Plant Environ Interact
February 2024
Climate change has initiated movement of both native and non-native (exotic) species across the landscape. Exotic species are hypothesized to establish from seed more readily than comparable native species. We tested the hypothesis that seed limitation is more important for exotic species than native grassland species.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFCover crops are increasingly being used in ecological restoration projects, and are hypothesized to facilitate establishment of sown species by reducing weed abundances without competing with the target mix. We tested these predictions and examined the role of cover crop species on later species composition and diversity using cover crop seed treatments. Treatments included a fall seeding of one annual (Raphanus sativus or Avena sativa), one biennial (Oenothera biennis), one perennial species (Elymus canadensis), two grass-forb species combinations, or nothing as a control.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFA primary goal of restoration ecology is to understand the factors that generate variability in species diversity and composition among restorations. Plant communities may assemble deterministically toward a common community type, or they may assemble stochastically, ending differently because of weather conditions during establishment, soil legacy effects, or exotic species propagule pressure. To test these alternative hypotheses, we sampled plant communities and soil at 93 randomly selected restored prairies distributed throughout Iowa, USA.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFPremise: Variation in pollinator effectiveness may contribute to pollen limitation in fragmented plant populations. In plants with multiovulate ovaries, the number of conspecific pollen grains per stigma often predicts seed set and is used to quantify pollinator effectiveness. In the Asteraceae, however, florets are uniovulate, which suggests that the total amount of pollen deposited per floret may not measure pollinator effectiveness.
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