Recent studies have highlighted the role of lianas in shaping stand dynamics both in tropical and temperate forests. However, English ivy (Hedera helix L.), one of the most widespread lianas in Europe, has received little attention. We conducted a study in the Siro Negri alluvial forest (NW Italy) to determine what factors most affected ivy distribution and investigate its interactions with the trees in the stand. We evaluated the influence of tree size, age, species, and neighborhood crowding on ivy occurrence. In addition, growth ring widths were used to explore the development pattern of climbing stems. Fifty-two percent of trees in our study plots carried ivy, a value comparable to liana incidence found in mature tropical forests. Tree ...
In a subtropical montane forest of north-western Argentina, we analysed the effect of crown illumina...
Lianas, woody climbing plants, comprise up to 40% of woody individuals and species in tropical fores...
In canopy ecology, it has long been understood that different guilds of arboreal plants have differe...
The increasing prevalence of woody liana species has been widely observed across the neotropics, but...
Ivy (Hedera helix L.) is the only native evergreen climber and exclusive representative of Araliacea...
Ivy (Hedera helix) is the most important liana in temperate European forests. We studied water relat...
Lianas have the potential to shape forest communities and alter forest regeneration. However, impact...
The ivy (Hedera helix) is one of the rare evergreen forest species in Central Europe and is seen as ...
Invasive species degrade ecosystems by altering natural processes and decreasing the abundance and d...
As competition from lianas reduces fitness of host trees, lianas could influence community compositi...
English and Irish ivy (Hedera helix and H. hibernica) are invasive lianas which have become especial...
To determine the susceptibility of different forest types to lianes, and to investigate which ecolog...
1. Lianas and other climbing plants are structural parasites of trees, generally reducing host tree ...
In 9 sites of Hedera helix occurrence were recorded in the forests surrounding area Szadek. The spec...
In a subtropical montane forest of north-western Argentina (27°S, 1000 m elevation), we analysed the...
In a subtropical montane forest of north-western Argentina, we analysed the effect of crown illumina...
Lianas, woody climbing plants, comprise up to 40% of woody individuals and species in tropical fores...
In canopy ecology, it has long been understood that different guilds of arboreal plants have differe...
The increasing prevalence of woody liana species has been widely observed across the neotropics, but...
Ivy (Hedera helix L.) is the only native evergreen climber and exclusive representative of Araliacea...
Ivy (Hedera helix) is the most important liana in temperate European forests. We studied water relat...
Lianas have the potential to shape forest communities and alter forest regeneration. However, impact...
The ivy (Hedera helix) is one of the rare evergreen forest species in Central Europe and is seen as ...
Invasive species degrade ecosystems by altering natural processes and decreasing the abundance and d...
As competition from lianas reduces fitness of host trees, lianas could influence community compositi...
English and Irish ivy (Hedera helix and H. hibernica) are invasive lianas which have become especial...
To determine the susceptibility of different forest types to lianes, and to investigate which ecolog...
1. Lianas and other climbing plants are structural parasites of trees, generally reducing host tree ...
In 9 sites of Hedera helix occurrence were recorded in the forests surrounding area Szadek. The spec...
In a subtropical montane forest of north-western Argentina (27°S, 1000 m elevation), we analysed the...
In a subtropical montane forest of north-western Argentina, we analysed the effect of crown illumina...
Lianas, woody climbing plants, comprise up to 40% of woody individuals and species in tropical fores...
In canopy ecology, it has long been understood that different guilds of arboreal plants have differe...