Antagonistic and mutualistic species interactions provide important ecosystem functions affecting plant population dynamics and distribution. Many of these functions are important for the regeneration of plants, either by limiting or facilitating successful transition between life stages. Interactions can occur across the whole geographical range of a species and thereby encompass different environmental gradients, such as changes in temperature or water availability. Understanding the joint effects of species interactions and environmental factors on the regeneration of plants is key for understanding plant population dynamics under global change and could provide important recommendations for managing and conservation efforts. My thesis ...
Identifying the mechanisms that prevent competitive exclusion in tropical forests is a key goal of t...
Investigating how interactions among plants depend on environmental conditions is key to understand ...
Plant–soil feedback, the reciprocal relationship between a plant and its associated microbial commun...
1. Abiotic factors, biotic interactions and dispersal ability determine the spatial distribution of ...
Title from PDF of title page (University of Missouri--Columbia, viewed on December 7, 2010).The enti...
Burning of fossil fuels has raised the level of atmospheric carbon dioxide, which contributes to gl...
1. Fungi are both agents of disease and mutualistic partners of plants. Previous studies have tested...
As a result of recent global climate change, areas that have previously been climatically unsuitable...
The success of invasive plants is influenced by many interacting factors, but evaluating multiple po...
Rapid climate change imperils many small-ranged endemic species as the climate envelopes of their na...
Positive and negative plant–plant interactions are major processes shaping plant communities. They a...
Although the importance of plant-associated microbes is increasingly recognized, little is known abo...
In this thesis I investigated the mutualism between Kunzea ericoides (kanuka) and two groups of soil...
Human-caused disruptions to seed-dispersal mutualisms increase the extinction risk for both plant an...
In this dissertation, I asked how soil biota, abiotic stress, and plant provenance influence plant c...
Identifying the mechanisms that prevent competitive exclusion in tropical forests is a key goal of t...
Investigating how interactions among plants depend on environmental conditions is key to understand ...
Plant–soil feedback, the reciprocal relationship between a plant and its associated microbial commun...
1. Abiotic factors, biotic interactions and dispersal ability determine the spatial distribution of ...
Title from PDF of title page (University of Missouri--Columbia, viewed on December 7, 2010).The enti...
Burning of fossil fuels has raised the level of atmospheric carbon dioxide, which contributes to gl...
1. Fungi are both agents of disease and mutualistic partners of plants. Previous studies have tested...
As a result of recent global climate change, areas that have previously been climatically unsuitable...
The success of invasive plants is influenced by many interacting factors, but evaluating multiple po...
Rapid climate change imperils many small-ranged endemic species as the climate envelopes of their na...
Positive and negative plant–plant interactions are major processes shaping plant communities. They a...
Although the importance of plant-associated microbes is increasingly recognized, little is known abo...
In this thesis I investigated the mutualism between Kunzea ericoides (kanuka) and two groups of soil...
Human-caused disruptions to seed-dispersal mutualisms increase the extinction risk for both plant an...
In this dissertation, I asked how soil biota, abiotic stress, and plant provenance influence plant c...
Identifying the mechanisms that prevent competitive exclusion in tropical forests is a key goal of t...
Investigating how interactions among plants depend on environmental conditions is key to understand ...
Plant–soil feedback, the reciprocal relationship between a plant and its associated microbial commun...