Apparent competition in canopy trees determined by pathogen transmission rather than susceptibility.
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Sudden oak death: interactions of the exotic oomycete Phytophthora ramorum with naïve North American hostsLandscape epidemiology and control of pathogens with cryptic and long-distance dispersal: sudden oak death in northern Californian forestsInteractive effects of wildfire, forest management, and isolation on amphibian and parasite abundance.An exploration of hypotheses that explain herbivore and pathogen attack in restored plant communitiesScaling up from greenhouse resistance to fitness in the field for a host of an emerging forest disease.Unexpected redwood mortality from synergies between wildfire and an emerging infectious disease.The role of hyperparasitism in microbial pathogen ecology and evolution.Tree litter and forest understorey vegetation: a conceptual framework to understand the effects of tree litter on a perennial geophyte, Anemone nemorosa.Mortality and community changes drive sudden oak death impacts on litterfall and soil nitrogen cycling.Forest species diversity reduces disease risk in a generalist plant pathogen invasion.Wildfire and forest disease interaction lead to greater loss of soil nutrients and carbon.The community effects of phenotypic and genetic variation within a predator population.Scientific Opinion on the Pest Risk Analysis onPhytophthora ramorumprepared by the FP6 project RAPRASpatial patterns of soil pathogens in declining Mediterranean forests: implications for tree species regeneration.Forest transformation resulting from an exotic pathogen: regeneration and tanoak mortality in coast redwood stands affected by sudden oak deathAn increase in transmission-related traits and in phenotypic plasticity is documented during a fungal invasionPathogen impacts on plant communities: unifying theory, concepts, and empirical workImpacts of exotic forest pathogens on Mediterranean ecosystems: four case studiesSubcontinental impacts of an invasive tree disease on forest structure and dynamicsEpidemiological modeling of invasion in heterogeneous landscapes: spread of sudden oak death in California (1990–2030)Emerging Diseases in European Forest Ecosystems and Responses in SocietyPotential susceptibility of Australian flora to a NA2 isolate of Phytophthora ramorum and pathogen sporulation potentialPerspectives of spatial scale in a wildland forest epidemic
P2860
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P2860
Apparent competition in canopy trees determined by pathogen transmission rather than susceptibility.
description
2010 nî lūn-bûn
@nan
2010年の論文
@ja
2010年学术文章
@wuu
2010年学术文章
@zh
2010年学术文章
@zh-cn
2010年学术文章
@zh-hans
2010年学术文章
@zh-my
2010年学术文章
@zh-sg
2010年學術文章
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2010年學術文章
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name
Apparent competition in canopy ...... on rather than susceptibility.
@en
Apparent competition in canopy ...... on rather than susceptibility.
@nl
type
label
Apparent competition in canopy ...... on rather than susceptibility.
@en
Apparent competition in canopy ...... on rather than susceptibility.
@nl
prefLabel
Apparent competition in canopy ...... on rather than susceptibility.
@en
Apparent competition in canopy ...... on rather than susceptibility.
@nl
P2093
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P1476
Apparent competition in canopy ...... on rather than susceptibility.
@en
P2093
David M Rizzo
Richard C Cobb
Ross K Meentemeyer
P2860
P304
P356
10.1890/09-0680.1
P407
P577
2010-02-01T00:00:00Z