Forest Ecosystem Responses to Exotic Pests and Pathogens in Eastern North America
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Economic impacts of non-native forest insects in the continental United StatesThe role of biotic interactions in shaping distributions and realised assemblages of species: implications for species distribution modellingRapid rebound of soil respiration following partial stand disturbance by tree girdling in a temperate deciduous forest.Predicted effects of gypsy moth defoliation and climate change on forest carbon dynamics in the New Jersey pine barrens.Adaptive potential of maritime pine (Pinus pinaster) populations to the emerging pitch canker pathogen, Fusarium circinatum.Climate-suitable planting as a strategy for maintaining forest productivity and functional diversity.Effects of an invasive forest pathogen on abundance of ticks and their vertebrate hosts in a California Lyme disease focus.Influences of forest structure, climate and species composition on tree mortality across the eastern USTowards a global barcode library for Lymantria (Lepidoptera: Lymantriinae) tussock moths of biosecurity concernSeed dispersal of Diospyros virginiana in the past and the present: Evidence for a generalist evolutionary strategyGenome-wide association study identifies a major gene for beech bark disease resistance in American beech (Fagus grandifolia Ehrh.).Soil-mediated indirect impacts of an invasive predator on plant growth.Eight questions about invasions and ecosystem functioning.The key host for an invasive forest pathogen also facilitates the pathogen's survival of wildfire in California forests.Biogeographical patterns and determinants of invasion by forest pathogens in Europe.Nitrogen cycling responses to mountain pine beetle disturbance in a high elevation whitebark pine ecosystemIndirect effects of emerald ash borer-induced ash mortality and canopy gap formation on epigaeic beetles.Ephemeral disturbances have long-lasting impacts on forest invasion dynamics.Effects of pine wilt disease invasion on soil properties and Masson pine forest communities in the Three Gorges reservoir region, China.Ecosystem carbon exchange in response to locust outbreaks in a temperate steppe.Relationship between soil nutrients and mycorrhizal associations of two Bipinnula species (Orchidaceae) from central ChileDensities of Agrilus auroguttatus and Other Borers in California and Arizona Oaks.Foundation species loss affects vegetation structure more than ecosystem function in a northeastern USA forestQuantifying variation in forest disturbance, and its effects on aboveground biomass dynamics, across the eastern United States.Nonnative forest insects and pathogens in the United States: Impacts and policy options.Cross-species outlier detection reveals different evolutionary pressures between sister species.Effects of introduced insects and diseases on forest ecosystems in the Catskill Mountains of New York.The emerging science of linked plant-fungal invasions.Short-Term Responses of Ground Beetles to Forest Changes Caused by Early Stages of Emerald Ash Borer (Coleoptera: Buprestidae)-Induced Ash Mortality.Invasive insect effects on nitrogen cycling and host physiology are not tightly linked.Atmospheric change alters foliar quality of host trees and performance of two outbreak insect species.Mortality and community changes drive sudden oak death impacts on litterfall and soil nitrogen cycling.Changes to the N cycle following bark beetle outbreaks in two contrasting conifer forest types.Fluxes of terrestrial and aquatic carbon by emergent mosquitoes: a test of controls and implications for cross-ecosystem linkages.Separate estimation of N export into baseline N leakage without disturbance and N loss due to insect defoliation in a pine forest watershed in central Japan.A signature of tree health? Shifts in the microbiome and the ecological drivers of horse chestnut bleeding canker disease.Density-dependent survival and fecundity of hemlock woolly adelgid (Hemiptera: Adelgidae).Indirect effects of invasive predators on litter decomposition and nutrient resorption on seabird-dominated islands.Using citizen science programs to identify host resistance in pest-invaded forests.Variation in growth and developmental responses to supraoptimal temperatures near latitudinal range limits of gypsy moth Lymantria dispar (L.), an expanding invasive species
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P2860
Forest Ecosystem Responses to Exotic Pests and Pathogens in Eastern North America
description
article
@en
im Januar 2006 veröffentlichter wissenschaftlicher Artikel
@de
wetenschappelijk artikel
@nl
наукова стаття, опублікована у 2006
@uk
name
Forest Ecosystem Responses to Exotic Pests and Pathogens in Eastern North America
@en
Forest Ecosystem Responses to Exotic Pests and Pathogens in Eastern North America
@nl
type
label
Forest Ecosystem Responses to Exotic Pests and Pathogens in Eastern North America
@en
Forest Ecosystem Responses to Exotic Pests and Pathogens in Eastern North America
@nl
prefLabel
Forest Ecosystem Responses to Exotic Pests and Pathogens in Eastern North America
@en
Forest Ecosystem Responses to Exotic Pests and Pathogens in Eastern North America
@nl
P2093
P1433
P1476
Forest Ecosystem Responses to Exotic Pests and Pathogens in Eastern North America
@en
P2093
CHARLES D. CANHAM
GARY M. LOVETT
KATHLEEN C. WEATHERS
MARY A. ARTHUR
ROSS D. FITZHUGH
P2860
P356
10.1641/0006-3568(2006)056[0395:FERTEP]2.0.CO;2
P577
2006-01-01T00:00:00Z