The following pages link to Jennifer Larson (Q139614):
Displayed 14 items.
- Balancing the need for seed against invasive species risks in prairie habitat restorations (Q146004) (← links)
- Coflowering invasive plants and a congener have neutral effects on fitness components of a rare endemic plant (Q146138) (← links)
- Divergent responses of butterflies and bees to burning and grazing management in tallgrass prairies (Q150355) (← links)
- Using a network modularity analysis to inform management of a rare endemic plant in the northern Great Plains, USA (Q236440) (← links)
- Factors affecting post-control reinvasion by seed of an invasive species, Phragmites australis, in the central Platte River, Nebraska. (Q238108) (← links)
- Exotic plant infestation is associated with decreased modularity and increased numbers of connectors in mixed-grass prairie pollination networks (Q238316) (← links)
- Using prairie restoration to curtail invasion of Canada thistle: the importance of limiting similarity and seed mix richness (Q242978) (← links)
- Nitrogen-limitation and invasive sweetclover impacts vary between two Great Plains plant communities (Q247701) (← links)
- Long-term dynamics of leafy spurge (Euphorbia esula) and its biocontrol agent, flea beetles in the genus Aphthona (Q252867) (← links)
- Variation in foraging patterns as reflected by floral resources used by male vs female bees of selected species at Badlands National Park, SD (Q272232) (← links)
- Restoration for resilience: The role of plant-microbial interactions and seed provenance in ecological restoration (Q285266) (← links)
- Toward improving pollinator habitat: Reconstructing prairies with high forb diversity (Q286156) (← links)
- Leafy spurge (Euphorbia esula) affects vegetation more than seed banks in mixed-grass prairies of the Northern Great Plains (Q293517) (← links)
- Fewer bowl traps and more hand netting can increase effective number of bee species and reduce excessive captures (Q296598) (← links)