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Invasive plant species / Plant morphology / Plant sexuality / Seed / Litter / Soil / Stratification / Celastrus orbiculatus / Germination / Plant reproduction / Botany / Biology


Why does land-use history facilitate nonnative plant invasion? A field experiment with Celastrus orbiculatus in the southern Appalachians Timothy R. Kuhman, Scott M. Pearson & Monica G. Turner
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Document Date: 2013-12-08 15:22:25


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City

Madison / Asheville / /

Company

Springer Science+Business Media B.V. / Patterson / /

Country

United States / Australia / /

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Event

Natural Disaster / /

Facility

Plant Analysis Lab / SAS Institute / University of Wisconsin-Madison Soil / Edgewood College / Mars Hill College / University of Wisconsin-Madison / /

IndustryTerm

soil chemical properties / e-offprint / ambient site / /

NaturalFeature

Bent Creek / Bent Creek Experimental Forest / /

Organization

SAS Institute / U.S. Forest Service / USA M. G. Turner Department of Zoology / Plant Analysis Lab for pH / S. M. Pearson Department of Natural Sciences / Department of Biological Sciences / Edgewood College / Hill College / University of Wisconsin / /

Person

Monica G. Turner / Timothy R. Kuhman / Van Lear / Scott M. Pearson Monica / Scott M. Pearson / /

Position

Author / accepted author / representative / Experimental site/stand characteristics Author / /

ProvinceOrState

Wisconsin / North Carolina / /

Region

eastern North America / eastern U.S. / northeastern U.S. / western North Carolina / eastern Asia / /

SocialTag