PS 42 - Invasion

Wednesday, August 8, 2012: 4:30 PM-6:30 PM
Exhibit Hall, Oregon Convention Center
 Effects of climate change on Bromus tectorum distribution in Rocky Mountain National Park, Colorado, USA
Amanda M. West, Colorado State University; Tewodros Wakie, Colorado State University; Sunil Kumar, Colorado State University; Cynthia S. Brown, Colorado State University; Thomas J. Stohlgren, Natural Resource Ecology Laboratory; Melinda Laituri, Colorado State University; Jim Bromberg, U.S. National Park Service
 Clonal success in an invasive species Kalanchoe delagoensis (Crassulaceae)
Azalea Guerra-García, Universidad Nacional Autónoma de México; Jordan Golubov Sr., Universidad Autónoma Metropolitana; Maria del Carmen Mandujano, Instituto de Ecología, UNAM
 Current status of naturalized temperate Asian bamboos in the United States: An on-going survey
Melissa C. Smith, USDA-ARS; Richard N. Mack, Washington State University
 Divergent patterns of growth and biomass allocation in native and introduced ranges of the annual grass Bromus rubens
Matthew R. O'Neill, University of California, Riverside; Edith B. Allen, University of California, Riverside; Michael F. Allen, University of California; Louis Santiago, University of California, Riverside
 Effect of environmental variables on germination of Japanese climbing fern spores
Jennifer L. Ulrich, University of Florida; Kimberly K. Bohn, University of Florida; Patrick J. Minogue, University of Florida
 How invaded is our lakescape?: Enumerating invaded lakes in the Northern Highlands Lake District of Wisconsin
Alexander W. Latzka, University of Wisconsin - Madison; Jake Vander Zanden, University of Wisconsin
 Climbing high: Probability of occurrence and patterns of invasion of Linaria dalmatica along an elevation gradient
Fredric W. Pollnac, University of New Hampshire; Matt Lavin, Montana State University; Bruce D. Maxwell, Montana State University; Mark L. Taper, Montana State University; Lisa J. Rew, Montana State University
 Utilization of rhizobia by the invasive legume, Sericea Lespedeza (Lespedeza cunteata)
Yiran Wang, Emporia State University; Brenda A. Koerner, Emporia State University
 A transcontinental biogeographic comparison of native and invasive dominants: Are invasives indeed doing something different than natives?
Kateřina ŠTajerová, Institute of Botany of the ASCR; Petr Pyšek, Institute of Botany, The Czech Academy of Sciences; Vojtech Jarosik, Charles University; Martin Hejda, Botanical Institute, Academy of Sciences of the Czech Republic; Dana M. Blumenthal, USDA-ARS; Ragan M. Callaway, The University of Montana; Diane L. Larson, US Geological Survey; Peter M. Kotanen, University of Toronto; Urs Schaffner, CABI Europe - Switzerland
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