Species frequency dynamics in an old-field succession: Effects of disturbance, fertilization and scale
Open Access
- 1 January 2005
- journal article
- Published by Wiley in Journal of Vegetation Science
Abstract
No abstract availableKeywords
This publication has 35 references indexed in Scilit:
- Experimental evidence for the effects of additional water, nutrients and physical disturbance on invasive plants in low fertility Hawkesbury Sandstone soils, Sydney, AustraliaJournal of Ecology, 2004
- Explaining productivity‐diversity relationships in plantsOikos, 2003
- The alpha–beta–regional relationship: providing new insights into local–regional patterns of species richness and scale dependence of diversity componentsEcology Letters, 2002
- Effects of Endophyte Infection in Tall Fescue (Festuca arundinacea: Poaceae) on Community DiversityInternational Journal of Plant Sciences, 2001
- A test of community reassembly using the exotic communities of New Zealand roadsides in comparison to British roadsidesJournal of Ecology, 2000
- Fluctuating resources in plant communities: a general theory of invasibilityJournal of Ecology, 2000
- forumThe core–satellite species hypothesis provides a theoretical basis for Grime's classification of dominant, subordinate, and transient speciesJournal of Ecology, 1999
- Benefits of plant diversity to ecosystems: immediate, filter and founder effectsJournal of Ecology, 1998
- Patch Structure in Tallgrass Prairies: Dynamics of Satellite SpeciesOikos, 1990
- The Distribution and Abundance of Tallgrass Prairie Plants: A Test of the Core-Satellite HypothesisThe American Naturalist, 1987