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Jacob E Lucero

Showing results (1-10 of 8) with videos related to

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Oecologia|February 10, 2018
Granivory from native rodents and competition from an exotic invader strongly and equally limit the establishment of native grassesJacob E Lucero, Ragan M Callaway
American Journal of Botany|June 5, 2026
Biological invasions by non-native plant species increase net primary productivity: Unexpected implications for ecological theoryRagan M Callaway, Christoph Rosche, Jacob E Lucero
Plos One|August 6, 2015
Increased Primary Production from an Exotic Invader Does Not Subsidize Native RodentsJacob E Lucero, Phil S Allen, Brock R McMillan
Ecological Applications : a Publication of the Ecological Society of America|December 8, 2025
Shrub-facilitated invasion accelerates desertificationJacob E Lucero, Christopher J Lortie, Alessandro Filazzola, et al.
Ecology Letters|August 20, 2022
The EICA is dead? Long live the EICA!Ragan M Callaway, Jacob E Lucero, José L Hierro, et al.
Ecology and Evolution|August 15, 2019
Enemy release from the effects of generalist granivores can facilitate <i>Bromus tectorum</i> invasion in the Great Basin DesertJacob E Lucero, Urs Schaffner, Ghorbanali Asadi, et al.
Ecology and Evolution|October 19, 2020
Escape from natural enemies depends on the enemies, the invader, and competitionJacob E Lucero, Nafiseh Mahdavi Arab, Sebastian T Meyer, et al.
Trends in Ecology & Evolution|July 19, 2023
Restoration ecology through the lens of coexistence theoryLauren M Hallett, Lina Aoyama, György Barabás, et al.
Pageof 1

Showing results (1-10 of 8) with videos related to

Sort By:
Pageof 1
Oecologia|February 10, 2018
Granivory from native rodents and competition from an exotic invader strongly and equally limit the establishment of native grassesJacob E Lucero, Ragan M Callaway
American Journal of Botany|June 5, 2026
Biological invasions by non-native plant species increase net primary productivity: Unexpected implications for ecological theoryRagan M Callaway, Christoph Rosche, Jacob E Lucero
Plos One|August 6, 2015
Increased Primary Production from an Exotic Invader Does Not Subsidize Native RodentsJacob E Lucero, Phil S Allen, Brock R McMillan
Ecological Applications : a Publication of the Ecological Society of America|December 8, 2025
Shrub-facilitated invasion accelerates desertificationJacob E Lucero, Christopher J Lortie, Alessandro Filazzola, et al.
Ecology Letters|August 20, 2022
The EICA is dead? Long live the EICA!Ragan M Callaway, Jacob E Lucero, José L Hierro, et al.
Ecology and Evolution|August 15, 2019
Enemy release from the effects of generalist granivores can facilitate <i>Bromus tectorum</i> invasion in the Great Basin DesertJacob E Lucero, Urs Schaffner, Ghorbanali Asadi, et al.
Ecology and Evolution|October 19, 2020
Escape from natural enemies depends on the enemies, the invader, and competitionJacob E Lucero, Nafiseh Mahdavi Arab, Sebastian T Meyer, et al.
Trends in Ecology & Evolution|July 19, 2023
Restoration ecology through the lens of coexistence theoryLauren M Hallett, Lina Aoyama, György Barabás, et al.
Pageof 1