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Robert W Pal

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

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Proceedings. Biological Sciences|March 25, 2025
Competition on a neutral playing field: invaders still win and size still matters… sometimesWenbo Luo, Huixuan Liao, Ragan Callaway, et al.
Ecology|May 13, 2025
Escape from harmful soil biota at high elevations: Plant-soil feedbacks along stress gradientsWenbo Luo, Huixuan Liao, Robert W Pal, et al.
Oecologia|May 25, 2015
Do exotic plants lose resistance to pathogenic soil biota from their native range? A test with Solidago giganteaJohn L Maron, Wenbo Luo, Ragan M Callaway, et al.
Ecology|November 19, 2016
Solidago gigantea plants from nonnative ranges compensate more in response to damage than plants from the native rangeHuixuan Liao, Priscila C S Gurgel, Robert W Pal, et al.
Ecology|April 17, 2020
What happens in Europe stays in Europe: apparent evolution by an invader does not help at homeRobert W Pal, John L Maron, David U Nagy, 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.
The New Phytologist|February 20, 2014
Conyza canadensis suppresses plant diversity in its nonnative ranges but not at home: a transcontinental comparisonManzoor A Shah, Ragan M Callaway, Tabasum Shah, et al.
Ecology Letters|August 4, 2025
Exotic Invasive Plant Species Increase Primary Productivity, but Not in Their Native RangesRagan M Callaway, Robert W Pal, Adrian Schaar, et al.
The ISME Journal|July 23, 2022
Acquisition and evolution of enhanced mutualism-an underappreciated mechanism for invasive success?Min Sheng, Christoph Rosche, Mohammad Al-Gharaibeh, et al.
The New Phytologist|June 11, 2024
Among-population variation in drought responses is consistent across life stages but not between native and non-native rangesDávid U Nagy, Arpad E Thoma, Mohammad Al-Gharaibeh, et al.
Pageof 1

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

Sort By:
Pageof 1
Proceedings. Biological Sciences|March 25, 2025
Competition on a neutral playing field: invaders still win and size still matters… sometimesWenbo Luo, Huixuan Liao, Ragan Callaway, et al.
Ecology|May 13, 2025
Escape from harmful soil biota at high elevations: Plant-soil feedbacks along stress gradientsWenbo Luo, Huixuan Liao, Robert W Pal, et al.
Oecologia|May 25, 2015
Do exotic plants lose resistance to pathogenic soil biota from their native range? A test with Solidago giganteaJohn L Maron, Wenbo Luo, Ragan M Callaway, et al.
Ecology|November 19, 2016
Solidago gigantea plants from nonnative ranges compensate more in response to damage than plants from the native rangeHuixuan Liao, Priscila C S Gurgel, Robert W Pal, et al.
Ecology|April 17, 2020
What happens in Europe stays in Europe: apparent evolution by an invader does not help at homeRobert W Pal, John L Maron, David U Nagy, 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.
The New Phytologist|February 20, 2014
Conyza canadensis suppresses plant diversity in its nonnative ranges but not at home: a transcontinental comparisonManzoor A Shah, Ragan M Callaway, Tabasum Shah, et al.
Ecology Letters|August 4, 2025
Exotic Invasive Plant Species Increase Primary Productivity, but Not in Their Native RangesRagan M Callaway, Robert W Pal, Adrian Schaar, et al.
The ISME Journal|July 23, 2022
Acquisition and evolution of enhanced mutualism-an underappreciated mechanism for invasive success?Min Sheng, Christoph Rosche, Mohammad Al-Gharaibeh, et al.
The New Phytologist|June 11, 2024
Among-population variation in drought responses is consistent across life stages but not between native and non-native rangesDávid U Nagy, Arpad E Thoma, Mohammad Al-Gharaibeh, et al.
Pageof 1