97th ESA Annual Meeting (August 5 -- 10, 2012)

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 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 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, Agricultural Research Service; Ragan M. Callaway, The University of Montana; Diane L. Larson, US Geological Survey; Peter M. Kotanen, University of Toronto; Urs Schaffner, CABI Europe - Switzerland
See more of: Posters