PS 16 - Seed Production, Dispersal, And Predation

Monday, August 12, 2019: 4:30 PM-6:30 PM
Exhibit Hall, Kentucky International Convention Center
Adult hydrological niche determines seed dispersal and germination patterns along a seasonally-flooding lakeshore meadow
Zhichun Lan, Nanchang University; Songxian Wan, Nanchang university; Xuejun Yang, Chinese Academy of Science; Kardol Paul, Swedish University of Agricultural Sciences; Jani M. Heino, Finnish Environment Institute; Merel Soons, Utrecht University; Lei Li, Nanchang university; Yizhen Liu, Nanchang university; Yongjiu Cai, Chinese Academy of Science; Gang Ge, Nanchang university
Desert shrubs without neighbors grow larger seeds: Do intraspecific interactions drive maternal effects on seeds?
Ryan McCarthy, The Ohio State University; Christopher Toy, The Ohio State University; Maria N. Miriti, The Ohio State University
Dispersal limitation of Phacelia purshii
Albert J. Meier, Western Kentucky University; Danielle M. Racke, Lynchburg College; Erik J. Mikulcik, Western Kentucky University
Seed predation in tallgrass prairies changes throughout the year and is affected by litter cover
Genevieve Anderegg, University of Wisconsin - Madison; Jonathan J. Henn, University of Wisconsin - Madison; Ellen I. Damschen, University of Wisconsin-Madison
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