COS 52 - Restoration Ecology II

Wednesday, August 14, 2019: 8:00 AM-11:30 AM
L015/019, Kentucky International Convention Center
Presider:
Christy A. Lowney
8:00 AM
The restoration theory of Phragmites australis population in inland salt marshes of Northeast China
Xiaoyu Li Sr., Northeast Institute of Geography and Agroecology, Chinese Academy of Sciences
8:20 AM
Restoration planting options for limber pines (Pinus flexilis James): 10 years later
A.M. Aramati Casper, Colorado State University, Mountain Studies Institute; Kelly S. Burns, USDA Forest Service; Anna W. Schoettle, Rocky Mountain Research Station
8:40 AM
Butterfly and floral community composition vary differently among management types
Nicholas J Lyon, Iowa State University; Diane Debinski, Montana State University
9:00 AM
Landscape context does not affect restoration of pollination function of a bee-pollinated forb in restored prairies
Alan Ritchie Jr., University of Minnesota; Daniel P. Cariveau, University of Minnesota
9:20 AM
Recovery in soil carbon stock but reduction in carbon stabilization after 56-year forest restoration in degraded tropical lands
Huiling Zhang, South China Botanical Garden, Chinese Academy of Sciences; Qi Deng, Tennessee State University; Dafeng Hui, Tennessee State University; Deqiang Zhang, South China Botanical Garden, Chinese Academy of Sciences
9:40 AM
9:50 AM
Restoration of soil microbial communities in prairie conservation corridors
Zachary Whitacre, Western Michigan University; Kathryn Docherty, Western Michigan University; Jacob Evans, Western Michigan University; Mitchell Patalon, Western Michigan University
10:10 AM
Investigating the driving forces in severity of beech bark disease to guide restoration efforts in northern Michigan
Andrea L. Myers, Michigan Technological University; Tara L Bal, Michigan Technological University; Bruce Leutscher, Pictured Rocks National Lakeshore; Andrew J Storer, Michigan Technological University; Yvette L. Dickinson, Michigan Technological University
10:50 AM
Assessing the recovery trajectory of restored plant communities
Brook D. Herman, U.S. Army Corps of Engineers; David H. Wise, University of Illinois at Chicago
See more of: Contributed Talks