PS 67 - Biodiversity

Friday, August 16, 2019: 8:30 AM-10:30 AM
Exhibit Hall, Kentucky International Convention Center
Cancelled
PS 67-23
Species abundance is determined by their functional traits through negative density dependence: Evidence from a subtropical forest in southern China (widthdrawn)
Weitao Wang, Sun Yat-sen University; Chengjin Chu, Sun Yat-sen University; Yun Jiang, Sun Yat-sen University
What drives species richness in Colorado's alpine tundra?
Mike Kintgen, Denver Botanic Gardens; Catherine Kleier, Regis University; Michael Guidi, Denver Botanic Gardens
Seedlings with delayed greening leaves suffer weaker herbivore damage and conspecific negative density dependence in a subtropical forest
Wenbin Li, Sun Yat-sen University; Yuxin Chen, Sun Yat-sen University; Yandan Lu, Sun Yat-sen University; Yong Shen, Sun Yat-sen University; Shixiao Yu, Sun Yat-sen University
Cumulative richness is and is not a function of species turnover
Angel Najjar, McMaster University; Jurek Kolasa, McMaster University
Early and late colonization of plant genotypes exert minimal impacts on the assembly of native and exotic populations
Joshua Kouri, University of Oklahoma; Megan M. Means, University of Oklahoma; Tess M. Hartog, University of Oklahoma; Lara Souza, University of Oklahoma
Decreasing flow levels and deteriorating water quality across five sites reduces aquatic insect diversity in the Chiricahua Mountains, Arizona
Sterling Stokes, Doris Duke Conservation Scholars Program, The University of Arizona; Earyn McGee, The University of Arizona; Michael T. Bogan, The University of Arizona
Pollination network and bee diversity of Southern Illinois limestone glades
Jacob L Chisausky, Southern Illinois University Carbondale; Lillian McIntyre, Southern Illinois University Carbondale; Leila Kassim, Southern Illinois University Carbondale; Sedonia D. Sipes, Southern Illinois University
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