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Nahuel Policelli
Researcher at National University of Comahue
Publications - 18
Citations - 355
Nahuel Policelli is an academic researcher from National University of Comahue. The author has contributed to research in topics: Biology & Invasive species. The author has an hindex of 7, co-authored 13 publications receiving 189 citations. Previous affiliations of Nahuel Policelli include Facultad de Ciencias Exactas y Naturales & Boston University.
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Journal ArticleDOI
Ecology and management of invasive Pinaceae around the world: progress and challenges
Martin A. Nuñez,Mariana C. Chiuffo,Agostina Torres,Thomas S. H. Paul,Romina D. Dimarco,Peter Raal,Nahuel Policelli,Jaime Moyano,Rafael A. García,Brian W. van Wilgen,Aníbal Pauchard,David M. Richardson +11 more
TL;DR: The ecology and management of Pinaceae invasions is reviewed and how restoration of invaded areas should be addressed is explored and how control interventions at early stages of invasion are focused.
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Suilloid fungi as global drivers of pine invasions.
TL;DR: The results suggest that the identity of mycorrhizal fungi and their ecological interactions, rather than simply the presence of compatible fungi, are key to the understanding of plant invasion processes and their success or failure.
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Back to Roots: The Role of Ectomycorrhizal Fungi in Boreal and Temperate Forest Restoration
Nahuel Policelli,Nahuel Policelli,Thomas R. Horton,Aimée T. Hudon,Taylor R. Patterson,Jennifer M. Bhatnagar +5 more
TL;DR: In this article, the potential role of Ectomycorrhizal fungi for restoring sites invaded by non-native plant species is discussed, and the limitations, knowledge gaps, and possible undesired outcomes of the use of EMF in forest restoration are explored.
Journal ArticleDOI
Pathogen accumulation cannot undo the impact of invasive species
Nahuel Policelli,Mariana C. Chiuffo,Jaime Moyano,Agostina Torres,Mariano A. Rodriguez-Cabal,Martin A. Nuñez +5 more
TL;DR: Invasive species abundance can decrease, increase, or not change invasive species abundance, but their impacts may persist in all scenarios.
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Ectomycorrhizal Plant-Fungal Co-invasions as Natural Experiments for Connecting Plant and Fungal Traits to Their Ecosystem Consequences
Jason D. Hoeksema,Colin Averill,Jennifer M. Bhatnagar,Edward R. Brzostek,Erika Buscardo,Ko-Hsuan Chen,Ko-Hsuan Chen,Hui-Ling Liao,Laszlo Nagy,Nahuel Policelli,Joanna Ridgeway,J. Alejandro Rojas,Rytas Vilgalys +12 more
TL;DR: Hypotheses on how effects of introduced and invasive EM fungi may depend on interactions between soil N availability in the exotic range and EM fungal traits are developed and tested.