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Comparative plant ecology

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The article was published on 1988-01-01 and is currently open access. It has received 1150 citations till now. The article focuses on the topics: Plant ecology.

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Dissertation

Live weight gain of ewes and lambs grazing subterranean clover-based pastures

Chloe Hannah
TL;DR: The water quality of the Mediterranean Sea has changed in recent years from being generally good to excellent, with the exception of the waters off the coast of Italy and the Black Sea, which have suffered from declining water quality for centuries.
Journal ArticleDOI

Combined effects between temporal heterogeneity of water supply, nutrient level, and population density on biomass of four broadly distributed herbaceous species.

TL;DR: Although greater shoot and root growth under homogeneous water supply appears to be a general trend among herbaceous species, the results suggested differences among species could be found in the degree of response to water heterogeneity and its interactions with nutrient level and intraspecific competition.
Journal Article

Betonica officinalis L. in the Czech Republic. II. Seed production and quality and variability of total polyphenols content.

TL;DR: Wood Betony (Betonica officinalis) is convenient and also production of seeds was satisfactory in the isolation cages with bumble-bees as pollinators and the seed quality was found to be comparable with naturally produced one.

Ecological effects of cultivation on the machair sand dune systems of the Outer Hebrides, Scotland

Drake Circus
TL;DR: In this article, the effects of cultivation practices and their role in maintaining plant species richness and community and ecosystem stability in the machair sand dune systems of the Outer Hebri-des of Scotland are investigated.
Journal ArticleDOI

The fate of morphologically different populations of Arrhenatherum elatius transplanted into arable and semi-natural habitats

TL;DR: Fates of three morphologically distinct populations of Arrhenatherum elatius were monitored following seedling transplantation into a winter wheat crop, or an Italian ryegrass and red clover ley, where there was a tendency for plants of arable origin to have a more bulbous phenotype.