Plant and microbial impacts of an invasive species vary across an environmental gradient
Emily C. Farrer(Tulane University), William Wilber(Tulane University), McKenzie K. H. Smith(Tulane University), Paweł Waryszak(Tulane University), Nelle K. Kulick(Tulane University), Helena Candaele(Tulane University), Sean F.H. Lee(Tulane University), Susannah R. Halbrook(Tulane University), Monica V. Brady(Tulane University), Christina Birnbaum(Tulane University), Caitlin R. Bumby(Tulane University), Carolyn S. Schroeder(Tulane University)
Cited by 30
Related Papers
Mutualisms are not constraining cross‐continental invasion success of <i><scp>A</scp>cacia</i> species within <scp>A</scp>ustralia
|Diversity and Distributions|2012|48
Topsoil Stockpiling in Restoration: Impact of Storage Time on Plant Growth and Symbiotic Soil Biota
|Ecological Restoration|2017|48
Nitrogen‐fixing bacterial communities in invasive legume nodules and associated soils are similar across introduced and native range populations in Australia
|Journal of Biogeography|2016|27
Soil fungal responses to experimental warming and drying in a Mediterranean shrubland
|The Science of The Total Environment|2019|27