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Local population differentiation in Bromus tectorum L. in relation to habitat-specific selection regimes

Citation

Val J Anderson, Keith R Merrill, Susan E Meyer, and Jason W Scott, Local population differentiation in Bromus tectorum L. in relation to habitat-specific selection regimes: .

Summary

A central question of invasion biology is how an exotic species invades new habitats following its initial establishment. Three hypotheses to explain this expansion are: (1) the existence of ‘general purpose’ genotypes, (2) the in situ evolution of novel genotypes, and (3) the dispersal of existing specialized genotypes into habitats for which they are pre-adapted. Bromus tectorum is a selfing exotic winter annual grass that has achieved widespread dominance in semiarid western North America and that is actively invading salt desert habitats. We examined mechanisms driving this invasion in three complementary studies. In reciprocal seeding experiments with ten populations from saline playa, salt desert shrubland, and upland sagebrush [...]

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  • Upper Colorado River Basin

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From Source - Mendeley RIS export <br> On - Tue May 10 12:23:31 CDT 2011

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Title Citation Local population differentiation in Bromus tectorum L. in relation to habitat-specific selection regimes

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