Filters: Tags: anti-exotic bias (X)
1 result (111ms)
Filters
Date Range
Extensions Types Contacts Categories |
Initially introduced to western United States to provide ecosystem services such as erosion control, Tamarix by the mid-1900s had became vilified as a profligate waster of water. This large shrub continues, today, to be indicted for various presumed environmental and economic costs, and millions of dollars are expended on its eradication. In this review, we examine the role of scientists in driving changes in perceptions of Tamarix from valuable import to vilified invader and (in some instances) back to a productive member of riparian plant communities. Scientists over the years have sustained a negative perception of Tamarix by, among other things, (1) citing outmoded sources; (2) inferring causation from correlative...
Categories: Publication;
Types: Citation,
Journal Citation;
Tags: Restoration Ecology,
anti-exotic bias,
invasive species,
riparian restoration,
scientific rigor
|