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Marcela Danu
On the European continent, urban population, representing a significant segment of the market, with features specific to a particular model of purchase, consumption, lifestyle, etc. , has the potential for growth. The possible effects of this increase (s...
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Don Gayton,Val Miller
Diffuse and spotted knapweed (Centaurea diffusa Lam and C. stoebe L.) are two closely related invasives found in many parts of British Columbia?s Southern Interior, causing substantial economic losses in rangelands. Beginning in 1970, the provincial gove...
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Ivy Whitehorne,Megan Harrison,Nancy A. Mahony,Patrick Robinson,Alicia Newbury,David J. Green
Livestock grazing is a dominant land use across North America and although the effects of grazing on birds have been studied in grassland, shrubland, and riparian habitats, studies of the effects in forests are rare. We investigated the effects of cattle...
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Michelle Cleary,Rona Sturrock,Janice Hodge
Laminated (or Phellinus) root disease (Phellinus sulphurascens Pilát, syn. = P. weirii) is a major, naturally occurring disturbance agent in interior forests and poses a significant threat to its most economically important host, Douglas-fir. The disease...
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Amalesh Dhar,Chris D.B. Hawkins
The mountain pine beetle (Dendroctonus ponderosae Hopkins; MPB) infestation has altered forests of lodgepole pine (Pinus contorta Dougl. ex Loud. var. latifolia Engelm.) to an unprecedented extent in British Columbia. After an MPB outbreak, advance regen...
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