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Lista de obras de Julia Cooke

Evidence for shifts to faster growth strategies in the new ranges of invasive alien plants

artículo científico publicado en 2014

Growth and survival of riparian plantings in relation to Weeping Willow canopy in the Upper Hunter River

article

Is plant ecology more siliceous than we realise?

artículo científico publicado el 5 de noviembre de 2010

Native and exotic invasive plants have fundamentally similar carbon capture strategies

article

Phosphorus recycling in photorespiration maintains high photosynthetic capacity in woody species

artículo científico publicado en 2015

Population dynamics of the invasive, annual species, Carrichtera annua, in Australia

article

Rapid evolution of leaf physiology in an introduced beach daisy

scientific article published on 28 August 2019

Reproductive output of invasive versus native plants

article

Shoot growth of woody trees and shrubs is predicted by maximum plant height and associated traits

article

Silicon concentration and leaf longevity: is silicon a player in the leaf dry mass spectrum?

scholarly article by Julia Cooke & Michelle R. Leishman published 29 June 2011 in Functional Ecology

Stem diameter growth rates in a fire-prone savanna correlate with photosynthetic rate and branch-scale biomass allocation, but not specific leaf area

scholarly article by Ian J. Wright et al published 20 November 2018 in Austral Ecology

Teaching and learning in ecology: a horizon scan of emerging challenges and solutions

scientific article published in 2020

The Christmas tree project: comparing the effects of five treatments on the health of cut Christmas trees (Pinus radiata, Pinaceae)

article

The unusual occurrence of green algal balls of Chaetomorpha linum on a beach in Sydney, Australia

article

Tradeoffs between foliar silicon and carbon-based defences: evidence from vegetation communities of contrasting soil types

article

Water availability affects seasonal CO2 -induced photosynthetic enhancement in herbaceous species in a periodically dry woodland.

artículo científico publicado en 2017

Why do plants silicify?