All Stories

  1. Bumblebee Abundance in Species-Rich Grasslands in Southern Sweden Decreases with Increasing Amount of Arable Land at a Landscape Level
  2. Short Spatiotemporal Fire History Explains the Occurrence of Beetles Favoured by Fire
  3. Pollinator activity and flowering in agricultural weeds in Sweden
  4. The population development of small trees and shrubs after 100 years of free succession of a wooded meadow in southern Sweden
  5. Maintaining an open landscape: comparison of management methods for semi-natural grasslands: a Swedish multi-site study
  6. Assemblages of flower-visiting insects in clear-cuts are rich and dynamic
  7. Color pan traps often catch less when there are more flowers around
  8. Buffering effects of soil seed banks on plant community composition in response to land use and climate
  9. Site factors are more important than management for indicator species in semi-natural grasslands in southern Sweden
  10. Sampling of flower-visiting insects: Poor correspondence between the catches of colour pan-trap and sweep netting
  11. Clear-cuts are temporary habitats, not matrix, for endangered grassland burnet moths (Zygaena spp.)
  12. Night, light and flight: light attraction in Trichoptera
  13. Changing land use and increasing abundance of deer cause natural regeneration failure of oaks: Six decades of landscape-scale evidence
  14. Land-use history influence the vegetation in coniferous production forests in southern Sweden
  15. Butterflies in Swedish grasslands benefit from forest and respond to landscape composition at different spatial scales
  16. Soil water potential and temperature sum during reproductive growth control seed dormancy in Alopecurus myosuroides Huds.
  17. Similar effects of different mowing frequencies on the conservation value of semi-natural grasslands in Europe
  18. Corrigendum to “The biodiversity cost of reducing management intensity in species-rich grasslands: Mowing annually vs. every third year” [Basic Appl. Ecol. 22 (2017) 61–74]
  19. Annual burning of semi-natural grasslands for conservation favours tall-grown species with high nectar production
  20. Spatial pattern of occurrence of epiphytic lichens on oaks in a heterogeneous landscape
  21. The biodiversity cost of reducing management intensity in species-rich grasslands: Mowing annually vs. every third year
  22. Temporal variations in methane emissions from emergent aquatic macrophytes in two boreonemoral lakes
  23. An example of how to build conservation evidence from case studies: Fire and raking to enhance Pulsatilla vernalis populations
  24. Palliative care consultation team on acute wards—an intervention study with pre-post comparisons
  25. Flower abundance and vegetation height as predictors for nectar-feeding insect occurrence in Swedish semi-natural grasslands
  26. Land-use history exerts long-term effects on the clear-cut flora in boreonemoral Sweden
  27. Wet Grasslands as a Green Infrastructure for Ecological Sustainability: Wader Conservation in Southern Sweden as a Case Study
  28. Grazing vs. mowing: A meta-analysis of biodiversity benefits for grassland management
  29. Assemblages of saproxylic beetles on large downed trunks of oak
  30. Boxing for biodiversity: evaluation of an artificially created decaying wood habitat
  31. Revealing hidden species distribution with pheromones: the case of Synanthedon vespiformis (Lepidoptera: Sesiidae) in Sweden
  32. Species richness in hollow oaks along a climate gradient
  33. The conservation benefit of mowing vs grazing for management of species-rich grasslands: a multi-site, multi-year field experiment
  34. Clear-cuts in production forests: From matrix to neo-habitat for butterflies
  35. Decade-long response of arid-land mallee vegetation to fire, flooding and grazing in south-eastern Australia
  36. Invasive plant species in the Swedish flora: developing criteria and definitions, and assessing the invasiveness of individual taxa
  37. Influences of forest type and habitat structure on bird assemblages of oak (Quercus spp.) and pine (Pinus spp.) stands in southwestern Turkey
  38. A burning desire for smoke? Sampling insects favoured by forest fire in the absence of fire
  39. Vegetation in clear‐cuts depends on previous land use: a century‐old grassland legacy
  40. Mowing for biodiversity: grass trimmer and knife mower perform equally well
  41. Evidence-based vegetation management: prospects and challenges
  42. Low host-tree preferences among saproxylic beetles: a comparison of four deciduous species
  43. Variation inElymus repenssusceptibility to glyphosate
  44. High-accuracy sampling of saproxylic diversity indicators at regional scales with pheromones: The case of Elater ferrugineus (Coleoptera, Elateridae)
  45. Decline in lichen biodiversity on oak trunks due to urbanization
  46. Is spring burning a viable management tool for species-rich grasslands?
  47. Influence of residence time analyses on estimates of wetland hydraulics and pollutant removal
  48. Effect of Tree-Fall Gaps on Fruit-Feeding Nymphalid Butterfly Assemblages in a Peruvian Rain Forest
  49. Using Sex Pheromone and a Multi-Scale Approach to Predict the Distribution of a Rare Saproxylic Beetle
  50. Forest Composition and Structure on Glade-forming Limestones in Middle Tennessee
  51. Do differences in plasticity during early growth lead to differing success in competition? A test using four co-occurring annualPapaver
  52. Seed germination and seedling development ecology in world-wide populations of a circumboreal Tertiary relict
  53. How much and at what scale? Multiscale analyses as decision support for conservation of saproxylic oak beetles
  54. Fame, glory and neglect in meta-analyses
  55. History matters: Impact of historical land use on butterfly diversity in clear-cuts in a boreal landscape
  56. Susceptibility variation to new and established herbicides: Examples of inter-population sensitivity of grass weeds
  57. Low pre-death growth rates of oak (Quercus robur L.)—Is oak death a long-term process induced by dry years?
  58. Monitoring of butterflies within a landscape context in south-eastern Sweden
  59. Tree and Site Quality Preferences of Six Epiphytic Lichens Growing on Oaks in Southeastern Sweden
  60. Changes in the distributions of epiphytic lichens in southern Sweden using a new statistical method
  61. Estimating the dispersal capacity of the rare lichen Cliostomum corrugatum
  62. Boxes mimicking tree hollows can help conservation of saproxylic beetles
  63. In the eye of the beholder: bias and stochastic variation in cover estimates
  64. An indicator system for identification of sites of high conservation value for saproxylic oak (Quercus spp.) beetles in southern Sweden
  65. Variation within species and inter-species comparison of seed dormancy and germination of four annual Lamium species
  66. INDICES FOR DETECTING DIFFERENCES IN SPECIES COMPOSITION: SOME SIMPLIFICATIONS OF RDA AND CCA
  67. Monitoring of butterflies in semi-natural grasslands: diurnal variation and weather effects
  68. Inter-species comparison of seed dormancy and germination of six annual Asteraceae weeds in an ecological context
  69. Effects on vegetation composition of a modified forest harvesting and propagation method compared with clear‐cutting, scarification and planting
  70. Observer bias and random variation in vegetation monitoring data
  71. Post-wildfire seedling colonisation patterns in aEucalyptus delegatensis(Myrtaceae) windthrow site at Snowy River National Park, Victoria
  72. Comparing after-ripening response and germination requirements of Conyza canadensis and C. bonariensis (Asteraceae) through logistic functions
  73. Importance of boreal grasslands in Sweden for butterfly diversity and effects of local and landscape habitat factors
  74. Seed dormancy pattern and germination preferences of the South African annual Papaver aculeatum
  75. Repeated grading of weed abundance and multivariate methods to improve the efficacy of on-farm weed control trials
  76. A Comparative Study of Germination Ecology of Four Papaver Taxa
  77. Weed suppression in mixed cropped grain peas and false flax (Camelina sativa)
  78. Seed dormancy and germination in the summer annual Galeopsis speciosa
  79. Weed occurrence in Finnish coastal regions: a survey of organically cropped spring cereals
  80. Mechanical and cultural strategies to control Cirsium arvense in organic arable cropping systems
  81. Rapid changes in the epiphytic macrolichen flora on sites in southern Sweden
  82. Evaluating the potential northward spread of two grass weeds in Sweden
  83. Arid land vegetation dynamics after a rare flooding event: influence of fire and grazing
  84. Letter Regarding Article by Khan et al, "Predictive Adaptive Responses to Maternal High-Fat Diet Prevent Endothelial Dysfunction but Not Hypertension in Adult Rat Offspring" * Response
  85. Comparison of data from two vegetation monitoring methods in semi-natural grasslands
  86. Complex Combination of Seed Dormancy and Seedling Development Determine Emergence of Viburnum tinus (Caprifoliaceae)
  87. Landscape effects on butterfly assemblages in an agricultural region
  88. Yield loss due to weeds in cereals and its large-scale variability in Sweden
  89. Germination ecology of seeds of the annual weeds Capsella bursa-pastoris and Descurainia sophia originating from high northern latitudes
  90. Control of Parthenium (Parthenium hysterophorus) in Grain Sorghum (Sorghum bicolor) in the Smallholder Farming System in Eastern Ethiopia1
  91. Yield loss in spring-sown cereals related to the weed flora in the spring
  92. Weed vegetation response to chemical and manual selective ground cover management in a shaded coffee plantation
  93. Seed dormancy pattern of the annuals Argemone ochroleuca and A. mexicana (Papaveraceae)
  94. Seed Dormancy, After-ripening and Light Requirements of Four Annual Asteraceae in South-western Australia
  95. Highlighting Differential Control of Weeds by Management Methods Using an Ordination Technique 1
  96. Non-deep simple morphophysiological dormancy in seeds of the weedy facultative winter annual Papaver rhoeas
  97. Germination ecology of the weed Parthenium hysterophorus in eastern Ethiopia
  98. Germination characteristics and emergence time of annual Bromus species of differing weediness in Sweden
  99. Germination requirements and seedling responses to water availability and soil type in four eucalypt species
  100. Interference by the weed Parthenium hysterophorus L. with grain sorghum: Influence of weed density and duration of competition
  101. The impact of logging intensity on field-layer vegetation in Swedish boreal forests
  102. Diving beetle (Dytiscidae) assemblages along environmental gradients in an agricultural landscape in southeastern Sweden
  103. Timing of Disturbance and Vegetation Development: How Sowing Date Affects the Weed Flora in Spring-Sown Crops
  104. Timing of disturbance and vegetation development: how sowing date affects the weed flora in spring-sown crops
  105. Seed dormancy-breaking and germination requirements ofDrosera anglica, an insectivorous species of the Northern Hemisphere
  106. Weed flora in arable fields of eastern Ethiopia with emphasis on the occurrence of Parthenium hysterophorus
  107. Germination studies of three dwarf shrubs ( Vaccinium , Ericaceae) of Northern Hemisphere coniferous forests
  108. Plant succession in perennial grass strips and effects on the diversity of leafhoppers (Homoptera, Auchenorrhyncha)
  109. Deep complex morphophysiological dormancy in seeds of Anthriscus sylvestris (Apiaceae)
  110. Interannual variation in weed biomass on arable land in Sweden
  111. Spatial and temporal stability of weed populations over five years
  112. Large-seeded spices are less dependent on light for germination than small-seeded ones
  113. Germination studies of three dwarf shrubs (Vaccinium, Ericaceae) of Northern Hemisphere coniferous forests
  114. A Survey of Weeds in Organic Farming in Sweden
  115. Data diving with cross-validation: an investigation of broad-scale gradients in Swedish weed communities
  116. The effect of light and number of diurnal temperature fluctuations on germination of Phragmites australis
  117. Seed size, shape and vertical distribution in the soil: indicators of seed longevity
  118. Seedling growth response to added nutrients depends on seed size in three woody genera
  119. Seed/cotyledon size and nutrient content play a major role in early performance of species on nutrient-poor soils
  120. Rate of Change in Dormancy Level and Light Requirement in Weed Seeds During Stratification
  121. Seasonal variation in dormancy and light sensitivity in buried seeds of eight annual weed species
  122. What determines seed set in Dracocephalum ryuschiana L. an endangered grassland plant?
  123. Weed seed germination after short-term light exposure: germination rate, photon fluence response and interaction with nitrate
  124. Seed germination inLaunaea arborescens: a continuously flowering semi-desert shrub
  125. Seed Dormancy in Carex canescens: Regional Differences and Ecological Consequences
  126. Seed Germination After Short-Duration Light Exposure: Implications for the Photo-Control of Weeds
  127. Weed performance in crop rotations with and without leys and at different nitrogen levels
  128. Effect of bean geese (Anser fabalis) grazing on winter wheat during migration stopover in southern Sweden
  129. Soil Seed Bank after Eighteen Years of Succession from Grassland to Forest
  130. Fire enhances weed invasion of roadside vegetation in southwestern Australia
  131. Germination ecology of the grassland biennialLinum catharticum
  132. Germination of up to 129-year old, dry-stored seeds of Geranium bohemicum (Geraniaceae)
  133. Germination ecology of the polycarpic grassland perennials Primula veris and Trollius europaeus
  134. Soil seed bank and species turnover in a limestone grassland
  135. Germination ecology of the endangered grassland biennial Gentianella campestris
  136. Naive birds and noble savages - a review of man-caused prehistoric extinctions of island birds
  137. Fern spores in a grassland soil