This decommissioned ERA site remains active temporarily to support our final migration steps to https://ualberta.scholaris.ca, ERA's new home. All new collections and items, including Spring 2025 theses, are at that site. For assistance, please contact erahelp@ualberta.ca.
Search
Skip to Search Results- 2Brown, Charlotte
- 2Cahill, James F.
- 2Salimbayeva, Karina
- 2Stotz, Gisela C.
- 1Amanda Kahn, Nathan Grant, Stephanie Archer, Anya Dunham, Sally Leys
- 1Holden, Emily M
-
Building a Glass Sponge Reef
2019-02-10
Keenan Guillas, Amanda Kahn, Nathan Grant, Stephanie Archer, Anya Dunham, Sally Leys
ABSTRACT Glass sponge reefs are endemic to the continental shelf waters of British Columbia and Alaska where they form complex three-dimensional habitats used by a variety of commercially important fish and invertebrate species. The Hecate Strait and Queen Charlotte Sound Glass Sponge Reefs...
-
Data associated with "Vegetative growth drives the negative effects of an invasive species on resident community diversity and is not limited by plant-soil feedbacks: a temporal assessment"
Data associated with "Vegetative growth drives the negative effects of an invasive species on resident community diversity and is not limited by plant-soil feedbacks: a temporal assessment"
Download2024-05-17
Holden, Emily M., Salimbayeva, Karina, Brown, Charlotte, Stotz, Gisela C., Cahill, James F.
Many pathways of invasion have been posited, but ecologists lack an experimental framework to identify which mechanisms are dominant in a given invasion scenario. Plant-soil feedbacks (PSFs) are one such mechanism that tend to initially facilitate, but over time attenuate, invasive species’...
-
Data associated with "Vegetative growth drives the negative effects of an invasive species on resident community diversity and is not limited by plant-soil feedbacks: a temporal assessment"
Data associated with "Vegetative growth drives the negative effects of an invasive species on resident community diversity and is not limited by plant-soil feedbacks: a temporal assessment"
Download2024-05-01
Holden, Emily M, Salimbayeva, Karina, Brown, Charlotte, Stotz, Gisela C., Cahill, James F.
Many pathways of invasion have been posited, but ecologists lack an experimental framework to identify which mechanisms are dominant in a given invasion scenario. Plant-soil feedbacks (PSFs) are one such mechanism that tend to initially facilitate, but over time attenuate, invasive species’...