For Ambrosia psilostachya, Baptisia australis,
Solidago canadensis, and Vernonia baldwinii, most measures of size and sexual reproduction were significantly greater in bison-grazed habitats while vegetative reproduction was not reduced in bison-grazed habitats.
bicolor; (2)
Solidago canadensis (gi|3914998|sp|O04996.3|); (3) Helianthus annuus (gi|50978416|emb|CAH06454.1|); (4) Mikania micrantha (gi|269856434|gb|ACZ51444.1|); (5) Ricinus communis (gi|255542450| ref|XP_002512288.1|); (6) Erythranthe guttata (gi|848852837|ref|XP_012841088.1|); (7) Olea europaea (gi|160962549|gb|ABX54845.1|); (8) Melastoma malabathricum (gi|295979335|dbj|BAJ07302.1|); (9) Knorringia sibirica (gi|259016718|gb|ACV89347.1|); (10) Populus trichocarpa (gi|566169463|ref|XP_006382702.1|); (11) Salix matsudana (gi|747192169|gb|AJE26130.1|); (12) Ipomoea batatas (gi|427199298| gb|AFY26880.1|); (13) Solanum lycopersicum (gi|902763183|ref|NP_001234031.2|).
Influence of the prey aphid Uroleucon nigrotuberculatum parasitizing
Solidago canadensis on the larval and adult survivorship of the predatory ladybird beetle Harmonia axyridis Ecological Research 26: 471-476.
maculosa Annual forb Grassland -USA Alliaria petiolata Biennial herb Hardwood Forest, North America Oenothera panciniata Annual herb Coastal sand dune-Japan Sapium sebiferum Perennial tree Hyric forest-USA
Solidago canadensis Perennial herb Chongming Island, China.
X Senecio conterminus Greene(1) X Silene repens Patrin
Solidago canadensis L var.
The integration of neighbourhood effects by clonal genets in
Solidago canadensis. Journal of Ecology 73:415-427.
The effects of stem gall insects on life history patterns in
Solidago canadensis. Ecology 60:910-917.
Solidago canadensis, Euthamia leptocephala, and Tripsacum dactyloides were the dominants in the four-year area.
For example, Eurosta solidaginis Fitch (Diptera: Tephritidae), a native North American gallmaker, is primarily associated with two species of goldenrod in the
Solidago canadensis complex, S.
The most frequently observed species were Poa pratensis (61.5%), Daucus carota (47.9%),
Solidago canadensis (42.5%), and Promus inermis (38.7%).
The regulation of leaf, ramet and genet densities in experimental populations of the rhizomatous perennial
Solidago canadensis. J.
Bowers (1993), experimenting with exclosures that admitted animals of various sizes, found that mammals had no measurable impact on the performance of a closely related goldenrod,
Solidago canadensis, in an old field in Virginia.