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An Evaluation of Arthropod Assemblages in Great Salt Lake Wetland Habitats: Differences Between Native and Invasive Vegetation and Implications for Restoration

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Title An Evaluation of Arthropod Assemblages in Great Salt Lake Wetland Habitats: Differences Between Native and Invasive Vegetation and Implications for Restoration
Creator Leonard, Emily E.
Description Wetlands provide important habitat for various birds. Invasive plants can disrupt wetland food webs by altering the arthropod assemblages (invertebrate animals such as spiders, mites, insects, centipedes, and millipedes) on which these birds rely. However, differences between the wetland arthropods found in invasive vs. native vegetation are poorly defined. Wetlands are often managed for the creation of bird habitat through invasive species removal and native plant revegetation, yet few...
Date 2020-05-01T07:00:00Z
Type text
Format application/pdf
Identifier https://digitalcommons.usu.edu/etd/7773 info:doi/10.26076/gry0-5d87 https://digitalcommons.usu.edu/context/etd/article/8915/viewcontent/WATSetd2020May_Leonard_Emily.pdf
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Source All Graduate Theses and Dissertations, Spring 1920 to Summer 2023
Publisher DigitalCommons@USU
Subject Arthropod Wetland Restoration Invasive Ecology and Evolutionary Biology

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