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- 4From:PLoS ONE (Vol. 14, Issue 12) Peer-ReviewedThe widely accepted "endozoochory syndrome" is assigned to angiosperm diaspores with a fleshy, attractive tissue and implies the existence of adaptations for protection against digestion during gut passage. This syndrome...
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- 6From:Plant Ecology (Vol. 222, Issue 7) Peer-ReviewedPost-dispersal seed predation is a key process regulating plant population dynamics and community composition. Because food preference (i.e., seed species selection) can interact with habitat features such as vegetation...
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- 11From:PLoS ONE (Vol. 14, Issue 10) Peer-ReviewedDung beetles are secondary seed dispersers, incidentally moving many of the seeds defecated by mammals vertically (seed burial) and/or horizontally as they process and relocate dung. Although several studies have...
- 12From:PeerJ (Vol. 3) Peer-ReviewedOne of the possible consequences of biological invasions is the decrease of native species abundances or their replacement by non-native species. In Andean Patagonia, southern Argentina and Chile, many non-native...
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- 17From:PLoS ONE (Vol. 15, Issue 6) Peer-ReviewedCuscuta (dodders) is a group of parasitic plants with tremendous economic and ecological significance. Their seeds are often described as "simple" or "unspecialized" because they do not exhibit any classical dispersal...
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- 20From:Systematic Botany (Vol. 37, Issue 1) Peer-ReviewedAuthor(s): Guillermo C. Amico (corresponding author) [1], Romina Vidal-Russell [1], Miguel A. Garcia [2], Daniel L. Nickrent [3] Loranthaceae includes approximately 73 genera and 915 species (Nickrent et al. 2010),...