Ecological consequences of tidal management for the salt-marsh vegetation
- 1 January 1985
- book chapter
- Published by Springer Nature
Abstract
No abstract availableKeywords
This publication has 17 references indexed in Scilit:
- Tidal Management: Consequences for the Salt-Marsh Vegetation1Water Science & Technology, 1984
- A comparison of the effect of artificial tidal action on the growth and protein nitrogen content of Salicornia stricta Dumort. and Salicornia ramosissima WoodsAquatic Botany, 1976
- Chemistry of submerged soils and growth and yield of ricePlant and Soil, 1973
- Physiologische Ökologie: Ein Vergleich der Anpassung von Pflanzen und Tieren an sauerstoffarme Umgebung1)1)Die Untersuchungen wurden dankenswerterweise durch ein Stipendium des Agricultural Research Council unterstützt.Flora, 1972
- Comparative Studies of Plant Growth and Distribution in Relation to Waterlogging: IV. The Growth of Dune and Dune Slack PlantsJournal of Ecology, 1971
- The Structure of the Species Populations in the Initial Stages of Salt-Marsh SuccessionJournal of Ecology, 1971
- The Shapes and Sizes of SeedsAnnual Review of Ecology and Systematics, 1970
- Organic Acid Metabolism in Relation to Flooding Tolerance in RootsJournal of Ecology, 1969
- Some Field Observations Relating the Growth of Bog Plants to Conditions of Soil AerationJournal of Ecology, 1967
- Factors Influencing Vascular Plant Zonation in North Carolina Salt MarshesEcology, 1963