• Home
  • Research
  • People
  • Publications
  • Opportunities
  • Cicadas
  • Contact

The Lau Lab

Community Ecology and Evolutionary Ecology

Effects of enemies on Exotic vs Native Plant Species

December 2, 2014 by Jen Lau

wheatThe Enemy Release Hypothesis (sensu Elton) is one of the key hypotheses explaining the success of invasive species. If invasives commonly escape their enemies and if this enemy release is responsible for their dominance over natives, then excluding enemies may help level the playing field and increase native plant abundance. We established long-term enemy exclosures in swamps, old fields, forests, and restored grasslands to test how enemies influence the relative abundance of native vs. exotic plant species.Many of these exclosures were constructed in public areas and Dave Williams (Lawton High School) is currently developing signage and activities for citizen scientists of all ages to engage in their own data collection on a subset of our plots.

Filed Under: Research

  • « Previous Page
  • 1
  • 2

Search

Lab Updates

May 15, 2021

Mackenzie Caple and Guillaume Dury just received funding from the IU RTP to study the effects of the Cicada emergence on mutualisms and plant evolution.

April 15, 2021

Congratulations to Emma Boehm for receiving the NSF GRFP.

January 8, 2021

Lana Bolin  received funding from the IU Environmental Resilience Institute to start a cool new program introducing community college students to ecological research.

September 1, 2017

Lana Bolin and Elizabeth Yablon are new first year students in the Lau Lab.  Welcome to MSU!

More Updates...

© Copyright 2021 Jennifer Lau · All Rights Reserved