Results 11 to 20 of about 3,675 (122)
Biological Flora of Britain and Ireland: Geranium pratense
Geranium pratense is a widespread plant in Great Britain but is scarce in Ireland. It is primarily a lowland species where it is characteristic of dry or moist neutral grasslands, especially on ungrazed road verges and the margins of watercourses. The long‐term trend in its British and Irish distribution between 1930 and 2019 is classified as stable ...
Richard G. Jefferson +6 more
wiley +1 more source
On Rooting Religious Studies: The Metaphysical Proposal of René Guénon
Abstract The present article problematizes current dominating approaches to method and theory in the study of religion by pointing to their inapplicability to theorists working outside secular worldviews. The first section of this article introduces decolonialist narratives by touching on important topics which are subsumed within larger discussions ...
Noah H. Taj
wiley +1 more source
Deep reticulation: the long legacy of hybridization in vascular plant evolution
SUMMARY Hybridization has long been recognized as a fundamental evolutionary process in plants but, until recently, our understanding of its phylogenetic distribution and biological significance across deep evolutionary scales has been largely obscure. Over the past decade, genomic and phylogenomic datasets have revealed, perhaps not surprisingly, that
Gregory W. Stull +3 more
wiley +1 more source
ABSTRACT Japanese knotweed sensu lato is a group of invasive plants, including Reynoutria japonica (var. japonica, var. compacta), R. sachalinensis, R. × bohemica, F2s and any backcrosses. Outside of its native East Asia, Japanese knotweed s.l. is an intractable weed, spreading by massive clonal reproduction, and causing significant ecological damage ...
Stuart D. Desjardins +2 more
wiley +1 more source
Field evaluation of weed suppression in fine fescue (Festuca spp.)
Abstract Weed suppression has been observed in the fine fescues, a group of low‐input turfgrasses. Of the fine fescues, Chewings fescue (Festuca rubra L. ssp. commutata Gaudin; CH) and strong creeping red fescue (F. rubra L. ssp. rubra Gaudin; ST) displayed the strongest weed suppression ability in previous research while hard fescue (F.
Florence Breuillin‐Sessoms +5 more
wiley +1 more source
Biological Flora of the British Isles: Crataegus monogyna
Crataegus monogyna is a shrub or small tree native to almost the whole of Britain, and to Europe generally excepting its northern and southern margins. Hawthorn has a wide ecological range and is an important component of hedges. It can colonize derelict or abandoned arable land forming dense scrub and thicket.
André Fichtner, Volker Wissemann
wiley +1 more source
UEG Week 2025 Moderated Posters [PDF]
United European Gastroenterology Journal, Volume 13, Issue S8, Page S189-S802, October 2025.
europepmc +2 more sources
Abstract It is time to synthesize the knowledge that has been generated through more than 260 years of botanical exploration, taxonomic and, more recently, phylogenetic research throughout the world. The adoption of an updated Global Strategy for Plant Conservation (GSPC) in 2011 provided the essential impetus for the development of the World Flora ...
Thomas Borsch +36 more
wiley +1 more source
International Biological Flora: Tsuga canadensis*
Eastern Hemlock is a long‐lived forest tree of eastern North America known for its deep shade and home given to many organisms. Despite surviving large‐scale clearing for agriculture when Europeans arrived, it returned to dominate when the land was abandoned in the mid 1800s.
Peter A. Thomas, David A. Orwig
wiley +1 more source
The charge and proton dynamics in hydrogen-bonded networks are investigated using ammonia as a model system. The fragmentation dynamics of medium-sized clusters (1-2 nm) upon single photon multi-ionization is studied, by analyzing the momenta of small ...
Gisselbrecht, Mathieu +6 more
core +1 more source

