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AbstractFull Text

Despite Hawaii's reputation as an extinction icon, significant biological resources remain, especially in watersheds, natural areas, and specialized edaphic sites (e.g., lava dry forest, coastal). While direct habitat destruction by humans continues, human-facilitated biological invaders are...

Author(s)
Medeiros, A. C.; Loope, L. L.
Publisher
USDA Forest Service, Pacific Southwest Research Station, Institute of Pacific Islands Forestry, Hilo, USA
Citation
Proceedings of the XIII International Symposium on Biological Control of Weeds, Waikoloa, Hawaii, USA, 11-16 September, 2011, 2013, pp 206-210
Abstract

Most rust fungi are highly host specific, but Puccina psidii has an extremely broad host range within Myrtaceae and gained notoriety with a host jump in its native Brazil from common guava (Psidium guajava) to commercial Eucalyptus plantations. When detected in Hawai'i in April 2005, the first...

Author(s)
Loope, L. L.; Uchida, J. Y.
Publisher
University of Hawaii Press, Honolulu, USA
Citation
Pacific Science, 2012, 66, 2, pp 127-139
Abstract

Aim: Many Australian Acacia species have been planted around the world, some are highly valued, some are invasive, and some are both highly valued and invasive. We review global efforts to minimize the risk and limit the impact of invasions in this widely used plant group. Location: Global....

Author(s)
Wilson, J. R. U.; Gairifo, C.; Gibson, M. R.; Arianoutsou, M.; Bakar, B. B.; Baret, S.; Celesti-Grapow, L.; DiTomaso, J. M.; Dufour-Dror, J. M.; Kueffer, C.; Kull, C. A.; Hoffmann, J. H.; Impson, F. A. C.; Loope, L. L.; Marchante, E.; Marchante, H.; Moore, J. L.; Murphy, D. J.; Tassin, J.; Witt, A.; Zenni, R. D.; Richardson, D. M.
Publisher
Wiley-Blackwell, Oxford, UK
Citation
Diversity and Distributions, 2011, 17, 5, pp 1030-1046
Abstract

Mountains are one of few ecosystems little affected by plant invasions. However, the threat of invasion is likely to increase because of climate change, greater anthropogenic land use, and continuing novel introductions. Preventive management, therefore, will be crucial but can be difficult to...

Author(s)
McDougall, K. L.; Khuroo, A. A.; Loope, L. L.; Parks, C. G.; Pauchard, A.; Reshi, Z. A.; Rushworth, I.; Kueffer, C.
Publisher
International Mountain Society (IMS), Berne, Switzerland
Citation
Mountain Research and Development, 2011, 31, 4, pp 380-387
Abstract

Increasingly recognized as having significant economic and ecological impacts, non-native invasive species have become an important interdisciplinary topic in biological and social science courses. Oceanic island systems like Hawaii have been particularly susceptible to invaders and efforts to...

Author(s)
Fox, A. M.; Loope, L. L.
Publisher
American Society of Agronomy, Madison, USA
Citation
Journal of Natural Resources and Life Sciences Education, 2007, 36, pp 147-157
Abstract

Cloud water can be a significant hydrologic input to mountain forests. Because it is a precipitation source that is vulnerable to climate change, it is important to quantify amounts of cloud water input at watershed and regional scales. During this study, cloud water and rain samples were collected ...

Author(s)
Scholl, M. A.; Giambelluca, T. W.; Gingerich, S. B.; Nullet, M. A.; Loope, L. L.
Publisher
American Geophysical Union, Washington, USA
Citation
Water Resources Research, 2007, 43, 12, pp w12411
Abstract

A Neotropical rust of the Myrtaceae, Puccinia psidii, was described from guava in Brazil in 1884. It was first discovered in Hawaii, USA, on potted Metrosideros polymorpha on Oahu in April 2005 with pathogenicity and identity established. It spread quickly, and by January 2006, severe outbreaks of...

Author(s)
Uchida, J. Y.; Loope, L. L.
Publisher
American Phytopathological Society (APS Press), St. Paul, USA
Citation
Plant Disease, 2009, 93, 4, pp 429
Abstract

Limiting dispersal is a fundamental strategy in the control of invasive species, and in certain situations containment of incipient populations may be an important management technique. To test the feasibility of slowing the rapid spread of two Argentine ant (Linepithema humile) supercolonies in...

Author(s)
Krushelnycky, P. D.; Loope, L. L.; Joe, S. M.
Citation
Biological Invasions, 2004, 6, 1, pp 47-57
Abstract

Analysis of long-term patterns of invasion can reveal the importance of abiotic factors in influencing invasion dynamics, and can help predict future patterns of spread. In the case of the invasive Argentine ant (Linepithema humile), most prior studies have investigated this species' limitations in ...

Author(s)
Krushelnycky, P. D.; Joe, S. M.; Medeiros, A. C.; Daehler, C. C.; Loope, L. L.
Publisher
Blackwell Publishing, Oxford, UK
Citation
Diversity and Distributions, 2005, 11, 4, pp 319-331
Abstract

The introduction of bamboo (Bambusa spp. and Dendrocalamus strictus) to the montane rain forests of the Luquillo Mountains, Puerto Rico, in the 1930s and 1940s has led to present-day bamboo monocultures in numerous riparian areas. When a non-native species invades a riparian ecosystem, in-stream...

Author(s)
O'Connor, P. J.; Covich, A. P.; Scatena, F. N.; Loope, L. L.
Citation
Journal of Tropical Ecology, 2000, 16, 4, pp 499-516

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