20 results on '"Reijers, Valérie C."'
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2. Habitat modification by marram grass negatively affects recruitment of conspecifics
3. Extreme heat and drought did not affect interspecific interactions between dune grasses
4. Scale-dependent interactions in coastal biogeomorphic landscapes: Pioneer both inhibits and facilitates primary foredune builder across spatial scales
5. Sand nourishment for multifunctional coastal climate adaptation: three key implications for researchers
6. Birds influence vegetation coverage and structure on sandy biogeomorphic islands in the Dutch Wadden Sea
7. Are Ecosystem Engineering Traits Fixed or Flexible: A Study on Clonal Expansion Strategies in Co-occurring Dune Grasses
8. Initiating and upscaling mussel reef establishment with life cycle informed restoration: Successes and future challenges
9. Herbivore exclusion and active planting stimulate reed marsh development on a newly constructed archipelago
10. On the use of large-scale biodegradable artificial reefs for intertidal foreshore stabilization
11. Resilience of beach grasses along a biogeomorphic successive gradient : resource availability vs. clonal integration
12. Loss of spatial structure after temporary herbivore absence in a high-productivity reed marsh
13. Co‐occurring intertidal ecosystem engineers with opposing growth strategies show opposite responses to environmental gradients during establishment.
14. Mutual facilitation between foundation species Mytilus edulis and Lanice conchilega promotes habitat heterogeneity on tidal flats.
15. A Lévy expansion strategy optimizes early dune building by beach grasses
16. Establishing cordgrass plants cluster their shoots to avoid ecosystem engineering.
17. Biodegradable artificial reefs enhance food web complexity and biodiversity in an intertidal soft‐sediment ecosystem.
18. Sediment availability provokes a shift from Brownian to Lévy‐like clonal expansion in a dune building grass.
19. Intraspecific facilitation explains the persistence of Phragmites australis in modified coastal wetlands.
20. Loss of spatial structure after temporary herbivore absence in a high‐productivity reed marsh.
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