Diane Larson, PhD (Former Employee)
Science and Products
Filter Total Items: 72
Leafy spurge (Euphorbia esula) affects vegetation more than seed banks in mixed-grass prairies of the Northern Great Plains Leafy spurge (Euphorbia esula) affects vegetation more than seed banks in mixed-grass prairies of the Northern Great Plains
Exotic plants have the ability to modify soil seed banks in habitats they invade, but little is known about the legacy of invasion on seed banks once an exotic plant has successfully been controlled. Natural areas previously invaded by leafy spurge in the northern Great Plains typically have one of two fates following its removal: a return of native plants, or a secondary invasion of...
Authors
Diane L. Larson, Dustin F. Haines, Jennifer L. Larson
Tallgrass prairie restoration: seeding for success Tallgrass prairie restoration: seeding for success
Tallgrass prairie is one of the most imperiled ecosystems on Earth. A 2004 estimate indicated that only 2.4 percent of the original northern tallgrass prairie remained in the United States. If tallgrass prairie and the species dependent on it are to survive, management must include restoration of cropland and degraded prairies, in addition to preservation of the few remaining fragments...
Authors
Diane L. Larson
Using prairie restoration to curtail invasion of Canada thistle: the importance of limiting similarity and seed mix richness Using prairie restoration to curtail invasion of Canada thistle: the importance of limiting similarity and seed mix richness
Theory has predicted, and many experimental studies have confirmed, that resident plant species richness is inversely related to invisibility. Likewise, potential invaders that are functionally similar to resident plant species are less likely to invade than are those from different functional groups. Neither of these ideas has been tested in the context of an operational prairie...
Authors
Diane L. Larson, J.B. Bright, Pauline Drobney, Jennifer L. Larson, Nicholas Palaia, Paul A. Rabie, Sara Vacek, Douglas Wells
Soil-occupancy effects of invasive and native grassland plant species on composition and diversity of mycorrhizal associations Soil-occupancy effects of invasive and native grassland plant species on composition and diversity of mycorrhizal associations
Diversified grasslands that contain native plant species can produce biofuels, support sustainable grazing systems, and produce other ecosystem services. However, ecosystem service production can be disrupted by invasion of exotic perennial plants, and these plants can have soil-microbial “legacies” that may interfere with establishment and maintenance of diversified grasslands even...
Authors
Nicholas R. Jordan, Laura Aldrich-Wolfe, Sheri C. Huerd, Diane L. Larson, Gary Muehlbauer
Book review: The Tallgrass Prairie Center guide to seed and seedling identification in the Upper Midwest Book review: The Tallgrass Prairie Center guide to seed and seedling identification in the Upper Midwest
This attractive, slim volume provides a wonderful introduction to a neglected aspect of prairie plant identification: seeds and seedlings. Williams, and the illustrator Brent Butler, take the mystery out of dichotomous keys with clear descriptions, vivid illustrations, and abundant photographs of characteristics that distinguish common, tallgrass prairie, seedlings. A botanical novice...
Authors
Diane L. Larson, Susan M. Galatowitsch
Native and European haplotypes of Phragmites Australis (common reed) in the central Platte River, Nebraska Native and European haplotypes of Phragmites Australis (common reed) in the central Platte River, Nebraska
Phragmites australis (common reed) is known to have occurred along the Platte River historically, but recent rapid increases in both distribution and density have begun to impact habitat for migrating sandhill cranes and nesting piping plovers and least terns. Invasiveness in Phragmites has been associated with the incursion of a European genotype (haplotype M) in other areas...
Authors
D.L. Larson, S.M. Galatowitsch, J.L. Larson
Science and Products
Filter Total Items: 72
Leafy spurge (Euphorbia esula) affects vegetation more than seed banks in mixed-grass prairies of the Northern Great Plains Leafy spurge (Euphorbia esula) affects vegetation more than seed banks in mixed-grass prairies of the Northern Great Plains
Exotic plants have the ability to modify soil seed banks in habitats they invade, but little is known about the legacy of invasion on seed banks once an exotic plant has successfully been controlled. Natural areas previously invaded by leafy spurge in the northern Great Plains typically have one of two fates following its removal: a return of native plants, or a secondary invasion of...
Authors
Diane L. Larson, Dustin F. Haines, Jennifer L. Larson
Tallgrass prairie restoration: seeding for success Tallgrass prairie restoration: seeding for success
Tallgrass prairie is one of the most imperiled ecosystems on Earth. A 2004 estimate indicated that only 2.4 percent of the original northern tallgrass prairie remained in the United States. If tallgrass prairie and the species dependent on it are to survive, management must include restoration of cropland and degraded prairies, in addition to preservation of the few remaining fragments...
Authors
Diane L. Larson
Using prairie restoration to curtail invasion of Canada thistle: the importance of limiting similarity and seed mix richness Using prairie restoration to curtail invasion of Canada thistle: the importance of limiting similarity and seed mix richness
Theory has predicted, and many experimental studies have confirmed, that resident plant species richness is inversely related to invisibility. Likewise, potential invaders that are functionally similar to resident plant species are less likely to invade than are those from different functional groups. Neither of these ideas has been tested in the context of an operational prairie...
Authors
Diane L. Larson, J.B. Bright, Pauline Drobney, Jennifer L. Larson, Nicholas Palaia, Paul A. Rabie, Sara Vacek, Douglas Wells
Soil-occupancy effects of invasive and native grassland plant species on composition and diversity of mycorrhizal associations Soil-occupancy effects of invasive and native grassland plant species on composition and diversity of mycorrhizal associations
Diversified grasslands that contain native plant species can produce biofuels, support sustainable grazing systems, and produce other ecosystem services. However, ecosystem service production can be disrupted by invasion of exotic perennial plants, and these plants can have soil-microbial “legacies” that may interfere with establishment and maintenance of diversified grasslands even...
Authors
Nicholas R. Jordan, Laura Aldrich-Wolfe, Sheri C. Huerd, Diane L. Larson, Gary Muehlbauer
Book review: The Tallgrass Prairie Center guide to seed and seedling identification in the Upper Midwest Book review: The Tallgrass Prairie Center guide to seed and seedling identification in the Upper Midwest
This attractive, slim volume provides a wonderful introduction to a neglected aspect of prairie plant identification: seeds and seedlings. Williams, and the illustrator Brent Butler, take the mystery out of dichotomous keys with clear descriptions, vivid illustrations, and abundant photographs of characteristics that distinguish common, tallgrass prairie, seedlings. A botanical novice...
Authors
Diane L. Larson, Susan M. Galatowitsch
Native and European haplotypes of Phragmites Australis (common reed) in the central Platte River, Nebraska Native and European haplotypes of Phragmites Australis (common reed) in the central Platte River, Nebraska
Phragmites australis (common reed) is known to have occurred along the Platte River historically, but recent rapid increases in both distribution and density have begun to impact habitat for migrating sandhill cranes and nesting piping plovers and least terns. Invasiveness in Phragmites has been associated with the incursion of a European genotype (haplotype M) in other areas...
Authors
D.L. Larson, S.M. Galatowitsch, J.L. Larson
*Disclaimer: Listing outside positions with professional scientific organizations on this Staff Profile are for informational purposes only and do not constitute an endorsement of those professional scientific organizations or their activities by the USGS, Department of the Interior, or U.S. Government