wetland-ecology
Wetland ecology examines plant and organism interactions in water-saturated ecosystems, focusing on how species develop specialized physiological and morphological adaptations to survive anaerobic soil conditions and fluctuating water levels. This field is essential to plant science because it reveals fundamental mechanisms of plant stress tolerance and plays a critical role in understanding biogeochemical cycling, carbon sequestration, and the ecosystem services these environments provide.
Habitat-specific trends in taxonomic, functional, and phylogenetic ...
The wildflowers and rushes in your nearest bog or wetland park are disappearing fastest, replaced...
Iron plaque on wetland plant roots serves as a hotspot at the rhizo...
Wetland plants growing along the edges of ponds, rivers, and constructed water-treatment marshes ...
Comprehensive evaluation of enrofloxacin removal and toxicokinetic ...
Waterways near farms — and the parks, wetlands, and drinking water sources downstream — are quiet...
Phragmites australis and Scirpus holoschoenus for metal(loid)s poll...
Wetland plants growing along contaminated streams or drainage ditches near old industrial sites a...
A novel nursery pollination mutualism between a water primrose and ...
Weevils — those small, snout-nosed beetles most gardeners curse — turn out to be secret pollinati...
Combined physiological, transcriptomic, and metabolomic analyses re...
Lead-contaminated wetlands and waterways border parks, neighborhoods, and farms worldwide, and un...
Carbon-fixing bacteria and sediment organic carbon response to the ...
Coastal mangrove forests lock away carbon at rates far exceeding most terrestrial forests, and un...
Mechanisms of AMF in regulating Cd contamination remediation and rh...
Wetland plants growing near industrial sites or polluted waterways could clean up toxic heavy met...
Trending: western skunk cabbage (Lysichiton americanus) — 128 obser...
Western skunk cabbage is one of the first plants to emerge each spring — often pushing through sn...
Sediment physicochemical and dissolved organic matter control micro...
The same cordgrass takeovers reshaping salt marshes along the Atlantic and Gulf coasts are quietl...
Aquatic plants.
The pond, marsh, or stream near your favorite walking trail depends on aquatic plants to stay cle...
Abiotic Methane Production Driven by Soil Reactive Oxygen Species.
Draining and reflooding your garden pond or a nearby restored wetland may be releasing more metha...
Effects of Chromium Species on Root Morphometry of Typha domingensi...
Floating plant rafts planted with cattails are being used to clean up chromium-contaminated water...
Trending: western skunk cabbage (Lysichiton americanus) — 138 obser...
Western skunk cabbage is a key early-spring indicator species — if you walk near wetlands or stre...
Kandelia obovata afforestation enhances coastal soil quality over S...
Coastal wetlands restored with native mangroves are the living seawalls that buffer the shoreline...
Potential role of anaerobic plant-associated bacteria in naphthenic...
Constructed wetlands — the same reed-and-sedge systems used in stormwater gardens and ecological ...
marsh calla (Calla palustris) observed in South Bristol, ME, US
Marsh calla is one of the few native aquatic aroids you can grow at the edge of a backyard pond —...
purple pitcher plant (Sarracenia purpurea) observed in Halifax, NS, CA
Carnivorous bog plants like the purple pitcher plant are sensitive indicators of wetland health, ...
western skunk cabbage (Lysichiton americanus) observed in Bella Bel...
Western skunk cabbage is one of the first plants to bloom each spring in Pacific Northwest wetlan...
bristle thistle (Cirsium horridulum) observed in Boy Scout Road Boa...
Bristle thistle is a native wildflower that supports specialist bees, goldfinches, and monarch bu...
Canada1Water: Hydraulic parametrized integrated soil, bedrock and p...
Understanding how water moves through soil and peat directly affects the health of every plant, w...