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Examples
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'' Eriophorum '' species exhibited even more dramatic interannual variation in flowering than '' Carex '' species, but there was no simple correlation with weather in the flowering year or the previous year [43].
Phenotypic responses of arctic species to changes in climate and ultraviolet-B radiation 2009
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Significance of sequential leaf development for nutrient balance of the cotton sedge, Eriophorum vaginatum L. Oecologia, 67: 511 – 518.
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The first experiment that manipulated CO2 in the Arctic concluded that elevated CO2 concentrations had no long-term effects because photosynthetic acclimation (i.e., down-regulation, the physiological adjustment of photosynthetic rate so that no differences are found between plants grown at ambient and elevated CO2 levels) in cottongrass ( '' Eriophorum vaginatum '') was apparent within three weeks and biomass did not increase.
Phenotypic responses of arctic species to changes in climate and ultraviolet-B radiation 2009
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Growth and flowering in '' Eriophorum vaginatum '': Annual and latitudinal variation.
Phenotypic responses of arctic species to changes in climate and ultraviolet-B radiation 2009
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Response of Eriophorum vaginatum to elevated CO2 and temperature in the Alaskan tussock tundra.
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Some of these (e.g., the moss Hylocomium splendens and the sedges Eriophorum angustifolium and E. vaginatum) are important dominants within the Arctic.
Implications of current species distributions for future biotic change in the Arctic 2009
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Effects of removal of neighboring species on growth, nutrients, and microclimate of Eriophorum vaginatum.
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Controls on seed production and seed germinability in Eriophorum vaginatum.
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Mean seasonal methane emissions from a high-arctic fen in Zackenberg, northeast Greenland, as a function of leaf biomass of the grasses Eriophorum scheuchzeri, Dupontia psilosantha, and Carex subspathacea, and total leaf biomass of the three species [5].
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Significance of sequential leaf development for nutrient balance of the cotton sedge, Eriophorum vaginatum L. Oecologia, 67: 511 – 518.
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