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Research ArticleRestoration Notes

Resurgence of Native Plants after Removal of Amur Honeysuckle from Bender Mountain Preserve, Ohio

Denis Conover and Tim Sisson
Ecological Restoration, September 2016, 34 (3) 187-190; DOI: https://doi.org/10.3368/er.34.3.187
Denis Conover
Corresponding author: University of Cincinnati, Department of Biological Sciences, P.O. Box 210006 Cincinnati, OH 45221-0006,
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Tim Sisson
Western Wildlife Corridor, 956 Anderson Ferry Road, Cincinnati, OH, 45238.
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Ecological Restoration: 34 (3)
Ecological Restoration
Vol. 34, Issue 3
1 Sep 2016
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Resurgence of Native Plants after Removal of Amur Honeysuckle from Bender Mountain Preserve, Ohio
Denis Conover, Tim Sisson
Ecological Restoration Sep 2016, 34 (3) 187-190; DOI: 10.3368/er.34.3.187

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Resurgence of Native Plants after Removal of Amur Honeysuckle from Bender Mountain Preserve, Ohio
Denis Conover, Tim Sisson
Ecological Restoration Sep 2016, 34 (3) 187-190; DOI: 10.3368/er.34.3.187
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Cited By...

  • Evidence for an Arboretum as a Point Source of Exotic Invasive Plants in Cincinnati, Ohio
  • The Rise of Non-Native Invasive Plants in Wooded Natural Areas in Southwestern Ohio
  • Detecting Invasive Amur Honeysuckle in Urban Green Spaces of Cincinnati, Ohio Using Landsat-8 NDVI Difference Images
  • Honoring the Ecological Legacy of the Braun Sisters with Grave Site Restoration Plantings (Spring Grove Cemetery, Ohio)
  • Foliar Spraying with Glyphosate Kills Invasive Five-leaf Aralia in a Wooded Natural Area (Ohio)
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