2014
DOI: 10.3398/064.074.0119
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Ecological Adaptation of the EndemicShepherdia rotundifoliato Conditions in Its Colorado Plateau Range

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Cited by 3 publications
(7 citation statements)
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“…Collectively, our data provide a first genetic, morphological, and physiological assessment of the landscape potential to the hybrid S. rotundifolia • S. argentea in the context of the wildland parents (Sriladda et al, 2014). While AFLP genetics within each taxon were heterogeneous, the hybrids expressed traits clearly intermediate between genetic variability of the two parents.…”
Section: Resultsmentioning
confidence: 80%
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“…Collectively, our data provide a first genetic, morphological, and physiological assessment of the landscape potential to the hybrid S. rotundifolia • S. argentea in the context of the wildland parents (Sriladda et al, 2014). While AFLP genetics within each taxon were heterogeneous, the hybrids expressed traits clearly intermediate between genetic variability of the two parents.…”
Section: Resultsmentioning
confidence: 80%
“…The genus Shepherdia (Elaeagnaceae) contains S. rotundifolia Parry, common name roundleaf buffaloberry, a shrub endemic to the IMW Colorado Plateau in southeast Utah and northern Arizona (USDA, 2012). Shepherdia rotundifolia is dioecious (Nelson, 1935), naturally occurring on very well drained, arid hillside slopes and canyons (Sriladda et al, 2014). This species has desirable aesthetic and practical traits, including extreme drought tolerance and evergreen, revolute, silver-blue (glaucous) foliage forming multiple clusters of attractive rosettes in a nearly perfect hemispherical crown form (Sriladda et al, 2014).…”
mentioning
confidence: 99%
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“…However, previous studies associated with actinorhizal plant nodulation have focused on A. maritima in the eastern United States (Beddes and Kratsch, 2010;Laws and Graves, 2005), and few studies have investigated the nodulation of Shepherdia. Because of different soil chemical and physical properties in the U.S. Intermountain West (Heaton and Koenig, 2010;Sriladda et al, 2014), characteristics of Shepherdia nodulation might be different from Alnus. Frankia strains in the nodules of S. Âutahensis might be similar to those in nodules of its parents, S. argentea and S. rotundifolia.…”
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confidence: 99%
“…Shepherdia argentea (silver buffaloberry) and Shepherdia rotundifolia (roundleaf buffaloberry) are both native plants in the Intermountain West (Mee et al, 2003). Shepherdia rotundifolia is an evergreen shrub with a tidy, rounded form and outstanding drought tolerance, but it is highly sensitive to excessive landscape irrigation (Sriladda, 2011;Sriladda et al, 2014). However, S. argentea is a fastgrowing, deciduous shrub that adapts to a wide range of soil conditions, but it is less aesthetically acceptable due to its thorny and unkempt appearance (Sriladda et al, 2016).…”
mentioning
confidence: 99%