Jaol wrote:Autumn Olive?
[img]http://i.imgur.com/DYwwqNF.jpg[/img]
Jaol wrote:Autumn Olive?
[img]http://i.imgur.com/DYwwqNF.jpg[/img]
He might've just looked on your User Gallery page...John Richardsim wrote:Jaol wrote:Autumn Olive?Your turn.[img]http://i.imgur.com/DYwwqNF.jpg[/img]
Not sure what the "main" difference is but I know that elk thistle and other native thistles will often be seen grazed on by native wildlife, while native thistles will not.Jaol wrote:What is the differentiation between the main native Elk Thistle and invasive Musk thistle?
1. How was it introduced to the U.S and where is it native from? 2. Name words for how it reproduces (oviparous, etc.). 3. How does it spread (bait, aquacultural purposes)? 4. What is its diet? How does it impact the species in its ecosystem (directly or indirectly)? How does it impact humans?
superpenguin666 wrote:=mrc&uact=8
1. How was it introduced to the U.S and where is it native from? 2. Name words for how it reproduces (oviparous, etc.). 3. How does it spread (bait, aquacultural purposes)? 4. What is its diet? How does it impact the species in its ecosystem (directly or indirectly)? How does it impact humans?
1. Ballast water. It's native to the Caspian Sea, Azov Sea, and a few more seas 2.parthenogenesis, sexually and asexually 3. attaches to fishing lines, downrigger cables and also spreads through bait buckets, livewells, etc. 4. it consumes various zooplankton, competes with planktivorous invertebrates and vertebrates for food and causes economic losses at fish farms
Correct for every single one! Your turn (and at least it was answeredJasperKota wrote:superpenguin666 wrote:=mrc&uact=8
1. How was it introduced to the U.S and where is it native from? 2. Name words for how it reproduces (oviparous, etc.). 3. How does it spread (bait, aquacultural purposes)? 4. What is its diet? How does it impact the species in its ecosystem (directly or indirectly)? How does it impact humans?1. Ballast water. It's native to the Caspian Sea, Azov Sea, and a few more seas 2.parthenogenesis, sexually and asexually 3. attaches to fishing lines, downrigger cables and also spreads through bait buckets, livewells, etc. 4. it consumes various zooplankton, competes with planktivorous invertebrates and vertebrates for food and causes economic losses at fish farms
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