Alison N. Hale, Ph.D.

Affiliations: 
Biological Sciences University of Pittsburgh, Pittsburgh, PA, United States 
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"Alison Hale"

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Susan Kalisz grad student 2012 University of Pittsburgh
 (An empirical test of the mutualism disruption hypothesis: Impacts of an allelopathic invader on the ecophysiology of a native forest herb.)
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Publications

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Hale AN, Lapointe L, Kalisz S. (2015) Invader disruption of belowground plant mutualisms reduces carbon acquisition and alters allocation patterns in a native forest herb. The New Phytologist
Martine CT, Hale AN. (2015) Parasitism disruption a likely consequence of belowground war waged by exotic plant invader. American Journal of Botany. 102: 327-8
Brouwer NL, Hale AN, Kalisz S. (2015) Mutualism-disrupting allelopathic invader drives carbon stress and vital rate decline in a forest perennial herb. Aob Plants. 7
Hale AN, Kalisz S. (2013) Perspectives on allelopathic disruption of plant mutualisms: A framework for individual- and population-level fitness consequences Plant Ecology. 213: 1991-2006
Hale AN, Tonsor SJ, Kalisz S. (2011) Testing the mutualism disruption hypothesis: physiological mechanisms for invasion of intact perennial plant communities Ecosphere. 2: art110
Cantor A, Hale A, Aaron J, et al. (2011) Low allelochemical concentrations detected in garlic mustard-invaded forest soils inhibit fungal growth and AMF spore germination Biological Invasions. 13: 3015-3025
Hale AN, Imfeld SM, Hart CE, et al. (2010) Reduced seed germination after pappus removal in the North American Dandelion (Taraxacum officinale; Asteraceae) Weed Science. 58: 420-425
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