Disturbance facilitates invasion: the effects are stronger abroad than at home.
about
The invasive coral Oculina patagonica has not been recently introduced to the Mediterranean from the western AtlanticCage matching: head to head competition experiments of an invasive plant species from different regions as a means to test for differentiation.Abundance of introduced species at home predicts abundance away in herbaceous communities.Range-expanding populations of a globally introduced weed experience negative plant-soil feedbacks.Climatic niche shifts are rare among terrestrial plant invaders.Modeling disturbance-based native invasive species control and its implications for management.Conyza canadensis suppresses plant diversity in its nonnative ranges but not at home: a transcontinental comparison.Dispersal pathways and genetic differentiation among worldwide populations of the invasive weed Centaurea solstitialis L. (Asteraceae).Native and non-native ruderals experience similar plant-soil feedbacks and neighbor effects in a system where they coexist.Testing genotypic variation of an invasive plant species in response to soil disturbance and herbivory.Integrated risk and recovery monitoring of ecosystem restorations on contaminated sites.Breaching the dispersal barrier to invasion: quantification and management.Testing hypotheses for exotic plant success: parallel experiments in the native and introduced ranges.Evidence of climatic niche shift during biological invasion.Disturbance maintains native and exotic plant species richness in invaded grassy woodlandsNative species richness buffers invader impact in undisturbed but not disturbed grassland assemblagesAlien and native plant establishment in grassland communities is more strongly affected by disturbance than above- and below-ground enemiesFire as mediator of pine invasion: evidence from Patagonia, ArgentinaLand-use changes and the invasion dynamics of shrubs in BaringoImpact of an invader on species diversity is stronger in the non-native range than in the native rangeFire and simulated herbivory have antagonistic effects on resistance of savanna grasslands to alien shrub invasionPlant neighbours rather than soil biota determine impact of an alien plant invaderEcological and biological determination of invasion success of non-native plant species in urban woodlands with special regard to short-lived monocarpsCan model species be used to advance the field of invasion ecology?Effects of soil fungi, disturbance and propagule pressure on exotic plant recruitment and establishment at home and abroadNon-native conditions favor non-native populations of invasive plant: demographic consequences of seed size variation?Abundance and dispersion of the invasive Mediterranean annual, Centaurea melitensis in its native and non-native rangesExploring the potential for climatic factors, herbivory, and co-occurring vegetation to shape performance in native and introduced populations of Verbascum thapsusInvasive Species: to eat or not to eat, that is the questionBiogeographical comparison of the invasive Lepidium draba in its native, expanded and introduced rangesPlant invasion at landscape and local scales along roadways in the mountainous region of the Greater Yellowstone EcosystemMorphological differentiation in a common garden experiment among native and non-native specimens of the invasive weed yellow starthistle (Centaurea solstitialis)Impact of Acroptilon repens on co-occurring native plants is greater in the invader’s non-native rangeSoil disturbance by a native rodent drives microhabitat expansion of an alien plantInvasive species grows faster, competes better, and shows greater evolution toward increased seed size and growth than exotic non-invasive congenersGeographic mosaics of plant-soil microbe interactions in a global plant invasionEnvironmental Tolerances of Miscanthus sinensis in Invasive and Native PopulationsSpecies interactions contribute to the success of a global plant invaderNitrogen acquisition by annual and perennial grass seedlings: testing the roles of performance and plasticity to explain plant invasionInhibitory effects of Eucalyptus globulus on understorey plant growth and species richness are greater in non-native regions
P2860
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P2860
Disturbance facilitates invasion: the effects are stronger abroad than at home.
description
2006 nî lūn-bûn
@nan
2006年の論文
@ja
2006年学术文章
@wuu
2006年学术文章
@zh
2006年学术文章
@zh-cn
2006年学术文章
@zh-hans
2006年学术文章
@zh-my
2006年学术文章
@zh-sg
2006年學術文章
@yue
2006年學術文章
@zh-hant
name
Disturbance facilitates invasion: the effects are stronger abroad than at home.
@en
Disturbance facilitates invasion: the effects are stronger abroad than at home.
@nl
type
label
Disturbance facilitates invasion: the effects are stronger abroad than at home.
@en
Disturbance facilitates invasion: the effects are stronger abroad than at home.
@nl
prefLabel
Disturbance facilitates invasion: the effects are stronger abroad than at home.
@en
Disturbance facilitates invasion: the effects are stronger abroad than at home.
@nl
P2093
P356
P1476
Disturbance facilitates invasion: the effects are stronger abroad than at home.
@en
P2093
Diego Villarreal
Jon M Graham
Jos L Hierro
Ozkan Eren
P304
P356
10.1086/505767
P577
2006-07-10T00:00:00Z