What makes a weed a weed: life history traits of native and exotic plants in the USA.
about
Plants capable of selfing are more likely to become naturalizedApplications of the fast-slow continuum and reproductive strategy framework of plant life histories.How weeds emerge: a taxonomic and trait-based examination using United States data.Dynamics of Weeds in the Soil Seed Bank: A Hidden Markov Model to Estimate Life History Traits from Standing Plant Time SeriesNot all weeds are created equal: A database approach uncovers differences in the sexual system of native and introduced weeds.A phylogenetically controlled analysis of the roles of reproductive traits in plant invasions.The relative importance of reproductive assurance and automatic selection as hypotheses for the evolution of self-fertilization.Genetic control of invasive plants species using selfish genetic elements.A Source Area Approach Demonstrates Moderate Predictive Ability but Pronounced Variability of Invasive Species Traits.Interactions between resource availability and enemy release in plant invasion.Mating system, population growth, and management scenario for Kalanchoe pinnata in an invaded seasonally dry tropical forest.When divergent life histories hybridize: insights into adaptive life-history traits in an annual weed.Competition alters life history and increases the relative fecundity of crop-wild radish hybrids (Raphanus spp.).A multi-scale spatial analysis of native and exotic plant species richness within a mixed-disturbance oak savanna landscape.Relatedness and environment affect traits associated with invasive and noninvasive introduced Commelinaceae.Effects of self-compatibility on the distribution range of invasive European plants in North America.Estimating the rate of biological introductions: Lessepsian fishes in the Mediterranean.Autecological traits determined two evolutionary strategies in Mediterranean plants during the Quaternary: low differentiation and range expansion versus geographical speciation in Linaria.Biology, chance, or history? The predictable reassembly of temperate grassland communities.Warming neutralizes host-specific competitive advantages between a native and invasive herbivoreUsing integral projection models to compare population dynamics of four closely related speciesBiological invasions in the context of green roofsMeta-Analysis of Exotic Forages as Invasive Plants in Complex Multi-Functioning LandscapesNutrients override atrazine effects on riparian and aquatic plant community structure in a North American agricultural catchmentFire and False Brome: How Do Prescribed Fire and Invasive Brachypodium sylvaticum Affect Each Other?Do invasive freshwater fish species grow better when they are invasive?Seedlings of the introduced invasive shrub Eugenia uniflora (Myrtaceae) outperform those of its native and introduced non-invasive congeners in FloridaEffects of native pollinator specialization, self-compatibility and flowering duration of European plant species on their invasiveness elsewherePre-fire fuel reduction treatments influence plant communities and exotic species 9 years after a large wildfireA plant-traits approach to assessing the success of alien weed species in irrigated Mediterranean orchardsDarwin’s naturalization hypothesis up-close: Intermountain grassland invaders differ morphologically and phenologically from native community dominantsPlantlet recruitment is the key demographic transition in invasion by Kalanchoe daigremontianaInteractions between alien plant species traits and habitat characteristics in agricultural landscapes in FinlandImpact of three aquatic invasive species on native plants and macroinvertebrates in temperate pondsPatterns of trait convergence and divergence among native and exotic species in herbaceous plant communities are not modified by nitrogen enrichmentGenetic diversity in the invasive Rubus phoenicolasius as compared to the native Rubus argutus using inter-simple sequence repeat (ISSR) markersA phylogenetic comparative study of preadaptation for invasiveness in the genus Silene (Caryophyllaceae)A test of baker’s law: breeding systems of invasive species of Asteraceae in ChinaEffects of biological invasions on forest carbon sequestrationUsing multi-scale species distribution data to infer drivers of biological invasion in riparian wetlands
P2860
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P2860
What makes a weed a weed: life history traits of native and exotic plants in the USA.
description
2004 nî lūn-bûn
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2004年の論文
@ja
2004年学术文章
@wuu
2004年学术文章
@zh
2004年学术文章
@zh-cn
2004年学术文章
@zh-hans
2004年学术文章
@zh-my
2004年学术文章
@zh-sg
2004年學術文章
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2004年學術文章
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name
What makes a weed a weed: life history traits of native and exotic plants in the USA.
@en
What makes a weed a weed: life history traits of native and exotic plants in the USA.
@nl
type
label
What makes a weed a weed: life history traits of native and exotic plants in the USA.
@en
What makes a weed a weed: life history traits of native and exotic plants in the USA.
@nl
prefLabel
What makes a weed a weed: life history traits of native and exotic plants in the USA.
@en
What makes a weed a weed: life history traits of native and exotic plants in the USA.
@nl
P2860
P1433
P1476
What makes a weed a weed: life history traits of native and exotic plants in the USA.
@en
P2093
Steve Sutherland
P2860
P2888
P356
10.1007/S00442-004-1628-X
P407
P577
2004-08-06T00:00:00Z