Performance Comparisons of Co-Occurring Native and Alien Invasive Plants: Implications for Conservation and Restoration
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The Origin of Cultivation and Proto-Weeds, Long Before Neolithic FarmingPlasticity-mediated persistence in new and changing environmentsUnderstanding invasion history and predicting invasive niches using genetic sequencing technology in Australia: case studies from Cucurbitaceae and BoraginaceaeThe soil bacterial communities of South African fynbos riparian ecosystems invaded by Australian Acacia speciesStress tolerance and ecophysiological ability of an invader and a native species in a seasonally dry tropical forestThe Invasion of Coastal Areas in South China by Ipomoea cairica May Be Accelerated by the Ecotype Being More Locally Adapted to Salt StressThermal ecological physiology of native and invasive frog species: do invaders perform better?A phylogenetic analysis of the British flora sheds light on the evolutionary and ecological factors driving plant invasionsAlien phytogeographic regions of southern Africa: numerical classification, possible drivers, and regional threatsResponse of aboveground biomass and diversity to nitrogen addition - a five-year experiment in semi-arid grassland of Inner Mongolia, ChinaEvolution of marginal populations of an invasive vine increases the likelihood of future spread.Competition overwhelms the positive plant-soil feedback generated by an invasive plant.Plant species' origin predicts dominance and response to nutrient enrichment and herbivores in global grasslandsPoised to prosper? A cross-system comparison of climate change effects on native and non-native species performance.Invasive forb benefits from water savings by native plants and carbon fertilization under elevated CO2 and warming.Predicting plant invasions under climate change: are species distribution models validated by field trials?Nonindigenous Plant Advantage in Native and Exotic Australian Grasses under Experimental Drought, Warming, and Atmospheric CO2 Enrichment.Community assembly rules affect the diversity of expanding communitiesConnecting differential responses of native and invasive riparian plants to climate change and environmental alteration.Disturbance governs dominance of an invasive forb in a temporary wetland.Reductions in native grass biomass associated with drought facilitates the invasion of an exotic grass into a model grassland system.Biotic interactions and plant invasions.Alien and endangered plants in the Brazilian Cerrado exhibit contrasting relationships with vegetation biomass and N : P stoichiometry.The physiology of invasive plants in low-resource environmentsAre introduced species better dispersers than native species? A global comparative study of seed dispersal distance.Does fungal endophyte infection improve tall fescue's growth response to fire and water limitation?Spatial Pattern and Scale Influence Invader Demographic Response to Simulated Precipitation Change in an Annual Grassland CommunityMethods to test the interactive effects of drought and plant invasion on ecosystem structure and function using complementary common garden and field experimentsIntroduced birds and the fate of hawaiian rainforests.Trait values, not trait plasticity, best explain invasive species' performance in a changing environment.Stoichiometric constraints do not limit successful invaders: zebra mussels in Swedish lakes.Synergy between pathogen release and resource availability in plant invasion.The complexity underlying invasiveness precludes the identification of invasive traits: A comparative study of invasive and non-invasive heterocarpic Atriplex congenersEvaluation of restoration effectiveness: community response to the removal of alien plants.Effects of deer on the photosynthetic performance of invasive and native forest herbs.Eco-physiological performance of two invasive weed congeners (Ageratum conyzoides L. and Ageratum houstonianum Mill.) in the Indo-Gangetic plains of India.Comparative water use of native and invasive plants at multiple scales: a global meta-analysis.Loss of foundation species increases population growth of exotic forbs in sagebrush steppe.Can the life-history strategy explain the success of the exotic trees Ailanthus altissima and Robinia pseudoacacia in Iberian floodplain forests?Increasing native, but not exotic, biodiversity increases aboveground productivity in ungrazed and intensely grazed grasslands.
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P2860
Performance Comparisons of Co-Occurring Native and Alien Invasive Plants: Implications for Conservation and Restoration
description
article
@en
im November 2003 veröffentlichter wissenschaftlicher Artikel
@de
wetenschappelijk artikel
@nl
наукова стаття, опублікована в листопаді 2003
@uk
ലേഖനം
@ml
name
Performance Comparisons of Co- ...... r Conservation and Restoration
@en
Performance Comparisons of Co- ...... r Conservation and Restoration
@nl
type
label
Performance Comparisons of Co- ...... r Conservation and Restoration
@en
Performance Comparisons of Co- ...... r Conservation and Restoration
@nl
prefLabel
Performance Comparisons of Co- ...... r Conservation and Restoration
@en
Performance Comparisons of Co- ...... r Conservation and Restoration
@nl
P1476
Performance Comparisons of Co- ...... r Conservation and Restoration
@en
P2093
Curtis C. Daehler
P304
P356
10.1146/ANNUREV.ECOLSYS.34.011802.132403
P407
P577
2003-11-01T00:00:00Z