ENEMY RELEASE? AN EXPERIMENT WITH CONGENERIC PLANT PAIRS AND DIVERSE ABOVE- AND BELOWGROUND ENEMIES
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Interactions between exotic invasive plants and soil microbes in the rhizosphere suggest that 'everything is not everywhere'An exotic species is the favorite prey of a native enemyThe invasive plant, Brassica nigra, degrades local mycorrhizas across a wide geographical landscapeParasites and genetic diversity in an invasive bumblebee.Soil feedback of exotic savanna grass relates to pathogen absence and mycorrhizal selectivity.Insects mediate the effects of propagule supply and resource availability on a plant invasion.Herbivore-induced "rent rise" in the host plant may drive a diet breadth enlargement in the tenant.Synergy between pathogen release and resource availability in plant invasion.Differentiating between effects of invasion and diversity: impacts of aboveground plant communities on belowground fungal communities.Testing Darwin's naturalization hypothesis in the Azores.Herbivore preference for native vs. exotic plants: generalist herbivores from multiple continents prefer exotic plants that are evolutionarily naïve.Population regulation by enemies of the grass Brachypodium sylvaticum: demography in native and invaded ranges.Plant invasions, generalist herbivores, and novel defense weapons.Effects of soil biota from different ranges on Robinia invasion: acquiring mutualists and escaping pathogens.Additive effects of aboveground polyphagous herbivores and soil feedback in native and range-expanding exotic plants.Testing assumptions of the enemy release hypothesis: generalist versus specialist enemies of the grass Brachypodium sylvaticum.Combined effects of plant competition and insect herbivory hinder invasiveness of an introduced thistle.Reciprocal effects of litter from exotic and congeneric native plant species via soil nutrients.Coexistence between native and exotic species is facilitated by asymmetries in competitive ability and susceptibility to herbivores.High tolerance to salinity and herbivory stresses may explain the expansion of Ipomoea cairica to salt marshes.The native-invasive balance: implications for nutrient cycling in ecosystems.Predicting novel trophic interactions in a non-native world.Integrative invasion science: model systems, multi-site studies, focused meta-analysis and invasion syndromes.Native congeners provide biotic resistance to invasive Potentilla through soil biota.A test of Darwin's naturalization hypothesis in the thistle tribe shows that close relatives make bad neighbors.Evolutionary increases in defense during a biological invasion.Exotic plants contribute positively to biodiversity functions but reduce native seed production and arthropod richness.Intraspecific plant-soil feedback and intraspecific overyielding in Arabidopsis thalianaLocal dominance of exotic plants declines with residence time: a role for plant-soil feedback?Phytophagous insects on native and non-native host plants: combining the community approach and the biogeographical approach.Do exotic plants lose resistance to pathogenic soil biota from their native range? A test with Solidago gigantea.Native and non-native ruderals experience similar plant-soil feedbacks and neighbor effects in a system where they coexist.Herbivory and dominance shifts among exotic and congeneric native plant species during plant community establishment.Comparative Herbivory Rates and Secondary Metabolite Profiles in the Leaves of Native and Non-Native Lonicera Species.No release for the wicked: enemy release is dynamic and not associated with invasiveness.Natural selection on plant resistance to herbivores in the native and introduced range.Biomechanical Properties of Hemlocks: A Novel Approach to Evaluating Physical Barriers of the Plant-Insect Interface and Resistance to a Phloem-Feeding Herbivore.Spatial pattern of invasion and the evolutionary responses of native plant speciesJoint effects of nutrient addition and enemy exclusion on exotic plant success.Invasions and extinctions through the looking glass of evolutionary ecology.
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ENEMY RELEASE? AN EXPERIMENT WITH CONGENERIC PLANT PAIRS AND DIVERSE ABOVE- AND BELOWGROUND ENEMIES
description
article
@en
im November 2005 veröffentlichter wissenschaftlicher Artikel
@de
wetenschappelijk artikel
@nl
наукова стаття, опублікована в листопаді 2005
@uk
name
ENEMY RELEASE? AN EXPERIMENT W ...... ABOVE- AND BELOWGROUND ENEMIES
@en
ENEMY RELEASE? AN EXPERIMENT W ...... ABOVE- AND BELOWGROUND ENEMIES
@nl
type
label
ENEMY RELEASE? AN EXPERIMENT W ...... ABOVE- AND BELOWGROUND ENEMIES
@en
ENEMY RELEASE? AN EXPERIMENT W ...... ABOVE- AND BELOWGROUND ENEMIES
@nl
prefLabel
ENEMY RELEASE? AN EXPERIMENT W ...... ABOVE- AND BELOWGROUND ENEMIES
@en
ENEMY RELEASE? AN EXPERIMENT W ...... ABOVE- AND BELOWGROUND ENEMIES
@nl
P2093
P2860
P356
P1433
P1476
ENEMY RELEASE? AN EXPERIMENT W ...... ABOVE- AND BELOWGROUND ENEMIES
@en
P2093
Alison G. Power
Anurag A. Agrawal
Charles E. Mitchell
John Klironomos
Peter M. Kotanen
P2860
P304
P356
10.1890/05-0219
P407
P577
2005-11-01T00:00:00Z