High seedling relative growth rate and specific leaf area are traits of invasive species: phylogenetically independent contrasts of woody angiosperms.
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Multivariate forecasts of potential distributions of invasive plant speciesNovel weapons testing: are invasive plants more chemically defended than native plants?A global assessment of a large monocot family highlights the need for group-specific analyses of invasivenessRapid increase in growth and productivity can aid invasions by a non-native treeClimate modifies response of non-native and native species richness to nutrient enrichment.Plant species' origin predicts dominance and response to nutrient enrichment and herbivores in global grasslandsConspecific plasticity and invasion: invasive populations of Chinese tallow (Triadica sebifera) have performance advantage over native populations only in low soil salinity.Reductions in native grass biomass associated with drought facilitates the invasion of an exotic grass into a model grassland system.The physiology of invasive plants in low-resource environmentsImpact of drought on plant populations of native and invasive origins.Trait values, not trait plasticity, best explain invasive species' performance in a changing environment.Competitive interactions between native and invasive exotic plant species are altered under elevated carbon dioxide.Ecotypic differentiation and phenotypic plasticity combine to enhance the invasiveness of the most widespread daisy in Chile, Leontodon saxatilis.Can the life-history strategy explain the success of the exotic trees Ailanthus altissima and Robinia pseudoacacia in Iberian floodplain forests?Managing soil nitrogen to restore annual grass-infested plant communities: effective strategy or incomplete framework?Seedling traits, plasticity and local differentiation as strategies of invasive species of Impatiens in central EuropeInvasive Microstegium populations consistently outperform native range populations across diverse environments.Resource competition in plant invasions: emerging patterns and research needsA functional trait perspective on plant invasion.Common and rare plant species respond differently to fertilisation and competition, whether they are alien or native.Functional morphology underlies performance differences among invasive and non-invasive ruderal Rubus species.Effect of intra- and interspecific competition on the performance of native and invasive species of Impatiens under varying levels of shade and moistureA comparison of the recruitment success of introduced and native species under natural conditions.Chinese tallow trees (Triadica sebifera) from the invasive range outperform those from the native range with an active soil community or phosphorus fertilizationA test for pre-adapted phenotypic plasticity in the invasive tree Acer negundo LRelease from herbivory does not confer invasion success for Eugenia uniflora in Florida.No evidence for local adaptation in an invasive alien plant: field and greenhouse experiments tracing a colonization sequence.Trait differences between naturalized and invasive plant species independent of residence time and phylogenyEffect of temperature and nutrients on the growth and development of seedlings of an invasive plant.Use of exotic plants to control Spartina alterniflora invasion and promote mangrove restorationImpacts of invading alien plant species on water flows at stand and catchment scalesA Source Area Approach Demonstrates Moderate Predictive Ability but Pronounced Variability of Invasive Species Traits.Functional Response (FR) and Relative Growth Rate (RGR) Do Not Show the Known Invasiveness of Lemna minuta (Kunth)Release from belowground enemies and shifts in root traits as interrelated drivers of alien plant invasion success: a hypothesis.Ecological effects of cell-level processes: genome size, functional traits and regional abundance of herbaceous plant species.The invasive stoloniferous clonal plant Alternanthera philoxeroides outperforms its co-occurring non-invasive functional counterparts in heterogeneous soil environments - invasion implications.Growth-form and spatiality driving the functional difference of native and alien aquatic plants in EuropeDynamics of novel forests of Castilla elastica in Puerto Rico: from species to ecosystems.Herbaceous plant species invading natural areas tend to have stronger adaptive root foraging than other naturalized species.Competition among native and invasive Impatiens species: the roles of environmental factors, population density and life stage.
P2860
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P2860
High seedling relative growth rate and specific leaf area are traits of invasive species: phylogenetically independent contrasts of woody angiosperms.
description
2007 nî lūn-bûn
@nan
2007年の論文
@ja
2007年論文
@yue
2007年論文
@zh-hant
2007年論文
@zh-hk
2007年論文
@zh-mo
2007年論文
@zh-tw
2007年论文
@wuu
2007年论文
@zh
2007年论文
@zh-cn
name
High seedling relative growth ...... ontrasts of woody angiosperms.
@en
High seedling relative growth ...... ontrasts of woody angiosperms.
@nl
type
label
High seedling relative growth ...... ontrasts of woody angiosperms.
@en
High seedling relative growth ...... ontrasts of woody angiosperms.
@nl
prefLabel
High seedling relative growth ...... ontrasts of woody angiosperms.
@en
High seedling relative growth ...... ontrasts of woody angiosperms.
@nl
P356
P1476
High seedling relative growth ...... ontrasts of woody angiosperms.
@en
P2093
Eva Grotkopp
Marcel Rejmánek
P304
P356
10.3732/AJB.94.4.526
P407
P577
2007-04-01T00:00:00Z