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Ploidy influences rarity and invasiveness in plantsPlants capable of selfing are more likely to become naturalizedEXOTIC PLANT SPECIES INVADE HOT SPOTS OF NATIVE PLANT DIVERSITYA global assessment of a large monocot family highlights the need for group-specific analyses of invasivenessA phylogenetic analysis of the British flora sheds light on the evolutionary and ecological factors driving plant invasionsThe more the better? The role of polyploidy in facilitating plant invasionsShifts in grassland invasibility: effects of soil resources, disturbance, composition, and invader size.The hidden side of plant invasions: the role of genome size.Are introduced species better dispersers than native species? A global comparative study of seed dispersal distance.Of Asian forests and European fields: Eastern U.S. plant invasions in a global floristic context.Testing Darwin's naturalization hypothesis in the Azores.A phylogenetically controlled analysis of the roles of reproductive traits in plant invasions.Temperature tolerance and stress proteins as mechanisms of invasive species success.Resource competition in plant invasions: emerging patterns and research needsExploration of a rare population of Chinese chestnut in North America: stand dynamics, health and genetic relationships.Ecology in the age of DNA barcoding: the resource, the promise and the challenges ahead.A test of Darwin's naturalization hypothesis in the thistle tribe shows that close relatives make bad neighbors.The contrasting effects of genome size, chromosome number and ploidy level on plant invasiveness: a global analysis.Functional and phylogenetic similarity of alien plants to co-occurring natives.Getting the right traits: reproductive and dispersal characteristics predict the invasiveness of herbaceous plant species.Naturalization of central European plants in North America: species traits, habitats, propagule pressure, residence time.Suppression of reproductive characteristics of the invasive plant Mikania micrantha by sweet potato competitionDifferent traits determine introduction, naturalization and invasion success in woody plants: Proteaceae as a test caseRevisiting Darwin's conundrum reveals a twist on the relationship between phylogenetic distance and invasibility.Biological invasions: recommendations for U.S. policy and management.Competition among native and invasive Impatiens species: the roles of environmental factors, population density and life stage.Role of adaptive and non-adaptive mechanisms forming complex patterns of genome size variation in six cytotypes of polyploid Allium oleraceum (Amaryllidaceae) on a continental scale.Evolution of genome size in pines (Pinus) and its life-history correlates: supertree analyses.Effects of self-compatibility on the distribution range of invasive European plants in North America.Plant invasions: merging the concepts of species invasiveness and community invasibilitySmall genome separates native and invasive populations in an ecologically important cosmopolitan grass.What makes a weed a weed: life history traits of native and exotic plants in the USA.Czech alien flora and the historical pattern of its formation: what came first to Central Europe?Planting intensity, residence time, and species traits determine invasion success of alien woody species.Marketing time predicts naturalization of horticultural plants.Do trade-offs have explanatory power for the evolution of organismal interactions?InvasionsThe paradox of invasionLatitudinal gradients and geographic ranges of exotic species: implications for biogeographyHigh predictability in introduction outcomes and the geographical range size of introduced Australian birds: a role for climate
P2860
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P2860
description
article
@en
im Oktober 1996 veröffentlichter wissenschaftlicher Artikel
@de
wetenschappelijk artikel
@nl
наукова стаття, опублікована в жовтні 1996
@uk
ലേഖനം
@ml
name
A theory of seed plant invasiveness: The first sketch
@en
A theory of seed plant invasiveness: The first sketch
@nl
type
label
A theory of seed plant invasiveness: The first sketch
@en
A theory of seed plant invasiveness: The first sketch
@nl
prefLabel
A theory of seed plant invasiveness: The first sketch
@en
A theory of seed plant invasiveness: The first sketch
@nl
P1476
A theory of seed plant invasiveness: The first sketch
@en
P2093
Marcel Rejmánek
P304
P356
10.1016/0006-3207(96)00026-2
P577
1996-10-01T00:00:00Z