نتایج جستجو برای: invader species

تعداد نتایج: 548714  

2015
Claudio S Quilodrán Juan I Montoya-Burgos Mathias Currat

Interspecific hybridization occurs in nature but can also be caused by human actions. It often leads to infertile or fertile hybrids that exclude one parental genome during gametogenesis, escaping genetic recombination and introgression. The threat that genome-exclusion hybridization might represent on parental species is poorly understood, especially when invasive species are involved. Here, w...

2000
Shahid Naeem Johannes M. H. Knops David Tilman Katherine M. Howe Theodore Kennedy Samuel Gale

Biological invasion is a widespread, but poorly understood phenomenon. Elton’s hypothesis, supported by theory, experiment, and anecdotal evidence, suggests that an important determinant of invasion success is resident biodiversity, arguing that high diversity increases the competitive environment of communities and makes them more difficult to invade. Observational studies of plant invasions, ...

2016
Celia Olabarria Ignacio Gestoso Fernando P. Lima Elsa Vázquez Luc A. Comeau Filipa Gomes Rui Seabra José M. F. Babarro

Different combinations of behavioural and physiological responses may play a crucial role in the ecological success of species, notably in the context of biological invasions. The invasive mussel Xenostrobus securis has successfully colonised the inner part of the Galician Rias Baixas (NW Spain), where it co-occurs with the commercially-important mussel Mytilus galloprovincialis. This study inv...

Journal: :Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences 2007

Journal: :The American naturalist 2008
John L Maron Marilyn Marler

Theory and empirical work have demonstrated that diverse communities can inhibit invasion. Yet, it is unclear how diversity influences invader impact, how impact varies among exotics, and what the relative importance of diversity is versus extrinsic factors that themselves can influence invasion. To address these issues, we established plant assemblages that varied in native species and functio...

2010
David Finnoff Alexei Potapov Mark A. Lewis

We consider the problem of management of an aquatic invader spreading in a lake system. We assume that each year the invader can be removed from a certain proportion of invaded lakes, which depends on the selected intensity of control. Control decisions are generated and compared for an optimally controlled system and for a static optimization across asymptotic steady states. Control close to e...

2012
Michael R. Crossland Takashi Haramura Angela A. Salim Robert J. Capon Richard Shine

If invasive species use chemical weapons to suppress the viability of conspecifics, we may be able to exploit those species-specific chemical cues for selective control of the invader. Cane toads (Rhinella marina) are spreading through tropical Australia, with negative effects on native species. The tadpoles of cane toads eliminate intraspecific competitors by locating and consuming newly laid ...

2011
Oana Paula Popa Elena Iulia Iorgu Ana Maria Krapal Beatrice Simona Kelemen Dumitru Murariu Luis Ovidiu Popa

Hypanis colorata (Eichwald, 1829) (Cardiidae: Lymnocardiinae) is a bivalve relict species with a Ponto-Caspian distribution and is under strict protection in Romania, according to national regulations. While the species is depressed in the western Black Sea lagoons from Romania and Ukraine, it is also a successful invader in the middle Dniepr and Volga regions. Establishing a conservation strat...

Journal: :Trends in ecology & evolution 2006
David L Strayer Valerie T Eviner Jonathan M Jeschke Michael L Pace

We describe here the ecological and evolutionary processes that modulate the effects of invasive species over time, and argue that such processes are so widespread and important that ecologists should adopt a long-term perspective on the effects of invasive species. These processes (including evolution, shifts in species composition, accumulation of materials and interactions with abiotic varia...

Journal: :Ecology 2010
E E Wilson D A Holway

Variation in invasion success may result from the divergent evolutionary histories of introduced species compared to those of native taxa. The vulnerability of native biotas to ecological disruption may be especially great on oceanic islands invaded by continental species with unique ecological traits. In part because Hawaii lacks native eusocial insects, social invaders may threaten endemic ta...

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