نتایج جستجو برای: species invasions

تعداد نتایج: 549727  

Journal: :Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences of the United States of America 2007
Elizabeth T Borer Parviez R Hosseini Eric W Seabloom Andrew P Dobson

Disease may play a critical role in invasions by nonnative plants and animals that currently threaten global biodiversity. For example, a generalist viral pathogen has been recently implicated in one of the most extensive plant invasions worldwide, the invasion and domination of California's perennial grasslands by exotic annual grasses. To date, disease has never been quantitatively assessed a...

2012
David L. Strayer

*Correspondence: E-mail: [email protected] Abstract I pose eight questions central to understanding how biological invasions affect ecosystems, assess progress towards answering those questions and suggest ways in which progress might be made. The questions concern the frequency with which invasions affect ecosystems; the circumstances under which ecosystem change is most likely; the f...

2006
Petr Pyšek David M. Richardson

Any organism must be equipped for life in a given environment, otherwise it will die. The fundamental question is how well does an organism need to be “equipped”, or what syndrome of traits must it possess to survive and flourish at a given locality. In the current human-mediated biodiversity crisis, where alien species play an important role, we need to know whether some species are inherently...

Journal: :Conservation biology : the journal of the Society for Conservation Biology 2007
Katharina Dehnen-Schmutz Julia Touza Charles Perrings Mark Williamson

Ornamental horticulture has been recognized as the main pathway for plant invasions worldwide. We examined the link between propagule pressure created by the presence of ornamental plants in the market and their ability to escape from cultivation and establish in the wild. A random sample of 534 non-native ornamental species on sale in nineteenth century Britain showed that 27% of these species...

2016
Christoph Kueffer Melisa Giorgis Heike Zimmermann Patric Brandt Erik Welk Henrik von Wehrden

Research on biological invasions has increased rapidly over the past 30 years, generating numerous explanations of how species become invasive. While the mechanisms of invasive species establishment are well studied, the mechanisms driving abundance patterns (i.e. patterns of population density and population size) remain poorly understood. It is assumed that invasive species typically have hig...

2014
Margherita Gioria Bruce A. Osborne

Invasions by alien plants provide a unique opportunity to examine competitive interactions among plants. While resource competition has long been regarded as a major mechanism responsible for successful invasions, given a well-known capacity for many invaders to become dominant and reduce plant diversity in the invaded communities, few studies have measured resource competition directly or have...

Journal: :Trends in ecology & evolution 2011
Philip E Hulme

Increasing evidence highlights the role that botanic gardens might have in plant invasions across the globe. Botanic gardens, often in global biodiversity hotspots, have been implicated in the early cultivation and/or introduction of most environmental weeds listed by IUCN as among the worst invasive species worldwide. Furthermore, most of the popular ornamental species in living collections ar...

Journal: :Ecology letters 2018
Insu Jo Kevin M Potter Grant M Domke Songlin Fei

Forest mycorrhizal type mediates nutrient dynamics, which in turn can influence forest community structure and processes. Using forest inventory data, we explored how dominant forest tree mycorrhizal type affects understory plant invasions with consideration of forest structure and soil properties. We found that arbuscular mycorrhizal (AM) dominant forests, which are characterised by thin fores...

2004
Brice X. Semmens Eric R. Buhle Anne K. Salomon Christy V. Pattengill-Semmens

Invasions of non-native species in marine ecosystems can be ecologically damaging and economically costly. Identifying ‘hot-spots’ of non-native species and their sources of introduction is necessary to maximize the effectiveness of invasion quarantine programs. We use a large spatially explicit marine fish database to show that there are a surprising number of non-native fishes on the reefs of...

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