نتایج جستجو برای: alien plant species

تعداد نتایج: 874337  

Journal: :The Science of the total environment 2018
Aristides Moustakas Anneta Voutsela Stelios Katsanevakis

Data of alien species presences are generally more readily available in protected than non-protected areas due to higher sampling efforts inside protected areas. Are the results and conclusions based on analyses of data collected in protected areas representative of wider non-protected regions? We address this question by analysing some recently published data of alien plants in Greece. Mixed e...

Journal: :Zootaxa 2015
Danilo Matzke Petr Kocarek

Greenhouses in botanical or zoological gardens are home to dozens of species of invertebrates that were introduced alongside plants or potting soil. Our study presents the description of an alien species of earwig, Euborellia arcanum sp. nov., found in tropical greenhouses in Leipzig and Potsdam (Germany) and in Vienna (Austria), including information about its biology in breeding culture. The ...

2013
Hana Skálová Vojtěch Jarošík Šárka Dvořáčková Petr Pyšek

Many alien plants are thought to be invasive because of unique traits and greater phenotypic plasticity relative to resident species. However, many studies of invasive species are unable to quantify the importance of particular traits and phenotypic plasticity in conferring invasive behavior because traits used in comparative studies are often measured in a single environment and by using plant...

2006
Michael Avery Eric Tillman MICHAEL L. AVERY

In Executive Order 13112 “Invasive Species”, an alien species is defined as one “that is not native” to a particular ecosystem. In North America today, there are nearly 100 alien bird species with self-sustaining populations. These include numerous game birds (primarily gallinaceous birds) and escaped pet birds (primarily psittacine species). Others, such as house sparrows (Passer domesticus), ...

2002
Jon E. Keeley

Blue oak savannas were found to be substantially more diverse at all scales from localized point diversity to the community scale, than higher elevation shrubland and coniferous forests in the southern Sierra Nevada. Also, alien plants were more diverse and represented a substantial fraction of the understory flora in these blue oak savannas, comprising threefourths of the species at the smalle...

2016
Kabir Peerbhay Onisimo Mutanga Riyad Ismail

Invasive alien plants are responsible for extensive economic and ecological damage in forest plantations. They have the ability to aggressively manipulate essential ecosystem structural and functional processes. Alterations in these processes can have detrimental effects on the growth and productivity of forest species and ultimately impact on the quality and quantity of forest wood material. U...

2014
Jitka Horáčková Lucie Juřičková Arnošt L. Šizling Vojtěch Jarošík Petr Pyšek Brock Fenton

Studies of plant invasions rarely address impacts on molluscs. By comparing pairs of invaded and corresponding uninvaded plots in 96 sites in floodplain forests, we examined effects of four invasive alien plants (Impatiens glandulifera, Fallopia japonica, F. sachalinensis, and F.× bohemica) in the Czech Republic on communities of land snails. The richness and abundance of living land snail spec...

Journal: :Functional Ecology 2022

Biological invasions are key to understanding ecological processes that determine the formation of novel interactions. Alien species can negatively impact floral visitation native species, but may also facilitate early establishment closely related alien by providing a preadapted pollinator community. We tested whether depended on phylogenetic relatedness and similarity species. In field experi...

2004
A. M. Latimer D. M. Richardson

Introduction It is often stated that biological invasions pose the second most pressing threat to biodiversity after direct habitat transformation. Yet this assertion, which has crucial policy implications for conservation, land-use planning and restoration, has yet to be quantitatively tested, except on the basis of analysis of threatening factors listed for rare species. A more detailed asses...

2008
Dieter Mueller-Dombois

Indigenous forests in remote islands are generally impoverished of secondary successional tree species. After canopy disturbances, the same indigenous tree species seem to resume dominance by a process known as ‘‘autosuccession’’ or ‘‘direct succession.’’ Primary forest tree species are mostly colonizer species. Mature island forests are difficult to categorize as either pioneer, successional, ...

نمودار تعداد نتایج جستجو در هر سال

با کلیک روی نمودار نتایج را به سال انتشار فیلتر کنید