نتایج جستجو برای: invasive alien plant species iaps

تعداد نتایج: 1003389  

Journal: :Ecology 2006
Wilfried Thuiller David M Richardson Mathieu Rouget Serban Procheş John R U Wilson

Although invasive alien species (IAS) are a major threat to biodiversity, human health, and economy, our understanding of the factors controlling their distribution and abundance is limited. Here, we determine how environmental factors, land use, life-history traits of the invaders, residence time, origin, and human usage interact to shape the spatial pattern of invasive alien plant species in ...

Journal: :Annals of botany 2008
Ignasi Bartomeus Jordi Bosch Montserrat Vilà

BACKGROUND AND AIMS Invasive plants are potential agents of disruption in plant-pollinator interactions. They may affect pollinator visitation rates to native plants and modify the plant-pollinator interaction network. However, there is little information about the extent to which invasive pollen is incorporated into the pollination network and about the rates of invasive pollen deposition on t...

2016
Paul O. Downey David M. Richardson

Biological invasions are widely acknowledged as a major threat to global biodiversity. Species from all major taxonomic groups have become invasive. The range of impacts of invasive taxa and the overall magnitude of the threat is increasing. Plants comprise the biggest and best-studied group of invasive species. There is a growing debate; however, regarding the nature of the alien plant threat-...

Journal: :Ecology letters 2007
Martha E Lopezaraiza-Mikel Richard B Hayes Martin R Whalley Jane Memmott

Studies of pairwise interactions have shown that an alien plant can affect the pollination of a native plant, this effect being mediated by shared pollinators. Here we use a manipulative field experiment, to investigate the impact of the alien plant Impatiens glandulifera on an entire community of coflowering native plants. Visitation and pollen transport networks were constructed to compare re...

Journal: :Biological reviews of the Cambridge Philosophical Society 2000
D M Richardson N Allsopp C M D'Antonio S J Milton M Rejmánek

Many introduced plant species rely on mutualisms in their new habitats to overcome barriers to establishment and to become naturalized and, in some cases, invasive. Mutualisms involving animal-mediated pollination and seed dispersal, and symbioses between plant roots and microbiota often facilitate invasions. The spread of many alien plants, particularly woody ones, depends on pollinator mutual...

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