نتایج جستجو برای: invasive plant

تعداد نتایج: 533735  

Journal: :Proceedings. Biological sciences 2009
Montserrat Vilà Ignasi Bartomeus Anke C Dietzsch Theodora Petanidou Ingolf Steffan-Dewenter Jane C Stout Thomas Tscheulin

The structure of plant-pollinator networks has been claimed to be resilient to changes in species composition due to the weak degree of dependence among mutualistic partners. However, detailed empirical investigations of the consequences of introducing an alien plant species into mutualistic networks are lacking. We present the first cross-European analysis by using a standardized protocol to a...

Journal: :Proceedings. Biological sciences 2015
Kirsten M Prior Jennifer M Robinson Shannon A Meadley Dunphy Megan E Frederickson

Generalized mutualisms are often predicted to be resilient to changes in partner identity. Variation in mutualism-related traits between native and invasive species however, can exacerbate the spread of invasive species ('invasional meltdown') if invasive partners strongly interact. Here we show how invasion by a seed-dispersing ant (Myrmica rubra) promotes recruitment of a co-introduced invasi...

2017
Emily J. Kapler Janette R. Thompson Mark P. Widrlechner

Conservation and land management decisions often are based primarily on natural science, but could be more successful if human influences were effectively integrated into decision making. This is especially true for efforts to manage invasive plants, whose arrival is usually the product of deliberate human introduction. Riskassessment models that predict the probability that a nonnative plant w...

2013
Emmi Felker-Quinn Jennifer A Schweitzer Joseph K Bailey

Ecological explanations for the success and persistence of invasive species vastly outnumber evolutionary hypotheses, yet evolution is a fundamental process in the success of any species. The Evolution of Increased Competitive Ability (EICA) hypothesis (Blossey and Nötzold 1995) proposes that evolutionary change in response to release from coevolved herbivores is responsible for the success of ...

Journal: :American journal of botany 2011
Kristin I Powell Jonathan M Chase Tiffany M Knight

PREMISE OF THE STUDY Invasive plant species are typically thought to pose a large threat to native biodiversity, and local-scale studies typically confirm this view. However, plant invaders rarely cause regional extirpations or global extinctions, causing some to suggest that invasive species' influence on native biodiversity may not be so dire. We aim to synthesize the seemingly conflicting li...

Journal: :Remote Sensing 2015
Itiya Aneece Howard Epstein

Abandoned agricultural fields have recently become more abundant in the U.S. and remain susceptible to species invasions after cultivation disturbance. As invasive species become more widespread with increases in anthropogenic activities, we need more effective ways to use limited resources for conservation of native ecosystems. Remote sensing can help us monitor the spread and effects of invas...

2011
Krikor Andonian José L. Hierro Liana Khetsuriani Pablo Becerra Grigor Janoyan Diego Villarreal Lohengrin Cavieres Laurel R. Fox Ragan M. Callaway

BACKGROUND Biological invasions are fundamentally biogeographic processes that occur over large spatial scales. Interactions with soil microbes can have strong impacts on plant invasions, but how these interactions vary among areas where introduced species are highly invasive vs. naturalized is still unknown. In this study, we examined biogeographic variation in plant-soil microbe interactions ...

2011
Zachary T. Brym Jeffrey K. Lake David Allen Annette Ostling

1. Understanding ecological strategies of invasive species relative to the entire native community is important in understanding and managing both the mechanisms and the potential impacts of invasion, but few studies have taken this approach. 2. We utilize advances in plant ecology to compare functional traits of an invasive shrub species, autumn-olive Elaeagnus umbellata, to those of the under...

2017
Ellen V Crocker Eric B Nelson Bernd Blossey

Interactions between introduced plants and soils they colonize are central to invasive species success in many systems. Belowground biotic and abiotic changes can influence the success of introduced species as well as their native competitors. All plants alter soil properties after colonization but, in the case of many invasive plant species, it is unclear whether the strength and direction of ...

Journal: :Current opinion in plant biology 2007
Pascal Bittel Silke Robatzek

Microbial life manifests itself in complex communities such as the ones attached to plant surfaces. They consist of beneficial mutualists and epiphytes as well as of potential pathogens. Plants express surface receptors that recognize them according to their microbe-associated molecular patterns (MAMPs). MAMP-stimulated plant responses have been studied for a long time. Recently a number of rep...

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