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The fluctuating resource hypothesis explains invasibility, but not exotic advantage following disturbance
(Ecological Society of America, 2018-06)
Invasibility is a key indicator of community susceptibility to changes in structure and function. The fluctuating resource hypothesis (FRH) postulates that invasibility is an emergent community property, a manifestation ...
Integrating the study of non-native plant invasions across spatial scalesBIOLOGICAL INVASIONS
(KLUWER ACADEMIC PUBLISHERS, 2017)
Presence-absence versus invasive status data for modelling potential distribution of invasive plants: Saltcedar in Argentina
(Université Laval, 2013-06)
Spontaneous populations of saltcedars are widely distributed in Argentina. The invasive behaviour of the genus has been documented in the USA, Mexico, and Australia, where its presence is associated with significant changes ...
Insights on the persistence of pines (Pinus species) in the Late Cretaceous and their increasing dominance in the Anthropocene
(John Wiley & Sons Ltd, 2018-10)
Although gymnosperms were nearly swept away by the rise of the angiosperms in the Late Cretaceous, conifers, and pines (Pinus species) in particular, survived and regained their dominance in some habitats. Diversification ...
The invasion of Undaria pinnatifida to a Macrocystis pyrifera kelp in Patagonia (Argentina, Southwest Atlantic)
(Cambridge University Press, 2009-12)
Biological invasions can alter the biodiversity of native communities generating an ecological impact that in many cases is irreversible. In 2001, Undaria pinnatifida invaded Macrocystis pyrifera kelp in Cracker Bay (42°56′S, ...