Abstract Based on atlas data with a 10-km cell resolution for 1,406 exotic plant species inhabiting Great Britain, we investigate the extent to which arrival time (residence time) and biogeographical origin (climate suitability) are associated with range sizes of exotic plants and how exotic plant richness is related to current climate and the human footprint. We grouped species according to four arrival periods (archaeophytes and three classes of neophytes), and three broad biogeographical origins, each reflecting a different macroclimate similarity with the study region (northern Holarctic [ Mediterranean [ and tropical–subtropical). While we found that mean range sizes increased with residence time, no strong effect of the region of orig...
Aim A fundamental question in macroecology centres around understanding the relationship between spe...
Aims: The rapid increase in the number of species that have naturalized beyond their native range is...
Endemic species are not uniformly distributed across the world but some areas are richer than others...
Aim The number of naturalized (i.e. established) alien species has increased rapidly over recent cen...
The number of naturalized (i.e. established) alien species has increased rapidly over recent centuri...
One of the most robust emerging generalisations in invasion biology is that the probability of invas...
Aim:The number of naturalized (i.e. established) alien species has increased rapidly over recent cen...
Climate warming is supposed to enlarge the area climatically suitable to the naturalization of alien...
1. The potential invasive success of exotic plant species is thought to be associated with similarit...
Aim: Understanding the factors that govern species' geographical ranges is of utmost importance for ...
Aim To investigate whether differences in the elevational trend in native and alien species richness...
Aim A fundamental question in macroecology centres around understanding the relationship between spe...
Aims: The rapid increase in the number of species that have naturalized beyond their native range is...
Endemic species are not uniformly distributed across the world but some areas are richer than others...
Aim The number of naturalized (i.e. established) alien species has increased rapidly over recent cen...
The number of naturalized (i.e. established) alien species has increased rapidly over recent centuri...
One of the most robust emerging generalisations in invasion biology is that the probability of invas...
Aim:The number of naturalized (i.e. established) alien species has increased rapidly over recent cen...
Climate warming is supposed to enlarge the area climatically suitable to the naturalization of alien...
1. The potential invasive success of exotic plant species is thought to be associated with similarit...
Aim: Understanding the factors that govern species' geographical ranges is of utmost importance for ...
Aim To investigate whether differences in the elevational trend in native and alien species richness...
Aim A fundamental question in macroecology centres around understanding the relationship between spe...
Aims: The rapid increase in the number of species that have naturalized beyond their native range is...
Endemic species are not uniformly distributed across the world but some areas are richer than others...