Differences in resource acquisition between native and exotic plants is one hypothesis to explain invasive plant success. Mechanisms include greater resource acquisition rates and greater plasticity in resource acquisition by invasive exotic species compared to non-invasive natives. We assess the support for these mechanisms by comparing nitrate acquisition and growth of invasive annual and perennial grass seedlings in western North America. Two invasive exotic grasses (Bromus tectorum and Taeniatherum caput-medusae) and three perennial native and exotic grasses (Pseudoroegneria spicata, Elymus elymoides, and Agropyron cristatum) were grown at various temperatures typical of autumn and springtime when resource are abundant and dominance is ...
Understanding competition for soil nitrate between common shrub-steppe, potential reclamation specie...
Theoretical and empirical work has established a positive relationship between resource availability...
Early emergence of plant seedlings can offer strong competitive advantages over later-germinating ne...
Millions of hectares throughout the Intermountain West are either dominated or threatened by the inv...
Background and aims Competition from the annual grass Bromus tectorum threatens aridland perennial b...
The mechanisms responsible for soil-N-mediated species replacement of native perennial grasses by th...
Traits that permit successful invasions have often seemed idiosyncratic, and the key biological trai...
Variation in the timing and size of resource fluctuations can influence how plants grow, allocate bi...
Anthropogenic nitrogen (N) deposition exerts profound influence on the composition and function of n...
Background Fast growing invasive alien species are highly efficient with little investment in their ...
In herbaceous ecosystems worldwide, biodiversity has been negatively impacted by changed grazing reg...
Abstract Resource amendments commonly promote plant invasions, raising concerns over the potential c...
Understanding the functional traits that allow invasives to outperform natives is a necessary first ...
Many studies have shown that high nitrogen availability encourages the community dominance of exotic...
Improving seedling survival of perennial bunchgrasses is a key goal of restoration programs in the I...
Understanding competition for soil nitrate between common shrub-steppe, potential reclamation specie...
Theoretical and empirical work has established a positive relationship between resource availability...
Early emergence of plant seedlings can offer strong competitive advantages over later-germinating ne...
Millions of hectares throughout the Intermountain West are either dominated or threatened by the inv...
Background and aims Competition from the annual grass Bromus tectorum threatens aridland perennial b...
The mechanisms responsible for soil-N-mediated species replacement of native perennial grasses by th...
Traits that permit successful invasions have often seemed idiosyncratic, and the key biological trai...
Variation in the timing and size of resource fluctuations can influence how plants grow, allocate bi...
Anthropogenic nitrogen (N) deposition exerts profound influence on the composition and function of n...
Background Fast growing invasive alien species are highly efficient with little investment in their ...
In herbaceous ecosystems worldwide, biodiversity has been negatively impacted by changed grazing reg...
Abstract Resource amendments commonly promote plant invasions, raising concerns over the potential c...
Understanding the functional traits that allow invasives to outperform natives is a necessary first ...
Many studies have shown that high nitrogen availability encourages the community dominance of exotic...
Improving seedling survival of perennial bunchgrasses is a key goal of restoration programs in the I...
Understanding competition for soil nitrate between common shrub-steppe, potential reclamation specie...
Theoretical and empirical work has established a positive relationship between resource availability...
Early emergence of plant seedlings can offer strong competitive advantages over later-germinating ne...