1. Ecological theory attempts to predict how impacts for native species arise from biological invasions. A fundamental question centres on the feeding interactions of invasive and native species: whether invasion will result in increased interspecific competition, which would result in negative consequences for the competing species, or trophic niche divergence, which would facilitate the invader's integration into the community and their coexistence with native species. 2. Here, the feeding interactions of a highly invasive fish, topmouth gudgeon Pseudorasbora parva, with three native and functionally similar fishes were studied to determine whether patterns of either niche overlap or divergence detected in mesocosm experiments were appare...
1. Rainbow (Oncorhynchus mykiss) and brown trout (Salmo trutta) are widespread and invasive salmonid...
Introductions of non–native fish can be a key driver of environmental change that has major implicat...
Despite growing evidence that biotic interactions limit the distribution of species and their potent...
1. Ecological theory attempts to predict how impacts for native species arise from biological invasi...
Ecological theory attempts to predict how impacts for native species arise from biological invasions...
1. Invasive species can cause substantial ecological impacts on native biodiversity. Whilst ecologic...
1.Ecological theory on the trophic impacts of invasive fauna on native competitors is equivocal. Whi...
Ecological theory on the trophic impacts of invasive fauna on native competitors is equivocal. Whils...
Novel trophic interactions between invasive and native species potentially increase levels of inters...
1. Ecological theory on the trophic impacts of invasive fauna on native competitors is equivocal. Wh...
Quantifying feeding interactions between non-indigenous and indigenous fishes in invaded fish commun...
Invaders affect native species across multiple trophic levels, influencing the structure and stabili...
Assessments of the trophic consequences of invasive fishes are important for quantifying their ecolo...
Species diversity is often an implicit source of biological insurance for communities against the im...
A major challenge in biological invasions is to predict community susceptibility to invasion. This s...
1. Rainbow (Oncorhynchus mykiss) and brown trout (Salmo trutta) are widespread and invasive salmonid...
Introductions of non–native fish can be a key driver of environmental change that has major implicat...
Despite growing evidence that biotic interactions limit the distribution of species and their potent...
1. Ecological theory attempts to predict how impacts for native species arise from biological invasi...
Ecological theory attempts to predict how impacts for native species arise from biological invasions...
1. Invasive species can cause substantial ecological impacts on native biodiversity. Whilst ecologic...
1.Ecological theory on the trophic impacts of invasive fauna on native competitors is equivocal. Whi...
Ecological theory on the trophic impacts of invasive fauna on native competitors is equivocal. Whils...
Novel trophic interactions between invasive and native species potentially increase levels of inters...
1. Ecological theory on the trophic impacts of invasive fauna on native competitors is equivocal. Wh...
Quantifying feeding interactions between non-indigenous and indigenous fishes in invaded fish commun...
Invaders affect native species across multiple trophic levels, influencing the structure and stabili...
Assessments of the trophic consequences of invasive fishes are important for quantifying their ecolo...
Species diversity is often an implicit source of biological insurance for communities against the im...
A major challenge in biological invasions is to predict community susceptibility to invasion. This s...
1. Rainbow (Oncorhynchus mykiss) and brown trout (Salmo trutta) are widespread and invasive salmonid...
Introductions of non–native fish can be a key driver of environmental change that has major implicat...
Despite growing evidence that biotic interactions limit the distribution of species and their potent...