In classical weed biological control, small collections of arthropods are made from one or a few sites in the native range of the target plant and are introduced to suppress the plant where it has become invasive, often across a wide geographic range. Ecological mismatches in the new range are likely, and success using the biocontrol agent may depend on post release evolution of beneficial life history traits. In this study we measure evolution of critical day length for diapause induction, (day length at which 50% of the population enters dormancy), in a beetle (Diorhabda carinulata) introduced into North America from China to control an exotic shrub, Tamarix spp. Beetle populations were sampled from four sites in North America seven years...
Understanding the impact of herbivory on plant populations is a fundamental goal of ecology. Damage ...
The success of invasive plants has often been attributed to their rapid evolution at the introduced ...
1. Herbivory can drive rapid evolution of plant chemical traits mediating defensive and competitive ...
In classical weed biological control, small collections of arthropods are made from one or a few sit...
We present evidence that populations of an invasive plant species that have become re-associated wit...
The Northern tamarisk beetle (Diorhabda carinulata) was introduced to the Colorado River Basin in 20...
Evolution has contributed to the successful invasion of exotic plant species in their introduced ran...
Introduced plants may initially experience enemy release but some of those interactions may be reins...
Adults and larvae of Diorhabda elongata Brullé subspecies deserticola Chen feed on the foliage of sa...
Introduced plants may initially experience enemy release but some of those interactions may be reins...
Premise: Spatial variation in selective pressures can lead to intraspecific variation in life histor...
The extent to which evolutionary change occurs in a predictable manner under field conditions and ho...
The success rate of weed biological control programs is difficult to evaluate and the factors affect...
Insects approved for classical biocontrol of weeds are often capable of using close relatives of the...
Understanding the impact of herbivory on plant populations is a fundamental goal of ecology. Damage ...
The success of invasive plants has often been attributed to their rapid evolution at the introduced ...
1. Herbivory can drive rapid evolution of plant chemical traits mediating defensive and competitive ...
In classical weed biological control, small collections of arthropods are made from one or a few sit...
We present evidence that populations of an invasive plant species that have become re-associated wit...
The Northern tamarisk beetle (Diorhabda carinulata) was introduced to the Colorado River Basin in 20...
Evolution has contributed to the successful invasion of exotic plant species in their introduced ran...
Introduced plants may initially experience enemy release but some of those interactions may be reins...
Adults and larvae of Diorhabda elongata Brullé subspecies deserticola Chen feed on the foliage of sa...
Introduced plants may initially experience enemy release but some of those interactions may be reins...
Premise: Spatial variation in selective pressures can lead to intraspecific variation in life histor...
The extent to which evolutionary change occurs in a predictable manner under field conditions and ho...
The success rate of weed biological control programs is difficult to evaluate and the factors affect...
Insects approved for classical biocontrol of weeds are often capable of using close relatives of the...
Understanding the impact of herbivory on plant populations is a fundamental goal of ecology. Damage ...
The success of invasive plants has often been attributed to their rapid evolution at the introduced ...
1. Herbivory can drive rapid evolution of plant chemical traits mediating defensive and competitive ...