Several hypotheses proposed to explain the success of introduced species focus on altered interspecific interactions. One of the most prominent, the Enemy Release Hypothesis, posits that invading species benefit compared to their native counterparts if they lose their herbivores and pathogens during the invasion process. We previously reported on a common garden experiment (from 2002) in which we compared levels of herbivory between 30 taxonomically paired native and introduced old?field plants. In this phylogenetically controlled comparison, herbivore damage tended to be higher on introduced than on native plants. This striking pattern, the opposite of current theory, prompted us to further investigate herbivory and several other interspec...
Our understanding of the interrelated mechanisms driving plant invasions, such as the interplay betw...
Introducing non-native species in new natural areas can have a large impact on the existing communit...
Introduced species inevitably experience novel selection pressures in their new environments as a re...
This is the publisher's version of an article published by the Ecological Society of America.Several...
1 .In their colonized ranges, exotic plants may be released from some of the herbivores or pathogens...
Biological invasions—the establishment and spread of species outside their historical native ranges—...
The enemy release hypothesis states that introduced plants have a competitive advantage due to their...
Plants engage in complex multipartite interactions with mutualists and antagonists, but these intera...
Although many factors have been proposed that potentially contribute to invasion success in plants, ...
The enemy release hypothesis (ERH) postulates that invasive species are released from the effects of...
The enemy release hypothesis is often cited as a potential explanation for the success of introduced...
Herbivores may facilitate or impede exotic plant invasion, depending on their direct and indirect in...
Why do some exotic plant species become invasive? Two common hypotheses, increased resource availabi...
The overwhelming majority of plant species introduced into a new range never become invasive. Conse...
specialist herbivore, weeds One of the most cited hypotheses explaining the inordinate success of a ...
Our understanding of the interrelated mechanisms driving plant invasions, such as the interplay betw...
Introducing non-native species in new natural areas can have a large impact on the existing communit...
Introduced species inevitably experience novel selection pressures in their new environments as a re...
This is the publisher's version of an article published by the Ecological Society of America.Several...
1 .In their colonized ranges, exotic plants may be released from some of the herbivores or pathogens...
Biological invasions—the establishment and spread of species outside their historical native ranges—...
The enemy release hypothesis states that introduced plants have a competitive advantage due to their...
Plants engage in complex multipartite interactions with mutualists and antagonists, but these intera...
Although many factors have been proposed that potentially contribute to invasion success in plants, ...
The enemy release hypothesis (ERH) postulates that invasive species are released from the effects of...
The enemy release hypothesis is often cited as a potential explanation for the success of introduced...
Herbivores may facilitate or impede exotic plant invasion, depending on their direct and indirect in...
Why do some exotic plant species become invasive? Two common hypotheses, increased resource availabi...
The overwhelming majority of plant species introduced into a new range never become invasive. Conse...
specialist herbivore, weeds One of the most cited hypotheses explaining the inordinate success of a ...
Our understanding of the interrelated mechanisms driving plant invasions, such as the interplay betw...
Introducing non-native species in new natural areas can have a large impact on the existing communit...
Introduced species inevitably experience novel selection pressures in their new environments as a re...