Secondary compounds can contribute to the success of non-native plant species if they reduce damage by native herbivores or inhibit the growth of native plant competitors. However, there is opposing evidence on whether the secondary compounds of non-native plant species are stronger than those of natives. This may be explained by other factors, besides plant origin, that affect the potential of plant secondary compounds. We tested how plant origin, phylogeny, growth strategy and stoichiometry affected the allelopathic potential of 34 aquatic plants. The allelopathic potential was quantified using bioassays with the cyanobacterium Dolichospermum flos-aquae. The allelopathic potential showed a strong phylogenetic signal, but was similar for n...
Biological invasions have become a major global issue in ecosystem conservation. As formalized in th...
International audienceThe release of allelochemicals by plants can affect the performance of other o...
Invasive plant species are often more successful within introduced areas when compared to their natu...
Secondary compounds can contribute to the success of non-native plant species if they reduce damage ...
Secondary compounds can contribute to the success of non-native plant species if they reduce damage ...
International audienceAllelopathy is defined as the effects (stimulatory and inhibitory) of a plant ...
ABSTRACT: Allelopathy in aquatic environments may provide a competitive advantage to angiosperms, al...
Some plants use allelopathy to compete against neighbouring plants, and the ability to induce allelo...
Non-native macrophytes structurally impact aquatic assemblages, yet little is known regarding how th...
Abstract Some introduced invasive species may be competitively superior to natives because they rele...
Non-native plants increasingly dominate the vegetation in aquatic ecosystems and thrive in eutrophic...
Allelopathy (i.e. chemical interactions between plants) is known to affect individual performance, c...
1. Non-native plants increasingly dominate the vegetation in aquatic ecosystems and thrive in eutrop...
Item does not contain fulltextAquatic macrophytes can excrete chemical substances into their envirom...
Many ecosystems may suffer from both nutrient enrichment and exotic plant invasions simultaneously. ...
Biological invasions have become a major global issue in ecosystem conservation. As formalized in th...
International audienceThe release of allelochemicals by plants can affect the performance of other o...
Invasive plant species are often more successful within introduced areas when compared to their natu...
Secondary compounds can contribute to the success of non-native plant species if they reduce damage ...
Secondary compounds can contribute to the success of non-native plant species if they reduce damage ...
International audienceAllelopathy is defined as the effects (stimulatory and inhibitory) of a plant ...
ABSTRACT: Allelopathy in aquatic environments may provide a competitive advantage to angiosperms, al...
Some plants use allelopathy to compete against neighbouring plants, and the ability to induce allelo...
Non-native macrophytes structurally impact aquatic assemblages, yet little is known regarding how th...
Abstract Some introduced invasive species may be competitively superior to natives because they rele...
Non-native plants increasingly dominate the vegetation in aquatic ecosystems and thrive in eutrophic...
Allelopathy (i.e. chemical interactions between plants) is known to affect individual performance, c...
1. Non-native plants increasingly dominate the vegetation in aquatic ecosystems and thrive in eutrop...
Item does not contain fulltextAquatic macrophytes can excrete chemical substances into their envirom...
Many ecosystems may suffer from both nutrient enrichment and exotic plant invasions simultaneously. ...
Biological invasions have become a major global issue in ecosystem conservation. As formalized in th...
International audienceThe release of allelochemicals by plants can affect the performance of other o...
Invasive plant species are often more successful within introduced areas when compared to their natu...