Rapid adaptation can aid invasive populations in their competitive success. Resource allocation trade-off hypotheses predict higher resource availability or the lack of natural enemies in introduced ranges allow for increased growth and reproduction, thus contributing to invasive success. Evidence for such hypotheses is however equivocal and tests among multiple ranges over productivity gradients are required to provide a better understanding of the general applicability of these theories. Using common gardens, we investigated the adaptive divergence of various constitutive and inducible defence-related traits between the native North American and introduced European and Australian ranges, while controlling for divergence due to latitudinal...
Invasive plant species threaten biological communities globally. However, relatively little is known...
Data from Colomer-Ventura et al.Divergence in plant traits and trait plasticity after invasion has b...
The success of invasive plants has often been attributed to their rapid evolution at the introduced ...
It has long been assumed that introduced species have higher seed dispersal and survival than do nat...
To understand the biological effects of climate change, it is essential to take into account species...
The margins of an expanding range are predicted to be challenging environments for adaptation. Margi...
Phenotypic differentiation in size and fecundity between native and invasive populations of a specie...
1. What drives the evolution of increased growth and fecundity in plants introduced to a novel range...
The evolution of increased competitive ability (EICA) hypothesis encapsulates the importance of evol...
The speed at which biological range expansions occur has important consequences for species experien...
Adaptation to climate, evolving over contemporary time scales, could facilitate rapid range expansio...
Biological invasions represent opportunities to gain insight into fundamental evolutionary questions...
Invasive plant species threaten biological communities globally. However, relatively little is known...
The EICA-hypothesis predicts that invading plants adapt to their novel environment by evolving incre...
Biological invasions are ‘natural’ experiments that can improve our understanding of contemporary ev...
Invasive plant species threaten biological communities globally. However, relatively little is known...
Data from Colomer-Ventura et al.Divergence in plant traits and trait plasticity after invasion has b...
The success of invasive plants has often been attributed to their rapid evolution at the introduced ...
It has long been assumed that introduced species have higher seed dispersal and survival than do nat...
To understand the biological effects of climate change, it is essential to take into account species...
The margins of an expanding range are predicted to be challenging environments for adaptation. Margi...
Phenotypic differentiation in size and fecundity between native and invasive populations of a specie...
1. What drives the evolution of increased growth and fecundity in plants introduced to a novel range...
The evolution of increased competitive ability (EICA) hypothesis encapsulates the importance of evol...
The speed at which biological range expansions occur has important consequences for species experien...
Adaptation to climate, evolving over contemporary time scales, could facilitate rapid range expansio...
Biological invasions represent opportunities to gain insight into fundamental evolutionary questions...
Invasive plant species threaten biological communities globally. However, relatively little is known...
The EICA-hypothesis predicts that invading plants adapt to their novel environment by evolving incre...
Biological invasions are ‘natural’ experiments that can improve our understanding of contemporary ev...
Invasive plant species threaten biological communities globally. However, relatively little is known...
Data from Colomer-Ventura et al.Divergence in plant traits and trait plasticity after invasion has b...
The success of invasive plants has often been attributed to their rapid evolution at the introduced ...