A central question in ecology concerns how some exotic plants that occur at low densities in their native range are able to attain much higher densities where they are introduced. This question has remained unresolved in part due to a lack of experiments that assess factors that affect the population growth or abundance of plants in both ranges. We tested two hypotheses for exotic plant success: escape from specialist insect herbivores and a greater response to disturbance in the introduced range. Within three introduced populations in Montana, USA, and three native populations in Germany, we experimentally manipulated insect herbivore pressure and created small-scale disturbances to determine how these factors affect the performance of hou...
Non-native plant species invasions can have significant ecological and economic impacts. Finding pat...
Herbivores may facilitate or impede exotic plant invasion, depending on their direct and indirect in...
Disturbance is a primary driver of exotic plant invasions, but why disturbance commonly favors exoti...
Invasive species often face novel abiotic and biotic environments with different selective regimes w...
Many invasion hypotheses postulate that introducing species to novel environments allows some organi...
1. Understanding the processes underlying the transition from introduction to naturalization and spr...
A growing body of literature has led to the debate in invasion biology whether exotic species perfor...
1.Many invasion hypotheses postulate that introducing species to novel environments allows some orga...
Successful exotic plant invasions are likely to be caused by multiple, non-mutually exclusive mechan...
The enemy release hypothesis is often cited as a potential explanation for the success of introduced...
Several hypotheses proposed to explain the success of introduced species focus on altered interspeci...
1 .In their colonized ranges, exotic plants may be released from some of the herbivores or pathogens...
Successful exotic plant invasions are likely to be caused by multiple, non-mutually exclusive mechan...
Biological invasions—the establishment and spread of species outside their historical native ranges—...
1. What drives the evolution of increased growth and fecundity in plants introduced to a novel range...
Non-native plant species invasions can have significant ecological and economic impacts. Finding pat...
Herbivores may facilitate or impede exotic plant invasion, depending on their direct and indirect in...
Disturbance is a primary driver of exotic plant invasions, but why disturbance commonly favors exoti...
Invasive species often face novel abiotic and biotic environments with different selective regimes w...
Many invasion hypotheses postulate that introducing species to novel environments allows some organi...
1. Understanding the processes underlying the transition from introduction to naturalization and spr...
A growing body of literature has led to the debate in invasion biology whether exotic species perfor...
1.Many invasion hypotheses postulate that introducing species to novel environments allows some orga...
Successful exotic plant invasions are likely to be caused by multiple, non-mutually exclusive mechan...
The enemy release hypothesis is often cited as a potential explanation for the success of introduced...
Several hypotheses proposed to explain the success of introduced species focus on altered interspeci...
1 .In their colonized ranges, exotic plants may be released from some of the herbivores or pathogens...
Successful exotic plant invasions are likely to be caused by multiple, non-mutually exclusive mechan...
Biological invasions—the establishment and spread of species outside their historical native ranges—...
1. What drives the evolution of increased growth and fecundity in plants introduced to a novel range...
Non-native plant species invasions can have significant ecological and economic impacts. Finding pat...
Herbivores may facilitate or impede exotic plant invasion, depending on their direct and indirect in...
Disturbance is a primary driver of exotic plant invasions, but why disturbance commonly favors exoti...