Success of alien plants is often attributed to high competitive ability. However, not all aliens become dominant, and not all natives are vulnerable to competitive exclusion. Here, we quantified competitive outcomes and their determinants, using response-surface experiments, in 48 pairs of native and naturalised alien annuals that are common or rare in Germany. Overall, aliens were not more competitive than natives. However, common aliens (invasive) were, despite strong limitation by intraspecific competition, more competitive than rare natives. This is because alien species had higher intrinsic growth rates than natives, and common species had higher intrinsic growth rates than rare ones. Strength of interspecific competition was not relat...
Background: Exotic species can rapidly develop adaptations to their non-native regions, such as incr...
1. Understanding the factors that drive commonness and rarity of plant species and whether these fac...
International audienceQuestions: The high competitiveness of exotic invasive species has often been ...
Success of alien plants is often attributed to high competitive ability. However, not all aliens bec...
Competition is commonly thought to underlie the impact of plant invasions. However, competitive effe...
Plant traits associated with alien invasiveness may also distinguish rare from common native species...
The success of invasive alien and common native species may be explained by the same underlying mech...
The success of invasive alien and common native species may be explained by the same underlying mech...
Alien plants experience novel abiotic conditions and interactions with native communities in the int...
Multiple invaders commonly co-occur in native ecosystems and in some cases have been shown to facili...
The invasion success of introduced plants is frequently explained as a result of competitive interac...
International audienceAim: Darwin’s naturalization hypothesis states that dissimilarity to native sp...
Invasive alien species (IAS) are the subset of naturalized species that cause greater impacts on bio...
Herbert Baker arguably initiated the search for species characteristics determining alien plant inva...
Background: Exotic species can rapidly develop adaptations to their non-native regions, such as incr...
1. Understanding the factors that drive commonness and rarity of plant species and whether these fac...
International audienceQuestions: The high competitiveness of exotic invasive species has often been ...
Success of alien plants is often attributed to high competitive ability. However, not all aliens bec...
Competition is commonly thought to underlie the impact of plant invasions. However, competitive effe...
Plant traits associated with alien invasiveness may also distinguish rare from common native species...
The success of invasive alien and common native species may be explained by the same underlying mech...
The success of invasive alien and common native species may be explained by the same underlying mech...
Alien plants experience novel abiotic conditions and interactions with native communities in the int...
Multiple invaders commonly co-occur in native ecosystems and in some cases have been shown to facili...
The invasion success of introduced plants is frequently explained as a result of competitive interac...
International audienceAim: Darwin’s naturalization hypothesis states that dissimilarity to native sp...
Invasive alien species (IAS) are the subset of naturalized species that cause greater impacts on bio...
Herbert Baker arguably initiated the search for species characteristics determining alien plant inva...
Background: Exotic species can rapidly develop adaptations to their non-native regions, such as incr...
1. Understanding the factors that drive commonness and rarity of plant species and whether these fac...
International audienceQuestions: The high competitiveness of exotic invasive species has often been ...