Increasing empirical evidence indicates the number of released individuals (i.e. propagule pressure) and number of released species (i.e. colonization pressure) are key determinants of the number of species that successfully invade new habitats. In view of these relationships, and the possibility that ships transport whole communities of organisms, we collected 333 ballast water and sediment samples to investigate the relationship between propagule and colonization pressure for a variety of diverse taxonomic groups (diatoms, dinoflagellates and invertebrates). We also reviewed the scientific literature to compare the number of species transported by ships to those reported in nature. Here, we show that even though ships transport nearly ent...
Much effort has been devoted to understanding the factors promoting species colonisation, and proces...
The diversity of diatom assemblages in ships ’ ballast sediments: colonization an
The diversity of diatom assemblages in ships ’ ballast sediments: colonization an
Aim: After J. L. Lockwood, P. Cassey and T. Blackburn (2009, Diversity and Distributions, 15, 904–9...
Recent empirical and statistical evidence suggest that propagule pressure (i.e., number of individua...
Recent empirical and statistical evidence suggest that propagule pressure (i.e., number of individua...
The number of released individuals, which is a component of propagule pressure, is considered to be ...
Aim We argue that 'propagule pressure', a key term in invasion biology, has been attributed at least...
Introductions of exotic fouling species have severely disrupted marine ecosystems. Theory suggests t...
The spread of non-indigenous species represents a significant threat to the native diversity globall...
Mechanistic insights from invasion biology indicate that propagule pressure of exotic species and na...
Mixed-species assemblages are often unintentionally introduced into new ecosystems. Analysing how as...
In 2024 cargo vessels must meet the International Maritime Organization's global ballast water disch...
In 2024 cargo vessels must meet the International Maritime Organization's global ballast water disch...
Species richness and species abundance (colonization pressure and propagule pressure, respectively) ...
Much effort has been devoted to understanding the factors promoting species colonisation, and proces...
The diversity of diatom assemblages in ships ’ ballast sediments: colonization an
The diversity of diatom assemblages in ships ’ ballast sediments: colonization an
Aim: After J. L. Lockwood, P. Cassey and T. Blackburn (2009, Diversity and Distributions, 15, 904–9...
Recent empirical and statistical evidence suggest that propagule pressure (i.e., number of individua...
Recent empirical and statistical evidence suggest that propagule pressure (i.e., number of individua...
The number of released individuals, which is a component of propagule pressure, is considered to be ...
Aim We argue that 'propagule pressure', a key term in invasion biology, has been attributed at least...
Introductions of exotic fouling species have severely disrupted marine ecosystems. Theory suggests t...
The spread of non-indigenous species represents a significant threat to the native diversity globall...
Mechanistic insights from invasion biology indicate that propagule pressure of exotic species and na...
Mixed-species assemblages are often unintentionally introduced into new ecosystems. Analysing how as...
In 2024 cargo vessels must meet the International Maritime Organization's global ballast water disch...
In 2024 cargo vessels must meet the International Maritime Organization's global ballast water disch...
Species richness and species abundance (colonization pressure and propagule pressure, respectively) ...
Much effort has been devoted to understanding the factors promoting species colonisation, and proces...
The diversity of diatom assemblages in ships ’ ballast sediments: colonization an
The diversity of diatom assemblages in ships ’ ballast sediments: colonization an