Trade-offs between performance and tolerance of abiotic and biotic stress have been proposed to explain both the success of invasive species and frequently observed size differences between native and introduced populations. Canada thistle seeds collected from across the introduced North American and the native European range were grown in benign and stressful conditions (nutrient stress, shading, simulated herbivory, drought, and mowing), to evaluate whether native and introduced individuals differ in performance or stress tolerance. An additional experiment assessed the strength of maternal effects by comparing plants derived from field-collected seeds with those derived from clones grown in the glasshouse. Introduced populations tended t...
Aim: Species capable of vigorous growth under a wide range of environmentalconditions should have a ...
1. Understanding how non-native plants respond to environmental variation, and the limits to these r...
The potential for rapid evolution in invasive species makes them useful for studying adaptive respon...
Phenotypic differentiation in size and fecundity between native and invasive populations of a specie...
Phenotypic differentiation in size and fecundity between native and invasive populations of a specie...
Invasive species often possess a great capacity to adapt to novel environments in the form of spatia...
Invasive species are able to move into new environments, with new abiotic conditions and biotic inte...
Genetically based phenotypic differentiation between native and invasive populations of exotic plant...
• To understand prerequisites of biological invasions, it is imperative to know whether species have...
Increasing evidence suggests that invasive populations adapt to novel environments rapidly, and the ...
Background and Aims: Phenotypic plasticity and genetic differentiation both play important roles in ...
1. Biotic resistance represents an important natural barrier to potential invaders throughout the wo...
There is growing evidence that rapid adaptation to novel environments drives successful establishmen...
Biotic resistance represents an important natural barrier to potential invaders throughout the world...
It has been widely suggested that invasion success along broad environmental gradients may be partia...
Aim: Species capable of vigorous growth under a wide range of environmentalconditions should have a ...
1. Understanding how non-native plants respond to environmental variation, and the limits to these r...
The potential for rapid evolution in invasive species makes them useful for studying adaptive respon...
Phenotypic differentiation in size and fecundity between native and invasive populations of a specie...
Phenotypic differentiation in size and fecundity between native and invasive populations of a specie...
Invasive species often possess a great capacity to adapt to novel environments in the form of spatia...
Invasive species are able to move into new environments, with new abiotic conditions and biotic inte...
Genetically based phenotypic differentiation between native and invasive populations of exotic plant...
• To understand prerequisites of biological invasions, it is imperative to know whether species have...
Increasing evidence suggests that invasive populations adapt to novel environments rapidly, and the ...
Background and Aims: Phenotypic plasticity and genetic differentiation both play important roles in ...
1. Biotic resistance represents an important natural barrier to potential invaders throughout the wo...
There is growing evidence that rapid adaptation to novel environments drives successful establishmen...
Biotic resistance represents an important natural barrier to potential invaders throughout the world...
It has been widely suggested that invasion success along broad environmental gradients may be partia...
Aim: Species capable of vigorous growth under a wide range of environmentalconditions should have a ...
1. Understanding how non-native plants respond to environmental variation, and the limits to these r...
The potential for rapid evolution in invasive species makes them useful for studying adaptive respon...