Indirect effects may play an important role in structuring plant communities. Using a spatially explicit model of consumer foraging and plant competition, we demonstrate how the relationship between the spatial area over which plants compete and the spatial scale of consumer behaviour can determine the outcome of competition when one plant species provides a refuge for mobile consumers (i.e. refuge-mediated apparent competition). Once an initial population of the invader is established, complete invasion may be inevitable because of an ever-advancing invasion front ratchets forward driven by a feeding front of mobile consumers. Because the spatial extent of apparent competition determines the area available for colonization, consumers may a...
Competitiveness describes a key ability important for plants to grow and survive abiotic and biotic ...
When applied at the individual patch level, the classic competition-colonization models of species c...
The refuge-mediated apparent competition hypothesis (RMACH) posits that a plant species can indirect...
At the intersection of consumer behaviour and plant competition is the concept of refuge-mediated ap...
Plant species vary greatly in their responsiveness to nutritional soil mutualists, such as mycorrhiz...
<div><p>Plant species vary greatly in their responsiveness to nutritional soil mutualists, such as m...
Amongst the various hypotheses that challenged to explain the coexistence of species with similar li...
The non-random dispersal of plant propagules is thought to counter competitive exclusion and thus pr...
As the number of biological invasions increases, interactions between different invasive species wil...
Despite considerable efforts devoted to investigate the community assembly processes driving plant i...
Understanding biodiversity maintenance when species compete for shared limiting resources remains an...
Understanding biodiversity maintenance when species compete for shared limiting resources remains an...
Most terrestrial plant communities exhibit relatively high species diversity and many competitive sp...
Asymmetric competition is a form of resource division among plants, in which large plants greatly su...
Disturbance is key to maintaining species diversity in plant communities. Although the effects of di...
Competitiveness describes a key ability important for plants to grow and survive abiotic and biotic ...
When applied at the individual patch level, the classic competition-colonization models of species c...
The refuge-mediated apparent competition hypothesis (RMACH) posits that a plant species can indirect...
At the intersection of consumer behaviour and plant competition is the concept of refuge-mediated ap...
Plant species vary greatly in their responsiveness to nutritional soil mutualists, such as mycorrhiz...
<div><p>Plant species vary greatly in their responsiveness to nutritional soil mutualists, such as m...
Amongst the various hypotheses that challenged to explain the coexistence of species with similar li...
The non-random dispersal of plant propagules is thought to counter competitive exclusion and thus pr...
As the number of biological invasions increases, interactions between different invasive species wil...
Despite considerable efforts devoted to investigate the community assembly processes driving plant i...
Understanding biodiversity maintenance when species compete for shared limiting resources remains an...
Understanding biodiversity maintenance when species compete for shared limiting resources remains an...
Most terrestrial plant communities exhibit relatively high species diversity and many competitive sp...
Asymmetric competition is a form of resource division among plants, in which large plants greatly su...
Disturbance is key to maintaining species diversity in plant communities. Although the effects of di...
Competitiveness describes a key ability important for plants to grow and survive abiotic and biotic ...
When applied at the individual patch level, the classic competition-colonization models of species c...
The refuge-mediated apparent competition hypothesis (RMACH) posits that a plant species can indirect...