Island biotas are viewed popularly as much more fragile than those of mainland areas and much more prone to damage from invaders. There are far too few data to assess this view thoroughly; for example, failed invasions are often unrecorded, and claims that an introduced species has displaced a native one are often based on correlated population changes rather than experiment and/or detailed field observations. If there is a tendency for invasions to affect island communities more than mainland ones, it is far from universal; virtually every kind of damage wrought by invaders on islands has also been wrought in mainland areas. It is unlikely that, by virtue of their reduced species richness alone, island communities pose less "bioti...
floras are not necessarily more species poor than continental ones Oceanic islands typically exhibit...
Island endemics are expected to have low effective population sizes (Ne), first because some may exp...
Aim: In the half-century since publication of the Theory of Island Biology, ecologists have come to ...
Abstract Numerous islands worldwide are being increasingly invaded by exotic species. However, the e...
One of the best-known general patterns in island biogeography is the species-isolation relationship ...
Aim Exotic species pose one of the most significant threats to biodiversity, especially on islands. ...
abstract: Species richness is decreasing at a global scale. At sub-global scales, that is, within an...
Classic island biogeography theory predicts that very small islands, near the extreme lower end of t...
Island species and habitats are particularly vulnerable to human disturbances, and anthropogenic cha...
Identifying the mechanisms underlying invasive plant establishment and native plant decline remains ...
The theory of island biogeography has played a pivotal role in the way ecologists view communities. ...
Copyright © 2005 Blackwell Publishing.This paper has two objectives. First, we examine how a variety...
Disturbances of oceanic origin can severely affect plant communities on islands, but it is unclear w...
Despite islands contributing only 6.7% of land surface area, they harbor ~20% of the Earth’s biodive...
Tropical islands are species foundries, formed either as a by-product of volcanism, when previously ...
floras are not necessarily more species poor than continental ones Oceanic islands typically exhibit...
Island endemics are expected to have low effective population sizes (Ne), first because some may exp...
Aim: In the half-century since publication of the Theory of Island Biology, ecologists have come to ...
Abstract Numerous islands worldwide are being increasingly invaded by exotic species. However, the e...
One of the best-known general patterns in island biogeography is the species-isolation relationship ...
Aim Exotic species pose one of the most significant threats to biodiversity, especially on islands. ...
abstract: Species richness is decreasing at a global scale. At sub-global scales, that is, within an...
Classic island biogeography theory predicts that very small islands, near the extreme lower end of t...
Island species and habitats are particularly vulnerable to human disturbances, and anthropogenic cha...
Identifying the mechanisms underlying invasive plant establishment and native plant decline remains ...
The theory of island biogeography has played a pivotal role in the way ecologists view communities. ...
Copyright © 2005 Blackwell Publishing.This paper has two objectives. First, we examine how a variety...
Disturbances of oceanic origin can severely affect plant communities on islands, but it is unclear w...
Despite islands contributing only 6.7% of land surface area, they harbor ~20% of the Earth’s biodive...
Tropical islands are species foundries, formed either as a by-product of volcanism, when previously ...
floras are not necessarily more species poor than continental ones Oceanic islands typically exhibit...
Island endemics are expected to have low effective population sizes (Ne), first because some may exp...
Aim: In the half-century since publication of the Theory of Island Biology, ecologists have come to ...