The performance of introduced plants can be limited by the availability of soil mutualists outside their native range, but how interactions with mutualists differ between ranges is largely unknown. If mutualists are absent, incompatible or parasitic, plants may compensate by investing more in root biomass, adapting to be more selective or by maximizing the benefits associated with the mutualists available. We tested these hypotheses using seven non-agricultural species of Trifolium naturalized in New Zealand (NZ). We grew seeds from two native (Spain, UK) and one introduced (NZ) provenance of each species in glasshouse pots inoculated with rhizosphere microbiota collected from conspecifics in each region. We compared how plant biomass, degr...
Plant species sometimes perform extraordinarily well when introduced to new environments, through ac...
1. Due to global warming and other changes in the environment, many native and exotic plant species ...
Arbuscular mycorrhizal (AM) fungi can exert a powerful influence on the outcome of plant–plant compe...
The performance of introduced plants can be limited by the availability of soil mutualists outside t...
* The performance of introduced plants can be limited by the availability of soil mutualists outside...
1. The performance of introduced plants can be limited by the availability of soil mutualists outsid...
1. The performance of introduced plants can be limited by the availability of soil mutualists outsid...
The majority of terrestrial plants form mutualistic associations with arbuscular mycorrhizal fungi (...
© 2016 John Wiley & Sons Ltd.Aim: While plant species introduced to new regions may benefit from esc...
Alien plant species may benefit from leaving behind specialised natural enemies when initially intro...
Mutualists may play an important role in invasion success. The ability to take advantage of novel mu...
A critical goal in the study of plant invasions is to understand the traits and mechanisms that cont...
Mutualistic interactions can strongly influence species invasions, as the inability to form successf...
The availability and quality of mutualists beyond a species' range edge may limit range expansion. W...
Plant species sometimes perform extraordinarily well when introduced to new environments, through ac...
1. Due to global warming and other changes in the environment, many native and exotic plant species ...
Arbuscular mycorrhizal (AM) fungi can exert a powerful influence on the outcome of plant–plant compe...
The performance of introduced plants can be limited by the availability of soil mutualists outside t...
* The performance of introduced plants can be limited by the availability of soil mutualists outside...
1. The performance of introduced plants can be limited by the availability of soil mutualists outsid...
1. The performance of introduced plants can be limited by the availability of soil mutualists outsid...
The majority of terrestrial plants form mutualistic associations with arbuscular mycorrhizal fungi (...
© 2016 John Wiley & Sons Ltd.Aim: While plant species introduced to new regions may benefit from esc...
Alien plant species may benefit from leaving behind specialised natural enemies when initially intro...
Mutualists may play an important role in invasion success. The ability to take advantage of novel mu...
A critical goal in the study of plant invasions is to understand the traits and mechanisms that cont...
Mutualistic interactions can strongly influence species invasions, as the inability to form successf...
The availability and quality of mutualists beyond a species' range edge may limit range expansion. W...
Plant species sometimes perform extraordinarily well when introduced to new environments, through ac...
1. Due to global warming and other changes in the environment, many native and exotic plant species ...
Arbuscular mycorrhizal (AM) fungi can exert a powerful influence on the outcome of plant–plant compe...