The evolution of increased competitive ability (EICA) hypothesis encapsulates the importance of evolution and ecology for biological invasions. According to this proposition, leaving specialist herbivores at home frees introduced plant species from investing limited resources in defense to instead use those resources for growth, selecting for individuals with reduced defense, enhanced growth, and, consequently, increased competitive ability. We took a multispecies approach, including ancestral and non-native populations of seven weeds, as well as seven coexisting local weeds, to explore all three predictions (i.e., lower defense, greater growth, and better ability to compete in non-native than ancestral populations), the generality as an in...
1.A long‐standing explanation for invasion success is that invasive plants could evolve to be more c...
Biological invasions are ubiquitous ecological phenomena that often impact native ecosystems. Some i...
Whereas a number of studies have demonstrated the tendency of nonnative plant populations to evolve ...
Non-native plant species invasions can have significant ecological and economic impacts. Finding pat...
1. The evolution of increased competitive ability (EICA) hypothesis proposes that release from enemy...
Ecological explanations for the success and persistence of invasive species vastly outnumber evoluti...
Müller C. Evolution of increased competitive ability and shifting defence hypotheses. In: Jeschke JM...
Abstract. The ''evolution of increased competitive ability'' (EICA) hypothesis p...
Research on post-establishment evolution in nonnative plant populations has focused almost exclusive...
<div><p>The evolution of increased competitive ability (EICA) hypothesis predicts that escape from i...
Biotic interactions can structure communities, drive succession, and account for patterns of biodive...
The evolution of increased competitive ability hypothesis (EICA) predicts that when alien plants are...
Plant invasions often involve rapid evolutionary change. Founder effects, hybridization, and adaptat...
A shift in the composition of the herbivore guild in the invasive range is expected to select for pl...
Competition is commonly thought to underlie the impact of plant invasions. However, competitive effe...
1.A long‐standing explanation for invasion success is that invasive plants could evolve to be more c...
Biological invasions are ubiquitous ecological phenomena that often impact native ecosystems. Some i...
Whereas a number of studies have demonstrated the tendency of nonnative plant populations to evolve ...
Non-native plant species invasions can have significant ecological and economic impacts. Finding pat...
1. The evolution of increased competitive ability (EICA) hypothesis proposes that release from enemy...
Ecological explanations for the success and persistence of invasive species vastly outnumber evoluti...
Müller C. Evolution of increased competitive ability and shifting defence hypotheses. In: Jeschke JM...
Abstract. The ''evolution of increased competitive ability'' (EICA) hypothesis p...
Research on post-establishment evolution in nonnative plant populations has focused almost exclusive...
<div><p>The evolution of increased competitive ability (EICA) hypothesis predicts that escape from i...
Biotic interactions can structure communities, drive succession, and account for patterns of biodive...
The evolution of increased competitive ability hypothesis (EICA) predicts that when alien plants are...
Plant invasions often involve rapid evolutionary change. Founder effects, hybridization, and adaptat...
A shift in the composition of the herbivore guild in the invasive range is expected to select for pl...
Competition is commonly thought to underlie the impact of plant invasions. However, competitive effe...
1.A long‐standing explanation for invasion success is that invasive plants could evolve to be more c...
Biological invasions are ubiquitous ecological phenomena that often impact native ecosystems. Some i...
Whereas a number of studies have demonstrated the tendency of nonnative plant populations to evolve ...