Copyright: © Authors. This is an open-access article distributed under the terms of the Creative Commons Attribution License, which permits unrestricted use, distribution, and reproduction in any medium, provided the original author and source are credited. http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/3.0/Both competitors and natural enemies can limit plant population growth. However, demographic comparisons of the effects of these interactions on introduced versus co-occurring, related native species are uncommon. We asked: (1) does plant competition, insect herbivory, or their combination reduce population growth rate, log lambda, of the Eurasian thistle Cirsium vulgare sufficiently to explain its limited invasiveness in western tallgrass prair...
Both competition and herbivory have been shown to reduce plant survival, growth, and reproduction. M...
Invasive species have the potential to alter trade-offs leading to selection in the populations they...
Invasive species have the potential to alter trade-offs leading to selection in the populations they...
Both competitors and natural enemies can limit plant population growth. However, demographic compari...
Both competitors and natural enemies can limit plant population growth. However, demographic compari...
Background/Question/Methods The European Cirsium vulgare is an invasive species worldwide, but in...
The biotic resistance hypothesis is a dominant paradigm for why some introduced species fail to beco...
The biotic resistance hypothesis is a dominant paradigm for why some introduced species fail to beco...
Click on the DOI link below to access the article (may not be free).Both competition and herbivory h...
Both competition and herbivory have been shown to reduce plant survival, growth, and reproduction. M...
The influence of native fauna on non-native plant population growth, size, and distribution is not w...
The influence of native fauna on non-native plant population growth, size, and distribution is not w...
The influence of native fauna on non-native plant population growth, size, and distribution is not w...
An important, yet poorly quantified mechanism to explain the failure of some exotic species to incre...
The influence of native fauna on non-native plant population growth, size, and distribution is not w...
Both competition and herbivory have been shown to reduce plant survival, growth, and reproduction. M...
Invasive species have the potential to alter trade-offs leading to selection in the populations they...
Invasive species have the potential to alter trade-offs leading to selection in the populations they...
Both competitors and natural enemies can limit plant population growth. However, demographic compari...
Both competitors and natural enemies can limit plant population growth. However, demographic compari...
Background/Question/Methods The European Cirsium vulgare is an invasive species worldwide, but in...
The biotic resistance hypothesis is a dominant paradigm for why some introduced species fail to beco...
The biotic resistance hypothesis is a dominant paradigm for why some introduced species fail to beco...
Click on the DOI link below to access the article (may not be free).Both competition and herbivory h...
Both competition and herbivory have been shown to reduce plant survival, growth, and reproduction. M...
The influence of native fauna on non-native plant population growth, size, and distribution is not w...
The influence of native fauna on non-native plant population growth, size, and distribution is not w...
The influence of native fauna on non-native plant population growth, size, and distribution is not w...
An important, yet poorly quantified mechanism to explain the failure of some exotic species to incre...
The influence of native fauna on non-native plant population growth, size, and distribution is not w...
Both competition and herbivory have been shown to reduce plant survival, growth, and reproduction. M...
Invasive species have the potential to alter trade-offs leading to selection in the populations they...
Invasive species have the potential to alter trade-offs leading to selection in the populations they...