CAB International
Researching invasive species

Detailed coverage of invasive species threatening livelihoods and the environment worldwide

The ISC is a constantly developing encyclopaedic resource containing:
Datasheets on over 1500 invasive species and animal diseases
Basic datasheets on further species, countries, habitats and pathways
Bibliographic database of over 75,000 records (updated weekly)
Full text documents (updated weekly)
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Updates
Country datasheets now include lists of species and animal diseases and can be found on the Basic Datasheets tab
Datasheets on Pathway causes (reasons for introduction/spread) and Pathway vectors (physical means of introduction/spread) have been added to the browse tree

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Showing 61 - 70 of 284
Search results for 'sn:"1366-9516"'
  Macroecology meets invasion ecology: linking the native distributions of Australian acacias to invasiveness.

Hui Cang;  Richardson, D. M.;  Robertson, M. P.;  Wilson, J. R. U.;  Yates, C. J.;  Wiley-Blackwell, Oxford, UK,  Diversity and Distributions, 2011, 17, 5, pp 872-883, many ref.

Aim: Species' native ranges reflect the net outcome of interactions between life-history strategies and biotic and abiotic influences over evolutionar...

  Phylogeographic consequences of different introduction histories of invasive Australian Acacia species and Paraserianthes lophantha (Fabaceae) in South Africa.

Roux, J. J. le;  Brown, G. K.;  Byrne, M.;  Ndlovu, J.;  Richardson, D. M.;  Thompson, G. D.;  Wilson, J. R. U.;  Wiley-Blackwell, Oxford, UK,  Diversity and Distributions, 2011, 17, 5, pp 861-871, many ref.

Aim: The genetic makeup and evolutionary potential of alien species can be profoundly influenced by their introduction history, but without detailed h...

  The evolution and phylogenetic placement of invasive Australian Acacia species.

Miller, J. T.;  Murphy, D. J.;  Brown, G. K.;  Richardson, D. M.;  González-Orozco, C. E.;  Wiley-Blackwell, Oxford, UK,  Diversity and Distributions, 2011, 17, 5, pp 848-860, many ref.

Aim: Acacia is the largest genus of plants in Australia with over 1000 species. A subset of these species is invasive in many parts of the world inclu...

  Adoption, use and perception of Australian acacias around the world.

Kull, C. A.;  Shackleton, C. M.;  Cunningham, P. J.;  Ducatillon, C.;  Dufour-Dror, J. M.;  Esler, K. J.;  Friday, J. B.;  Gouveia, A. C.;  Griffin, A. R.;  Marchante, E.;  Midgley, S. J.;  Pauchard, A.;  Rangan, H.;  Richardson, D. M.;  Rinaudo, T.;  Tassin, J.;  Urgenson, L. S.;  Maltitz, G. P. von;  Zenni, R. D.;  Zylstra, M. J.;  Wiley-Blackwell, Oxford, UK,  Diversity and Distributions, 2011, 17, 5, pp 822-836, many ref.

Aim: To examine the different uses and perceptions of introduced Australian acacias (wattles; Acacia subgenus Phyllodineae) by rural households and co...

  A native at home and abroad: the history, politics, ethics and aesthetics of acacias.

Carruthers, J.;  Robin, L.;  Hattingh, J. P.;  Kull, C. A.;  Rangan, H.;  Wilgen, B. W. van;  Wiley-Blackwell, Oxford, UK,  Diversity and Distributions, 2011, 17, 5, pp 810-821, many ref.

Aim: Anthropogenic introductions of Australian Acacia spp. that become classed as alien invasive species have consequences besides the physical, spati...

  Trees and shrubs as invasive alien species - a global review.

Richardson, D. M.;  Rejmánek, M.;  Wiley-Blackwell, Oxford, UK,  Diversity and Distributions, 2011, 17, 5, pp 788-809, many ref.

Aim: Woody plants were not widely considered to be important invasive alien species until fairly recently. Thousands of species of trees and shrubs ha...

  Special Issue: Human-mediated introductions of Australian acacias - a global experiment in biogeography.

Richardson, D. M.;  Carruthers, J.;  Hui, C.;  Impson, F. A. C.;  Miller, J. T.;  Robertson, M. P.;  Rouget. M.;  le Roux, J. J.;  Wilson, J. R. U.;  Wiley-Blackwell, Oxford, UK,  Diversity and Distributions, 2011, 17, 5, pp 771-1075

Aim: Australian acacias (1012 recognized species native to Australia, which were previously grouped in Acacia subgenus Phyllodineae) have been moved e...

  High mitochondrial DNA diversity of an introduced alien carnivore: comparison of feral and ranch American mink Neovison vison in Poland.

Zalewski, A.;  Michalska-Parda, A.;  Ratkiewicz, M.;  Kozakiewicz, M.;  Bartoszewicz, M.;  Brzezin´ski, M.;  Wiley-Blackwell, Oxford, UK,  Diversity and Distributions, 2011, 17, 4, pp 757-768, many ref.

Aim: Invasive alien species usually exhibit very high adaptation and rapid evolution in a new environment, but they often have low levels of genetic d...

  The role of long-distance seed dispersal in the local population dynamics of an invasive plant species.

Pergl, J.;  Müllerová, J.;  Perglová, I.;  Herben, T.;  Pyšek, P.;  Wiley-Blackwell, Oxford, UK,  Diversity and Distributions, 2011, 17, 4, pp 725-738, many ref.

Aim: Long-distance dispersal is important for plant population dynamics at larger spatial scales, but our understanding of this phenomenon is mostly b...

  Pine invasions: climate predicts invasion success; something else predicts failure.

Nuñez, M. A.;  Medley, K. A.;  Wiley-Blackwell, Oxford, UK,  Diversity and Distributions, 2011, 17, 4, pp 703-713, many ref.

Aim: Explaining why some invasions fail while others succeed is a prevailing question in invasion biology. Different factors have been proposed to exp...

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