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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...
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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...
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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...
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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...
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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...
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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...
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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...
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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...
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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...
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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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