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Progress in invasive plants research

Progress in invasive plants research
Progress in invasive plants research
This paper identifies the historical precedents and recent advances in descriptive and analytical aspects of invasive plant ecology. The paper takes a global perspective that focuses primarily on natural and semi-natural systems. The dynamics of plant invasions depend on the unique combination of species and recipient environments in light of short-lived, but highly influential, stochastic events. Spreading from the original point of establishment can be virtually instantaneous or follow a prolonged timelag. Range extension proceeds according to a variety of patterns dependent on the interplay between dispersal modes and landscape characteristics. The impacts of plant invasions are all-encompassing: biodiversity loss, economic impacts and aesthetic impacts occasioned by the loss of traditional cultural or natural landscapes. From the conservation perspective, costs are incalculable, but undoubtedly high. The impacts of invasive plants on natural ecosystems occur across all levels of biotic organization and, in the worst case, result in global extinctions and modification of fundamental ecosystem properties that make restoration practically impossible. Plant invasions occur across all habitat types and have spawned complementary theories, which are briefly presented within particular contexts.
invasible habitats, invasion dynamics, invasion impacts, non-native plants, plant invasions
0309-1333
25-46
Henderson, Scott
75580667-728c-4fad-8a80-02bf38a2132c
Dawson, Terence P.
0c9227ce-1d62-47b5-9571-a8a1864321af
Whittaker, Robert J.
5129fcff-2ef3-436f-bef6-88c520e4aae9
Henderson, Scott
75580667-728c-4fad-8a80-02bf38a2132c
Dawson, Terence P.
0c9227ce-1d62-47b5-9571-a8a1864321af
Whittaker, Robert J.
5129fcff-2ef3-436f-bef6-88c520e4aae9

Henderson, Scott, Dawson, Terence P. and Whittaker, Robert J. (2006) Progress in invasive plants research. Progress in Physical Geography, 30 (1), 25-46. (doi:10.1191/0309133306pp468ra).

Record type: Article

Abstract

This paper identifies the historical precedents and recent advances in descriptive and analytical aspects of invasive plant ecology. The paper takes a global perspective that focuses primarily on natural and semi-natural systems. The dynamics of plant invasions depend on the unique combination of species and recipient environments in light of short-lived, but highly influential, stochastic events. Spreading from the original point of establishment can be virtually instantaneous or follow a prolonged timelag. Range extension proceeds according to a variety of patterns dependent on the interplay between dispersal modes and landscape characteristics. The impacts of plant invasions are all-encompassing: biodiversity loss, economic impacts and aesthetic impacts occasioned by the loss of traditional cultural or natural landscapes. From the conservation perspective, costs are incalculable, but undoubtedly high. The impacts of invasive plants on natural ecosystems occur across all levels of biotic organization and, in the worst case, result in global extinctions and modification of fundamental ecosystem properties that make restoration practically impossible. Plant invasions occur across all habitat types and have spawned complementary theories, which are briefly presented within particular contexts.

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More information

Published date: 2006
Keywords: invasible habitats, invasion dynamics, invasion impacts, non-native plants, plant invasions

Identifiers

Local EPrints ID: 58477
URI: http://eprints.soton.ac.uk/id/eprint/58477
ISSN: 0309-1333
PURE UUID: 3b3f9713-fa6a-4065-86f5-2aab99676b6a

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Date deposited: 14 Aug 2008
Last modified: 15 Mar 2024 11:11

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Contributors

Author: Scott Henderson
Author: Terence P. Dawson
Author: Robert J. Whittaker

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