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The evolution of increased competitive ability (EICA) hypothesis proposes that exotic plants often become invasive because they have evolved reduced a...
Read moreIn North America, herbicides are commonly used to control non-native invasive plants on public wildlands. Little is known about the magnitude, efficac...
Read moreRecent changes in agricultural policies have reduced the extent of cultivated farmland. This has provided opportunities to restore heathland vegetatio...
Read moreFarmland bird populations have declined sharply due to agricultural intensification. In Europe, these negative population trends have been linked to t...
Read moreWhile many ecosystems depend on fire to maintain biodiversity, non-native plant invasions can enhance fire intensity, suppressing native species and g...
Read morePhragmites australis is an invasive grass that has increased dramatically in distribution and abundance within the USA in the last 100 years. This stu...
Read morePollination of crops depends on local agricultural management and the quality of adjacent habitats. Lowland coffee Coffea canephora, is an important t...
Read moreLines separating native and invasive plant species can be thin due to close relatedness, obscured by cryptic invasions, or breached by hybridization. ...
Read moreRocky outcrop ecosystems support unique biological communities, high levels of species endemism and are important in the conservation of biodiversity ...
Read moreDrainage canals are widespread components of agricultural landscapes. Although canals have greatly contributed to biodiversity loss by desiccating wet...
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