Related references
Note: Only part of the references are listed.Invasive trees and shrubs: where do they come from and what we should expect in the future?
Marcel Rejmanek
BIOLOGICAL INVASIONS (2014)
Community control on growth and survival of an exotic shrub
Zachary T. Brym et al.
BIOLOGICAL INVASIONS (2014)
Hierarchical mechanisms of spatially contagious seed dispersal in complex seed-disperser networks
Jose M. Fedriani et al.
ECOLOGY (2014)
Directness and tempo of avian seed dispersal increases emergence of wild chiltepins in desert grasslands
Tomas A. Carlo et al.
JOURNAL OF ECOLOGY (2014)
Seed Dispersers, Seed Predators, and Browsers Act Synergistically as Biotic Filters in a Mosaic Landscape
Regino Zamora et al.
PLOS ONE (2014)
Consequences of Seed Dispersal for Plant Recruitment in Tropical Forests: Interactions Within the Seedscape
Noelle G. Beckman et al.
BIOTROPICA (2013)
Where do seeds go when they go far? Distance and directionality of avian seed dispersal in heterogeneous landscapes
Tomas A. Carlo et al.
ECOLOGY (2013)
Neighborhood effects on seed dispersal by frugivores: testing theory with a mistletoe-marsupial system in Patagonia
Juan Manuel Morales et al.
ECOLOGY (2012)
Native fruit traits may mediate dispersal competition between native and non-native plants
Clare Aslan et al.
NeoBiota (2012)
Biological invasions and the study of vertebrate dispersal of plants: Opportunities and integration
David A. Westcott et al.
ACTA OECOLOGICA-INTERNATIONAL JOURNAL OF ECOLOGY (2011)
Contagious dispersal of seeds of synchronously fruiting species beneath invasive and native fleshy-fruited trees
Eve White et al.
AUSTRAL ECOLOGY (2011)
Post-dispersal seed mortality of exotic and native species: Effects of fungal pathogens and seed predators
Petr Dostal
BASIC AND APPLIED ECOLOGY (2010)
Destination-based seed dispersal homogenizes genetic structure of a tropical palm
Jordan Karubian et al.
MOLECULAR ECOLOGY (2010)
Deposition of exotic bird-dispersed seeds into three habitats of a fragmented landscape in the northeastern United States
Timothy S. McCay et al.
PLANT ECOLOGY (2009)
Inequalities in fruit-removal and seed dispersal: consequences of bird behaviour, neighbourhood density and landscape aggregation
Tomas A. Carlo et al.
JOURNAL OF ECOLOGY (2008)
Impact of avian frugivores on dispersal and recruitment of the invasive Prunus serotina in an agricultural landscape
Bart Deckers et al.
BIOLOGICAL INVASIONS (2008)
Fruit type, life form and origin determine the success of woody plant invaders in an urban landscape
Myla F. J. Aronson et al.
BIOLOGICAL INVASIONS (2007)
Management of plant invasions mediated by frugivore interactions
Yvonne M. Buckley et al.
JOURNAL OF APPLIED ECOLOGY (2006)
Avian seed dispersal of an invasive shrub
Anne M. Bartuszevige et al.
BIOLOGICAL INVASIONS (2006)
Seed dispersal of fleshy-fruited invasive plants by birds: contributing factors and management options
CR Gosper et al.
DIVERSITY AND DISTRIBUTIONS (2005)
Spatial concordance between seed rain and seedling establishment in bird-dispersed trees:: does scale matter?
D García et al.
JOURNAL OF ECOLOGY (2005)
Evidence for the enemy release hypothesis in Hypericum perforatum
M Vila et al.
OECOLOGIA (2005)
Fruiting trees as dispersal foci in a semi-deciduous tropical forest
CJ Clark et al.
OECOLOGIA (2004)
Factors affecting seed rain beneath fleshy-fruited plants
K Takahashi et al.
PLANT ECOLOGY (2004)
Release of invasive plants from fungal and viral pathogens
CE Mitchell et al.
NATURE (2003)
When do herbivores affect plant invasion?: Evidence for the natural enemies and biotic resistance hypotheses
JL Maron et al.
OIKOS (2001)
Directed dispersal of Opuntia species in the Karoo, South Africa:: are crows the responsible agents?
WRJ Dean et al.
JOURNAL OF ARID ENVIRONMENTS (2000)
Plant invasions -: the role of mutualisms
DM Richardson et al.
BIOLOGICAL REVIEWS (2000)