All Stories

  1. Quantifying the invasiveness of species
  2. The Global Garlic Mustard Field Survey (GGMFS): challenges and opportunities of a unique, large-scale collaboration for invasion biology
  3. Rapid Adaptation to Climate Facilitates Range Expansion of an Invasive Plant
  4. Phenotypic plasticity and adaptive evolution contribute to advancing flowering phenology in response to climate change
  5. Origin, fate, and architecture of ecologically relevant genetic variation
  6. Genetic trade-offs and conditional neutrality contribute to local adaptation
  7. Encyclopedia of Biological Invasions . Encyclopedias of the Natural World, Number 3. Edited by Daniel Simberloff and Marcel Rejmánek. Berkeley (California): University of California Press. $95.00. xxiv + 765 p.; ill.; index. ISBN: 978‐0‐520‐26421‐2. 2...
  8. Open minded and open access: introducing NeoBiota, a new peer-reviewed journal of biological invasions
  9. POPULATION DIVERGENCE ALONG LINES OF GENETIC VARIANCE AND COVARIANCE IN THE INVASIVE PLANT LYTHRUM SALICARIA IN EASTERN NORTH AMERICA
  10. Natural Selection and Genetic Constraints on Flowering Phenology in an Invasive Plant
  11. Evolutionary constraints on adaptive evolution during range expansion in an invasive plant
  12. Common garden comparisons of native and introduced plant populations: latitudinal clines can obscure evolutionary inferences
  13. Subjectivity and flexibility in invasion terminology: too much of a good thing?
  14. Plant reproductive systems and evolution during biological invasion
  15. Propagule pressure: a null model for biological invasions
  16. Propagule Pressure: A Null Model for Biological Invasions
  17. Characterised and Projected Costs of Nonindigenous Species in Canada
  18. Realized vs apparent reduction in enemies of the European starling
  19. Invasion genetics of the Eurasian spiny waterflea: evidence for bottlenecks and gene flow using microsatellites
  20. Are characteristics of introduced salmonid fishes biased by propagule pressure?
  21. Is invasion success explained by the enemy release hypothesis?
  22. A neutral terminology to define ‘invasive’ species
  23. Bridging Troubled Waters: Biological Invasions, Transoceanic Shipping, and the Laurentian Great Lakes
  24. Ballast-mediated animal introductions in the Laurentian Great Lakes: retrospective and prospective analyses
  25. In search of an operational lexicon for biological invasions
  26. The ecology of biological invasions: past, present and future