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Journal ArticleDOI

Ecology of Biological Invasions of North America and Hawaii

Bradley C. Bennett
- 01 Jan 1988 - 
- Vol. 38, Iss: 1, pp 56-58
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This article is published in BioScience.The article was published on 1988-01-01. It has received 196 citations till now. The article focuses on the topics: Ecology (disciplines).

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Citations
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Biotic invasions: causes, epidemiology, global consequences, and control

TL;DR: Given their current scale, biotic invasions have taken their place alongside human-driven atmospheric and oceanic alterations as major agents of global change and left unchecked, they will influence these other forces in profound but still unpredictable ways.
Journal ArticleDOI

Biological invasions by exotic grasses, the grass/fire cycle, and global change

TL;DR: Biological invasions into wholly new regions are a consequence of a far reaching but underappreciated component of global environmental change, the human-caused breakdown of biogeographic barriers to species dispersal.
Journal ArticleDOI

Impact: Toward a Framework for Understanding the Ecological Effects of Invaders

TL;DR: This paper argues that the total impact of an invader includes three fundamental dimensions: range, abundance, and the per-capita or per-biomass effect of the invader, and recommends previous approaches to measuring impact at different organizational levels, and suggests some new approaches.
Journal ArticleDOI

Community invasibility, recruitment limitation, and grassland biodiversity

TL;DR: Local biotic interactions and recruitment dynamics jointly determined diversity, species composition, and species abundances in these native grassland communities, suggesting that recruitment limitation may be more important, even on a local scale, than often recognized.
References
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Journal ArticleDOI

Biotic invasions: causes, epidemiology, global consequences, and control

TL;DR: Given their current scale, biotic invasions have taken their place alongside human-driven atmospheric and oceanic alterations as major agents of global change and left unchecked, they will influence these other forces in profound but still unpredictable ways.
Journal ArticleDOI

Biological invasions by exotic grasses, the grass/fire cycle, and global change

TL;DR: Biological invasions into wholly new regions are a consequence of a far reaching but underappreciated component of global environmental change, the human-caused breakdown of biogeographic barriers to species dispersal.
Journal ArticleDOI

Impact: Toward a Framework for Understanding the Ecological Effects of Invaders

TL;DR: This paper argues that the total impact of an invader includes three fundamental dimensions: range, abundance, and the per-capita or per-biomass effect of the invader, and recommends previous approaches to measuring impact at different organizational levels, and suggests some new approaches.
Journal ArticleDOI

Community invasibility, recruitment limitation, and grassland biodiversity

TL;DR: Local biotic interactions and recruitment dynamics jointly determined diversity, species composition, and species abundances in these native grassland communities, suggesting that recruitment limitation may be more important, even on a local scale, than often recognized.
Journal ArticleDOI

Elton revisited: a review of evidence linking diversity and invasibility

TL;DR: It is found that much of the historical work that has contributed to the perception that diverse communities are less invasible, including Elton's observations and MacArthur's species-packing and diversity-stability models is based on controversial premises.