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Progress toward understanding the ecological impacts of nonnative species

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TLDR
19 testable hypotheses that explain temporal and spatial variation in impact are identified and reviewed and highlight the importance of the functional ecology of the nonnative species and the structure, diversity, and evolutionary experience of the recipient community as general determinants of impact.
Abstract
A predictive understanding of the ecological impacts of nonnative species has been slow to develop, owing largely to an apparent dearth of clearly defined hypotheses and the lack of a broad theoretical framework. The context dependency of impact has fueled the perception that meaningful generalizations are nonexistent. Here, we identified and reviewed 19 testable hypotheses that explain temporal and spatial variation in impact. Despite poor validation of most hypotheses to date, evidence suggests that each can explain at least some impacts in some situations. Several hypotheses are broad in scope (applying to plants and animals in virtually all contexts) and some of them, intriguingly, link processes of colonization and impact. Collectively, these hypotheses highlight the importance of the functional ecology of the nonnative species and the structure, diversity, and evolutionary experience of the recipient community as general determinants of impact; thus, they could provide the foundation for a theoretical framework for understanding and predicting impact. Further substantive progress toward this goal requires explicit consideration of within-taxon and across-taxa variation in the per capita effect of invaders, and analyses of complex interactions between invaders and their biotic and abiotic environments.

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Predatory ability and abundance forecast the ecological impacts of two aquatic invasive species

TL;DR: In this paper , the mediating effect of prey density on predatory impact in these invaders relative to functionally analogous native rock crabs (Cancer irroratus) and Atlantic salmon (Salmo salar), respectively, feeding on shared prey (Mytilus sp. and Tenebrio molitor, respectively).

Comparative functional responses of crayfishes: variation across species and populations

Jaime Grimm
TL;DR: It is concluded that source population and interspecific interactions mediate per capita effects, and possibly the overall impact, of introduced crayfishes, and cautioned against the use of single populations in conducting invasive species risk assessments.
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Designing an optimal sampling strategy for a national level invasive alien plant assessment: A South African case study

TL;DR: The development of an objective and scientifically accurate monitoring system at a regional level for major invaders for an extensive area such as South Africa is presented by comparing three standard statistical sampling strategies, namely, simple random, systematic and proportionally stratified sampling.
Posted Content

"Perchance to dream?": Assessing effect of dispersal strategies on the fitness of expanding populations

TL;DR: While survival and wealth of the population is affected presumably by overall habitat quality, the dispersal depends mainly on the behavioral strategy, and the "Dreamer" strategy or the strategy of deferred gain belongs to the Pareto frontier in the Fitness.
References
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Journal ArticleDOI

Mechanisms of Maintenance of Species Diversity

TL;DR: Stabilizing mechanisms are essential for species coexistence and include traditional mechanisms such as resource partitioning and frequency-dependent predation, as well as mechanisms that depend on fluctuations in population densities and environmental factors in space and time.
Journal ArticleDOI

Resource Availability and Plant Antiherbivore Defense

TL;DR: Resource availability in the environment is proposed as the major determinant of both the amount and type of plant defense, and theories on the evolution of plant defenses are compared with other theories.
Journal ArticleDOI

A General Hypothesis of Species Diversity

TL;DR: A new hypothesis, based on differences in the rates at which populations of competing species approach competitive equilibrium (reduction or exclusion of some species), is proposed to explain patterns of species diversity.
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