ℹ️
🇬🇧
Search
Search for publications relevant for "propagule pressure"
propagule pressure
Publication
Class
Person
Publication
Programmes
Export current view
publication
Naturalization of central European plants in North America: species traits, habitats, propagule pressure, residence time
2015 |
Faculty of Science
publication
Planting history and propagule pressure as predictors of invasions by woody species in a temperature region.
2006 |
Faculty of Science
publication
The ins and outs of acclimatisation: imports versus translocations of skylarks and starlings in 19th century New Zealand
2019 |
Faculty of Science
publication
Human activity strongly influences genetic dynamics of the most widespread invasive plant in the sub-Antarctic
2022 |
Faculty of Science
publication
Grasping at the routes of biological invasions: a framework for integrating pathways into policy
2008 |
Faculty of Science
publication
Crossing Frontiers in Tackling Pathways of Biological Invasions
2015 |
Faculty of Science
publication
Changing roles of propagule, climate, and land use during extralimital colonization of a rose chafer beetle
2013 |
Faculty of Science
publication
Where do they come from and where do they go? European natural habitats as donors of invasive alien plants globally
2013 |
Faculty of Science
publication
Troubling travellers: are ecologically harmful alien species associated with particular introduction pathways?
2017 |
Faculty of Science
publication
European ornamental garden flora as an invasion debt under climate change
2018 |
Faculty of Science
publication
Introduction bias affects relationships between the characteristics of ornamental alien plants and their naturalization success
2016 |
Faculty of Science
publication
Latitudinal patterns of alien plant invasions
2021 |
Faculty of Science
publication
MAcroecological Framework for Invasive Aliens (MAFIA): disentangling large-scale context dependence in biological invasions
2020 |
Faculty of Science
publication
Assessing the introduction of exotic raptors into the wild from falconry
2021 |
Faculty of Science
publication
Correlates of naturalization and occupancy of introduced ornamentals in Germany
2008 |
Faculty of Science
publication
Introduction history and species characteristics partly explain naturalization success of North American woody species in Europe
2009 |
Faculty of Science
publication
Separating habitat invasibility by alien plants from the actual level of invasion
2008 |
Faculty of Science
publication
The biogeography of naturalization in alien plants
2006 |
Faculty of Science
publication
Geographical Constraints Are Stronger than Invasion Patterns for European Urban Floras
2014 |
Faculty of Science
publication
Introduction history mediates naturalization and invasiveness of cultivated plants
2022 |
Faculty of Science
publication
Effects of land-use change and related pressures on alien and native subsets of island communities
2020 |
Faculty of Science
publication
Getting the Right Traits: Reproductive and Dispersal Characteristics Predict the Invasiveness of Herbaceous Plant Species
2015 |
Faculty of Science
publication
Biological invasions in Europe 50 years after Elton: time to sound the ALARM
2011 |
Faculty of Science
publication
How the Yellowhammer became a Kiwi: the history of an alien bird invasion revealed
2015 |
Faculty of Science
publication
Colonization of high altitudes by alien plants over the last two centuries
2011 |
Faculty of Science
publication
Habitats and land use as determinants of plant invasions in the temperature zone of Europe
2009 |
Faculty of Science
publication
Differences in germination and seedling establishment of alien and native Impatiens species
2009 |
Faculty of Science
publication
European map of alien plant invasions, based on the quantitative assessment across habitats.
2009 |
Faculty of Science
publication
Planting intensity, residence time, and species traits determine invasion success of alien woody species
2009 |
Faculty of Science
publication
Spread of Impatiens glandulifera from riparian habitats to forests and its associated impacts: insights from a new invasion
2020 |
Faculty of Science