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      The effects of climate warming and disturbance on the colonization potential of ornamental alien plant species

      1 , 2 , 1 , 3
      Journal of Ecology
      Wiley

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          Five potential consequences of climate change for invasive species.

          Scientific and societal unknowns make it difficult to predict how global environmental changes such as climate change and biological invasions will affect ecological systems. In the long term, these changes may have interacting effects and compound the uncertainty associated with each individual driver. Nonetheless, invasive species are likely to respond in ways that should be qualitatively predictable, and some of these responses will be distinct from those of native counterparts. We used the stages of invasion known as the "invasion pathway" to identify 5 nonexclusive consequences of climate change for invasive species: (1) altered transport and introduction mechanisms, (2) establishment of new invasive species, (3) altered impact of existing invasive species, (4) altered distribution of existing invasive species, and (5) altered effectiveness of control strategies. We then used these consequences to identify testable hypotheses about the responses of invasive species to climate change and provide suggestions for invasive-species management plans. The 5 consequences also emphasize the need for enhanced environmental monitoring and expanded coordination among entities involved in invasive-species management.
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            Seedling survival and seed size: a synthesis of the literature

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              Consequences of climate change on the tree of life in Europe.

              Many species are projected to become vulnerable to twenty-first-century climate changes, with consequent effects on the tree of life. If losses were not randomly distributed across the tree of life, climate change could lead to a disproportionate loss of evolutionary history. Here we estimate the consequences of climate change on the phylogenetic diversities of plant, bird and mammal assemblages across Europe. Using a consensus across ensembles of forecasts for 2020, 2050 and 2080 and high-resolution phylogenetic trees, we show that species vulnerability to climate change clusters weakly across phylogenies. Such phylogenetic signal in species vulnerabilities does not lead to higher loss of evolutionary history than expected with a model of random extinctions. This is because vulnerable species have neither fewer nor closer relatives than the remaining clades. Reductions in phylogenetic diversity will be greater in southern Europe, and gains are expected in regions of high latitude or altitude. However, losses will not be offset by gains and the tree of life faces a trend towards homogenization across the continent.
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                Author and article information

                Journal
                Journal of Ecology
                J Ecol
                Wiley
                00220477
                November 2017
                November 2017
                May 23 2017
                : 105
                : 6
                : 1698-1708
                Affiliations
                [1 ]Ecology; Department of Biology; University of Konstanz; Universitätsstrasse 10 Konstanz D-78464 Germany
                [2 ]Conservation Ecology Group; Department of Biosciences; Durham University; South Road Durham DH1 2LF UK
                [3 ]Zhejiang Provincial Key Laboratory of Plant Evolutionary Ecology and Conservation; Taizhou University; Taizhou 318000 China
                Article
                10.1111/1365-2745.12798
                7b44790a-7fdb-4d05-93b2-25d881f42dc4
                © 2017

                http://doi.wiley.com/10.1002/tdm_license_1.1

                http://onlinelibrary.wiley.com/termsAndConditions#vor

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