Positive Interactions of Nonindigenous Species: Invasional Meltdown? (original) (raw)
- Anonymous (1991) Plant invasions. The incidence of environmental weeds in Australia. Australian National Parks and Wildlife Service, Canberra
- Aplet GH (1990) Alternation of earthworm community biomass by the alien Myrica faya in Hawaii. Oecologia 82: 411–416
Google Scholar - Bach CE (1991) Direct and indirect interactions between ants, scales, and plants. Oecologia 82: 233–239
Google Scholar - Barthell JF, Randall JM, Thorp RW and Wenner AM (1994) Invader assisted invasion: pollination of yellow star-thistle by feral honey bees in island and mainland ecosystems (Abstract). Bulletin of the Ecological Society of America 75: 10
Google Scholar - Boucher D (1985) The idea of mutualism, past and future. In: Boucher D (ed) The Biology of Mutualism, pp 1–28. Oxford University Press, New York
Google Scholar - Boucher D, James S and Keeler KH (1982) The ecology of mutualism. Annual Review of Ecology and Systematics 13: 315–347
Google Scholar - Butz Huryn VM (1997) Ecological impacts of introduced honey bees. Quarterly Review of Biology 72: 275–297
Google Scholar - Carleton AR and Owre OT (1975) The red-whiskered bulbul in Florida: 1960–71. Auk 92: 40–57
Google Scholar - Chapman RN (1931) Animal Ecology. McGraw-Hill, New York
Google Scholar - Cheke AS (1987) An ecological history of the Mascarene islands, with particular reference to extinctions and introductions of land vertebrates. In: Diamond AW (ed) Mascarene Island Birds, pp 5–89. Cambridge University Press, Cambridge
Google Scholar - Crosby AW (1986) Ecological Imperialism. The Biological Expansion of Europe, 900–1900. Cambridge University Press, Cambridge
Google Scholar - Cross JR (1981) The establishment of Rhododendron ponticum in the Killarney Oakwoods, S.W. Ireland. Journal of Ecology 69: 807–824
Google Scholar - D'Antonio CM and Vitousek PM (1992) Biological invasions by exotic grasses, the grass/fire cycle, and global change. Annual Review of Ecology and Systematics 23: 63–87
Google Scholar - DeAngelis DL, Post WM and Travis CC (1980) Postive Feedback in Natural Systems. Springer-Verlag, Berlin
Google Scholar - Dermott R and Kerec D (1997) Changes to the deepwater benthos of eastern Lake Erie since the invasion of Dreissena: 1979–1993. Canadian Journal of Fisheries and Aquatic Sciences 54: 922–930
Google Scholar - Dow RL and Terceira C (1985) Indian laurel survey. Department of Agriculture and Fisheries, Bermuda, Monthly Bulletin 56: 53
Google Scholar - Elton CS (1958) The Ecology of Invasions by Plants and Animals. Methuen, London
Google Scholar - Fox MD and Fox BJ (1986) The susceptibility of natural communities to invasion. In: Groves RH and Burdon JJ (eds) Ecology of Biological Invasion, pp 57–66. Cambridge University Press, Cambridge
Google Scholar - French JRPI (1993) How well can fishes prey on zebra mussels in eastern North America? Fisheries 18: 13–19
Google Scholar - Gerrish G and Mueller-Dombois D (1980) Behavior of native and non-native plants in two tropical rainforests on Oahu, Hawaiian Islands. Phytocoenologia 8: 237–295
Google Scholar - Ghedotti MJ, Smihula JC and Smith GR (1995) Zebra mussel predation by round gobies in the laboratory. Journal of Great Lakes Research 21: 665–669
Google Scholar - Griffin GF, Stafford Smith DM, Morton SR, Allan GE and Masters KA (1989) Status and implications of the invasion of tamarisk (Tamarix aphylla) on the Finke River, Northern Territory, Australia. Journal of Environmental Management 29: 297–315
Google Scholar - Griffiths RW (1993) Effects of zebra mussels (Dreissena polymorpha) on the benthic fauna of Lake St. Clair. In: Nalepa TF and Schloesser DW (eds) Zebra Mussels. Biology, Impacts, and Control, pp 415–437. Lewis Publishers, Boca Raton, FL
Google Scholar - Harper JL, Williams JT and Sagar GR (1965) The behaviour of seeds in soil. I. The heterogeneity of soil surfaces and its role in determining the establishment of plants from seed. Journal of Ecology 53: 273–286
Google Scholar - Hilburn DJ (1987) Indian laurel (Ficus microcarpus L.). A problem tree in Bermuda. Unpublished manuscript
- Hokkanen H and Pimentel D (1984) New approach for selecting biological control agents. Canadian Entomologist 116: 1109–1121
Google Scholar - Hokkanen H and Pimentel D (1989) New associations in biological control: theory and practice. Canadian Entomologist 121: 829–840
Google Scholar - Howarth FG (1985) Impacts of alien land arthropods and molluscs on native plants and animals in Hawaii. In: Stone CP and Scott JM (eds) Hawai'i's Terrestrial Ecosystems: Preservation and Management, pp 149–179. University of Hawaii, Honolulu, HI
Google Scholar - Hughes R, Vitousek PM and Tunison T (1991) Alien grass invasion and fire in the seasonal submontane zone of Hawai'i. Ecology 72: 743–746
Google Scholar - Hurd PD and Linsley EG (1964) The squash and gourd bees — genera Peponapsis Robertson and Xenoglossa Smith — inhabiting America north of Mexico (Hymenoptera: Apoidea). Hilgardia 35: 375–477
Google Scholar - Hurd PD Jr and Linsley EG (1966) The Mexican squash and gourd bees of the genus Peponapis (Hymenoptera: Apoidea). Annals of the Entomological Society of America 59: 835–851
Google Scholar - Hurd PD Jr and Linsley EG (1967a) South American squash and gourd bees of the genus Peponapis (Hymenoptera: Apoidea). Annals of the Entomological Society of America 60: 647–661
Google Scholar - Hurd PD Jr and Linsley EG (1967b) Squash and gourd bees of the genus Xenoglossa (Hymenoptera: Apoidea). Annals of the Entomological Society of America 60: 988–1007
Google Scholar - Hurd PD Jr, Linsley EG and Whitaker TW (1971) Squash and gourd bees (Peponapis, Xenoglossa) and the origin of the cultivated Cucurbita. Evolution 25: 218–234
Google Scholar - Johnson LE, and Carlton JT (1996) Post-establishment spread in large-scale invasions: dispersal mechanisms of the zebra mussel Dreissena polymorpha. Ecology 77: 1686–1690
Google Scholar - Kareiva PM and Bertness MD (1997) Special feature. Reexamining the role of positive interactions in communities. Ecology 78: 1945
Google Scholar - Kauffman S, McKey DB, Hossaert-McKey M and Horvitz CC (1991) Adaptations for a two-phase seed dispersal system involving vertebrates and ants in a hemiepiphytic fig (Ficus microcarpa: Moraceae). American Journal of Botany 78: 971–977
Google Scholar - Kloot PM (1983) The role of common iceplant (Mesembryanthemum crystallinum) in the deterioration of medic pastures. Australian Journal of Ecology 8: 301–306
Google Scholar - Knight RS (1986) A comparative analysis of fleshy fruit displays in alien and indigenous plants. In: MacDonald IAW, Kruger FJ and Ferrar AA (eds) The Ecology and Management of Biological Invasions in Southern Africa, pp 171–177. Oxford University Press, Capetown
Google Scholar - Leppäkoski E (1984) Introduced species in the Baltic Sea and its coastal ecosystems. Ophelia Suppl. 3: 123–135
Google Scholar - Lewandowski K (1982) The role of early developmental stages, in the dynamics of Dreissena polymorpha (Pall.) (Bivalvia) populations in lakes. II. Settling of larvae and the dynamics of numbers of settled individuals. Ekologia Polska 30: 223–286
Google Scholar - Lonsdale WM (1993) Rates of spread of an invading species — Mimosa pigra in northern Australia. Journal of Ecology 81: 513–521
Google Scholar - Lonsdale WM and Braithewaite RN (1988) The shrub that conquered the bush. New Scientist 15: 52–55
Google Scholar - Loope LL and Scowcroft PG (1985) Vegetation response within exclosures in Hawaii: A review. In: Stone CP and Scott JM (eds) Hawai'i's Terrestrial Ecosystems: Preservation and Management, pp 377–400. University of Hawaii, Honolulu
Google Scholar - Lowe RL and Pillsbury RW (1995) Shifts in benthic algal community structure and function following the appearance of zebra mussels (Dreissena polymorpha) in Saginaw Bay, Lake Huron. Journal of Great Lakes Research 21: 558–566
Google Scholar - Lynch M, Conery J and Burger R (1995) Mutation accumulation and the extinction of small populations. American Naturalist 146: 489–518
Google Scholar - MacArthur RH and Wilson EO (1963) An equilbrium theory of insular zoogeography. Evolution 17: 373–387
Google Scholar - MacArthur RH and Wilson EO (1967) The Theory of Island Biogeography. Princeton University Press, Princeton, NJ
Google Scholar - Macdonald IA, Thebaud C, Strahm WA and Strasberg D (1991) Effects of alien plant invasions on native vegetation remnants on La Réunion (Mascarene Islands, Indian Ocean). Environmental Conservation 18: 51–61
Google Scholar - MacIsaac HJ (1996) Potential abiotic and biotic impacts of zebra mussels on the inland waters of North America. American Zoologist 36: 287–299
Google Scholar - Mack RN (1981) Invasion of Bromus tectorum L. into Western North America: an ecological chronicle. Agro Ecosystems 7: 145–165
Google Scholar - Mack RN (1986) Alien plant invasion to the Intermountain West: a case history. In: Mooney HA and Drake JA (eds) Ecology of Biological Invasions of North America and Hawaii, pp 191–210. Springer-Verlag, New York
Google Scholar - Mack RN (1989) Temperate grasslands vulnerable to plant invasions: characteristics and consequences. In: Drake JA, Mooney HA, di Castri F, Groves RH, Kruger FJ, Rejmánek M and Williamson M (eds) Biological Invasions: A Global Perspective, pp 155–179. John Wiley, Chichester, UK
Google Scholar - Mack RN and Thompson JN (1982) Evolution in steppe with few, large, hooved mammals. American Naturalist 119: 757–773
Google Scholar - Mal TK, Lovett-Doust J, Lovett-Doust L and Mulligan GA (1992) The biology of Canadian weeds. 100. Lythrum salicaria. Canadian Journal of Plant Sciences 72: 1305–1330
Google Scholar - McKey DB and Kaufmann SC (1991) Naturalization of exotic Ficus species (Moraceae) in south Florida. In: Center TD, Doren RF, Hofstetter RL, Myers RL and Whiteaker LD (eds) Proceedings of the Symposium on Exotic Pest Plants. Technical Report NPS/NREVER/NRTR-91/06, pp 221–236. United States Department of the Interior/National Park Service, Washington, DC
Google Scholar - Melgoza G, Nowak RS and Tausch RJ (1990) Soil water exploitation after fire: competition between Bromus tectorum (cheat-grass) and two native species. Oecologia 83: 7–13
Google Scholar - Menge BA (1995) Indirect effects in marine rocky intertidal interaction webs: patterns and importance. Ecological Monographs 65: 21–74
Google Scholar - Monkman KD (1984) Rapid spread of the Indian laurel. Department of Agriculture and Fisheries, Bermuda, Monthly Bulletin 55: 84–85
Google Scholar - Moulton MP and Pimm SL (1983) The introduced Hawaiian avifauna: biogeographic evidence for competition. American Naturalist 121: 669–690
Google Scholar - Parker IM, Simberloff D, Lonsdale WM, Goodell K, Wonham M, Kareiva PM, Williamson MH, Von Holle B, Moyle PB, Byers JE and Goldwasser L (1999) Impact: toward a framework for understanding the ecological effects of invaders. Biological Invasions 1: 3–19 (this issue)
Google Scholar - Philbrick RN (1972) The plants of Santa Barbara Island. Madrono 21: 329–393
Google Scholar - Ramakrishnan PS and Vitousek PM (1989) Ecosystem-level processes and the consequences of biological invasions. In: Drake JA, Mooney HA, di Castri F, Groves RH, Kruger FJ, Rejmánek M and Williamson M (eds) Biological Invasions. A Global Perspective, pp 281–300. John Wiley, Chichester, UK
Google Scholar - Ramirez BW and Montero SJ (in press) Ficus microcarpa L. and F. benjamina L. and other species introduced in the New World, their pollinators (Agaonidae) and other fig wasps. Rev. Biol. Tropical.
- Reeders HH, Bij de Vaate A and Nordhuis R (1993) Potential of the zebra mussel (Dreissena polymorpha) for water quality management. In: Nalepa TF and Schloesser DW (eds) Zebra Mussels. Biology, Impacts, and Control, pp 439–451. Lewis Publishers, Boca Raton, FL
Google Scholar - Ricciardi A, Whoriskey FG and Rasmussen JB (1997) The role of zebra mussel (Dreissena polymorpha) in structuring macroinvertebrate communities on hard substrata. Canadian Journal of Fisheries and Aquatic Sciences 54: 2596–2608
Google Scholar - Ricciardi A, Neves RJ and Rasmussen JB (1998) Impending extinctions of North American freshwater mussels (Unionoida) following the zebra mussel (Dreissena polymorpha) invasion. Journal of Animal Ecology 67: 613–619
Google Scholar - Risch S and Boucher D (1976) What ecologists look for. Bulletin of the Ecological Society of America 52: 8–9
Google Scholar - Simberloff D (1974) Equilibrium theory of island biogeography and ecology. Annual Review of Ecology and Systematics 5: 161–182
Google Scholar - Simberloff D (1981) Community effects of introduced species. In: Nitecki MH (ed) Biotic Crises in Ecological and Evolutionary Time, pp 53–81. Academic Press, New York
Google Scholar - Simberloff D (1986) Introduced insects: A biogeographic and systematic perspective. In: Mooney HA and Drake JA (eds) Ecology of Biological Invasions of North America and Hawaii, pp 3–26. Springer-Verlag, New York
Google Scholar - Simberloff D and Boecklen W (1988) Why some birds introduced to the Hawaiian islands fail to colonize. In: van den Elzen R, Shuchmann K-L and Schmidt-Koenig K (eds) Current Topics in Avian Biology, pp 69–72. Deutschen Ornithologen-Gesellschaft, Bonn
Google Scholar - Smith CW (1991) The alien plant problem in Hawaii. In: Center TD, Doren RF, Hofstetter RL, Myers RL and Whiteaker LD (eds) Proceedings of the Symposium on Exotic Pest Plants, pp 327–338. US Department of the Interior, National Park Service, Washington, DC
Google Scholar - Stewart TW and Haynes JM (1994) Benthic macroinvertebrate communities of southwestern Lake Ontario following invasion of Dreissena. Journal of Great Lakes Research 20: 479–493
Google Scholar - Stiling PD (1996) Ecology. Theories and Applications. Prentice Hall, Upper Saddle River, NJ
Google Scholar - Stone CP (1985) Alien animals in Hawai'i's native ecosystems: toward controlling the adverse effects of introduced vertebrates. In: Stone CP and Scott JM (eds) Hawai'i's Terrestrial Ecosystems: Preservation and Management, pp 251–297. University of Hawaii, Honolulu, HI
Google Scholar - Stone CP and Taylor DD (1984) Status of feral pig management and research in Hawaii Volcanoes National Park. Proceedings of the Hawaii Volcanoes National Park Natural Science Conference 5: 106–117
Google Scholar - Tallamy DW (1983) Equilibrium biogeography and its application to insect host-parasite systems. American Naturalist 121: 244–254
Google Scholar - US Congress, O.T.A. (1993) Harmful Non-Indigenous Species in the United States. US Government Printing Office, Washington, DC
Google Scholar - Udvardy MDF (1969) Dynamic Zoogeography. Van Nostrand and Reinhold, New York
Google Scholar - Vaughan RE and Wiehé PO (1939) Note on ‘The Plant Communities of Mauritius’. Journal of Ecology 27: 281
Google Scholar - Vitousek PM (1986) Biological invasions and ecosystem properties: can species make a difference? In: Mooney HA and Drake JA (eds) Ecology of Biological Invasions of North America and Hawaii, pp 163–176. Springer-Verlag, New York
Google Scholar - Vitousek PM and Walker LR (1989) Biological invasion by Myrica faya in Hawai'i: plant demography, nitrogen fixation, ecosystem effects. Ecological Monographs 59: 247–265
Google Scholar - Vivrette NJ and Muller CH (1977) Mechanism of invasion and dominance of coastal grassland by Mesembryanthemum crystallinum. Ecological Monographs 47: 301–318
Google Scholar - Waser NM, Chiitka L, Price MV, Williams NM and Ollerton J (1996) Generalization in pollination systems and why it matters. Ecology 77: 1043–1060
Google Scholar - Westman WE (1986) Resilience: concepts and measures. In: Dell B, Hopkins AJM and Lamont BB (eds) Resilience in Mediterranean-type Ecosystems, Dr. W. Junk, Dordrecht, The Netherlands
Google Scholar - Wiehé PO (1946) L'herbe condé et la lutte contre les mauvaises herbes. Revue Agriculturale Ile Maurice 25: 51–61
Google Scholar - Williamson M (1986) Biological Invasions. Chapman & Hall, London
Google Scholar - Williamson M (1989) The MacArthur and Wilson theory today: true but trivial. Journal of Biogeography 16: 3–4
Google Scholar - Woodward SA, Vitousek PM, Matson K, Hughes F, Benvenuto K and Matson PA (1990) Use of the exotic tree Myrica faya by native and exotic birds in Hawai'i Volcanoes National Park. Pacific Science 44: 88–93
Google Scholar