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Auteur Ewald Weber (1960-) |
Documents disponibles écrits par cet auteur (7)
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Biological flora of the British isles : Robinia pseudoacacia / Arne Cierjacks in Journal of ecology, 101 (2013)
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Titre : Biological flora of the British isles : Robinia pseudoacacia Type de document : Électronique Auteurs : Arne Cierjacks (1972-) ; Ingo Kowarik (1955-) ; Jasmin Joshi ; Stefan Hempel ; Michael Ristow ; Moritz Lippe (von der) ; Ewald Weber (1960-) Année de publication : 2013 Article en page(s) : 1623–1640 Langues : Anglais (eng) Catégories : [CBNPMP-Thématique] Plantes subspontanées, naturalisées, envahissantes Mots-clés : Robinia pseudoacacia L., 1753 Lien pérenne : DOI : 10.1111/1365-2745.12162 Permalink : https://biblio.cbnpmp.fr/index.php?lvl=notice_display&id=142746
in Journal of ecology > 101 (2013) . - 1623–1640Cierjacks, Arne (1972-), Kowarik, Ingo (1955-), Joshi, Jasmin, Hempel, Stefan, Ristow, Michael, Lippe (von der), Moritz, Weber, Ewald (1960-) 2013 Biological flora of the British isles : Robinia pseudoacacia. Journal of ecology, 101: 1623–1640.Documents numériques
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Article (2013)URL Invasive plant species of the world : a reference guide to environmental weeds / Ewald Weber (2003)
Titre : Invasive plant species of the world : a reference guide to environmental weeds Type de document : Imprimé Auteurs : Ewald Weber (1960-) Editeur : Oxon, UK : Cabi publishing Année de publication : 2003 Importance : 548 p. ISBN/ISSN/EAN : 0-8519-695-7 Langues : Anglais (eng) Catégories : [CBNPMP-Thématique] Plantes subspontanées, naturalisées, envahissantes Permalink : https://biblio.cbnpmp.fr/index.php?lvl=notice_display&id=78524 Weber, Ewald (1960-) , 2003. Invasive plant species of the world : a reference guide to environmental weeds. Cabi publishing, Oxon, UK. 548 pp.Exemplaires (1)
Code-barres Cote Support Localisation Section Disponibilité 13948 PEE Livre Bureaux PEE Consultable Invasive plant species of the world : a reference guide to environmental weeds, 2nd edition / Ewald Weber (2017)
Titre : Invasive plant species of the world : a reference guide to environmental weeds, 2nd edition Type de document : Imprimé Auteurs : Ewald Weber (1960-) Editeur : CABI Année de publication : 2017 Importance : 581 p. ISBN/ISSN/EAN : 978-1-788064-386-1 Langues : Anglais (eng) Catégories : [CBNPMP-Thématique] Plantes subspontanées, naturalisées, envahissantes Permalink : https://biblio.cbnpmp.fr/index.php?lvl=notice_display&id=83385 Weber, Ewald (1960-) , 2017. Invasive plant species of the world : a reference guide to environmental weeds, 2nd edition. CABI, [S.l.]. 581 pp.Exemplaires (1)
Code-barres Cote Support Localisation Section Disponibilité 27138 PEE Livre Bureaux PEE Consultable A meta-analysis of trait differences between invasive and non-invasive plant species / Mark van Kleunen in Ecology Letters, 13 (2009)
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Titre : A meta-analysis of trait differences between invasive and non-invasive plant species Type de document : Électronique Auteurs : Mark van Kleunen (1973-) ; Ewald Weber (1960-) ; Markus Fischer Année de publication : 2009 Article en page(s) : 1-11 Langues : Anglais (eng) Catégories : [CBNPMP-Thématique] Plantes subspontanées, naturalisées, envahissantes Résumé : A major aim in ecology is identifying determinants of invasiveness. We performed a meta-analysis of 117 field or experimental-garden studies that measured pair-wise trait differences of a total of 125 invasive and 196 non-invasive plant species in the invasive range of the invasive species. We tested whether invasiveness is associated with performance-related traits (physiology, leaf-area allocation, shoot allocation, growth rate, size and fitness), and whether such associations depend on type of study and on biogeographical or biological factors. Overall, invasive species had significantly higher values than non-invasive species for all six trait categories. More trait differences were significant for invasive vs. native comparisons than for invasive vs. non-invasive alien comparisons. Moreover, for comparisons between invasive species and native species that themselves are invasive elsewhere, no trait differences were significant. Differences in physiology and growth rate were larger in tropical regions than in temperate regions. Trait differences did not depend on whether the invasive alien species originates from Europe, nor did they depend on the test environment. We conclude that invasive alien species had higher values for those traits related to performance than non-invasive species. This suggests that it might become possible to predict future plant invasions from species traits. Lien pérenne : DOI : 10.1111/j.1461-0248.2009.01418.x Permalink : https://biblio.cbnpmp.fr/index.php?lvl=notice_display&id=142798
in Ecology Letters > 13 (2009) . - 1-11Kleunen, Mark van (1973-), Weber, Ewald (1960-), Fischer, Markus 2009 A meta-analysis of trait differences between invasive and non-invasive plant species. Ecology Letters, 13: 1-11.Naturalized alien flora of the world: species diversity, taxonomic and phylogenetic patterns, geographic distribution and global hotspots of plant invasion / Petr Pyšek in Preslia, 89 (2017)
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Titre : Naturalized alien flora of the world: species diversity, taxonomic and phylogenetic patterns, geographic distribution and global hotspots of plant invasion Type de document : Électronique Auteurs : Petr Pyšek ; Jan Pergl (1977-) ; Bernd Lenzner ; Wayne Dawson ; Holger Kreft ; Patrick Weigelt ; Marten Winter ; John Kartesz ; Misako Nishino ; Luibov A. Antonova ; Julie F. Barcelona ; Fransisco J. Cabezas ; Dairon Cárdenas ; Juliana Cárdenas-Toro ; Nicolás Castaño ; Eduardo Chacón ; Cyrille Chatelain ; Stefan Dullinger ; Alexandr L. Ebel ; Estrela Figueiredo ; Nicol Fuentes ; Piero Genovesi (1960-) ; Quentin Groom ; Lesley Henderson ; S Inderjit ; Audrey Kupriyanov ; Silvana Masciadri ; Noëlie Maurel ; Jan Meerman ; Olga Morozova ; Dietmar Moser ; Daniel L. Nickrent ; Pauline M. Nowak ; Shyama Pagad ; Annette Patzelt ; Pieter B. Pelser ; Hanno Seebens ; Wen-Sheng Shu ; Jacob Thomas ; Mauricio Velayos ; Ewald Weber (1960-) ; Jan J. Wieringa ; María P. Baptiste ; Mark van Kleunen (1973-) Année de publication : 2017 Article en page(s) : 203-274 Langues : Anglais (eng) Catégories : [CBNPMP-Thématique] Plantes subspontanées, naturalisées, envahissantes Résumé : Using the recently built Global Naturalized Alien Flora (GloNAF) database, containing data on the distribution of naturalized alien plants in 483 mainland and 361 island regions of the world, we describe patterns in diversity and geographic distribution of naturalized and invasive plant species, taxonomic, phylogenetic and life-history structure of the global naturalized flora as well as levels of naturalization and their determinants. The mainland regions with the highest numbers of naturalized aliens are some Australian states (with New South Wales being the richest on this continent) and several North American regions (of which California with 1753 naturalized plant species represents the world’s richest region in terms of naturalized alien vascular plants). England, Japan, New Zealand and the Hawaiian archipelago harbour most naturalized plants among islands or island groups. These regions also form the main hotspots of the regional levels of naturalization, measured as the percentage of naturalized aliens in the total flora of the region. Such hotspots of relative naturalized species richness appear on both the western and eastern coasts of North America, in north-western Europe, South Africa, south-eastern Australia, New Zealand, and India. High levels of island invasions by naturalized plants are concentrated in the Pacific, but also occur on individual islands across all oceans. The numbers of naturalized species are closely correlated with those of native species, with a stronger correlation and steeper increase for islands than mainland regions, indicating a greater vulnerability of islands to invasion by species that become successfully naturalized. South Africa, India, California, Cuba, Florida, Queensland and Japan have the highest numbers of invasive species. Regions in temperate and tropical zonobiomes harbour in total 9036 and 6774 naturalized species, respectively, followed by 3280 species naturalized in the Mediterranean zonobiome, 3057 in the subtropical zonobiome and 321 in the Arctic. The New World is richer in naturalized alien plants, with 9905 species compared to 7923 recorded in the Old World. While isolation is the key factor driving the level of naturalization on islands, zonobiomes differing in climatic regimes, and socioeconomy represented by per capita GDP, are central for mainland regions. The 11 most widely distributed species each occur in regions covering about one third of the globe or more in terms of the number of regions where they are naturalized and at least 35% of the Earth’s land surface in terms of those regions’ areas, with the most widely distributed species Sonchus oleraceus occuring in 48% of the regions that cover 42% of the world area. Other widely distributed species are Ricinus communis, Oxalis corniculata, Portulaca oleracea, Eleusine indica, Chenopodium album, Capsella bursa-pastoris, Stellaria media, Bidens pilosa, Datura stramonium and Echinochloa crus-galli. Using the occurrence as invasive rather than only naturalized yields a different ranking, with Lantana camara (120 regions out of 349 for which data on invasive status are known), Calotropis procera (118), Eichhornia crassipes (113), Sonchus oleraceus (108) and Leucaena leucocephala (103) on top. As to the life-history spectra, islands harbour more naturalized woody species (34.4%) than mainland regions (29.5%), and fewer annual herbs (18.7% compared to 22.3%). Ranking families by their absolute numbers of naturalized species reveals that Compositae (1343 species), Poaceae (1267) and Leguminosae (1189) contribute most to the global naturalized alien flora. Some families are disproportionally represented by naturalized aliens on islands (Arecaceae, Araceae, Acanthaceae, Amaryllidaceae, Asparagaceae, Convolvulaceae, Rubiaceae, Malvaceae), and much fewer so on mainland (e.g. Brassicaceae, Caryophyllaceae, Boraginaceae). Relating the numbers of naturalized species in a family to its total global richness shows that some of the large species-rich families are over-represented among naturalized aliens (e.g. Poaceae, Leguminosae, Rosaceae, Amaranthaceae, Pinaceae), some under-represented (e.g. Euphorbiaceae, Rubiaceae), whereas the one richest in naturalized species, Compositae, reaches a value expected from its global species richness. Significant phylogenetic signal indicates that families with an increased potential of their species to naturalize are not distributed randomly on the evolutionary tree. Solanum (112 species), Euphorbia (108) and Carex (106) are the genera richest in terms of naturalized species; over-represented on islands are Cotoneaster, Juncus, Eucalyptus, Salix, Hypericum, Geranium and Persicaria, while those relatively richer in naturalized species on the mainland are Atriplex, Opuntia, Oenothera, Artemisia, Vicia, Galium and Rosa. The data presented in this paper also point to where information is lacking and set priorities for future data collection. The GloNAF database has potential for designing concerted action to fill such data gaps, and provide a basis for allocating resources most efficiently towards better understanding and management of plant invasions worldwide. Lien pérenne : DOI : 10.23855/preslia.2017.203 Permalink : https://biblio.cbnpmp.fr/index.php?lvl=notice_display&id=143130
in Preslia > 89 (2017) . - 203-274Pyšek, Petr, Pergl, Jan (1977-), Lenzner, Bernd, Dawson, Wayne, Kreft, Holger, Weigelt, Patrick, Winter, Marten, Kartesz, John, Nishino, Misako, Antonova, Luibov A., Barcelona, Julie F., Cabezas, Fransisco J., Cárdenas, Dairon, Cárdenas-Toro, Juliana, Castaño, Nicolás, Chacón, Eduardo, Chatelain, Cyrille, Dullinger, Stefan, Ebel, Alexandr L., Figueiredo, Estrela, Fuentes, Nicol, Genovesi, Piero (1960-), Groom, Quentin, Henderson, Lesley, Inderjit, S, Kupriyanov, Audrey, Masciadri, Silvana, Maurel, Noëlie, Meerman, Jan, Morozova, Olga, Moser, Dietmar, Nickrent, Daniel L., Nowak, Pauline M., Pagad, Shyama, Patzelt, Annette, Pelser, Pieter B., Seebens, Hanno, Shu, Wen-Sheng, Thomas, Jacob, Velayos, Mauricio, Weber, Ewald (1960-), Wieringa, Jan J., Baptiste, María P., Kleunen, Mark van (1973-) 2017 Naturalized alien flora of the world: species diversity, taxonomic and phylogenetic patterns, geographic distribution and global hotspots of plant invasion. Preslia, 89: 203-274.Documents numériques
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Article (2017)URL Plantes invasives de Suisse : les reconnaître, lutter contre / Ewald Weber (2013)
PermalinkSchlüssel zur Einteilung von Neophyten in der Schweiz in die Schwarze Liste oder die Watch-Liste / Ewald Weber in Botanica helvetica, 115 (2005)
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