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Auteur Marten Winter |
Documents disponibles écrits par cet auteur (9)
Affiner la rechercheAlien flora of Europe : species diversity, temporal trends, geographical patterns and research needs / Philip W. Lambdon (2008)
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Titre : Alien flora of Europe : species diversity, temporal trends, geographical patterns and research needs Type de document : Tiré à part de revue Auteurs : Philip W. Lambdon ; Petr Pyšek ; Corina Basnou ; Martin Hejda ; Margarita Arianoutsou ; Franz Essl (1973-) ; Vojtěch Jarošík (1958-2013) ; Jan Pergl (1977-) ; Marten Winter ; Paulina Anastasiu ; Pavlos Andriopoulos ; Ioannis Bazos ; Giuseppe Brundu ; Laura Celesti-Grapow ; Philippe Chassot ; Pinelopi Delipetrou ; Mélanie Josefsson ; Salit Kark ; Stefan Klotz ; Yannis Kokkoris ; Ingolf Kühn ; Andreas Zikos ; David Roy ; Philip Eric Hulme Année de publication : 2008 Importance : 101–149 Langues : Anglais (eng) Catégories : [CBNPMP-Thématique] Plantes subspontanées, naturalisées, envahissantes Résumé : The paper provides the first estimate of the composition and structure of alien plants occurring in the wild in the European continent, based on the results of the DAISIE project (2004–2008), funded by the 6th Framework Programme of the European Union and aimed at “creating an inventory of invasive species that threaten European terrestrial, freshwater and marine environments”. The plant section of the DAISIE database is based on national checklists from 48 European countries/regions and Israel; for many of them the data were compiled during the project and for some countries DAISIE collected the first comprehensive checklists of alien species, based on primary data (e.g., Cyprus, Greece, F. Y. R. O. Macedonia, Slovenia, Ukraine). In total, the database contains records of 5789 alien plant species in Europe (including those native to a part of Europe but alien to another part), of which 2843 are alien to Europe (of extra-European origin). The research focus was on naturalized species; there are in total 3749 naturalized aliens in Europe, of which 1780 are alien to Europe. This represents a marked increase compared to 1568 alien species reported by a previous analysis of data in Flora Europaea (1964–1980). Casual aliens were marginally considered and are represented by 1507 species with European origins and 872 species whose native range falls outside Europe. The highest diversity of alien species is concentrated in industrialized countries with a tradition of good botanical recording or intensive recent research. The highest number of all alien species, regardless of status, is reported from Belgium (1969), the United Kingdom (1779) and Czech Republic (1378). The United Kingdom (857), Germany (450), Belgium (447) and Italy (440) are countries with the most naturalized neophytes. The number of naturalized neophytes in European countries is determined mainly by the interaction of temperature and precipitation; it increases with increasing precipitation but only in climatically warm and moderatelywarm regions. Of the nowadays naturalized neophytes alien to Europe, 50% arrived after 1899, 25% after 1962 and 10% after 1989. At present, approximately 6.2 new species, that are capable of naturalization, are arriving each year. Most alien species have relatively restricted European distributions; half of all naturalized species occur in four or fewer countries/regions, whereas 70% of non-naturalized species occur in only one region. Alien species are drawn from 213 families, dominated by large global plant families which have a weedy tendency and have undergone major radiations in temperate regions (Asteraceae, Poaceae, Rosaceae, Fabaceae, Brassicaceae). There are 1567 genera, which have alien members in European countries, the commonest being globally-diverse genera comprising mainly urban and agricultural weeds (e.g., Amaranthus, Chenopodium and Solanum) or cultivated for ornamental purposes (Cotoneaster, the genus richest in alien species). Only a few large genera which have successfully invaded (e.g., Oenothera, Oxalis, Panicum, Helianthus) are predominantly of non-European origin. Conyza canadensis, Helianthus tuberosus and Robinia pseudoacacia are most widely distributed alien species. Of all naturalized aliens present in Europe, 64.1% occur in industrial habitats and 58.5% on arable land and in parks and gardens. Grasslands and woodlands are also highly invaded, with 37.4 and 31.5%, respectively, of all naturalized aliens in Europe present in these habitats. Mires, bogs and fens are least invaded; only approximately 10% of aliens in Europe occur there. Intentional introductions to Europe (62.8% of the total number of naturalized aliens) prevail over unintentional (37.2%). Ornamental and horticultural introductions escaped from cultivation account for the highest number of species, 52.2% of the total. Among unintentional introductions, contaminants of seed, mineral materials and other commodities are responsible for 1091 alien species introductions to Europe (76.6% of all species introduced unintentionally) and 363 species are assumed to have arrived as stowaways (directly associated with human transport but arriving independently of commodity). Most aliens in Europe have a native range in the same continent (28.6% of all donor region records are from another part of Europe where the plant is native); in terms of species numbers the contribution of Europe as a region of origin is 53.2%. Considering aliens to Europe separately, 45.8% of species have their native distribution in North and South America, 45.9% in Asia, 20.7% in Africa and 5.3% in Australasia. Based on species composition, European alien flora can be classified into five major groups: (1) north-western, comprising Scandinavia and the UK; (2) west-central, extending from Belgium and the Netherlands to Germany and Switzerland; (3) Baltic, including only the former Soviet Baltic states; (4) east-central, comprizing the remainder of central and eastern Europe; (5) southern, covering the entire Mediterranean region. The clustering patterns cut across some European bioclimatic zones; cultural factors such as regional trade links and traditional local preferences for crop, forestry and ornamental species are also important by influencing the introduced species pool. Finally, the paper evaluates a state of the art in the field of plant invasions in Europe, points to research gaps and outlines avenues of further research towards documenting alien plant invasions in Europe. The data are of varying quality and need to be further assessed with respect to the invasion status and residence time of the species included. This concerns especially the naturalized/casual status; so far, this information is available comprehensively for only 19 countries/regions of the 49 considered. Collating an integrated database on the alien flora of Europe can form a principal contribution to developing a European-wide management strategy of alien species. Identifiant : HAL : hal-02666016 / Handle : 10261/61126
Permalink : https://biblio.cbnpmp.fr/index.php?lvl=notice_display&id=135202 Lambdon, Philip W., Pyšek, Petr, Basnou, Corina, Hejda, Martin, Arianoutsou, Margarita, Essl, Franz (1973-), Jarošík, Vojtěch (1958-2013), Pergl, Jan (1977-), Winter, Marten, Anastasiu, Paulina, Andriopoulos, Pavlos, Bazos, Ioannis, Brundu, Giuseppe, Celesti-Grapow, Laura, Chassot, Philippe, Delipetrou, Pinelopi, Josefsson, Mélanie, Kark, Salit, Klotz, Stefan, Kokkoris, Yannis, Kühn, Ingolf, Zikos, Andreas, Roy, David, Hulme, Philip Eric 2008 Alien flora of Europe : species diversity, temporal trends, geographical patterns and research needs. Preslia, 80 : 101–149.Exemplaires (1)
Code-barres Cote Support Localisation Section Disponibilité 23955A Lambdon P. Tiré à part Bureaux PEE Consultable Documents numériques
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Article (2008)URLAlien flora of Europe : species diversity, temporal trends, geographical patterns and research needs. Electronic appendix 1 / Philip W. Lambdon in Preslia, 80 (2008)
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Titre : Alien flora of Europe : species diversity, temporal trends, geographical patterns and research needs. Electronic appendix 1 : references for data sources used in Table 1 Type de document : Numérique Auteurs : Philip W. Lambdon ; Petr Pyšek ; Corina Basnou ; Martin Hejda ; Margarita Arianoutsou ; Franz Essl (1973-) ; Vojtěch Jarošík (1958-2013) ; Jan Pergl (1977-) ; Marten Winter ; Paulina Anastasiu ; Pavlos Andriopoulos ; Ioannis Bazos ; Giuseppe Brundu ; Laura Celesti-Grapow ; Philippe Chassot ; Pinelopi Delipetrou ; Mélanie Josefsson ; Salit Kark ; Stefan Klotz ; Yannis Kokkoris ; Ingolf Kühn ; Hélia Marchante ; Irena Perglova ; Joan Pino ; Montserrat Vilà ; Andreas Zikos ; David Roy ; Philip Eric Hulme Année de publication : 2008 Article en page(s) : 7 p. Langues : Français (fre) Catégories : [CBNPMP-Thématique] Plantes subspontanées, naturalisées, envahissantes Permalink : https://biblio.cbnpmp.fr/index.php?lvl=notice_display&id=82535
in Preslia > 80 (2008) . - 7 p.Lambdon, Philip W., Pyšek, Petr, Basnou, Corina, Hejda, Martin, Arianoutsou, Margarita, Essl, Franz (1973-), Jarošík, Vojtěch (1958-2013), Pergl, Jan (1977-), Winter, Marten, Anastasiu, Paulina, Andriopoulos, Pavlos, Bazos, Ioannis, Brundu, Giuseppe, Celesti-Grapow, Laura, Chassot, Philippe, Delipetrou, Pinelopi, Josefsson, Mélanie, Kark, Salit, Klotz, Stefan, Kokkoris, Yannis, Kühn, Ingolf, Marchante, Hélia, Perglova, Irena, Pino, Joan, Vilà, Montserrat, Zikos, Andreas, Roy, David, Hulme, Philip Eric 2008 Alien flora of Europe : species diversity, temporal trends, geographical patterns and research needs. Electronic appendix 1 : references for data sources used in Table 1. Preslia, 80: 7 p..Documents numériques
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Electronic appendix 1 (2008)Adobe Acrobat PDFDisentangling the role of environmental and human pressures on biological invasions across Europe / Petr Pyšek in Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences of the United States of America, 107 (27) (2010)
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Titre : Disentangling the role of environmental and human pressures on biological invasions across Europe Type de document : Numérique Auteurs : Petr Pyšek ; Vojtěch Jarošík (1958-2013) ; Philip Eric Hulme ; Ingolf Kühn ; Jan Wild ; Margarita Arianoutsou ; Sven Bacher ; François Chiron ; Viktoras Didžiulis ; Franz Essl (1973-) ; Piero Genovesi (1960-) ; Francesca Gherardi ; Martin Hejda ; Salit Kark ; Philip W. Lambdon ; Marie-Laure Deprez-Loustau ; Wolfgang Nentwig (1953-) ; Jan Pergl (1977-) ; Katja Poboljšaj ; Wolfgang Rabitsch (1968-) ; Alain Roques (1951-) ; David Roy ; Susan Shirley ; Wojciech Solarz ; Montserrat Vilà ; Marten Winter Année de publication : 2010 Article en page(s) : 12157–12162 Langues : Anglais (eng) Catégories : [CBNPMP-Thématique] Plantes subspontanées, naturalisées, envahissantes Résumé : The accelerating rates of international trade, travel, and transport in the latter half of the twentieth century have led to the progressive mixing of biota from across the world and the number of species introduced to new regions continues to increase. The importance of biogeographic, climatic, economic, and demographic factors as drivers of this trend is increasingly being realized but as yet there is no consensus regarding their relative importance. Whereas little may be done to mitigate the effects of geography and climate on invasions, a wider range of options may exist to moderate the impacts of economic and demographic drivers. Here we use the most recent data available from Europe to partition between macroecological, economic, and demographic variables the variation in alien species richness of bryophytes, fungi, vascular plants, terrestrial insects, aquatic invertebrates, fish, amphibians, reptiles, birds, and mammals. Only national wealth and human population density were statistically significant predictors in the majority of models when analyzed jointly with climate, geography, and land cover. The economic and demographic variables reflect the intensity of human activities and integrate the effect of factors that directly determine the outcome of invasion such as propagule pressure, pathways of introduction, eutrophication, and the intensity of anthropogenic disturbance. The strong influence of economic and demographic variables on the levels of invasion by alien species demonstrates that future solutions to the problem of biological invasions at a national scale lie in mitigating the negative environmental consequences of human activities that generate wealth and by promoting more sustainable population growth. Identifiant : DOI : 10.1073/pnas.1002314107 Permalink : https://biblio.cbnpmp.fr/index.php?lvl=notice_display&id=141894
in Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences of the United States of America > 107 (27) (2010) . - 12157–12162Pyšek, Petr, Jarošík, Vojtěch (1958-2013), Hulme, Philip Eric, Kühn, Ingolf, Wild, Jan, Arianoutsou, Margarita, Bacher, Sven, Chiron, François, Didžiulis, Viktoras, Essl, Franz (1973-), Genovesi, Piero (1960-), Gherardi, Francesca, Hejda, Martin, Kark, Salit, Lambdon, Philip W., Deprez-Loustau, Marie-Laure, Nentwig, Wolfgang (1953-), Pergl, Jan (1977-), Poboljšaj, Katja, Rabitsch, Wolfgang (1968-), Roques, Alain (1951-), Roy, David, Shirley, Susan, Solarz, Wojciech, Vilà, Montserrat, Winter, Marten 2010 Disentangling the role of environmental and human pressures on biological invasions across Europe. Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences of the United States of America, 107(27): 12157–12162.Documents numériques
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Article (2010)URLEuropean ornamental garden flora as an invasion debt under climate change / Emily Haeuser in Journal of applied ecology, 55 (2018)
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Titre : European ornamental garden flora as an invasion debt under climate change Type de document : Numérique Auteurs : Emily Haeuser ; Wayne Dawson ; Wilfried Thuiller (1975-) ; Stefan Dullinger ; Svenja Block ; Oliver Bossdorf ; Marta Carboni ; Luisa Conti ; Iwona Dullinger ; Franz Essl (1973-) ; Günther Klonner ; Dietmar Moser ; Tamara Münkemüller ; Madalin Parepa ; Lauren Talluto ; Holger Kreft ; Jan Pergl (1977-) ; Petr Pyšek ; Patrick Weigelt ; Marten Winter ; Martin Hermy ; Sebastiaan Van der Veken ; Cristina Roquet ; Mark van Kleunen (1973-) Année de publication : 2018 Langues : Anglais (eng) Catégories : [CBNPMP-Thématique] Plantes subspontanées, naturalisées, envahissantes
[CBNPMP-Thématique] Changement climatiqueRésumé : 1 Most naturalised and invasive alien plant species were originally introduced to regions for horticultural purposes. However, many regions now face an invasion debt from ornamental alien species, which have not yet naturalised. In this regard, climate change represents a threat as it may lower the barriers to naturalisation for some ornamental alien species. Identifying those species is extremely important for anticipating impending invasions.
2 To identify predictors of naturalisation, we modelled the effects of climate, nursery availability and species characteristics on the current European naturalisation success of 2,073 ornamental aliens commonly planted in European gardens. We then used the resulting model together with climate projections for 2050 to forecast future naturalisation risks for the 1,583 species not yet naturalised in Europe.
3 We found that non-European naturalised range size, climatic suitability, propagule pressure, having a dioecious sexual system and plant height jointly explained current naturalisation success in Europe. By 2050, naturalisation probability projections increased by more than 0.1 for 41 species, and only decreased by more than 0.1 for one species.
4 Policy implications. Using predictions based on our integrated model of alien ornamental naturalisation success, we identified species with high future naturalisation risk and species with high projected increases in naturalisation potential in Europe under climate change. This species list allows for prioritisation of monitoring and regulation of ornamental plants to mitigate the invasion debt.Identifiant : DOI : 10.1111/1365-2664.13197 / HAL : hal-01983405
Permalink : https://biblio.cbnpmp.fr/index.php?lvl=notice_display&id=155482
in Journal of applied ecology > 55 (2018)Haeuser, Emily, Dawson, Wayne, Thuiller, Wilfried (1975-), Dullinger, Stefan, Block, Svenja, Bossdorf, Oliver, Carboni, Marta, Conti, Luisa, Dullinger, Iwona, Essl, Franz (1973-), Klonner, Günther, Moser, Dietmar, Münkemüller, Tamara, Parepa, Madalin, Talluto, Lauren, Kreft, Holger, Pergl, Jan (1977-), Pyšek, Petr, Weigelt, Patrick, Winter, Marten, Hermy, Martin, Van der Veken, Sebastiaan, Roquet, Cristina, Kleunen, Mark van (1973-) 2018 European ornamental garden flora as an invasion debt under climate change. Journal of applied ecology, 55.Documents numériques
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article (2018)URLA global synthesis of naturalised and invasive plants in aquatic habitats / Alessandra Kortz in Neobiota, 102 (2025)
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Titre : A global synthesis of naturalised and invasive plants in aquatic habitats Type de document : Numérique Auteurs : Alessandra Kortz ; Martin Hejda ; Jan Cuda ; Zarah Pattison ; Josef Brůna ; Ana Novoa ; Jan Pergl (1977-) ; Pavel Pipek ; Kateřina Štajerová ; Paulina Anastasiu ; Michael Ansong ; Margarita Arianoutsou ; Julie F. Barcelona ; Suneeta Bhatta ; Farzaneh Bordbar ; Israel Borokini ; Laura Celesti-Grapow ; Eduardo Chacón ; Wayne Dawson ; Dorjee ; Franz Essl (1973-) ; Lilian Ferrufino-Acosta ; Estrela Figueiredo ; Rodolfo Flores ; Guillaume Fried ; Nicol Fuentes ; Pablo Galan ; Christian Gilli ; Michael Glaser ; José Ramón Grande Allende ; Zigmantas Gudzinskas ; Rachael Holmes ; Philip Eric Hulme ; Inderjit ; Eun Su Kan ; Holger Kreft ; Dan W. Krix ; Ingolf Kühn ; Omar Lopez ; AnaLu MacVean ; Trobjon Makhkamov ; Elizabete Marchante ; Hélia Marchante ; Alfred Maroyi ; Rachid Meddour ; Pierre Meerts ; Sharif A. Mukul ; Brad R. Murray ; Megan L. Murray ; Daniel L. Nickrent ; Prince E. Norman ; Ali Omer ; Annette Patzelt ; Pieter B. Pelser ; Joan Pino ; Marc Riera ; Dagoberto Rodríguez Delcid ; Julissa Rojas-Sandoval ; Roser Rotchés Ribalta ; José Yader Sageth Ruiz-Cruz ; Stepan Senator ; Alexander N. Sennikov ; Bharat Babu Shrestha ; Gideon F. Smith ; Sima Sohrabi ; Barbara Tokarska-Guzik ; Mark van Kleunen (1973-) ; Montserrat Vilà ; Viktoria Wagner ; Patrick Weigelt ; Marten Winter ; Ayse Yazlik ; Elena Zykova ; Petr Pyšek Année de publication : 2025 Article en page(s) : 473-494 Langues : Anglais (eng) Catégories : [CBNPMP-Thématique] Plantes subspontanées, naturalisées, envahissantes Résumé : Global databases have contributed to our understanding of alien, naturalised and invasive plant species distributions. Still, the role of species invasions in habitats, specifically in aquatic habitats, remains underexplored at the global scale. Accordingly, a comprehensive global synthesis of the status of plant invasions in aquatic habitats has been missing. Here, we focus on macroecological patterns of naturalised non-invasive and invasive plants in aquatic habitats using the recently built SynHab database. Amongst all the plant records compiled in SynHab, 592 are assigned to aquatic habitats, of which 183 are unique plant taxa (further termed ‘species’) belonging to 49 families. Of the total number of records, 462 refer to taxa with naturalised non-invasive occurrences and 130 to invasive occurrences. The species pool analysed here refers to 78 regions distributed across all botanical continents as defined by the World Geographical Scheme for Recording Plant Distributions. The number of naturalised non-invasive aquatic species is similar across different continents and biomes, but Tropical Asia had more and the Mediterranean zonobiome had fewer invasive species than expected. Tropical Asia, Temperate Asia and Africa have the highest proportions of naturalised species that have become invasive, while across continents, invasive proportions were highest for tropical and subtropical zonobiomes. New Zealand, Italy and California contained disproportionately more naturalised species than expected, given the area covered by aquatic habitat in those regions, whereas South Sudan, Papua New Guinea and Kyrgyzstan had disproportionately fewer species. In pairwise dissimilarity comparisons, all continents had distinct species compositions (from 0.73 to 0.92 of the Jaccard dissimilarity index) and so did zonobiomes (0.69 to 1.00). The high proportion of invasive species in Tropical Asia in comparison with terrestrial invasions in this region, indicates a greater susceptibility of warmer regions to aquatic plant invasions. This may be exacerbated by further naturalisations in the future, as data from temperate regions suggest a larger pool of available species. Identifiant : DOI : 10.3897/neobiota.102.151156 Permalink : https://biblio.cbnpmp.fr/index.php?lvl=notice_display&id=155479
in Neobiota > 102 (2025) . - 473-494Kortz, Alessandra, Hejda, Martin, Cuda, Jan, Pattison, Zarah, Brůna, Josef, Novoa, Ana, Pergl, Jan (1977-), Pipek, Pavel, Štajerová, Kateřina, Anastasiu, Paulina, Ansong, Michael, Arianoutsou, Margarita, Barcelona, Julie F., Bhatta, Suneeta, Bordbar, Farzaneh, Borokini, Israel, Celesti-Grapow, Laura, Chacón, Eduardo, Dawson, Wayne, Dorjee, Essl, Franz (1973-), Ferrufino-Acosta, Lilian, Figueiredo, Estrela, Flores, Rodolfo, Fried, Guillaume, Fuentes, Nicol, Galan, Pablo, Gilli, Christian, Glaser, Michael, Grande Allende, José Ramón, Gudzinskas, Zigmantas, Holmes, Rachael, Hulme, Philip Eric, Inderjit, Kan, Eun Su, Kreft, Holger, Krix, Dan W., Kühn, Ingolf, Lopez, Omar, MacVean, AnaLu, Makhkamov, Trobjon, Marchante, Elizabete, Marchante, Hélia, Maroyi, Alfred, Meddour, Rachid, Meerts, Pierre, Mukul, Sharif A., Murray, Brad R., Murray, Megan L., Nickrent, Daniel L., Norman, Prince E., Omer, Ali, Patzelt, Annette, Pelser, Pieter B., Pino, Joan, Riera, Marc, Rodríguez Delcid, Dagoberto, Rojas-Sandoval, Julissa, Rotchés Ribalta, Roser, Sageth Ruiz-Cruz, José Yader, Senator, Stepan, Sennikov, Alexander N., Shrestha, Bharat Babu, Smith, Gideon F., Sohrabi, Sima, Tokarska-Guzik, Barbara, Kleunen, Mark van (1973-), Vilà, Montserrat, Wagner, Viktoria, Weigelt, Patrick, Winter, Marten, Yazlik, Ayse, Zykova, Elena, Pyšek, Petr 2025 A global synthesis of naturalised and invasive plants in aquatic habitats. Neobiota, 102: 473-494.Documents numériques
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article (2025)Adobe Acrobat PDFNaturalized 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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PermalinkNo saturation in the accumulation of alien species worldwide / Hanno Seebens in Nature communications, 8 (2017)
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PermalinkA unified classification of Alien species based on the magnitude of their environmental impacts / Tim M. Blackburn (2014)
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PermalinkWidespread decline in Central European plant diversity across six decades / David Eichenberg in Global Change Biology, 27 (2021)
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