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CBNPMP-Thèmes > Ecologie et géographie botanique > Chorologie, endémisme, cartographie d'espèce, atlas, catalogue, centre dispersion, région florale, migration > Plantes subspontanées, naturalisées, envahissantes
Plantes subspontanées, naturalisées, envahissantes |
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Hybridization as a stimulus for the evolution of invasiveness in plants / Norman Carl Ellstrand (2000)
est un tiré à part de 97 (13) - June 2000 (Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences of the United States of America)
Titre : Hybridization as a stimulus for the evolution of invasiveness in plants Type de document : Tiré à part d'ouvrage Auteurs : Norman Carl Ellstrand (1952-) ; Kristina A. Schierenbeck Année de publication : 2000 Importance : p. 289-309 Langues : Anglais (eng) Catégories : [CBNPMP-Thèmes] Diversité génétique
[CBNPMP-Thèmes] Hybridations interspécifiques et intergénériques, introgression (ét. cytogén. & appl. amélior. pl.)
[CBNPMP-Thèmes] Plantes subspontanées, naturalisées, envahissantes
[CBNPMP-Thèmes] Pollution génétiqueRésumé : Invasive species are of great interest to evolutionary biologists and ecologists because they represent historical examples of dramatic evolutionary and ecological change. Likewise, they are increasingly important economically and environmentally as pests. Obtaining generalizations about the tiny fraction of immigrant taxa that become successful invaders has been frustrated by two enigmatic phenomena. Many of those species that become successful only do so (i) after an unusually long lag time after initial arrival, and/or (ii) after multiple introductions. We propose an evolutionary mechanism that may account for these observations. Hybridization between species or between disparate source populations may serve as a stimulus for the evolution of invasiveness. We present and review a remarkable number of cases in which hybridization preceded the emergence of successful invasive populations. Progeny with a history of hybridization may enjoy one or more potential genetic benefits relative to their progenitors. The observed lag times and multiple introductions that seem a prerequisite for certain species to evolve invasiveness may be a correlate of the time necessary for previously isolated populations to come into contact and for hybridization to occur. Our examples demonstrate that invasiveness can evolve. Our model does not represent the only evolutionary pathway to invasiveness, but is clearly an underappreciated mechanism worthy of more consideration in explaining the evolution of invasiveness in plants. Lien pérenne : DOI : 10.1073/pnas.97.13.7043 Permalink : https://biblio.cbnpmp.fr/index.php?lvl=notice_display&id=84901 Ellstrand, N.C., Schierenbeck, KA. 2000. Hybridization as a stimulus for the evolution of invasiveness in plants. In: 97 (13) - June 2000 (Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences of the United States of America, 97 (13) [01/06/2013]). National Academy of Sciences, Washington, D.C.: 289-309.Documents numériques
Consultable
Article (2000)URL Hybrids of Thuja occidentalis and Thuja plicata (Cupressaceae) – Is this a fact or misunderstanding? / Jerzy Zieliński in Rocznik Polskiego Towarzystwa Dendrologicznego, 67 (2019)
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Titre : Hybrids of Thuja occidentalis and Thuja plicata (Cupressaceae) – Is this a fact or misunderstanding? Type de document : Imprimé Auteurs : Jerzy Zieliński ; Wladyslaw Danielewicz ; Piotr Kosiński Année de publication : 2019 Article en page(s) : 9-24 Langues : Anglais (eng) Catégories : [CBNPMP-Thèmes] Plantes subspontanées, naturalisées, envahissantes Mots-clés : Thuja occidentalis Thuja plicata Résumé : Thuja occidentalis and T. plicata belong to alien trees most frequently cultivated in Europe. Morphologically they differ significantly from each other and their natural ranges are geographically isolated, hence the taxonomic status of both taxa has never been questioned. In cultivation, however, these species are often very difficult to distinguish so speculations appeared that they can hybridize with each other. Reports about their hybrids growing in the Kórnik Arboretum, Poland, have been delivered several times; for the first time in 1933, then in 1957 and in 1981. In the latter publication, based on those hybrids, a new nothospecies Thuja ×plicatoides was described. That name, however, was not validly published, because its Latin diagnosis was limited only to a few words and no mention was made of how the hybrid differed from its parental species. The analysis of numerous arborvitae specimens growing in the Kórnik Arboretum, and in many other places in Poland, has shown that the earlier reports about the occurrence of Thuja hybrids in cultivation were fully justified. The results of this study were documented by numerous photographs showing the main diagnostic features of T. occidentalis, T. plicata and their hybrids. Special attention was paid to the characteristics of cones, which are rarely used in the Thuja taxonomy. The shape of cone scales, the length of the scale mucro and the structure of small 'lips' on the scale apices turned out to be significant cone features; the latter was used for the first time when distinguishing between both Thuja species. The cone and leaf features made it possible to recognize not only 'pure' species, but also their hybrids. The name Thuja ×plicatoides Seneta, for formal reasons has been rejected, so for the hybrids a new name Thuja ×senetiana has been proposed, which commemorates Włodzimierz Seneta, an outstanding Polish dendrologist. Permalink : https://biblio.cbnpmp.fr/index.php?lvl=notice_display&id=152905
in Rocznik Polskiego Towarzystwa Dendrologicznego > 67 (2019) . - 9-24Zieliński, J., Danielewicz, W., Kosiński, P. 2019. Hybrids of Thuja occidentalis and Thuja plicata (Cupressaceae) – Is this a fact or misunderstanding? Rocznik Polskiego Towarzystwa Dendrologicznego, 67: 9-24.Documents numériques
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Article (2019)URL Hypericum mutilum L. plante Nord Américaine dans la Vallée de l'Adour / Jean Vivant in Le Monde des plantes, 266 (Mars 1950)
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Titre : Hypericum mutilum L. plante Nord Américaine dans la Vallée de l'Adour Type de document : Imprimé Auteurs : Jean Vivant, Auteur Année de publication : 1950 Article en page(s) : 17 Langues : Français (fre) Catégories : [CBNPMP-Thèmes] Plantes subspontanées, naturalisées, envahissantes
[CBNPMP-Géographique] Vallée de L'AdourMots-clés : Hypericum mutilum L. Permalink : https://biblio.cbnpmp.fr/index.php?lvl=notice_display&id=144512
in Le Monde des plantes > 266 (Mars 1950) . - 17Vivant, J. 1950. Hypericum mutilum L. plante Nord Américaine dans la Vallée de l'Adour. Le Monde des plantes, 266: 17.Exemplaires (1)
Code-barres Cote Support Localisation Section Disponibilité R1409 P-58 Revue Centre de documentation Revues Consultable Impact des discontinuités sur la dynamique des peuplements de macrophytes en grands cours d’eau : Application à l’hydrosystème Adour-Garonne / Emilie Breugnot (2003)
Titre : Impact des discontinuités sur la dynamique des peuplements de macrophytes en grands cours d’eau : Application à l’hydrosystème Adour-Garonne Type de document : Électronique Auteurs : Emilie Breugnot ; Alain Dutartre ; Christophe Laplace-Treyture Editeur : Cemagref, INRA Rennes Année de publication : 2003 Importance : 22 p. Langues : Français (fre) Catégories : [CBNPMP-Thèmes] Plantes subspontanées, naturalisées, envahissantes Permalink : https://biblio.cbnpmp.fr/index.php?lvl=notice_display&id=82893 Breugnot, E., Dutartre, A., Laplace-Treyture, C. 2003. Impact des discontinuités sur la dynamique des peuplements de macrophytes en grands cours d’eau : Application à l’hydrosystème Adour-Garonne. Cemagref, INRA Rennes, [S.l.]. 22 pp.Impact de huit plantes invasives sur des communautés végétales de la région méditerranéenne / Chloé Pierre (2012)
Titre : Impact de huit plantes invasives sur des communautés végétales de la région méditerranéenne Type de document : Imprimé Auteurs : Chloé Pierre Editeur : Dijon : Agro Sup Année de publication : 2012 Importance : 50 p. Langues : Français (fre) Catégories : [CBNPMP-Thèmes] Plantes subspontanées, naturalisées, envahissantes Mots-clés : Artemisia verlotiorum Lamotte, 1877 Ambrosia artemisiifolia L., 1753 Amorpha fruticosa L., 1753 Baccharis halimifolia L., 1753 Carpobrotus N.E.Br., 1925 Impatiens balfouri Hook.f., 1903 Phyla filiformis (Schrad.) Meikle, 1985 Reynoutria x bohemica Chrtek & Chrtkova, 1983 Note de contenu : Mémoire de fin d'études d'ingénieur Permalink : https://biblio.cbnpmp.fr/index.php?lvl=notice_display&id=82641 Pierre, C. 2012. Impact de huit plantes invasives sur des communautés végétales de la région méditerranéenne. Agro Sup, Dijon. 50 pp.Exemplaires (1)
Code-barres Cote Support Localisation Section Disponibilité 25676 PEE Rapport d'étude Bureaux PEE Consultable Impact of biological invasions on ecosystem services / Montserrat Vilà (2017)
PermalinkImpact of droughts on Cedrus atlantica forests dieback in the Aurès (Algeria) / Dalila Kherchouche in Journal of life sciences, 6 (2012)
PermalinkImpact des plantes exotiques envahissantes sur le comportement de récolte de Bombus terrestris (L.) (Hymenoptera, Apidae) / Maxime Drossart (2014)
PermalinkImpact des renouées exotiques envahissantes Fallopia spp. sur les pollinisateurs, ainsi que sur la reproduction d’une espèce végétale indigène / Esther Gerber in Actes de la Société jurassienne d'Emulation, (2008)
PermalinkImpacts écologiques et paysagers de l’implantation de Miscanthus x giganteus dans le Parc naturel régional de Lorraine / Julian Pichenot (2023)
PermalinkImpacts of biological invasions disturbance regimes / Michelle Cailin Mack (1998)
PermalinkPermalinkPermalinkImpatiens glandulifera Royle en Haute-Garonne / Jean Dader in Le Monde des plantes, 223 (Janvier-Février 1937)
PermalinkImpatiens glandulifera Royle (= I. roileyi Walpers) : Balsamine de l’Himalaya / Agence méditerranéenne de l'environnement (Montpellier) (2003)
PermalinkImplications for biological invasion of non-native plants for sale in the world’s largest online market / Achyut Kumar Banerjee in Conservation Biology, 37 (4) (2022)
PermalinkImpliquer la filière horticole dans la lutte contre les espèces envahissantes / Isabelle Mandon-Dalger (2007)
PermalinkImportance or Ludwigia grandiflora as invasive weed on meadows and pastures in Western France / Jacques Haury (2011)
PermalinkIncidence of Germinable Seeds of Ludwigia grandiflora subsp. hexapetala (Onagraceae) in the Feces of Lake Biwa’s Waterfowl / Shinya Hieda in Acta Phytotaxonomica et Geobotanica, 74 (1) (2023)
PermalinkInformation on measures and related costs in relation to species included on the Union list: Acacia saligna / Giuseppe Brundu (2018)
PermalinkInformation on measures and related costs in relation to species included on the Union list: Ailanthus altissima / Giuseppe Brundu (2017)
PermalinkInformation on measures and related costs in relation to species included on the Union list: Ambrosia confertiflora / Johannes Leonardus Cornelis Hendrikus van Valkenburg (2018)
PermalinkInformation on measures and related costs in relation to species included on the Union list: Andropogon virginicus / Johannes Leonardus Cornelis Hendrikus van Valkenburg (2018)
PermalinkInformation on measures and related costs in relation to species included on the Union list. Baccharis halimifolia / Guillaume Fried (2019)
PermalinkInformation on measures and related costs in relation to species included on the Union list: Cabomba caroliniana / Tobias O Bickel (2019)
PermalinkInformation on measures and related costs in relation to species included on the Union list. Cardiospermum grandiflorum / Nicola Schoenenberger (2017)
PermalinkInformation on measures and related costs in relation to species included on the Union list. Cinnamomum camphora / Johannes J. Le Roux (2017)
PermalinkInformation on measures and related costs in relation to species included on the Union list: Cortaderia jubata / Vernon Visser (2018)
PermalinkInformation on measures and related costs in relation to species included on the Union list: Ehrharta calycina / Vernon Visser (2018)
PermalinkInformation on measures and related costs in relation to species included on the Union list. Eichhornia crassipes / Julie A Coetzee (2019)
PermalinkInformation on measures and related costs in relation to species included on the Union list: Elodea nuttallii. / Andreas Hussner (2017)
PermalinkInformation on measures and related costs in relation to species included on the Union list. Gunnera tinctoria / Margherita Gioria (2017)
PermalinkInformation on measures and related costs in relation to species included on the Union list: Gymnocoronis spilanthoides / Johannes Leonardus Cornelis Hendrikus van Valkenburg (2017)
PermalinkInformation on measures and related costs in relation to species included on the Union list: Hakea sericea / Elizabete Marchante (2018)
PermalinkInformation on measures and related costs in relation to species included on the Union list. Heracleum spp. / Jan Pergl (2019)
PermalinkInformation on measures and related costs in relation to species included on the Union list. Humulus scandens / Guillaume Fried (2018)
PermalinkInformation on measures and related costs in relation to species included on the Union list: Hydrocotyle ranunculoides / Andreas Hussner (2019)
PermalinkInformation on measures and related costs in relation to species included on the Union list: Hygrophila polysperma / Johannes Leonardus Cornelis Hendrikus van Valkenburg (2017)
PermalinkInformation on measures and related costs in relation to species included on the Union list. Impatiens glandulifera / Rob Tanner (2018)
PermalinkInformation on measures and related costs in relation to species included on the Union list: Lagarosiphon major / Andreas Hussner (2019)
PermalinkInformation on measures and related costs in relation to species included on the Union list. Lespedeza cuneata / Luke S. Flory (2018)
PermalinkInformation on measures and related costs in relation to species included on the Union list. Ludwigia grandiflora and Ludwigia peploides / Guillaume Fried (2019)
PermalinkInformation on measures and related costs in relation to species included on the Union list. Lygodium japonicum / Kimberly K. Bohn (2018)
PermalinkInformation on measures and related costs in relation to species included on the Union list. Lysichiton americanus / Guillaume Fried (2019)
PermalinkInformation on measures and related costs in relation to species included on the Union list: Microstegium vimineum / Luke S. Flory (2017)
PermalinkInformation on measures and related costs in relation to species included on the Union list: Myriophyllum heterophyllum Michx. / Jonathan Newman (2017)
PermalinkInformation on measures and related costs in relation to species included on the Union list. Parthenium hysterophorus / F. Dane Panetta (2019)
PermalinkInformation on measures and related costs in relation to species included on the Union list: Pennisetum setaceum / Giuseppe Brundu (2017)
PermalinkInformation on measures and related costs in relation to species included on the Union list. Persicaria perfoliata / Lisa Tewksburry (2019)
PermalinkInformation on measures and related costs in relation to species included on the Union list. Pistia stratiotes / Andreas Hussner (2017)
PermalinkInformation on measures and related costs in relation to species included on the Union list. Prosopis juliflora / Nick Pasiecznik (2018)
PermalinkInformation on measures and related costs in relation to species included on the Union list. Pueraria montana var. lobata / Melissa A. Bravo (2019)
PermalinkInformation on measures and related costs in relation to species included on the Union list: Salvinia molesta / Martin P. Hill (2017)
PermalinkInformation on measures and related costs in relation to species included on the Union list. Triadica sebifera / Luke S. Flory (2018)
PermalinkDe l'installation d'une plante exotique dans un écosystème à son invasion : quand et comment agir efficacement ? Exemple des renouées asiatiques / Mathieu Boyer (2013)
PermalinkInteraction between Ailanthus altissima and Native Robinia pseudoacacia in Early Succession: Implications for Forest Management / Erik T. Nilsens in Forests, 9 (4) (2018)
PermalinkIntroduced plants of the invasive Solidago gigantea (Asteraceae) are larger and grow denser than conspecifics in the native… / Gabi Jakobs in Diversity and Distributions, 10 (2004)
PermalinkPermalinkIntroduction and naturalization of Prunus serotina in centrel Europe / Uwe Starfinger (1997)
PermalinkIntroduction et dispersion d'une espèce envahissante : le cas de l'ambroisie à feuilles d'armoise (Ambrosia artemisiifolia L.) en France / Bruno Chauvel in Acta botanica gallica, 158 (3) (10/2011)
PermalinkIntroduction d'espèces fixatrices d'azote au sein de plantations à courte rotation / Cecilia Gana in Revue forestière française, 66 (4) (08/2014)
PermalinkPermalinkIntroduction de macrophytes aquatiques et riverains dans les hydrosystèmes français métropolitains : essai de bilan. Actes du séminaire du 13-15 Février 1996 "Les introductions d'espèces dans les milieux aquatiques continentaux en métropole" / Alain Dutartre (1997)
PermalinkIntroduction, spread and distribution of Abies cephalonica in Austria / Franz Essl in BioInvasions Records, 11 (3) (2022)
PermalinkInvasibility of species-rich communities in riparian zones / Anne-Marie Planty-Tabacchi (1996)
PermalinkInvasion des corridors fluviaux du Sud-ouest par des espèces végétales exotiques / Anne-Marie Planty-Tabacchi (1997)
PermalinkInvasion of the flatworms : easily hidden in imported plants, some land flatworms are conquering the world / Ronald Sluys in American scientist, 104 (5) (September-October 2016)
PermalinkInvasion des rivières du Sud-Ouest par les plantes exotiques / Anne-Marie Planty-Tabacchi
PermalinkLes invasions biologiques / Françoise Breton in Courrier de l'environnement de l'INRA, 32 (12/1997)
PermalinkLes invasions biologiques / Pierre Marsal in Courrier de l'environnement de l'INRA, 46 (06/2002)
PermalinkInvasions biologiques et biologie de la conservation : essai de synthèse / Michel Pascal in Courrier de l'environnement de l'INRA, 40 (06/2000)
PermalinkLes invasions biologiques causées par les plantes exotiques sur le territoire français métropolitain : état des connaissances et propositions d'actions / Serge Muller (2001)
PermalinkLes invasions biologiques : un danger pour la biodiversité / Jean Claude Lefeuvre (2013)
PermalinkInvasions biologiques : état de l'art et perspectives / Pierre Joly in Revue d'écologie (La terre et la vie), 7 (2000)
PermalinkLes invasions biologiques, une question de natures et de sociétés / Robert Barbault (2010)
PermalinkLes invasions biologiques : un risque pour la biodiversité à l’échelle mondiale / Jean Claude Lefeuvre (2006)
PermalinkInvasions by alien plants in the Czech Republic : a quantitative assessment across habitats / Milan Chytrý in Preslia, 77 (2005)
PermalinkPermalinkInvasive Acer negundo outperforms native species in non-limiting resource environments due to its higher phenotypic plasticity / Annabel J. Porté in BMC Ecology, 11 (2011)
PermalinkInvasive alien species indicators in Europe : A review of streamlining European biodiversity (SEBI) Indicator 10 / Agence européenne pour l'environnement (2012)
PermalinkInvasive alien species . A potential threat for re-introduction of endangered cheer pheasant in Margalla National Park / Muhammad Shahbaz (2006)
PermalinkInvasive plant causes health problems in France / Sarah Brunel in Plant Talk, 38 (10/2004)
PermalinkInvasive plant species of the world : a reference guide to environmental weeds / Ewald Weber (2003)
PermalinkInvasive plant species of the world : a reference guide to environmental weeds, 2nd edition / Ewald Weber (2017)
PermalinkInvasive plants and enemy release : evolution of trait means and trait correlations in Ulex europaeus / Hornoy (1985-) in PloS ONE, 6 (10) (2011)
PermalinkInvasive plants and forest ecosystems / Ravinder Kumar Kohli (2008)
PermalinkInvasive plants differentially affect soil biota through litter and rhizosphere pathways: a meta-analysis / Peter Zhang in Ecology Letters, 22 (2019)
PermalinkInvasive Plants : Ecological and Agricultural Aspects / S Inderjit (2005)
PermalinkInvasive plants evade herbivores with novel toxins in Conservation in practice, 7 (3) (07/2006)
PermalinkInvasive red oak (Quercus rubra L.) modifies soil physicochemical properties and forest understory vegetation / Malgorzata Stanek in Forest ecology and management, 472 (2020)
PermalinkInvasive species as ecological threat : is restoration an alternative to fear-based resource management / Paul H. Gobster in Ecological Restoration, 23 (4) (12/2005)
PermalinkInvasive species of Heracleum in Europe : an insight into genetic relationships and invasion history / Sarka Jahodova in Diversity and Distributions, 13 (2007)
PermalinkInventaire des stations d'espèces végétales prioritaires de la rive sud du lac de Neuchâtel d'Yverdonles- Bains à Cudrefin / Christian Clerc (2004)
PermalinkPermalinkIs there any evidence for rapid, genetically-based, climatic niche expansion in the invasive common ragweed ? / Laure Gallien in PloS ONE, 11 (4) (2015)
PermalinkIt's often better to eradicate, but can we eradicate better / E.S. Zavaleta (2002)
PermalinkPermalinkLa Jacinthe d'eau, plante envahissante / R. L. Steyaert in Les Naturalistes belges, 37 (2) (1956)
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