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Holocene palaeo-invasions: the link between pattern, process and scale in invasion ecology?
Authors
Lindsey Gillson
Anneli Ekblom
+66 more
Katherine J. Willis
Cynthia Froyd
TD Allison
MB Araújo
KD Bennett
JL Betancourt
L Björkman
W Bond
RHW Bradshaw
DD Breshears
RM Callaway
JS Carrión
JS Clark
MB Davis
MB Davis
MB Davis
RK Didham
D Foster
L Gillson
S Gray
A Guisan
A Guisan
J Gurevitch
L Hannah
JL Hierro
ML Hunter
ST Jackson
RM Keane
TH Keitt
WC Kerfoot
MT Kinnison
ME Lyford
EA Lynch
E Martinez-Meyer
JS McLachlan
CI Millar
CE Mitchell
CE Mitchell
HA Mooney
PR Moorcroft
JD Olden
C Parmesan
T Parshall
M Pascal
RG Pearson
C Perrings
RJ Petit
HR Pulliam
M Rejmánek
A Ricciardi
DM Richardson
O Ronce
TP Rooney
E Siemann
J-C Svenning
J-C Svenning
TW Swetnam
JFN Leeuwen van
B Holle Von
JW Williams
KJ Willis
KJ Willis
KA With
KA With
KD Woods
KD Woods
Publication date
1 January 2008
Publisher
'Springer Science and Business Media LLC'
Doi
Abstract
Invasion ecology has made rapid progress in recent years through synergies with landscape ecology, niche theory, evolutionary ecology and the ecology of climate change. The palaeo-record of Holocene invasions provides a rich but presently underexploited resource in exploring the pattern and process of invasions through time. In this paper, examples from the palaeo-literature are used to illustrate the spread of species through time and space, also revealing how interactions between invader and invaded communities change over the course of an invasion. The main issues addressed are adaptation and plant migration, ecological and evolutionary interactions through time, disturbance history and the landscape ecology of invasive spread. We consider invasions as a continuous variable, which may be influenced by different environmental or ecological variables at different stages of the invasion process, and we use palaeoecological examples to describe how ecological interactions change over the course of an invasion. Finally, the use of palaeoecological information to inform the management of invasions for biodiversity conservation is discussed. © 2008 Springer Science+Business Media B.V
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