Biological Invasions (2011) 13 (4)
Articles of Biological Invasions entered for 2011 and volume (issue): 13 (4)
Biological Invasions (2011) 13, 819-829
Young Jin Chun (2011)
Phenotypic plasticity of introduced versus native purple loosestrife: univariate and multivariate reaction norm approaches
Biological Invasions (2011) 13, 831-844
Benigno Padrón, Manuel Nogales, Anna Traveset, Montserrat Vilà, Alejandro Martínez-Abraín, David P. Padilla and Patriciay Marrero (2011)
Integration of invasive Opuntia spp. by native and alien seed dispersers in the Mediterranean area and the Canary Islands
Biological Invasions (2011) 13, 857-868
Travis D. Marsico, Lisa E. Wallace, Gary N. Ervin, Christopher P. Brooks, Jessica E. McClure and Mark E. Welch (2011)
Geographic patterns of genetic diversity from the native range of Cactoblastis cactorum (Berg) support the documented history of invasion and multiple introductions for invasive populations
Biological Invasions (2011) 13, 883-894
Aaron B. Shiels and Donald R. Drake (2011)
Are introduced rats (Rattus rattus) both seed predators and dispersers in Hawaii?
Biological Invasions (2011) 13, 895-904
Maria Calvino-Cancela (2011)
Seed dispersal of alien and native plants by vertebrate herbivores
Biological Invasions (2011) 13, 905-917
Kristin I. Powell, Kyra N. Krakos and Tiffany M. Knight (2011)
Comparing the reproductive success and pollination biology of an invasive plant to its rare and common native congeners: a case study in the genus Cirsium (Asteraceae)
Biological Invasions (2011) 13, 919-931
L. May and L.K. Baldwin (2011)
Linking field based studies with greenhouse experiments: the impact of Centaurea stoebe (=C. maculosa) in British Columbia grasslands
Biological Invasions (2011) 13, 933-944
Pierre Gladieux, Tatiana Giraud, Levente Kiss, Benjamin J. Genton, Odile Jonot and Jacqui A. Shykoff (2011)
Distinct invasion sources of common ragweed (Ambrosia artemisiifolia) in Eastern and Western Europe
Biological Invasions (2011) 13, 945-955
Wendy E. Morrison and Mark E. Hay (2011)
Feeding and growth of native, invasive and non-invasive alien apple snails (Ampullariidae) in the United States: Invasives eat more and grow more
Biological Invasions (2011) 13, 1003-1019
Cor J. Vink, José G.B. Derraik, Craig B. Phillips and Phil J. Sirvid (2011)
The invasive Australian redback spider, Latrodectus hasseltii Thorell 1870 (Araneae: Theridiidae): current and potential distributions, and likely impacts
Biological Invasions (2011) 13, 1029-1042
Charles G. Chimera and Donald R. Drake (2011)
Could poor seed dispersal contribute to predation by introduced rodents in a Hawaiian dry forest?