Biological Invasions (2015) 17 (6)

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Articles of Biological Invasions entered for 2015 and volume (issue): 17 (6)

Biological Invasions (2015) 17, 1595-1602
Sebastián A. Ballari, M. Fernanda Cuevas, Sebastián Cirignoli and Alejandro E.J. Valenzuela (2015)
Invasive wild boar in Argentina: using protected areas as a research platform to determine distribution, impacts and management

Biological Invasions (2015) 17, 1615-1622
Azalea Guerra-García, Jordan Golubov and María C. Mandujano (2015)
Invasion of Kalanchoe by clonal spread

Biological Invasions (2015) 17, 1669-1681
Ebony G. Murrell, Bruce H. Noden and Steven A. Juliano (2015)
Contributions of temporal segregation, oviposition choice, and non-additive effects of competitors to invasion success of Aedes japonicus (Diptera: Culicidae) in North America

Biological Invasions (2015) 17, 1683-1695
Tegan A.L. Morton, Alexandra Thorn, J. Michael Reed, Roy G. Van Driesche, Richard A. Casagrande and Frances S. Chew (2015)
Modeling the decline and potential recovery of a native butterfly following serial invasions by exotic species

Biological Invasions (2015) 17, 1697-1712
M.S. Dechoum, T.T. Castellani, S.M. Zalba, M. Rejmánek, N. Peroni and J.Y. Tamashiro (2015)
Community structure, succession and invasibility in a seasonal deciduous forest in southern Brazil

Biological Invasions (2015) 17, 1729-1742
Kevin R. Hultine, Tom L. Dudley, Dan F. Koepke, Daniel W. Bean, Ed P. Glenn and Adam M. Lambert (2015)
Patterns of herbivory-induced mortality of a dominant non-native tree/shrub (Tamarix spp.) in a southwestern US watershed

Biological Invasions (2015) 17, 1817-1832
Eric Motard, Sophie Dusz, Benoît Geslin, Marthe Akpa-Vinceslas, Cécile Hignard, Olivier Babiar, Danielle Clair-Maczulajtys and Alice Michel-Salzat (2015)
How invasion by Ailanthus altissima transforms soil and litter communities in a temperate forest ecosystem

Biological Invasions (2015) 17, 1833-1847
Heather A. Hager, Rochelle Rupert, Lauren D. Quinn and Jonathan A. Newman (2015)
Escaped Miscanthus sacchariflorus reduces the richness and diversity of vegetation and the soil seed bank

Biological Invasions (2015) 17, 1849-1857
Kevin J. Horn, Rachel Nettles and Samuel B. St. Clair (2015)
Germination response to temperature and moisture to predict distributions of the invasive grass red brome and wildfire

Biological Invasions (2015) 17, 1859-1868
P. Colangelo, A. Abiadh, G. Aloise, G. Amori, D. Capizzi, E. Vasa, F. Annesi and R. Castiglia (2015)
Mitochondrial phylogeography of the black rat supports a single invasion of the western Mediterranean basin

Biological Invasions (2015) 17, 1869-1883
Bram D'Hondt, Sonia Vanderhoeven, Sophie Roelandt, François Mayer, Veerle Versteirt, Tim Adriaens, Els Ducheyne, Gilles San Martin, JeanClaude Grégoire, Iris Stiers, Sophie Quoilin, Julien Cigar, André Heughebaert and Etienne Branquart (2015)
Harmonia + and Pandora +: risk screening tools for potentially invasive plants, animals and their pathogens

Biological Invasions (2015) 17, 1915-1926
Seth M. Munson, A. Lexine Long, Cheryl Decker, Katie A. Johnson, Kathleen Walsh and Mark E. Miller (2015)
Repeated landscape-scale treatments following fire suppress a non-native annual grass and promote recovery of native perennial vegetation