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. 2021 Apr;108(4):549-552.
doi: 10.1002/ajb2.1642. Epub 2021 Apr 23.

Botany is the root and the future of invasion biology

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Free article

Botany is the root and the future of invasion biology

Brittany L Sutherland et al. Am J Bot. 2021 Apr.
Free article
No abstract available

Keywords: colonization; establishment; genomics; herbaria; introduced species; weed science.

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References

LITERATURE CITED

    1. Barrett, S. C. H. 2015. Foundations of invasion genetics: the Baker and Stebbins legacy. Molecular Ecology 24: 1927-1941.
    1. te Beest, M., J. J. Le Roux, D. M. Richardson, A. K. Brysting, J. Suda, M. Kubesova, and P. Pysek. 2012. The more the better? The role of polyploidy in facilitating plant invasions. Annals of Botany 109: 19-45.
    1. Bock, D. G., M. B. Kantar, C. Caseys, R. Matthey-Doret, and L. H. Rieseberg. 2018. Evolution of invasiveness by genetic accommodation. Nature Ecology & Evolution 2: 991-999.
    1. van Boheemen, L. A., E. Lombaert, K. A. Nurkowski, B. Gauffre, L. H. Rieseberg, and K. A. Hodgins. 2017. Multiple introductions, admixture and bridgehead invasion characterize the introduction history of Ambrosia artemisiifolia in Europe and Australia. Molecular Ecology 26: 5421-5434.
    1. Colautti, R. I., and J. A. Lau. 2015. Contemporary evolution during invasion: evidence for differentiation, natural selection, and local adaptation. Molecular Ecology 24: 1999-2017.

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