Favorable Climate Change Response Explains Non-Native Species' Success in Thoreau's Woods

dc.contributor.author

Willis, Charles G

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Ruhfel, Brad R

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Primack, Richard B

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Miller-Rushing, Abraham J

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Losos, Jonathan B

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Davis, Charles C

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2011-06-21T17:31:28Z

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2011-06-21T17:31:28Z

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2010

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Invasive species have tremendous detrimental ecological and economic impacts. Climate change may exacerbate species invasions across communities if non-native species are better able to respond to climate changes than native species. Recent evidence indicates that species that respond to climate change by adjusting their phenology (i.e., the timing of seasonal activities, such as flowering) have historically increased in abundance. The extent to which non-native species success is similarly linked to a favorable climate change response, however, remains untested. We analyzed a dataset initiated by the conservationist Henry David Thoreau that documents the long-term phenological response of native and non-native plant species over the last 150 years from Concord, Massachusetts (USA). Our results demonstrate that non-native species, and invasive species in particular, have been far better able to respond to recent climate change by adjusting their flowering time. This demonstrates that climate change has likely played, and may continue to play, an important role in facilitating non-native species naturalization and invasion at the community level.

dc.description.version

Version of Record

dc.identifier.citation

Willis,Charles G.;Ruhfel,Brad R.;Primack,Richard B.;Miller-Rushing,Abraham J.;Losos,Jonathan B.;Davis,Charles C.. 2010. Favorable Climate Change Response Explains Non-Native Species' Success in Thoreau's Woods. Plos One 5(1): e8878-e8878.

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1932-6203

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https://hdl.handle.net/10161/4524

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en_US

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Public Library of Science (PLoS)

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10.1371/journal.pone.0008878

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Plos One

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united-states

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flowering times

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global change

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plant

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phenology

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tree

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biology

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multidisciplinary sciences

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Favorable Climate Change Response Explains Non-Native Species' Success in Thoreau's Woods

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Other article

duke.date.pubdate

2010-1-26

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1

duke.description.volume

5

pubs.begin-page

e8878

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