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Enemy release hypothesis
And Belowground Insect Herbivory Mediates Invasion Dynamics and Impact of an Exotic Plant
Shell Crushing Resistance of Alien and Native Thiarid Gastropods to Predatory Crabs in South Africa
Lionfish Parasite Release
Testing the Enemy Release Hypothesis in a Native Insect Species with an Expanding Range
Negative Soil Feedbacks Accumulate Over Time for Nonnative Plant Species
A Review and Meta-Analysis of the Enemy Release Hypothesis in Plant–Herbivorous Insect Systems
Indirect Effects of Host-Specific Biological Control Agents
The Endophyte-Enemy Release Hypothesis: Implications for Classical Biological Control and Plant Invasions
Catford Et Al
Escape from Parasites
Community Assembly Theory As a Framework for Biological Invasions
Endophytes of Invasive Weeds: Pertinence to Classical Biological Control in India
Cadotte 1.Indd
Synergy Between Pathogen Release and Resource Availability in Plant Invasion
Predation Parasitoids Parasitoids Herbivory
Predator–Prey Naïveté, Antipredator Behavior, and the Ecology of Predator Invasions
Little Evidence for Release from Herbivores As a Driver of Plant Invasiveness from a Multi-Species Herbivore-Removal Experiment
Biological Invasion Theories
Top View
Lessons from Three Cases of Biological Control of Native Freshwater Macrophytes Isolated from Their Natural Enemies
Evidence of the Enemy Release Hypothesis: Parasites of the Lionfish Complex (Pterios Volitans and P
The Paradox of the Parasites
Rethinking Biological Invasions As a Metacommunity Problem
Biological Control, of Plants
A Biogeographical Support to the Enemy Release Hypothesis
Release of Invasive Plants from Fungal and Viral Pathogens
Nature: Parasites Lost
Release from Foliar and Floral Fungal Pathogen Species Does Not Explain the Geographic Spread of Naturalized North American Plants in Europe
Interactions Between Resource Availability and Enemy Release in Plant Invasion