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Climate change and plant invasions: restoration opportunities ahead?

Summary

Rather than simply enhancing invasion risk, climate change may also reduce invasive plant competitiveness if conditions become climatically unsuitable. Using bioclimatic envelope modeling, we show that climate change could result in both range expansion and contraction for five widespread and dominant invasive plants in the western United States. Yellow starthistle (Centaurea solstitialis) and tamarisk (Tamarix spp.) are likely to expand with climate change. Cheatgrass (Bromus tectorum) and spotted knapweed (Centaurea biebersteinii) are likely to shift in range, leading to both expansion and contraction. Leafy spurge (Euphorbia esula) is likely to contract. The retreat of onceintractable invasive species could create restoration opportunities [...]

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Bradley et al., 2009.pdf 1.27 MB application/pdf

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  • John Wesley Powell Center for Analysis and Synthesis

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repo sciencebase 3c4dd383-e05c-46e2-bbb1-6bbdfbef558c

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