A recent study published in NeoBiota indicates that thousands of non-native plant species could now find suitable conditions in the Arctic.
Researchers have catalogued which alien plants may pose a threat to plants in the Arctic. The post Study warns thousands of ‘alien species’ could invade Arctic appeared first on Talker.
More than 2,500 alien plant species could find suitable conditions in the Arctic, especially in northern Norway and Svalbard.
In this week's Science for All newsletter, Divya Gandhi explains how the Arctic is at the risk of an invasion of non-native species ...
The spread of species beyond their native habitat is a human-made environmental change on a global scale. Among vascular plants, over 16,000 species have now permanently settled in foreign countries.
Introduction: Nonnative species in the world / David Pimentel -- The impacts of alien plants in Australia / Richard H. Groves -- Environmental and economic costs of invertebrate invasions in Australia ...
Thousands of alien species could invade the Arctic, warns a new study. Warmer temperatures and more tourists make it easier for non-native plants and animals to get a foothold in far northerly ...