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EPIGENETICS OF COLONIZING SPECIES? A STUDY OF JAPANESE KNOTWEED IN CENTRAL EUROPE

2016
Some of the world's most successful invasive plants have spread across large geographic areas while retaining little or no genetic diversity. Because of this lack of heritable variation evolutionary hypotheses are usually not invoked when attempting to explain the success of these species.
Zhang Yuanye   +3 more
openaire   +2 more sources

The Ecological Genomic Processes of the Iconic Japanese Knotweed Invasion

Many plant invasions establish from only a few individuals and exhibit clonal spread, providing an opportunity to examine the genomic mechanisms that underlie the success of particularly aggressive individuals. One of the world’s most invasive species, the Japanese knotweed complex, is well suited for such investigations.
Burns, Bethany   +31 more
openaire   +4 more sources

Fallopia japonica (Japanese knotweed)

PlantwisePlus Knowledge Bank, 2022
openaire   +1 more source

Japanese knotweed increases soil erosion on riverbanks

River Research and Applications, 2022
Maxime Boivin, Claude Lavoie
exaly  

Plants Against Property: Japanese Knotweed as Companion Species

Theory, Culture & Society
In Britain, the non-toxic herbaceous perennial ‘Japanese knotweed’ is the subject of intense fear and anxiety amongst property owners. Though the plant does no more physical damage than other disruptive plants and trees, in the mid-2000s banks began refusing mortgages on properties where Japanese knotweed was growing within seven metres, slashing ...
openaire   +1 more source

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