Interim profile, incomplete information
26 references found for Senecio squalidus:
Summary: Available from: http://www.plantnetwork.org/aliens/code_of_conduct_aliens_eu.pdf [Accessed 26 July 2010]
Summary: This compilation of information sources can be sorted on keywords for example: Baits & Lures, Non Target Species, Eradication, Monitoring, Risk Assessment, Weeds, Herbicides etc. This compilation is at present in Excel format, this will be web-enabled as a searchable database shortly. This version of the database has been developed by the IUCN SSC ISSG as part of an Overseas Territories Environmental Programme funded project XOT603 in partnership with the Cayman Islands Government - Department of Environment. The compilation is a work under progress, the ISSG will manage, maintain and enhance the database with current and newly published information, reports, journal articles etc.
3. Otley H, Munro G, Clausen A and Ingham B. 2008. Falkland Islands State of the Environment Report 2008. Falkland Islands Government and Falklands Conservation, Stanley.
4. Williamson, Mark; Petr Pysek; Vojtech Jarosik & Karel Prach, 2005. On the rates and patterns of spread of alien plants in the Czech Republic, Britain, and Ireland. Ecoscience 12 (3): 424-433 (2005)
5. Abbott, R. J.; James, J. K. James; D. G. Forbes and H. P. Comes, 2002. Hybrid origin of the Oxford Ragwort, Senecio squalidus L: morphological and allozyme differences between S. squalidus and S. rupestris Waldst. and Kit. Watsonia 24: 17–29 (2002)
6. Abbott, Richard J., 1992. Plant Invasions, Interspecific Hybridization and the Evolution of New Plant Taxa. TREE vol. 7, no. 12, December 1992
7. Abbott, Richard J.; Brennan, Adrian C.; James, Juliet K.; Forbes, David G.; Hegarty, Matthew J.; Hiscock, Simon J., 2009. Recent hybrid origin and invasion of the British Isles by a self-incompatible species, Oxford ragwort (Senecio squalidus L., Asteraceae). Biological Invasions. 11(5). MAY 2009. 1145-1158.
8. Abbott, Richard J.; Ireland, Helen E.; Joseph, Latha; Davies, M. Stuart; Rogers, Hilary J., 2003. Recent plant speciation in Britain and Ireland: Origins, establishment and evolution of four new hybrid species. Biology & Environment. 105B(3, Sp. Iss. SI). NOV 2005. 173-183.
9. Abbott, Richard J.; James, Juliet K.; Milne, Richard I.; Gillies, Amanda C. M., 2003. Plant introductions, hybridization and gene flow. Philosophical Transactions of the Royal Society of London B Biological Sciences. 358(1434). 29 June, 2003. 1123-1132.
10. Abbott, Richard J.; Lowe, Andrew J., 2004. Origins, establishment and evolution of new polyploid species: Senecio cambrensis and S. eboracensis in the British Isles. Biological Journal of the Linnean Society. 82(4). August 2004. 467-474.
Summary: Available from: http://www.biochange.ie/alienplants/result_species.php?species=882&volg=i&lang=latin&p=I [Accessed 26 July 2010]
12. Allan, Eric; Pannell, John R., 2009. Rapid divergence in physiological and life-history traits between northern and southern populations of the British introduced neo-species, Senecio squalidus. Oikos. 118(7). JUL 2009. 1053-1061.
13. Botham, M. S.; Rothery, P.; Hulme, P. E.; Hill, M. O.; Preston, C. D.; Roy, D. B., 2009. Do urban areas act as foci for the spread of alien plant species? An assessment of temporal trends in the UK. Diversity & Distributions. 15(2). MAR 2009. 338-345.
14. Brennan, Adrian C.; Harris, Stephen A.; Hiscock, Simon J., 2005. Modes and rates of selfing and associated inbreeding depression in the self-incompatible plant Senecio squalidus (Asteraceae): a successful colonizing species in the British Isles. New Phytologist. 168(2). NOV 2005. 475-486.
15. Broughton, D. A. & McAdam, J. H. 2002. The Non-Native Vascular Flora of the Falkland Islands. Botanical Journal of Scotland 54 (2) 153-190.
16. Ellstrand, Norman C.; Schierenbeck, Kristina A., 2006. Hybridization as a stimulus for the evolution of invasiveness in plants? Euphytica. 148(1-2). MAR 2006. 35-46.
17. Groves, R. H., 2006. Are some weeds sleeping? Some concepts and reasons. Euphytica. 148(1-2). MAR 2006. 111-120.
Summary: Available from: http://www.watsonia.org.uk/2403Harris.pdf [Accessed 26 July 2010]
19. Hiscock, Simon J., 2000. Genetic control of self-incompatibility in Senecio squalidus L. (Asteraceae): A successful colonizing species. Heredity. 85(1). July, 2000. 10-19.
20. Hiscock, Simon J., 2000. Self-incompatibility in Senecio squalidus L. (Asteraceae). Annals of Botany (London). 85(Suppl. A). March, 2000. 181-190.
Summary: Available from: http://www.itis.gov/servlet/SingleRpt/SingleRpt?search_topic=TSN&search_value=36186 [Accessed 26 July 2010]
22. James, Juliet K.; Abbott, Richard J., 2005. Recent, allopatric, homoploid hybrid speciation: The origin of Senecio squalidus (Asteraceae) in the British Isles from a hybrid zone on Mount Etna, Sicily. Evolution. 59(12). DEC 2005. 2533-2547.
23. Kent, H. Douglas, 1964. Senecio squalidus L. in the British Isles: 9, Ireland. The Irish Naturalists' Journal, Vol. 14, No. 9 (Jan., 1964), pp. 203-205
24. Reynolds, Sylvia C. P., 1994. Records of Alien and Casual Plants in Ireland 1993. The Irish Naturalists' Journal, Vol. 24, No. 12 (Oct., 1994), pp. 515-517
Summary: Available from: http://www.ars-grin.gov/cgi-bin/npgs/html/taxon.pl?316824 [Accessed 26 July 2010]
Summary: Available from: http://plants.usda.gov/java/profile?symbol=SESQ [Accessed 26 July 2010]
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