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TZID:Europe/Berlin
TZUNTIL:20160327T010000Z
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DTSTART:20131027T030000
TZOFFSETFROM:+0200
TZOFFSETTO:+0100
RDATE:20141026T030000
RDATE:20151025T030000
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DTSTART:20140330T020000
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UID:www.bayceer.uni-bayreuth.de-bayceer-t116581id
DTSTAMP:20260404T071455Z
DESCRIPTION:Invasive species are a miracle. They often outperform native sp
 ecies in their novel range despite having evolved elsewhere. Theories tryi
 ng to explain invasion success in plants have focused on two non-exclusive
  mechanisms: changes in biotic interactions and rapid evolutionary change.
  Therefore\, invasive species provide an ideal playground for studying rea
 l-time evolution. However\, invasion biology has not yet combined the tool
 boxes of community ecologists and of evolutionary biologists to investigat
 e whether plants have evolved during invasion\, and whether this infers a 
 fitness advantage when exposed to various types of biotic interactions. He
 re\, we present a comprehensive approach to studying such rapid evolution 
 in two model invasive plant species by using plants both from the native a
 nd the invasive range and exposing them to various types of biotic interac
 tions - herbivory\, competition and allelopathy. Our findings provide new 
 insights into mechanisms of plant invasion through rapid evolution while a
 t the same time confirming the paradigm that future invasions remain diffi
 cult to predict.\n \n***\nInvited by Stephan Clemens\, Plant Physiology
DTSTART;TZID=Europe/Berlin:20140515T000000
DTEND;TZID=Europe/Berlin:20140515T235959
SUMMARY:Prof. Dr. Katja Tielbörger\, Plant Ecology\, Institute of Evolution
  and Ecology\, Universität Tübingen (Homepage): Plants on the move - the m
 iracle of invasion
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