Resources (Novel Ecosystems)
By Amy Nelson
Bridgewater, P., Higgs, E.S., Hobbs, R.J. and Jackson, S.T. (2011) Engaging with novel ecosystems. Frontiers in Ecology and the Environment 9(8):423-423.
Davis, M.A. 2009. Invasion Biology.OxfordUniversity Press.Oxford,UK,
Hobbs, R.J., Arico S, Aronson J, Baron JS, Bridgewater P, Cramer VA, Epstein PR, Ewell JJ, Klink CA, Lugo AE, Norton D, Ojima D, Richardson DM, Sanderson EW, Valladares F, Vila M, Zamora R, and Zobel M (2006) Novel ecosystems: theoretical and management aspects of the new ecological world order. Global Ecology and Biogeography, 15, 1-7.
Hobbs, R.J., Higgs, E and Harris, J.A. (2009) Novel ecosystems: implications for conservation and restoration. Trends in Ecology and Evolution. 24 (11):599-605.
Hobbs, R.J. and Richardson, D.M. (2011) Invasion ecology and restoration ecology: Parallel evolution in two fields of endeavour. Pp 61-69 in Fifty Years of Invasion Ecology: The Legacy of Charles Elton, edited by D.M. Richardson. Blackwell, Oxford. ISBN13: 978-1-4443-3585-9
Lugo, A.E. (2004) The outcome of alien tree invasions in Puerto Rico. Frontiers in Ecology and The Environment, 2, 265-273.
Marris, E. 2011. Rambunctious Garden: Saving Nature in a Post-Wild World. BloosmburyUSA.
Mascaro, J., et al. 2008. Limited native plant regeneration in novel, exotic-dominated forests onHawai’i.ForestEcology and Management. 256(4):593–606
Christopher P. Quine, Jonathan W. Humphrey. (2010) Plantations of exotic tree species in Britain: irrelevant for biodiversity or novel habitat for native species?. Biodiversity and Conservation 19:5, 1503-1512
Timothy R. Seastedt, Richard J Hobbs, and Katharine N Suding. 2008. Management of novel ecosystems: are novel approaches required? Frontiers in Ecology and the Environment 6: 547–553.
U.S. Federal laws pertaining to non-native species http://www.invasivespeciesinfo.gov/laws/publiclaws.shtml
On Line Articles/Editorials
Living with nature’s original sin (Sydney Morning Herald, December 10, 2011)