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Home   /   biological invasions

New in @Biotropica: Logging helps black rats invade rainforests

Rat with spool attached. (Credit: Oliver Wearn)

Logging can encourage black rats to invade tropical rainforests by creating habitats they prefer, giving them the chance to displace… Read More »

Editor’s Choice @Biotropica 47(2): Introduced plants & the diet of tortoises on Santa Cruz Island, Galapagos

Yum. A male tortoise (C. porter) feeding on the probably introduced Paspalum conjugatum (Photo by Christian Ziegler).

  The March 2015 Editor’s Choice Article is: Blake, S., Guézou, A., Deem, S. L., Yackulic, C. B. and Cabrera,… Read More »

Photos from the Field: Wilson et al. 2014. Plant invasions & elephants

Wilson et al. 2014. In this study a trunksful of grass was defined as the number of trunksful of grass or browse that the focal elephant gathered with its trunk and put into its mouth. Here, a herd of elephants is seen feeding on grass in a Lantana camara-free area of Mudumalai Tiger Reserve. (Photo credit: Gaius Wilson).

Gaius Wilson, Monica A. Gruber, and Philip J. Lester. 2014. Foraging Relationships Between Elephants and Lantana camara Invasion in Mudumalai Tiger Reserve, India. Biotropica 46(2):194-201 … Read More »

2010 Award for Excellence in Tropical Biology & Conservation

2010 Award for Excellence in Tropical Biology & Conservation

The Association for Tropical Biology and Conservation and the Editors of Biotropica proudly announce the winner of the 2010 Biotropica… Read More »

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