Project details
Chief investigators:Â
- Professor R Frankham
- Associate Professor A Moles
- Associate Professor W Sherwin
Introduced species provide a fascinating system for studying the way plants adapt to life in a new environment. We are measuring changes in form, function and genetic make-up of introduced species since their arrival in Australia, New Zealand and England. Work by students in the , especially Joanna Buswell (MSc; ), Rhiannon Dalrymple (BSc Hons) and Habacuc Flores (PhD student), suggests that most plant species undergo significant and substantial changes in at least one morphological trait when they are introduced to a new country. Quantifying the rate and direction of evolution will increase our understanding of the invasion process and help us estimate how quickly plants might be able to adapt to future climate change. Work from the Big Ecology Lab is also testing long-held assumptions about the role of disturbance in invasion (), and the advantages of introduced species (). Claire Brandenburger (PhD student) is asking whether populations of introduced plants are becoming reproductively isolated from populations of the species in their native range. As I explained in a , I think that introduced species are on their way to becoming new native Australian taxa.