An international research team led by the University of Vienna has produced, for the first time, high-resolution global maps ...
Temperature plays the biggest role in where plants can grow. Warmer conditions allow more plants to survive in new places. Other factors like rainfall and soil also matter, but temperature has the ...
An international research team led by the University of Vienna has produced, for the first time, high-resolution global maps of invasion risk for ...
A 'biological invasion' of alien species is threatening life on Earth – with risks to human health, crops, and infrastructure, a new report finds. Around 37,000 alien species have entered new areas – ...
Add Yahoo as a preferred source to see more of our stories on Google. A lot of people think of plants as pretty to look at, but defenceless and passive as far as organisms go. However, the many alien ...
Biodiversity is great in theory, but there are reasons to fend off invasive species and the knock-on effect of their presence Britain would be a wasteland if it weren’t for immigration. Fifteen ...
Alien species are taking over nature. Rogue rats are running amok on remote islands, predatory crayfish are cruising English rivers, Japanese knotweed is strangling South Wales, water hyacinth is ...
An international research team led by the University of Vienna has produced, for the first time, high-resolution global maps ...
Rats are among the alien species which have caused global extinctions. Pictured: Rats eat grains of puffed rice in Allahabad on July 28, 2015. Getty Images/Sanjay Kanojia Maybe it's a good thing we ...
Alien plants carried by tourists and scientists visiting Antarctica are causing a threat to its eco-system, according to researchers. Researchers found that tourists who visit Antarctica carry seeds ...
Britain is under threat from more than 66 alien plant and animal species headed our way, experts warn, including a monster seaweed and a killer catfish. The ‘codium parvulum’ seaweed was recorded ...
Alien plants invading Britain from garden centres pose more of a threat to the environment than any so-called superweeds resulting from genetically modified (GM) crops, a leading scientist has warned.