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Latest revision as of 12:59, 20 November 2024
Nanopublications allow to express individual scientific claims in a way that facilitates their processing by automated workflows (https://nanopub.net). We have, for example, published a set of nanopublications describing invasion hypothesis statements alongside with a hypothesis description paper on the enemy release hypothesis (Heger et al. 2024; see list below).
- Reduced pressure by enemies in the non-native range contributes to invasion success
- Reduced per capita effect of enemies on species in the non-native range increases population-level performance of non-native species
- Changed richness and abundance of enemies in the non-native range increases population-level performance of non-native species
- Adaptation in response to enemy release in the non-native range increases population-level performance of non-native species
- Transport to non-native range decreases number of enemies
- Reduced pressure by generalist enemies in the non-native range contributes to invasion success
- Reduced pressure by specialist enemies in the non-native range contributes to invasion success
- Number of enemies of invasive species has smaller value than number of enemies of native species
- Number of enemies of invasive species in its non-native range has smaller value than number of enemies of invasive species in its native range
- Reduced pressure by enemies in the non-native range increases performance of non-native species
- Absence of enemies in the non-native range contributes to invasion success
- Reduced pressure by enemies in the non-native range