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1. Proximity to forest plantations is associated with presence and abundance of invasive plants in landscapes of south-central Chile.

2. Acacia dealbata invasion in Chile: Surprises from climatic niche and species distribution models.

3. Biodiversity assessments: Origin matters.

4. Landscape drivers of recent fire activity (2001-2017) in south-central Chile.

5. Macroalgas exóticas en la costa de Chile: patrones espaciales y temporales en el proceso de invasión.

6. Natives and non-natives plants show different responses to elevation and disturbance on the tropical high Andes of Ecuador.

7. Disturbance is the key to plant invasions in cold environments.

8. Linking the impacts of plant invasion on community functional structure and ecosystem properties.

10. Pine invasions in treeless environments: dispersal overruns microsite heterogeneity.

11. Invasive woody legumes: Climatic range shifts and their relationships to functional traits.

12. Do climatically similar regions contain similar alien floras? A comparison between the mediterranean areas of central Chile and California.

13. Multiple effects of urbanization on the biodiversity of developing countries: The case of a fast-growing metropolitan area (Concepción, Chile)

14. Comparing alien plant invasions among regions with similar climates: where to from here?

15. Influence of Elevation, Land Use, and Landscape Context on Patterns of Alien Plant Invasions along Roadsides in Protected Areas of South-Central Chile.

16. Including a diverse set of voices to address biological invasions.

17. Unintended consequences of planting native and non‐native trees in treeless ecosystems to mitigate climate change.

18. Towards integrating and harmonising information on plant invasions across Australia.

19. Making ecology really global.

20. Genetic analyses reveal complex introduction histories for the invasive tree Acacia dealbata Link around the world.

21. Challenging the view that invasive non-native plants are not a significant threat to the floristic diversity of Great Britain.

23. Pinus contorta Alters Microenvironmental Conditions and Reduces Plant Diversity in Patagonian Ecosystems.

24. RÁPIDO MOVIMIENTO DE PLANTAS EXÓTICAS EN LA ZONA CENTRAL DE CHILE. UNA RECONSTRUCCIÓN A TRAVÉS DE EVIDENCIA HISTÓRICA Y PALINOLÓGICA.

25. Información científica clave para la gestión y conservación del ecosistema biocultural del Pewén en Chile y Argentina.

26. Understanding climate change impacts on biome and plant distributions in the Andes: Challenges and opportunities.

27. Native versus non-native invasions: similarities and differences in the biodiversity impacts of Pinus contorta in introduced and native ranges.

28. Drivers of plant invasion vary globally: evidence from pine invasions within six ecoregions.

29. A single ectomycorrhizal fungal species can enable a Pinus invasion.

30. What is valued in conservation? A framework to compare ethical perspectives.

31. Think globally, measure locally: The MIREN standardized protocol for monitoring plant species distributions along elevation gradients.

32. Soil biotic and abiotic effects on seedling growth exhibit context‐dependent interactions: evidence from a multi‐country experiment on Pinus contorta invasion.

33. Railways redistribute plant species in mountain landscapes.

34. Viewing Emerging Human Infectious Epidemics through the Lens of Invasion Biology.

35. Management Policies for Invasive Alien Species: Addressing the Impacts Rather than the Species.

36. Invasion costs, impacts, and human agency: response to Sagoff 2020.

37. Scientists' warning on invasive alien species.

38. Drivers of future alien species impacts: An expert‐based assessment.

39. Native and non-native trees can find compatible mycorrhizal partners in each other's dominated areas.

40. Multi-taxa inventory of naturalized species in Chile.

41. A Conceptual Framework for Range-Expanding Species that Track Human-Induced Environmental Change.

42. Comparing temperature data sources for use in species distribution models: From in‐situ logging to remote sensing.

43. Severity of impacts of an introduced species corresponds with regional eco‐evolutionary experience.

44. Do people care about pine invasions? Visitor perceptions and willingness to pay for pine control in a protected area.

46. Microclimate variability in alpine ecosystems as stepping stones for non‐native plant establishment above their current elevational limit.

47. Mountain roads and non-native species modify elevational patterns of plant diversity.

48. Monitoreo de la superficie de los bosques nativos de Chile: un desafío pendiente.

49. Invasive plant species thresholds in the forests of Robinson Crusoe Island, Chile.

50. Lags in the response of mountain plant communities to climate change.

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