AoB PLANTS is soliciting submissions for an upcoming Special Issue titled ‘The 
Role of Below-Ground Processes in Mediating Plant Invasions.’  Published by 
Oxford University Press, AoB PLANTS is an open-access, nonprofit journal that 
has been publishing peer-reviewed articles since 2010 
(http://aobplants.oxfordjournals.org).  The journal is indexed in Web of 
Science as well as other Thomson Reuters products, and its first Impact Factor 
Score will be released in June 2014. 

Edited by Inderjit (University of Delhi), this special issue will focus on the 
wide range of below-ground processes and characteristics that can influence the 
success of plant invasions and their impacts on novel environments.  It will 
explore plant-soil feedbacks and the various mechanisms by which below-ground 
processes can mediate the dynamics of plant invasions. 

The following papers are scheduled for inclusion in this special issue, and 
others will be added in the coming weeks:

Inderjit (University of Delhi) and Sharon Strauss (University of California, 
Davis)
Mechanisms underlying plant invasions driven by soil processes

Tanja Speek, Joop Schaminee, Jeltje Stam, Lambertus, A. P. Lotz, Wim Ozinga and 
Wim van der Putten (Netherlands Institute of Ecology)
Local dominance of exotic plants declines with residence time: patterns and 
possible mechanisms

Loralee Larios (University of Montana) and Katharine Suding (University of 
California, Berkeley)
Plant neighbors and soil resource availability alter native and exotic 
plant-soil feedbacks

Ian Dickie (Lincoln University)
Co-invasions and novel mutualisms: networks of trees and fungi

Keith Clay, Heather Reynolds, James Bever and Richard Phillips (Indiana 
University)
Causes and consequences of soil microbial community changes with plant invasions

Pamela Belter and James Cahill (University of Alberta)
Disentangling root system responses to neighbors: implications for invasion and 
coexistence

Sara Grove (University of California, Santa Cruz), Ingrid Parker (University of 
California, Santa Cruz), and Karen Haubensak (Northern Arizona University)
Ectomycorrhizal fungal communities in Douglas fir forests and clearcuts 
dominated by Cytisus scoparius, an invasive shrub

Susana Rodríguez Echeverría (Universidade de Coimbra) and Anna Traveset 
(Mediterranean Institute for Advanced Studies)
Plant invasions: putative linkages between below- and above-ground mutualisms

Robin Duponnois (National de Baillarguet)
The importance of mycorrhizal symbiosis in plant invasion processes

Mette Vestergård, Regin Rønn and Flemming Ekelund (University of Copenhagen)
Invasive organisms below- and above-ground

Christina Birnbaum (Murdoch University), Andrew Bissett (CSIRO), Peter Thrall 
(CSIRO) and Michelle Leishman (Macquarie University)
Role of nitrogen fixing bacterial communities in Acacia species invasion in 
Australia

Johannes Le Roux and Allan Ellis (Stellenbosch University)
Phylogenetic diversity of alpha and beta rhizobia associated with invasive 
wattles (genus Acacia) in South Africa’s Cape Floristic Region

If you are interested in submitting a paper for inclusion in this Special 
Issue, please send details to SI Editor Inderjit ([email protected]) and the 
Chief Editor of AoB PLANTS, Hall Cushman ([email protected]).  The deadline 
for submitting to this special issue is August 15, 2014. 

Papers submitted to AoB PLANTS undergo double-blind peer evaluation and receive 
first decisions quickly (typically within 30–40 days of submission).  
Additionally, all open-access fees for AoB PLANTS have been waived until 2015. 

 

 

 

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