20-09-2006, 04:39 PM
posted to uk.environment.conservation,uk.rec.gardening
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First recorded activity by GardenBanter: Sep 2006
Posts: 94
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Ailanthus altissima: "toxic tree of heaven"
In article ,
"michael adams" wrote:
"Des Higgins" wrote in message
. ie...
"Geoff" wrote in message
...
On 19 Sep 2006 09:55:36 -0700, "Bill" wrote:
BAC wrote:
"Bill" wrote in message
oups.com...
BAC wrote:
Don't panic, it's been here for 250 years or so without 'taking
over'.
But the climate has heated up at an accelerated rate and now it
might
be more sympathetic to this trees native conditions.
It may indeed, but that doesn't mean it will inevitably become a
problem
here.
Over long time spans, you get more and more species and species mixtures
evolving that are highly specific to particular locations and habitats and
which can do this because they are isolated
Then when we come along and mix them with each other you get species
warfare
and you end up with fewer species as one species replaces others either
directly through competition or indirectly through habitat loss/change
(e.g.
Rhodendron ponticum in SW Ireland are replacing Oakwoods and all the
mosses
and liverworts that live in them). That is backwards evolution towards
the
kind of species mix you get in supermarket carparks.
Disgruntled of Dublin
There are only two sides in species warfare. The human species on one
side against which nothing can prevail, and everything else on the other.
http://www.patternliteracy.com/exotics.html
http://dtheo.org/AABGAPaper.htm
http://dtheo.org/NativesVs.Exotics.htm
http://dtheo.org/BookOrder.htm
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