David Mark Richardson (born 16 June 1958) is a South African ecologist, particularly known for his work on invasive species, especially invasive trees and shrubs.
Biography
Richardson was born in Pretoria. He received his BSc degree in Forestry from Stellenbosch University in 1981 and his PhD in Botany from the University of Cape Town in 1989. He worked as Associate Professor of Botany and deputy director of the Institute for Plant Conservation at the University of Cape Town from 1992 to 2004. He joined the Department of Botany and Zoology at Stellenbosch University as Professor of Ecology and served as Deputy-Director (Science Strategy) at the Centre for Invasion Biology between 2004 and 2012. In 2012 he was appointed Director of the Centre for Invasion Biology, and in 2014 he was promoted to Distinguished Professor.
He was Editor-in-Chief of the journal Diversity and Distributions between 1998 and 2015.
Awards and honours
Selected publications
*Richardson, D.M. & Bond, W.J. (1991). Determinants of plant distribution: Evidence from pine invasions. American Naturalist, 137: 639âÂÂ668.
*Rejmánek, M. & Richardson, D.M. (1996). What attributes make some plant species more invasive? Ecology, 77: 1655âÂÂ1661.
*Cowling, R.M., Richardson, D.M. & Pierce, S.M. (eds) (1997). Vegetation of southern Africa. Cambridge University Press, Cambridge. .
*Richardson, D.M. (ed)(1998). Ecology and Biogeography of Pinus. Cambridge University Press, Cambridge. .
*Richardson, D.M. (1998). Forestry trees as invasive aliens. Conservation Biology, 12: 18âÂÂ26.
*Higgins, S.I. & Richardson, D.M. (1999). Predicting plant migration rates in a changing world: the role of long-distance dispersal. American Naturalist, 153: 464âÂÂ475.
*Richardson, D.M., Allsopp, N., D'Antonio, C.M., Milton, S.J. & Rejmánek, M. (2000). Plant invasions: The role of mutualisms. Biological Reviews, 75: 65âÂÂ93.
*Richardson, D.M., PyÃ
¡ek, P., Rejmánek, M., Barbour, M.G., Panetta, D.F. & West, C.J. (2000). Naturalization and invasion of alien plants â concepts and definitions. Diversity and Distributions, 6: 93âÂÂ107.
*Richardson, D.M. & Rejmánek, M. (2004). Invasive conifers: A global survey and predictive framework. Diversity and Distributions, 10: 321âÂÂ331.
*Richardson, D.M. & PyÃ
¡ek, P. (2006). Plant invasions â merging the concepts of species invasiveness and community invasibility. Progress in Physical Geography, 30: 409âÂÂ431.
*Richardson, D.M. & Rundel, P.W., Jackson, S.T., Teskey, R.O., Aronson, J., Bytnerowicz, A., Wingfield, M.J. & ProcheÃ
Â, S. (2007). Human impacts in pine forests: past, present and future. Annual Review of Ecology, Evolution, and Systematics, 38: 275âÂÂ297.
*Richardson, D.M., Hellmann, J.J., McLachlan, et al.(2009). Multidimensional evaluation of managed relocation. Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences of the United States of America, 106: 9721âÂÂ9724.
*Richardson, D.M. (ed.)(2011). Fifty years of invasion ecology. The legacy of Charles Elton. Wiley-Blackwell, Oxford. .
*Richardson, D.M., Carruthers, J., Hui, C., Impson, F.A.C., Robertson, M.P., Rouget, M., Le Roux, J.J., Wilson, J.R.U. (2011). Human-mediated introductions of Australian acaciasâÂÂa global experiment in biogeography. Diversity and Distributions, 17: 771âÂÂ787
*Hui, C. & Richardson, D.M.(2017). Invasion Dynamics. Oxford University Press, Oxford. .
References
External links