4.4 Article

Effects of crayfish on leaf litter breakdown and shredder prey: are native and introduced species functionally redundant?

Related references

Note: Only part of the references are listed.
Article Psychology, Biological

Behavioural determinants of agonistic success in invasive crayfish

Sandra Hudina et al.

BEHAVIOURAL PROCESSES (2012)

Article Environmental Sciences

Managing invasive crayfish: is there a hope?

Francesca Gherardi et al.

AQUATIC SCIENCES (2011)

Review Ecology

Ecosystem Consequences of Biological Invasions

Joan G. Ehrenfeld

ANNUAL REVIEW OF ECOLOGY, EVOLUTION, AND SYSTEMATICS, VOL 41 (2010)

Review Ecology

Twenty years of zebra mussels: lessons from the mollusk that made headlines

David L. Strayer

FRONTIERS IN ECOLOGY AND THE ENVIRONMENT (2009)

Article Environmental Sciences

The impact of introduced signal crayfish Pacifastacus leniusculus on stream invertebrate communities

Lynne Crawford et al.

AQUATIC CONSERVATION-MARINE AND FRESHWATER ECOSYSTEMS (2006)

Review Biodiversity Conservation

Biotic indirect effects: a neglected concept in invasion biology

Eve M. White et al.

DIVERSITY AND DISTRIBUTIONS (2006)

Article Limnology

Alien vs. endemic crayfish: roles of species identity in ecosystem functioning

Nisikawa Usio et al.

ARCHIV FUR HYDROBIOLOGIE (2006)

Review Biodiversity Conservation

Impact of an introduced Crustacean on the trophic webs of Mediterranean wetlands

W Geiger et al.

BIOLOGICAL INVASIONS (2005)

Article Ecology

Does functional redundancy exist?

M Loreau

OIKOS (2004)

Article Fisheries

The nearshore phosphorus shunt: a consequence of ecosystem engineering by dreissenids in the Laurentian Great Lakes

RE Hecky et al.

CANADIAN JOURNAL OF FISHERIES AND AQUATIC SCIENCES (2004)

Review Biodiversity Conservation

Directing research to reduce the impacts of nonindigenous species

JE Byers et al.

CONSERVATION BIOLOGY (2002)