no |
title |
author |
magazine |
year |
volume |
issue |
page(s) |
type |
1 |
A complex sound coupled with an air curtain blocks invasive carp passage without habituation in a laboratory flume
|
Dennis, Clark E. |
|
2019 |
21 |
9 |
p. 2837-2855 |
article |
2 |
Aerial photography and dendrochronology as tools for recreating invasion histories: do they work for bitou bush (Chrysanthemoides monilifera subsp. rotundata)?
|
Scott, John K. |
|
2019 |
21 |
9 |
p. 2983-2996 |
article |
3 |
A taste for aliens: contribution of a novel prey item to native fishes’ diet
|
Puntila-Dodd, Riikka |
|
2019 |
21 |
9 |
p. 2907-2917 |
article |
4 |
Can Acacia mangium and Acacia auriculiformis hinder restoration efforts in the Brazilian Atlantic Forest under current and future climate conditions?
|
Heringer, Gustavo |
|
2019 |
21 |
9 |
p. 2949-2962 |
article |
5 |
Generic ecological impact assessment of alien species (GEIAA): the third generation of assessments in Norway
|
Sandvik, Hanno |
|
2019 |
21 |
9 |
p. 2803-2810 |
article |
6 |
Invasive host caught up with a native parasitoid: field data reveal high parasitism of Harmonia axyridis by Dinocampus coccinellae in Central Europe
|
Knapp, Michal |
|
2019 |
21 |
9 |
p. 2795-2802 |
article |
7 |
Molecular analyses indicate that both native and exotic pathogen populations serve as sources of novel outbreaks of Cypress Canker Disease
|
Rocca, Gianni Della |
|
2019 |
21 |
9 |
p. 2919-2932 |
article |
8 |
Positive interactions among native and invasive vascular plants in Antarctica: assessing the “nurse effect” at different spatial scales
|
Atala, Cristian |
|
2019 |
21 |
9 |
p. 2819-2836 |
article |
9 |
Recent confirmation of a single haplotype in the Italian population of Vespa velutina
|
Granato, Anna |
|
2019 |
21 |
9 |
p. 2811-2817 |
article |
10 |
Recruitment of native parasitic wasps to populations of the invasive winter moth in the northeastern United States
|
Broadley, Hannah J. |
|
2019 |
21 |
9 |
p. 2871-2890 |
article |
11 |
Springs ecosystems: vulnerable ecological islands where environmental conditions, life history traits, and human disturbance facilitate non-native plant invasions
|
Nielson, Kayleigh G. |
|
2019 |
21 |
9 |
p. 2963-2981 |
article |
12 |
The importance of biological plausibility for data poor models in the face of an immediate threat by an emerging infectious disease: a reply to Katz and Zellmer (2018)
|
Feldmeier, Stephan |
|
2019 |
21 |
9 |
p. 2789-2793 |
article |
13 |
The role of landscape composition and disturbance type in mediating salt marsh resilience to feral hog invasion
|
Sharp, Sean J. |
|
2019 |
21 |
9 |
p. 2857-2869 |
article |
14 |
Variable colonization by the hemlock woolly adelgid suggests infestation is associated with hemlock host species
|
Leppanen, Christy |
|
2019 |
21 |
9 |
p. 2891-2906 |
article |
15 |
What’s next? The release of exotic pets continues virtually unabated 7 years after enforcement of new legislation for managing invasive species
|
Maceda-Veiga, Alberto |
|
2019 |
21 |
9 |
p. 2933-2947 |
article |