The accidental or deliberate introductions of species to areas outside their native ranges often represent irreversible events and can deeply affect native communities. Particularly when spreading and developing spectacular population increases, non-native (‘invasive’) species may influence local food webs as predators or aggressively compete with other species for limited resources and cause severe ecological and economic damage. To make predictions useful for the management and control of non-native species, it is crucial to understand the nature of successful invaders, the invasion process and the impacts non- native species may have. In the present work, I applied field and laboratory studies to investigate the underlying mechanisms of ...
Caprella scaura, originally described by Templeton (1836) from Mauritius and later reported as sever...
The amphipod Caprella mutica is one of the most rapidly invading species in Europe and has extendedi...
Paracaprella pusilla Mayer, 1890 is a tropical caprellid species recently introduced to the Eastern ...
Studying offshore natural and artificial hard substrates in the southern North Sea (51ºN–57ºN/1ºW–9º...
<p>Studying offshore natural and artificial hard substrates in the southern North Sea (51ºN–57ºN/1ºW...
<p>Studying offshore natural and artificial hard substrates in the southern North Sea (51ºN–57ºN/1ºW...
Caprella scaura is an epifaunal amphipod crustacean that originates in the western Indian Ocean and ...
The invasive caprellid Caprella scaura Templeton, 1836 is rapidly spreading along marinas of Souther...
The caprellid amphipod, Caprella mutica, is a well-known invasive species, originating in the Sea of...
Despite the fact that stowaway transport is an increasingly common invasion pathway, its key ecologi...
Paracaprella pusilla Mayer (Fauna und Flora des Golfes von Neapel 17:1–55, 1890), originally descri...
Mechanisms of a successful immigration from north-east Asia: population dynamics, life history trait...
Caprella scaura is an invasive amphipod, native to the Indian Ocean, which has already spread to sev...
Studying offshore natural and artificial hard substrates in the southern North Sea (51ºN–57ºN/1ºW–9º...
Paracaprella pusilla Mayer, 1980 is a tropical caprellid amphipod species. It was first described fr...
Caprella scaura, originally described by Templeton (1836) from Mauritius and later reported as sever...
The amphipod Caprella mutica is one of the most rapidly invading species in Europe and has extendedi...
Paracaprella pusilla Mayer, 1890 is a tropical caprellid species recently introduced to the Eastern ...
Studying offshore natural and artificial hard substrates in the southern North Sea (51ºN–57ºN/1ºW–9º...
<p>Studying offshore natural and artificial hard substrates in the southern North Sea (51ºN–57ºN/1ºW...
<p>Studying offshore natural and artificial hard substrates in the southern North Sea (51ºN–57ºN/1ºW...
Caprella scaura is an epifaunal amphipod crustacean that originates in the western Indian Ocean and ...
The invasive caprellid Caprella scaura Templeton, 1836 is rapidly spreading along marinas of Souther...
The caprellid amphipod, Caprella mutica, is a well-known invasive species, originating in the Sea of...
Despite the fact that stowaway transport is an increasingly common invasion pathway, its key ecologi...
Paracaprella pusilla Mayer (Fauna und Flora des Golfes von Neapel 17:1–55, 1890), originally descri...
Mechanisms of a successful immigration from north-east Asia: population dynamics, life history trait...
Caprella scaura is an invasive amphipod, native to the Indian Ocean, which has already spread to sev...
Studying offshore natural and artificial hard substrates in the southern North Sea (51ºN–57ºN/1ºW–9º...
Paracaprella pusilla Mayer, 1980 is a tropical caprellid amphipod species. It was first described fr...
Caprella scaura, originally described by Templeton (1836) from Mauritius and later reported as sever...
The amphipod Caprella mutica is one of the most rapidly invading species in Europe and has extendedi...
Paracaprella pusilla Mayer, 1890 is a tropical caprellid species recently introduced to the Eastern ...