Summary 1. It is well recognised that non‐indigenous species (NIS) can affect native communities via the ‘spillover’ of introduced parasites. However, two other potentially important processes, the ‘spillback’ of native parasites from a competent NIS host, where the latter acts as a reservoir leading to amplified infection in native hosts, and the ‘dilution’ of parasitism by a NIS host acting as a sink for native parasites, have either not been tested or largely overlooked. 2. We surveyed the helminth parasite fauna of native New Zealand fish in Otago streams that varied in the abundance of introduced brown trout Salmo trutta, to look for evidence of spillback and/or dilution. Spillover is not an issue in this system, with trout intr...
Compared with the effect of invaders on the native terrestrial fauna of New Zealand, interactions be...
It is believed by many that parasites are only as important as the fish they infect. Parasites are u...
Disease‐mediated threats posed by exotic species to native counterparts are not limited to introduce...
Summary 1. It is well recognised that non‐indigenous species (NIS) can affect native communities...
Native parasite acquisition provides introduced species with the potential to modify native host-par...
Non-indigenous species are commonly released from their native enemies, including parasites, when th...
Disease-mediated impacts of exotic species on their native counterparts are often ignored when paras...
AbstractExotic fish species frequently acquire native parasites despite the absence of closely relat...
Parasites are increasingly shown to impact ecosystem processes such as population dynamics and food ...
Exotic fish species frequently acquire native parasites despite the absence of closely related nativ...
When non-native species are introduced into a new range, their parasites can also be introduced, wit...
Summary 1. Biological invasions, still occurring worldwide at an alarming rate, are widely ack...
Compared with the effect of invaders on the native terrestrial fauna of New Zealand, interactions be...
It is believed by many that parasites are only as important as the fish they infect. Parasites are u...
Disease‐mediated threats posed by exotic species to native counterparts are not limited to introduce...
Summary 1. It is well recognised that non‐indigenous species (NIS) can affect native communities...
Native parasite acquisition provides introduced species with the potential to modify native host-par...
Non-indigenous species are commonly released from their native enemies, including parasites, when th...
Disease-mediated impacts of exotic species on their native counterparts are often ignored when paras...
AbstractExotic fish species frequently acquire native parasites despite the absence of closely relat...
Parasites are increasingly shown to impact ecosystem processes such as population dynamics and food ...
Exotic fish species frequently acquire native parasites despite the absence of closely related nativ...
When non-native species are introduced into a new range, their parasites can also be introduced, wit...
Summary 1. Biological invasions, still occurring worldwide at an alarming rate, are widely ack...
Compared with the effect of invaders on the native terrestrial fauna of New Zealand, interactions be...
It is believed by many that parasites are only as important as the fish they infect. Parasites are u...
Disease‐mediated threats posed by exotic species to native counterparts are not limited to introduce...