Didemnum vexillum Kott (2002) is a high-impact, globally-invasive, colonial tunicate species that is native to Japan (Lambert, 2009; Stefaniak et al., 2012). It is generally a temperate cold-water organism, and its introduced range currently includes New Zealand, the Netherlands, France, Ireland, United Kingdom, Spain, Italy, and both the west and east coasts of the United States and Canada (Lambert, 2009; Stefaniak et al., 2012; Tagliapietra et al., 2012; Ordóñez et al., 2015, Vercaemer et al., 2015). Like other invasive tunicates, D. vexillum has the capacity to reproduce rapidly, outcompete native species, deteriorate environmental integrity, and cause significant economic harm (Lambert, 2005; Blum et al., 2007; Daniel and Therriault, 20...
Didemnid ascidians are notorious marine invaders, fouling infrastructure in many ecosystems globally...
Non-indigenous species can dominate fouling assemblages on artificial structures in marine environme...
The frequency of fouling tunicates is increasing in Atlantic Canada and along the New England coast ...
Didemnum vexillum Kott (2002) is a high-impact, globally-invasive, colonial tunicate species that is...
Didemnum vexillum Kott (2002) is a high-impact, globally-invasive, colonial tunicate species that is...
Source at: https://vkm.no Didemnum vexillum is colonial sea squirt, a marine species which originate...
The potential spread of Didemnum vexillum through aquaculture transfers of Pacific oyster (Crassostr...
Over the past forty years, an increasing number of previously unrecorded populations of a colonial a...
Loch Creran on the west coast of Scotland supports the most expansive reefs of the serpulid (Serpula...
The North American bivalve mollusc Ensis directus (Conrad, 1843) (Bivalvia, Pharidae) is native to t...
Non-indigenous species can dominate fouling assemblages on artificial structures in marine environme...
abstract: Over the past decade, four exotic tunicates (Styela clava, Ciona intestinalis, Botrylloide...
The North American bivalve mollusc Ensis directus (Conrad, 1843) (Bivalvia, Pharidae) is native to t...
Increasing recognition of the threat which invasive non-native species present to ecological and eco...
Since the discovery of the invasive tunicate Didemnum vexillum on Georges Bank in 2002, scientists h...
Didemnid ascidians are notorious marine invaders, fouling infrastructure in many ecosystems globally...
Non-indigenous species can dominate fouling assemblages on artificial structures in marine environme...
The frequency of fouling tunicates is increasing in Atlantic Canada and along the New England coast ...
Didemnum vexillum Kott (2002) is a high-impact, globally-invasive, colonial tunicate species that is...
Didemnum vexillum Kott (2002) is a high-impact, globally-invasive, colonial tunicate species that is...
Source at: https://vkm.no Didemnum vexillum is colonial sea squirt, a marine species which originate...
The potential spread of Didemnum vexillum through aquaculture transfers of Pacific oyster (Crassostr...
Over the past forty years, an increasing number of previously unrecorded populations of a colonial a...
Loch Creran on the west coast of Scotland supports the most expansive reefs of the serpulid (Serpula...
The North American bivalve mollusc Ensis directus (Conrad, 1843) (Bivalvia, Pharidae) is native to t...
Non-indigenous species can dominate fouling assemblages on artificial structures in marine environme...
abstract: Over the past decade, four exotic tunicates (Styela clava, Ciona intestinalis, Botrylloide...
The North American bivalve mollusc Ensis directus (Conrad, 1843) (Bivalvia, Pharidae) is native to t...
Increasing recognition of the threat which invasive non-native species present to ecological and eco...
Since the discovery of the invasive tunicate Didemnum vexillum on Georges Bank in 2002, scientists h...
Didemnid ascidians are notorious marine invaders, fouling infrastructure in many ecosystems globally...
Non-indigenous species can dominate fouling assemblages on artificial structures in marine environme...
The frequency of fouling tunicates is increasing in Atlantic Canada and along the New England coast ...