Search
Skip to Search Results- 3Invasive species
- 1Biological invasions
- 1Bythotrephes
- 1Ecological modeling
- 1Habitat invasibility
- 1Habitat suitability
-
2012
Lewis, M. A., Rajakaruna, H., Strasser, C.
If a non-indigenous species is to thrive and become invasive it must first persist under its new set of environmental conditions. Net reproductive rate (R 0) represents the average number of female offspring produced by a female over its lifetime, and has been used as a metric of population...
-
2007
Lewis, M. A., Finnoff, D., Potapov, A.
A metapopulation model for alien species invasion of a lake network is coupled with an economic model of prevention. The model restates a stochastic problem in deterministic terms. It provides a macroscopic description of the lake network with prevention methods controlling both the outflow of...
-
The spread, establishment and impacts of the spiny water flea, Bythotrephes longimanus, in temperate North America: a synopsis of the special issue.
Download2011
Leung, B., Yan, N. D., Peacor, S. D., Lewis, M. A.
More than most sub-disciplines of ecology, the study of biological invasions is characterized by breadth rather than by depth. Studies of expanding ranges of invaders are common, as are post-invasion case studies, but we rarely have a deep understanding of the dynamics and regulators of the...