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- 2016
- Predicting harvest of non-native signal crayfish in lakes —a role for changing climate? (
- 2014
- Complementary Bibliometric Analysis : MDH Library (
- Population collapses in introduced non-indigenous crayfish (
- 2010
- Fluctuations in harvest of native and introduced crayfish are driven by temperature and population density in previous years (
- The impact of trout on galaxiid fishes in New Zealand (
- 2009
- Invasions and niche width: does niche width of an introduced crayfish differ from a native crayfish? (
- 2008
- Tuning in to multiple predators: conflicting demands for shell morphology in a freshwater snail. (
- Trophic interactions in Zostera marina beds along the Swedish coast (
- The influence of food quality and availability on trophic position, carbon signature, and growth rate of an omnivorous crayfish (
- The influence of productivity and width of littoral zone on the trophic position of a large-bodied omnivore. (
- Effects of stream predator richness on the prey community and ecosystem attributes. (
- 2007
- Are fish populations in temperate streams affected by crayfish? - A field survey and prospects (
- Persistent organic pollutants (POP) in a benthic omnivore - A comparison between lake and stream crayfish populations (
- A documented amphibian decline over 40 years: Possible causes and implications for species recovery (
- Heavy metals and stable isotopes in a benthic omnivore in a trophic gradient of lakes (
- 2006
- Stable isotopes as an indicator of diet in omnivorous crayfish (Pacifastacus leniusculus): the influence of tissue, sample treatment, and season (
- Crayfish in lakes and streams: individual and population responses to predation, productivity and substratum availability (
- Does natural acidity mediate interactions between introduced brown trout, native fish, crayfish and other invertebrates in West Coast New Zealand streams? (
- Low levels of persistent organic pollutants (POPS) in New Zealand eels reflect isolation from atmospheric sources (
- Facilitation and interference among three predators affect their consumption of a stream-dwelling mayfly (