80 results on '"Arnott, Shelley E."'
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2. Impacts of sequential salinity and heat stress are recovery time-specific in freshwater crustacean, Daphnia pulicaria
3. Watercraft decontamination practices to reduce the viability of aquatic invasive species implicated in overland transport
4. The ecosystem implications of road salt as a pollutant of freshwaters
5. Evolved tolerance to NaCl does not alter Daphnia response to acute heat stress
6. Widespread variation in salt tolerance within freshwater zooplankton species reduces the predictability of community‐level salt tolerance
7. Interactive effects of increasing chloride concentration and warming on freshwater plankton communities
8. Inter population variation in behaviour of native prey (Daphnia) mediates the impact of the invasive spiny water flea (Bythotrephes cederströmii)on plankton communities
9. Freshwater salinisation: a research agenda for a saltier world
10. Current water quality guidelines across North America and Europe do not protect lakes from salinization
11. Similar zooplankton responses to low pH and calcium may impair long‐term recovery from acidification
12. Lake salinization drives consistent losses of zooplankton abundance and diversity across coordinated mesocosm experiments
13. Watercraft Decontamination Practices to Reduce the Viability of Aquatic Invasive Species Implicated in Overland Transport.
14. Effects of chloride and nutrients on freshwater plankton communities
15. Dietary lipid quality mediates salt tolerance of a freshwater keystone herbivore
16. Consistent and transient drivers of freshwater zooplankton communities
17. Contrasting long-term trends of chloride levels in remote and human-disturbed lakes in south-central Ontario, Canada
18. Road Salt Impacts Freshwater Zooplankton at Concentrations below Current Water Quality Guidelines
19. Review paper: Rotifer responses to increased acidity: long-term patterns during the experimental manipulation of Little Rock Lake
20. Taxonomic resolution of the North American invasive species of the genus Bythotrephes Leydig, 1860 (Crustacea: Cladocera: Cercopagididae)
21. A framework for predicting which non-native individuals and species will enter, survive, and exit human-mediated transport
22. Benefits of increased colonist quantity and genetic diversity for colonization depend on colonist identity
23. Anti-predator behaviour of native prey (Daphnia) to an invasive predator (Bythotrephes longimanus) is influenced by predator density and water clarity
24. Could a residential wood ash recycling programme be part of the solution to calcium decline in lakes and forests in Muskoka (Ontario, Canada)?
25. A comparative evaluation of five common pairwise tests of species association
26. Local context and connectivity determine the response of zooplankton communities to salt contamination
27. Nonlinear effects of aqueous calcium concentration on antipredator response in Daphnia
28. Ca2+ levels in Daphnia hemolymph may explain occurrences of daphniid species along recent Ca gradients in Canadian soft-water lakes.
29. The impact of calcium decline on population growth rates of crustacean zooplankton in Canadian Shield lakes
30. Subcatchment deltas and upland features influence multiscale aquatic ecosystem recovery in damaged landscapes
31. Relative importance of colonist quantity, quality, and arrival frequency to the extinction of two zooplankton species
32. Biotic resistance of impact: a native predator (Chaoborus) influences the impact of an invasive predator (Bythotrephes) in temperate lakes
33. The effects of Bythotrephes longimanus and calcium decline on crustacean zooplankton communities in Canadian Shield lakes
34. Dry conditions disrupt terrestrial-aquatic linkages in northern catchments
35. The quick and the dead: copepods dominate as cladocerans decline following invasion by Hemimysis anomala
36. A review of the effects ofBythotrephes longimanusand calcium decline on zooplankton communities — can interactive effects be predicted?
37. Strength in size not numbers: propagule size more important than number in sexually reproducing populations
38. Dispersal strength influences zooplankton co‐occurrence patterns in experimental mesocosms
39. Dispersal acts as both bane and balm for invaded zooplankton communities
40. Effects of an invasive consumer on zooplankton communities are unaltered by nutrient inputs
41. Spatial, Environmental, and Biotic Determinants of Zooplankton Community Composition in Subarctic Lakes and Ponds in Wapusk National Park, Canada
42. Timing is everything: priority effects alter community invasibility after disturbance
43. Influence of light on the foraging impact of an introduced predatory cladoceran,Bythotrephes longimanus
44. Regional zooplankton dispersal provides spatial insurance for ecosystem function
45. The role of dispersal levels, Allee effects and community resistance as zooplankton communities respond to environmental change
46. Grazing rates of crustacean zooplankton communities on intact phytoplankton communities in Canadian Subarctic lakes and ponds
47. The recovery of acid‐damaged zooplankton communities in Canadian Lakes: the relative importance of abiotic, biotic and spatial variables
48. Hemimysis anomala in Lake Ontario food webs: Stable isotope analysis of nearshore communities
49. Portage connectivity does not predict establishment success of canoe-mediated dispersal for crustacean zooplankton
50. Differential sensitivity of planktonic trophic levels to extreme summer temperatures in boreal lakes
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