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1. Mesopredator release moderates trophic control of plant biomass in a Georgia salt marsh.

2. Variation in Oceanographic Resistance of the World's Coastlines to Invasion by Species With Planktonic Dispersal.

3. A global synthesis of predation on bivalves.

4. The resistance of Georgia coastal marshes to hurricanes.

5. Managing the threat of infectious disease in fisheries and aquaculture using structured decision making.

6. Using ecosystem engineers to enhance multiple ecosystem processes.

7. The role of small‐scale environmental gradients on trematode infection.

8. Differential equity in access to public and private coastal infrastructure in the Southeastern United States.

9. The opposing roles of lethal and nonlethal effects of parasites on host resource consumption.

10. Responses of a tidal freshwater marsh plant community to chronic and pulsed saline intrusion.

11. Comparing edge and fragmentation effects within seagrass communities: A meta‐analysis.

12. Intraspecific diversity and genetic structure in the widespread macroalga Agarophyton vermiculophyllum.

13. Influences of land use and ecological variables on trematode prevalence and intensity at the salt marsh‐upland ecotone.

14. Dead litter of resident species first facilitates and then inhibits sequential life stages of range‐expanding species.

15. Specific niche requirements underpin multidecadal range edge stability, but may introduce barriers for climate change adaptation.

16. Environmental gradients influence biogeographic patterns of nonconsumptive predator effects on oysters.

17. A comparison of diversity estimators applied to a database of host–parasite associations.

18. Freeze tolerance of poleward‐spreading mangrove species weakened by soil properties of resident salt marsh competitor.

19. Detrital traits affect substitutability of a range‐expanding foundation species across latitude.

20. High abundance of an invasive species gives it an outsized ecological role.

21. Mixed effects of an introduced ecosystem engineer on the foraging behavior and habitat selection of predators.

22. Exotic asphyxiation: interactions between invasive species and hypoxia.

23. The double edge to parasite escape: invasive host is less infected but more infectable.

24. Genetic identification of source and likely vector of a widespread marine invader.

25. Genetic by environmental variation but no local adaptation in oysters ( Crassostrea virginica).

26. Bad neighbors: how spatially disjunct habitat degradation can cause system-wide population collapse.

27. The macroecology of infectious diseases: a new perspective on global-scale drivers of pathogen distributions and impacts.

28. Invasion of novel habitats uncouples haplo-diplontic life cycles.

29. Consistency of trematode infection prevalence in host populations across large spatial and temporal scales.

30. The oceanic concordance of phylogeography and biogeography: a case study in Notochthamalus.

31. Opposing selective pressures decouple pattern and process of parasitic infection over small spatial scale.

32. Do native predators benefit from non-native prey?

33. Predation risk predicts use of a novel habitat.

34. The location, strength, and mechanisms behind marine biogeographic boundaries of the east coast of North America.

35. Geographic variation in intertidal oyster reef properties and the influence of tidal prism.

36. Engineering or food? mechanisms of facilitation by a habitat-forming invasive seaweed.

37. The biogeography of trophic cascades on US oyster reefs.

38. Circulation constrains the evolution of larval development modes and life histories in the coastal ocean.

39. Modeling the relationship between propagule pressure and invasion risk to inform policy and management.

40. Positive versus negative effects of an invasive ecosystem engineer on different components of a marine ecosystem.

41. Do invasive species perform better in their new ranges?

42. Indirect effects of parasites in invasions.

43. Density-dependent facilitation cascades determine epifaunal community structure in temperate Australian mangroves.

44. Invasive ecosystem engineer selects for different phenotypes of an associated native species.

45. Parasites and invasions: a biogeographic examination of parasites and hosts in native and introduced ranges.

46. A practical approach to implementation of ecosystem-based management: a case study using the Gulf of Maine marine ecosystem.

47. Using Parasitic Trematode Larvae to Quantify an Elusive Vertebrate Host.

48. A framework for understanding physical ecosystem engineering by organisms.

49. Variable direct and indirect effects of a habitat-modifying invasive species on mortality of native fauna.

50. Behavioural interactions between ecosystem engineers control community species richness.

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