48 results on '"Hatcher, Melanie J."'
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2. A Species Invasion Mediated through Habitat Structure, Intraguild Predation, and Parasitism
3. Invader Relative Impact Potential: a new metric to understand and predict the ecological impacts of existing, emerging and future invasive alien species
4. Differential Drift and Parasitism in Invading and Native Gammarus spp. (Crustacea: Amphipoda)
5. Parasite-Mediated Predation between Native and Invasive Amphipods
6. Infection and invasion: study cases from aquatic communities
7. Trait-Mediated Effects of Parasites on Invader-Native Interactions
8. Activity patterns and organization within ant nests
9. Parasites and biological invasions: parallels, interactions, and control
10. Predicting invasive species impacts: a community module functional response approach reveals context dependencies
11. Disease emergence and invasions
12. Indirect effects of parasites in invasions
13. Diverse effects of parasites in ecosystems: linking interdependent processes
14. Parasites in Ecological Communities: From Interactions to Ecosystems
15. Advancing impact prediction and hypothesis testing in invasion ecology using a comparative functional response approach
16. Trait-Mediated Effects of Parasites on Invader-Native Interactions
17. Evolutionary Consequences of Cytoplasmically Inherited Feminizing Factors
18. The less amorous Gammarus: predation risk affects mating decisions in Gammarus duebeni (Amphipoda)
19. Intersexuality in the amphipod Gammarus duebeni results from incomplete feminisation by the vertically transmitted parasitic sex ratio distorter Nosema granulosis
20. Transmission and burden and the impact of temperature on two species of vertically transmitted microsporidia
21. Mate choice and mate guarding under the influence of a vertically transmitted, parasitic sex ratio disorder
22. Local adaptation and enhanced virulence of Nosema granulosis artificially introduced into novel populations of its crustacean host, Gammarus duebeni
23. Size and pairing success in Gammarus duebeni: can females be too big?
24. The replacement of a native freshwater amphipod by an invader: roles for environmental degradation and intraguild predation
25. Parasite transmission and cannibalism in an amphipod (Crustacea)
26. Parasite altered micro-distribution of Gammarus pulex (Crustacea: Amphipoda)
27. Should sex-ratio distorting parasites abandon horizontal transmission?
28. Persistence of selfish genetic elements: population structure and conflict
29. Host-parasitoid relationships within figs of an invasive fig tree: a fig wasp community structured by gall size
30. Maternal-Zygotic Gene Conflict Over Sex Determination: Effects of Inbreeding
31. Host‐parasitoid relationships within figs of an invasive fig tree: a fig wasp community structured by gall size.
32. Eaten alive: cannibalism is enhanced by parasites
33. Predicting invasive species impacts: a community module functional response approach reveals context dependencies
34. Parasites that change predator or prey behaviour can have keystone effects on community composition
35. Predator cue studies reveal strong trait-mediated effects in communities despite variation in experimental designs
36. Advancing impact prediction and hypothesis testing in invasion ecology using a comparative functional response approach
37. Parasites in Ecological Communities
38. Parasitism may enhance rather than reduce the predatory impact of an invader
39. A keystone effect for parasites in intraguild predation?
40. How parasites affect interactions between competitors and predators
41. An acanthocephalan parasite mediates intraguild predation between invasive and native freshwater amphipods (Crustacea)
42. Population Dynamics under Parasitic Sex Ratio Distortion
43. Modeling Biological Systems: Principles and Applications James W. Haefner
44. Size and pairing success inGammarus duebeni: can females be too big?
45. The effect of point of expression on ESS sex ratios
46. Two cues sex for determination in Gammarus duebeni: Adaptive variation in environmental sex determination?
47. An acanthocephalan parasite mediates intraguild predation between invasive and native freshwater amphipods (Crustacea).
48. Parasites influence cannibalistic and predatory interactions within and between native and invasive amphipods.
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