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You are here: Home / Animals / Publications / Scientifc Journal Articles Printable version
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Scientific Journal Articles

Provides selected resources for citations, with some links to fulltext, for articles from scientific, scholarly, or professional journals for invasive animals. See Resource Library - Scientific Journal Articles for general resources and other species. See Searching for Journal Articles for other search options.

Google Scholar

Google Scholar provides a simple way to broadly search for scholarly literature. From one place, you can search across many disciplines and sources: peer-reviewed papers, theses, books, abstracts and articles, from academic publishers, professional societies, preprint repositories, universities and other scholarly organizations. Google Scholar helps you identify the most relevant research across the world of scholarly research.

Google Scholar

Aldhous, Peter. 2004. Invasive species: The toads are coming! (PDF | 63 KB) Nature 432:796-98.

Brockerhoff, Eckehard G., Andrew M. Liebhold, and Herv Jactel. 2006. The ecology of forest insect invasions and advances in their management. (PDF | 962 KB) Canadian Journal of Forest Research 36:263-68.

Cruz, Felipe, C. Josh Donlan, Karl Campbell, and Victor Carrion. 2005. Conservation action in the Galapagos: Feral pig (Sus scrofa) eradication from Santiago Island. (PDF | 255 KB) Biological Conservation 121:473-78.

Dobbs, Thomas T., and Charles F. Brodel. 2004. Cargo aircraft as a pathway for the entry of nonindigenous pests into south Florida. (PDF | 190 KB) Florida Entomologist 87(1): 65-78.

Eschtruth, Anne K., Natalie L. Cleavitt, John J. Battles, Richard A. Evans, and Timothy J. Fahey. 2006. Vegetation dynamics in declining eastern hemlock stands: 9 years of forest response to hemlock woolly adelgid infestation. Canadian Journal of Forest Research 36(6):1435-1450. (Abstract)

Gammon, David E., and Brian A. Maurer. 2002. Evidence for non-uniform dispersal in the biological invasions of two naturalized North American bird species. (PDF | 1.67 MB) Global Ecology and Biogeography 11(2):155-62.

Gramming, Carol. 2005. Hawaii's Coral Trees Feel the Sting of Foreign Wasps. Science Magazine 310:1759-1760. (USDA access through DigiTop)

Giraud, Tatiana, Jes S. Pedersen, and Laurent Keller. 2002. Evolution of supercolonies: The Argentine ants of southern Europe. (PDF | 106 KB) Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences 99(9): 6075-79.

Helms, Ken R., and S. Bradleigh Vinson. 2001. Coexistence of native ants with the red imported fire ant, Solenopsis invicta. Southwestern Naturalist 46:396-400.

———. 2002. Widespread association of the invasive ant, Solenopsis invicta, with an invasive mealybug. Ecology 83(9): 2425–38. (Abstract)

Kelley, J. 1985. Update on Pyrrhalta nymphaeae (Galerucella) in central Florida. Aquatics 7(4): 17.

Kraus, Fred and Domingo Cravalho. 2001. The risk to Hawai'i from snakes (PDF | 100 KB). Pacific Science 55(4): 409-417.

Liebhold, Andrew M., Timothy T. Work, Deborah G. McCullough, and Joseph F. Cavey. 2006. Airline baggage as a pathway for alien insect species invading the United States. (PDF | 2.05 MB) American Entomologist 52(1): 48-54.

Livingston, R. L., J. E. Dewey, D. P. Beckman, and L. E. Stipe. 2000. Distribution of the balsam woolly adelgid in Idaho. Western Journal of Applied Forestry 15(4): 227-31. (Abstract)

Morrison, Lloyd W. 2002. Long-term impacts of an arthropod-community invasion by the imported fire ant, Solenopsis invicta. Ecology 83(8): 2337-45. (Abstract)

Solis, M. Alma, Stephen D. Hight, and Doria R. Gordon. 2004. Tracking the cactus moth, Cactoblastis cactorum Berg., as it flies and eats its way westward in the U.S. (PDF | 342 KB) News of the Lepidopterists' Society 46(1).

Suarez, Andrew V, David A. Holway, and Ted J. Case. 2001. Patterns of spread in biological invasions dominated by long-distance jump dispersal: Insights from Argentine ants. (PDF | 187 KB) Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences 98(3): 1095-1100.

Tsutsui, Neil D., Andrew V. Suarez, David A. Holway, and Ted J. Case. 2000. Reduced genetic variation and the success of an invasive species. (PDF | 113 KB) Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences 97(11): 5948-53.

Venette, R. C., and D. W. Ragsdale. 2004. Assessing the invasion by soybean aphid (Homoptera: Aphididae): Where will it end? (PDF | 1.77 MB) Annals of the Entomological Society of America 97(2): 219-26.

Whitmire, Stefanie L., and Patrick C. Tobin. 2006. Persistence of invading gypsy moth populations in the United States. (PDF | 404 KB) Oecologia 147:230-37.

Yang, Z.-qi. J.S. Strazanac, Y.-X. Yao, and X.-Y. Wang. (2006). A New Species of Emerald Ash Borer Parasitoid from China Belonging to the Genus Tetrastichus Haliday (Hymneoptera: Eulophidae). Proceedings of the Entomological Society of Washington 108(3):550-558. (Abstract)

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Last Modified: Dec 03, 2008
 
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