General
Allen, E. A., and L. M. Humble. 2002. Nonindigenous species introductions: A threat to Canada's forests and forest economy. (PDF | 70 KB) Canadian Journal of Plant Pathology 24:103-10.
Arim, Matías, Sebastián R. Abades, Paula E. Neill, Mauricio Lima, and Pablo A. Marquet. 2006. Spread dynamics of invasive species. (PDF | 525 KB) Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences 103(2): 374-78.
Baker, Beth. 2001. National Management Plan maps strategy for controlling invasive species. Bioscience 51(2): 92.
Baskin, Y. 1996. Curbing undesirable invaders. Bioscience 46(10): 732-36.
Brown, James H., and Dov F. Sax. 2004. An essay on some topics concerning invasive species. (PDF | 71 KB) Austral Ecology 29:530-36.
Carlton, James T. 1996. Biological invasions and cryptogenic species. Ecology 77(6): 1653-55.
Colautti, Robert I., et al. 2006. Characterised and projected costs of nonindigenous species in Canada (PDF | 238 KB) Biological Invasions 8:45-59.
Daehler, C. C. 2001. Two ways to be an invader, but one is more suitable for ecology. Bulletin of the Ecological Society of America 82(1): 101-3.
Davis, Mark A., and Ken Thompson. 2000. Eight ways to be a colonizer; two ways to be an invader: A proposed nomenclature scheme for invasion biology. (PDF | 90 KB) Bulletin of the Ecological Society of America 81(3): 226-30.
Didham, Raphael K., Jason M. Tylianakis, Melissa A. Hutchison, Robert M. Ewers, and Neil J. Gemmell. 2005. Are invasive species the drivers of ecological change? (PDF | 126 KB) Trends in Ecology and Evolution 20(9): 470-74.
Eldredge, L.G. 2006. Numbers of Hawaiian species for 2003–2005. (PDF | 790 KB) Bishop Museum Occasional Papers 88: 62-79.
Ewel, J. J., D. J. O'Dowd, J. Bergelson, C. C. Daehler, C. M. D'Antonio, D. Gomez, D. R. Gordon, R. J. Hobbs, A. Holt; K. R. Hopper, C. E. Hughes, M. Lahart, R. R. B. Leakey, W. G. Lee, L. L. Loope, D. H. Lorence, S. M. Louda, A. E. Lugo, P. B. Mcevoy, and D. M. Richardson. 1999. Deliberate introductions of species: Research needs — Benefits can be reaped, but risks are high. BioScience 49:619-30. (USDA access through DigiTop)
Finnoff, David, Jason F. Shogren, Brian Leung, and David Lodge.
2005. The importance of bioeconomic feedback in invasive species
management. (PDF | 201 KB) Ecological Economics 52:367-81.
Gobster, Paul H. 2005. Invasive species as ecological threat: Is restoration an alternative to fear-based resource management? (PDF | 496 KB) Ecological Restoration 23(4): 261-70.
Gurevitch, Jessica, and Dianna K. Padilla. 2004. Are invasive species a major cause of extinctions?Trends in Ecology and Evolution 19(9): 470-74. (USDA access through DigiTop)
Guo, Qinfeng, Qian, Hong, Ricklefs, Robert E. & Xi, Weimin. 2006.
Distributions of exotic plants in eastern Asia and North America.
Ecology Letters 9(7):827-834. (USDA access through DigiTop)
Hastings, Alan, Richard J. Hall, and Caz M. Taylor. 2006. A simple approach to optimal control of invasive species. Theoretical Poplulation Biology (article in press). (USDA access through DigiTop)
Jenkins, Peter T. 2002. Paying
for protection from invasive species. Issues in Science and Technology 19(1).
Keller, Reuben P., David M. Lodge, and David C. Finnoff. 2007. Risk assessment for invasive species produces net bioeconomic benefits. Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences 104(1):203-207. (Abstract) (USDA access through DigiTop)
Korniss, Gyorgy, and Thomas Caraco. 2005. Spatial dynamics of invasion: The geometry of introduced species. (PDF | 345 KB) Journal of Theoretical Biology 233:137-50.
Krajick, Kevin. 2005. Winning the war against island invaders. Science 310(5753): 1410-13. (USDA access through DigiTop)
Lodge, D. M. 1993. Biological invasions: Lessons for ecology. Trends in Ecology and Evolution 8:133-37.
Lovett, Gary M., Charles D. Canham, Mary A. Arthur, Kathleen C. Weathers, and Ross D. Fitzhugh. 2006. Forest ecosystem responses to exotic pests and pathogens in eastern North America. (PDF | 902 KB) BioScience 56(5): 395-405.
Mack, Michelle C., and C.M. D'Antonio. 1998. Impacts of biological invasions on disturbance regimes. Trends in Ecology and Evolution 13(5): 195-98. (USDA access through DigiTop) (PDF | 631 KB)
Mack, Richard N., Daniel Simberloff, W. Mark Lonsdale, Harry Evans,
Michael Clout, and Fakhri A. Bazzaz. 2000. Biotic
invasions: Causes, epidemiology, global consequences, and control.
(PDF | 350 KB) Issues in Ecology, no. 5.
McAusland, Carol, and Christopher Costello. 2004. Avoiding invasives: Trade-related policies for controlling unintentional exotic species introductions. (PDF | 326 KB) Journal of Environmental Economics and Management 48:954-77.
McCann, Jean, Steve Bunk, Eugene Russo, and Christine Bahls. 2001. Battling the bioinvaders: As invasive species problems grow, questions persist on how to deal with these foreign foes. The Scientist 15(18):1. Note: Requires free registration.
McKinney, Michael L., and Julie L. Lockwood. 1999. Biotic homogenization: A few winners replacing many losers in the next mass extinction. (PDF | 90 KB) Trends in Ecology and Evolution 14:453.
Mehta, Shefali V., Robert G. Haight, Frances R. Homans, Stephen Polasky, and Robert C. Venette. 2007. Optimal detection and control strategies for invasive species management. Ecological Economics 237-245.
Mills, Edward L., Joseph H. Leach, James T. Carlton, and Carol L. Secor. 1994. Exotic species and the integrity of the Great Lakes. (PDF | 6.35 MB) Bioscience 44(10): 666-75.
Mooney, H. A., and E. E. Cleland. 2001. The evolutionary impact of invasive species. (PDF | 81 KB) Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences 98(10): 5446-51.
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