
Encyclopedia of Biological Invasions
Description
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Encyclopedia of Biological Invasions features articles on:
. Well-known invasive species such the zebra mussel, chestnut blight, cheatgrass, gypsy moth, Nile perch, giant African snail, and Norway rat
. Regions with especially large numbers of introduced species including the Great Lakes, Mediterranean Sea, Hawaiian Islands, Australia, and New Zealand.
. Conservation, ecological, economic, and human and animal health impacts of invasions around the world
. The processes and pathways involved in invasion
. Management of introduced species
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Content
- Intro
- Title Page
- Copyright Page
- Content
- Contents by Subject Area
- Contributors
- Guide to the Encyclopedia
- Preface
- A
- Acclimatization Societies
- Agreements, International
- Agriculture
- Algae
- Allelopathy
- Ants
- Apomixis
- Aquaculture
- Aquaria
- Australia: Invasions
- B
- Ballast
- Bees
- Belowground Phenomena
- Biological Control, of Animals
- Biological Control, of Plants
- Birds
- Black, White, and Gray Lists
- Brown Treesnake
- Bryophytes and Lichens
- Burmese Python and Other Giant Constrictors
- C
- Canals
- Carnivores
- Carp, Common
- CART and Related Methods
- Cheatgrass
- Climate Change
- Competition, Animal
- Competition, Plant
- Crabs
- Crayfish
- Crustaceans (Other)
- D
- DAISIE Project
- Darwin, Charles
- Databases
- Demography
- Disease Vectors, Human
- Dispersal Ability, Animal
- Dispersal Ability, Plant
- Disturbance
- E
- Early Detection and Rapid Response
- Earthworms
- Ecoterrorism and Biosecurity
- Elton, Charles S.
- Endangered and Threatened Species
- Enemy Release Hypothesis
- Epidemiology and Dispersal
- Eradication
- Eucalypts
- Eutrophication, Aquatic
- Evolutionary Response, of Natives to Invaders
- Evolution of Invasive Populations
- F
- Fire Regimes
- Fishes
- Flaviviruses
- Forest Insects
- Forestry and Agroforestry
- Freshwater Plants and Seaweeds
- Fungi
- G
- Game Animals
- Genotypes, Invasive
- Geographic Origins and Introduction Dynamics
- Grasses and Forbs
- Grazers
- Great Lakes: Invasions
- Gypsy Moth
- H
- Habitat Compatibility
- Hawaiian Islands: Invasions
- Hemlock Woolly Adelgid
- Herbicides
- Herbivory
- Horticulture
- Hybridization and Introgression
- Hydrology
- I
- Influenza
- Integrated Pest Management
- Invasibility, of Communities and Ecosystems
- Invasional Meltdown
- Invasion Biology
- Invasion Biology: Historical Precedents
- Invasion Economics
- Invasiveness
- Invertebrates, Marine
- Islands
- K
- Kudzu
- L
- Ladybugs
- Lag Times
- Lakes
- Landscape Patterns of Plant Invasions
- Land Use
- Lantana camara
- Laws, Federal and State
- Life History Strategies
- M
- Malaria Vectors
- Mammals, Aquatic
- Mechanical Control
- Mediterranean Sea: Invasions
- Melastomes
- Mosquitoes
- Mutualism
- Mycorrhizae
- N
- "Native Invaders"
- New Zealand: Invasions
- Nile Perch
- Nitrogen Enrichment
- Novel Weapons Hypothesis
- O
- Ostriculture
- P
- Parasites, of Animals
- Parasitic Plants
- Pathogens, Animal
- Pathogens, Human
- Pathogens, Plant
- Pesticides (Fish and Mollusc)
- Pesticides for Insect Eradication
- Pesticides (Mammal)
- Pet Trade
- Phytophthora
- Pollination
- Ponto-Caspian: Invasions
- Predators
- Propagule Pressure
- Protected Areas
- R
- Range Modeling
- Rats
- Regulation (U.S.)
- Remote Sensing
- Reproductive Systems, Plant
- Reptiles and Amphibians
- Restoration
- Rinderpest
- Risk Assessment and Prioritization
- Rivers
- Rodents (Other)
- S
- SCOPE Project
- Sea Lamprey
- Seas and Oceans
- Seed Ecology
- Small Indian Mongoose
- Snails and Slugs
- South Africa: Invasions
- Succession
- T
- Taxonomic Patterns
- Tolerance Limits, Animal
- Tolerance Limits, Plant
- Transformers
- Trees and Shrubs
- V
- Vegetative Propagation
- Vines and Lianas
- W
- Wasps
- Water Hyacinth
- Weeds
- Wetlands
- X
- Xenophobia
- Z
- Zebra Mussel
- Back
- Glossary
- Key References
- Index
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