How Many, And Which, Plants Will Invade Natural Areas? Julie L. LockwoodDaniel SimberloffBetsy Von Holle OriginalPaper Pages: 1 - 8
Changing Community States in the Gulf of Maine: Synergism Between Invaders, Overfishing and Climate Change Larry G. HarrisMegan C. Tyrrell OriginalPaper Pages: 9 - 21
Assessing Invader Roles Within Changing Ecosystems: Historical and Experimental Perspectives on an Exotic Mussel in an Urbanized Lagoon Jeffrey A. Crooks OriginalPaper Pages: 23 - 36
Patterns of Plant Invasions: A Case Example in Native Species Hotspots and Rare Habitats Thomas J. StohlgrenYuka OtsukiJayne Belnap OriginalPaper Pages: 37 - 50
Modification of Sediments and Macrofauna by an Invasive Marsh Plant T.S. TalleyL.A. Levin OriginalPaper Pages: 51 - 68
Exotic Grasses Potentially Slow Invasion of an N-fixing Tree into a Hawaiian Woodland Carla M. D'AntonioMichelle Mack OriginalPaper Pages: 69 - 73
Reinvasion of a Riparian Forest Community by an Animal-dispersed Tree Weed Following Control Measures F.D. PanettaE.C. Sparkes OriginalPaper Pages: 75 - 88
Introduced Plant Viruses and the Invasion of a Native Grass Flora L.T. DavisP.L. Guy OriginalPaper Pages: 89 - 95
Nontarget Effects of Biological Control. By Peter A. Follett and Jian J. Duan (eds), 2000, xiii +316 pp, Kluwer Academic Publishers, Boston, Massachusetts, ISBN: 0-7923-7725-7 Donald R. Strong OriginalPaper Pages: 97 - 98