Burrowing Invasive Species: An Unquantified Erosion Risk at the Aquatic‐Terrestrial Interface
- 26 August 2019
- journal article
- review article
- Published by American Geophysical Union (AGU) in Reviews of Geophysics
- Vol. 57 (3), 1018-1036
- https://doi.org/10.1029/2018rg000635
Abstract
No abstract availableKeywords
This publication has 97 references indexed in Scilit:
- New England Salt Marsh Recovery: Opportunistic Colonization of an Invasive Species and Its Non-Consumptive EffectsPLOS ONE, 2013
- Erodibility of cohesive sediment: The importance of sediment propertiesEarth-Science Reviews, 2011
- Marine Crustacean Invasions in North America: A Synthesis of Historical Records and Documented ImpactsPublished by Springer Science and Business Media LLC ,2011
- Accelerated erosion of saltmarshes infested by the non-native burrowing crustacean Sphaeroma quoianumMarine Ecology Progress Series, 2010
- Breaking ground: Pedological, geological, and ecological implications of soil bioturbationEarth-Science Reviews, 2009
- Seepage erosion in layered stream bank materialEarth Surface Processes and Landforms, 2009
- Population control of coypu Myocastor coypus in Italy compared to eradication in UK: a cost-benefit analysisWildlife Biology, 2007
- Macrophytes and suspension-feeding invertebrates modify flows and fine sediments in the Frome and Piddle catchments, Dorset (UK)Journal of Hydrology, 2006
- The Invasion of the Chinese Mitten Crab (Eriocheir sinensis) in the United Kingdom and Its Comparison to Continental EuropeBiological Invasions, 2005
- Patterns and processes of biological invasion: The Chinese mitten crab in San Francisco BayBasic and Applied Ecology, 2003