
Publications
The Institute communicates its scientific and educational information in a number of ways. One major outlet is peer-reviewed publications and reports. Cary Institute staff regularly publish in the best-rated journals in their respective fields.
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Transformation of freshwater ecosystems by bivalves: a case study of zebra mussels in the Hudson River”, BioScience, vol. 49, p. 19-27, 1999.
, “ Twenty years of zebra mussels: lessons from the mollusk that made headlines”, Front. Ecol. Environ., vol. 7, 2009.
, “ Understanding how nutrient cycles and freshwater mussels (Unionoida) affect one another”, Hydrobiologia, 2013.
, “ Understanding the long-term effects of species invasions”, Trends Ecol. Evol., vol. 21, p. 645-651, 2006.
, “ Use of flow refuges by unionid mussels in rivers”, J. N. Am. Benthol. Soc., vol. 18, p. 468-476, 1999.
, “ Usefulness of bioclimatic models for studying climate change and invasive species”, in R. S. Ostfeld and W. H. Schlesinger (eds.). The Year in Ecology and Conservation Biology. Annals of the New York Academy of Sciences, vol. 1134, 2008, p. 1-24.
, “ Using geophysical information to define benthic habitats in a large river”, Freshwater Biol., vol. 51, p. 25-38, 2006.
, “ Using landscape ecology to understand and manage freshwater mussel populations”, J. N. Am. Benthol. Soc., vol. 27, p. 424-439, 2008.
, “ Vegetation of riprapped revetments along the freshwater tidal Hudson River, New York”, Aquatic Sciences, vol. 78, no. 3, p. 605 - 614, 2016.
, “ What are the tradeoffs between the immediacy of management needs and the longer process of scientific discovery?”, in G. E. Likens (ed.). Long-Term Studies in Ecology: Approaches and Alternatives, 1989, p. 203-205.
, “ What kind of spatial and temporal details are required in models of heterogeneous systems?”, Oikos, vol. 102, p. 654-662, 2003.
, “ Where rivers are born: The scientific imperative for defending small streams and wetlands”, American Rivers and the Sierra Club, Washington, DC., p. 23, 2003.
, “ Zebra mussel (Dreissena polymorpha) affects the feeding ecology of early stage striped bass (Morone saxatilis) in the Hudson River estuary”, Environmental Biology of Fishes, vol. 100, no. 4, p. 395 - 406, 2017.
, “ Zebra mussel invasion in a large, turbid river: phytoplankton response to increased grazing”, Ecology, vol. 78, p. 588-602, 1997.
, “ The zoobenthos of the freshwater tidal Hudson River and its response to the zebra mussel (Dreissena polymorpha) invasion”, Arch. Hydrobiol. Suppl. (Monographic Studies), vol. 139, p. 1-52, 2001.
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