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David Strayer

Lacy, A, Y Jin, David L. Strayer, and S Lenhart. 2024. “Modeling the Population Dynamics and Movement of Zebra Mussels”. JOURNAL OF DIFFERENCE EQUATIONS AND APPLICATIONS. doi:10.1080/10236198.2024.2302015.
Limburg, Karin E., Dennis P. Swaney, and David L. Strayer. 2024. “River Ecosystems”. In Encyclopedia of Biodiversity, 600-619. Elsevier. doi:10.1016/b978-0-12-822562-2.00053-0.
Strayer, David L. (2022) 2022. “Think Locally and Act Globally on Invasive Species”. Natural Areas Journal 42 (108). Natural Areas Association. doi:10.3375/0885-8608-42.2.108.
Strayer, David L. 2022. “Comment: Novak Et Al. (2021) Overestimated the Successes of Species Translocations and Minimized Their Risks”. Conservation Science and Practice 4 (7). Wiley. doi:10.1111/csp2.12694.
Geist, JA, JL Mancuso, MM Morin, KP Bommarito, EN Bovee, D Wendell, B Burroughs, MR Luttenton, David L. Strayer, and SD Tiegs. (2024) 2022. “The New Zealand Mud Snail (Potamopyrgus antipodarum): Autecology and Management of a Global Invader”. BIOLOGICAL INVASIONS 24 (4): 905-38. doi:10.1007/s10530-021-02681-7.
Ostfeld, Richard S., Kathleen C. Weathers, David L. Strayer, and Gene E. Likens. 2021. “Ecology of Lyme Disease”. In Fundamentals of Ecosystem Science, 2ndnd ed. London, UK: Academic Press.
2021. Fundamentals of Ecosystem Science. Edited by Kathleen C. Weathers, David L. Strayer, and Gene E. Likens. 2nd ed. Elsevier. doi:10.1016/c2015-0-01951-7.
Strayer, David L., Stephen K. Hamilton, and Heather M. Malcom. 2021. “Long‐term Increases in Shell Thickness in Elliptio Complanata (Bivalvia: Unionidae) in the Freshwater Tidal Hudson River”. Freshwater Biology 66 (7). Wiley: 1375-81. doi:10.1111/fwb.13723.
Strayer, David L. 2020. “Non‐native Species Have Multiple abundance–impact Curves”. Ecology and Evolution 10 (13). Wiley: 6833-43. doi:https://doi.org/10.1002/ece3.6364.
Robertson, P. A., A. Mill, A. Novoa, J. M. Jeschke, F. Essl, B. Gallardo, J. Geist, et al. (2024) 2020. “A Proposed Unified Framework to Describe the Management of Biological Invasions”. Biological Invasions 22 (9): 2633-45.