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1. Pining away and at home: global utilisation of Pinus radiata by native and non-native insects.

2. Prevalence and drivers of a tree-killing bark beetle, Ips typographus (Coleoptera, Scolytinae), in international invasion pathways into the USA.

3. Approaches to Forecasting Damage by Invasive Forest Insects and Pathogens: A Cross-Assessment.

4. Trait‐habitat associations explain novel bird assemblages mixing native and alien species across New Zealand landscapes.

5. Mechanisms driving component Allee effects during invasions: using a biological control agent as model invader.

6. Probing the role of propagule pressure, stochasticity, and Allee effects on invasion success using experimental introductions of a biological control agent.

7. Acoustic communication of the red‐haired bark beetle Hylurgus ligniperda.

8. Depletion of heterogeneous source species pools predicts future invasion rates.

9. Eradication programs against non-native pests and pathogens of woody plants in Europe: which factors influence their success or failure?

10. Host range expansion of native insects to exotic trees increases with area of introduction and the presence of congeneric native trees.

11. Predicting how altering propagule pressure changes establishment rates of biological invaders across species pools.

12. An Experimental Test of Insect-Mediated Colonisation of Damaged Pinus radiata Trees by Sapstain Fungi.

13. Aerial Application of Pheromones for Mating Disruption of an Invasive Moth as a Potential Eradication Tool.

14. Forest Insect Biosecurity: Processes, Patterns, Predictions, Pitfalls.

15. Maximising biodiversity in plantation forests: Insights from long-term changes in clearfell-sensitive beetles in a Pinus radiata plantation

16. Novel insect-tree associations resulting from accidental and intentional biological ‘invasions’: a meta-analysis of effects on insect fitness.

17. Tree diversity reduces herbivory by forest insects.

18. The ecology of forest insect invasions and advances in their management.

19. Interception frequency of exotic bark and ambrosia beetles (Coleoptera: Scolytinae) and relationship with establishment in New Zealand and worldwide.

20. International imports and climatic filtering drive compositional variation in non‐native insect establishments.

21. Preventing invasions of Asian longhorn beetle and citrus longhorn beetle: are we on the right track?

22. Asymmetrical insect invasions between three world regions.

23. Linking human impacts to community processes in terrestrial and freshwater ecosystems.

24. The role of propagule pressure in experimental bark beetle invasions.

25. Fewer non‐native insects in freshwater than in terrestrial habitats across continents.

26. Moths and butterflies on alien shores: Global biogeography of non‐native Lepidoptera.

27. Eradication of Invading Insect Populations: From Concepts to Applications.

28. Effects of competition and habitat heterogeneity on native‐exotic plant richness relationships across spatial scales.

29. Bark beetles attacking conifer seedlings: picking on the weakest or feasting upon the fittest?

30. Behavioural responses of diapausing Halyomorpha halys (Hemiptera: Pentatomidae) to conspecific volatile organic compounds.

31. Effectiveness of the International Phytosanitary Standard ISPM No. 15 on Reducing Wood Borer Infestation Rates in Wood Packaging Material Entering the United States.

32. High-resolution DNA melt-curve analysis for cost-effective mass screening of pairwise species interactions.

33. Invasion disharmony in the global biogeography of native and non‐native beetle species.

34. Description, phenology and biology of Zelostemma chionochloae Buhl sp. nov., a platygastrid parasitoid of Eucalyptodiplosis chionochloae (Diptera: Cecidomyiidae) in New Zealand.

35. Description of Eucalyptodiplosis chionochloae sp. nov., a cecidomyiid feeding on inflorescences of Chionochloa (Poaceae) in New Zealand.

36. Consistent trade‐offs in ecosystem services between land covers with different production intensities.

37. Sound production in bark and ambrosia beetles.

38. Habitat fragmentation and eradication of invading insect herbivores.

39. Volatile release, mobility, and mortality of diapausing Halyomorpha halys during simulated shipping movements and temperature changes.

40. Common pathways by which non-native forest insects move internationally and domestically.

41. Recurrent bridgehead effects accelerate global alien ant spread.

42. Global rise in emerging alien species results from increased accessibility of new source pools.

43. Identification of volatiles released by diapausing brown marmorated stink bug, Halyomorpha halys (Hemiptera: Pentatomidae).

44. Long-distance dispersal of non-native pine bark beetles from host resources.

45. Bird functional diversity enhances insectivory at forest edges: a transcontinental experiment.

46. Effects of plant phylogenetic diversity on herbivory depend on herbivore specialization.

47. Habitat filtering by landscape and local forest composition in native and exotic New Zealand birds.

48. Linking Climate Suitability, Spread Rates and Host-Impact When Estimating the Potential Costs of Invasive Pests.

49. Forest Biodiversity and the Delivery of Ecosystem Goods and Services: Translating Science into Policy.

50. Plant diversity drives global patterns of insect invasions.

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