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24 results on '"Joyce, Patrick W. S."'

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5. Too hot to handle? An urgent need to understand climate change impacts on the biogeochemistry of tropical coastal waters

10. First record of the invasive alien mussel Mytella strigata (Hanley, 1843) in Hong Kong.

11. Population Genomics, Transcriptional Response to Heat Shock, and Gut Microbiota of the Hong Kong Oyster Magallana hongkongensis

12. Biometric conversion factors as a unifying platform for comparative assessment of invasive freshwater bivalves

13. Supplementary material 1 from: Dickey JWE, Cuthbert RN, South J, Britton JR, Caffrey J, Chang X, Crane K, Coughlan NE, Fadaei E, Farnsworth KD, Ismar-Rebitz SMH, Joyce PWS, Julius M, Laverty C, Lucy FE, MacIsaac HJ, McCard M, McGlade CLO, Reid N, Ricciardi A, Wasserman RJ, Weyl OLF, Dick JTA (2020) On the RIP: using Relative Impact Potential to assess the ecological impacts of invasive alien species. NeoBiota 55: 27-60. https://doi.org/10.3897/neobiota.55.49547

14. On the RIP: using Relative Impact Potential to assess the ecological impacts of invasive alien species

16. On the RIP: using Relative Impact Potential to assess the ecological impacts of invasive alien species

17. Wild gregarious settlements of Ostrea edulis in a semi‐enclosed sea lough: a case study for unassisted restoration.

18. Relative impacts of the invasive Pacific oyster, Crassostrea gigas, over the native blue mussel, Mytilus edulis, are mediated by flow velocity and food concentration.

19. Nature-based solutions to the management of legacy plastic pollution: Filter-feeders as bioremediation tools for coastal microplastics.

20. Temperature-dependent responses and trophic interaction strengths of a predatory marine gastropod and rock oyster under ocean warming.

21. Too hot to handle? An urgent need to understand climate change impacts on the biogeochemistry of tropical coastal waters.

22. Microplastics, both non-biodegradable and biodegradable, do not affect the whole organism functioning of a marine mussel.

23. Stay clean: direct steam exposure to manage biofouling risks.

24. Using functional responses and prey switching to quantify invasion success of the Pacific oyster, Crassostrea gigas.

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