High tolerance to abiotic stressors and invasion success of the slow growing freshwater snail, Melanoides tuberculatus

article by Scott M. Weir & Christopher J. Salice published 9 August 2011 in Biological Invasions

High tolerance to abiotic stressors and invasion success of the slow growing freshwater snail, Melanoides tuberculatus is …
instance of (P31):
scholarly articleQ13442814

External links are
P356DOI10.1007/S10530-011-0084-X
P5875ResearchGate publication ID229070416

P50authorChristopher J SaliceQ89953013
P2093author name stringScott M. Weir
P2860cites workManaging the risk of invasive species: how well do functional traits determine invasion strategy and success?Q51175655
Evolutionary and physiological adaptations of aquatic invasive animals: r selection versus resistanceQ55869903
Variation in Desiccation Tolerance in Freshwater Snails and Its Consequences for Invasion AbilityQ55870513
ALIEN FISHES IN CALIFORNIA WATERSHEDS: CHARACTERISTICS OF SUCCESSFUL AND FAILED INVADERSQ55870640
Aquatic pollution increases the relative success of invasive speciesQ56764931
What explains the invading success of the aquatic mud snail Potamopyrgus antipodarum (Hydrobiidae, Mollusca)?Q56773440
Biological and ecological characteristics of invasive species: a gammarid studyQ56778919
Invasive species profiling? Exploring the characteristics of non-native fishes across invasion stages in CaliforniaQ56785660
Temperature Tolerance of Red-Rim MelaniaMelanoides tuberculatus, an Exotic Aquatic Snail Established in the United StatesQ56909757
Pesticides and public health: integrated methods of mosquito managementQ27487788
Biological invasions: Lessons for ecologyQ33793741
The introduction of Melanoides tuberculata (Mollusca: Thiaridae) to the island of Saint Lucia (West Indies) and its role in the decline of Biomphalaria glabrata, the snail intermediate host of Schistosoma mansoniQ34060380
Resistance to cadmium and parasite infection are inversely related in two strains of a freshwater gastropodQ38454292
Fecundity as a basis for risk assessment of nonindigenous freshwater molluscsQ40242620
P433issue2
P407language of work or nameEnglishQ1860
P921main subjectfresh waterQ102192
invasive speciesQ183368
biological invasionQ446911
abiotic stressQ4667893
invasion successQ109467185
aquatic invasionQ110758984
disturbance hypothesisQ115794757
Melanoides tuberculatusQ50407655
P6104maintained by WikiProjectWikiProject Invasion BiologyQ56241615
P1104number of pages10
P304page(s)385-394
P577publication date2011-08-09
P1433published inBiological InvasionsQ15763359
P1476titleHigh tolerance to abiotic stressors and invasion success of the slow growing freshwater snail, Melanoides tuberculatus
P478volume14

Reverse relations

cites work (P2860)
Q56426542Chemical cues released by heterospecific competitors: behavioural responses of native and alien invasive aquatic gastropods
Q41533619Chronic effects of 17α-ethinylestradiol, fluoxetine, and the mixture on individual and population-level end points in Daphnia magna
Q30577263Combined and interactive effects of global climate change and toxicants on populations and communities
Q43483860Effects of 17α-ethynylestradiol, fluoxetine, and the mixture on life history traits and population growth rates in a freshwater gastropod
Q35434986Esterase in imported fire ants, Solenopsis invicta and S. richteri (Hymenoptera: Formicidae): activity, kinetics and variation
Q57063224Feeding dynamics ofMelanoides tuberculata(Müller, 1774)
Q56459993Muddied waters: suspended sediment impacts on gill structure and aerobic scope in an endangered native and an invasive freshwater crayfish
Q34714018Plasticity in offspring contaminant tolerance traits: developmental cadmium exposure trumps parental effects
Q38632424Profound and pervasive degradation of Madagascar's freshwater wetlands and links with biodiversity
Q36651710Stress for invasion success? Temperature stress of preceding generations modifies the response to insecticide stress in an invasive pest insect
Q39453066Transgenerational cross-tolerance to stress: parental exposure to predators increases offspring contaminant tolerance

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