Collection of papers presented at the Second International Conference on Marine Bioinvasions. The complexity of marine ecosystems challenges easy solutions to prevention, management, and control of introduced species. This book highlights issues of timely importance in marine bioinvasion science, including potential evolutionary consequences and the feasibillity of biological control.
Introduction. Assessing the ecological impacts of an introduced seastar: the importance of multiple methods; D.J. Ross, C.R. Johnson, C.L. Hewitt. Native species vulnerability to introduced predators: testing an inducible defense and a refuge from predation; W.L. Whitlow, N.A. Rice, C. Sweeney. Biotic resistance experienced by an invasive crustacean in a temperate estuary; C.E. Hunt, S.B. Yamada. Alteration to microbial community composition and changes in decomposition associated with an invasive intertidal macrophyte; D.R. Hahn. Ecological and economic implications of a tropical jellyfish invader in the Gulf of Mexico; W.M. Graham, D.L. martin, D.L. Felder, V.L. Asper, H.M. Perry. Rapid evolution of an established feral telapia (Oreochromis spp.): the need to incorporate invasion science into regulatory structures; B.A. Costa-Pierce. Estuarine and scalar patterns of invasion in the soft-bottom benthic communities of the San Francisco Estuary; H. Lee II, B.Thompson, S. Lowe. History of aquatic invertebrate invasions in the Caspian Sea; I.A. Grigorovich, T.W. Therriault, H.J. MacIasaac. Biological control of marine invasive species: cautionary tales and land-based lessons; D. Secord. Did biological control cause extinction of the coconut moth, Levuana iridescens, in Fiji? A.M. Kuris. Instructions for Authors.