All Stories

  1. Niche partitioning of intertidal seagrasses: evidence of the influence of substrate temperature
  2. Epibiotic pressure contributes to biofouling invader success
  3. Biosecurity messages are lost in translation to citizens: Implications for devolving management to citizens
  4. DecipheringPvalues: Beware false certainty
  5. Mini-review: Assessing the drivers of ship biofouling management – aligning industry and biosecurity goals
  6. INVASIVESNET towards an International Association for Open Knowledge on Invasive Alien Species
  7. Acanthaster planci invasions: applying biosecurity practices to manage a native boom and bust coral pest in Australia
  8. Marine pests in paradise: capacity building, awareness raising and preliminary introduced species port survey results in the Republic of Palau
  9. Understanding Acceptable Level of Risk: Incorporating the Economic Cost of Under-Managing Invasive Species
  10. Evolving Marine Biosecurity in the Galapagos Islands
  11. Invasion Expansion: Time since introduction best predicts global ranges of marine invaders
  12. The Enlargement of the Suez Canal and Introduction of Non-Indigenous Species to the Mediterranean Sea
  13. Classification of Non-Indigenous Species Based on Their Impacts: Considerations for Application in Marine Management
  14. Assessing marine biosecurity risks when data are limited: bioregion pathway and species-based exposure analyses
  15. Risk Assessment in Ballast Water Management
  16. ‘Double trouble’: the expansion of the Suez Canal and marine bioinvasions in the Mediterranean Sea
  17. A hub and spoke network model to analyse the secondary dispersal of introduced marine species in Indonesia
  18. How often are invasion-induced ecological impacts missed?
  19. Protecting high-value areas from introduced marine species
  20. The role of uncertainty and subjective influences on consequence assessment by aquatic biosecurity experts
  21. Vulnerabilities and adaptation of ports to climate change
  22. A gastropod’s induced behavioral and morphological responses to invasive Carcinus maenas in Australia indicate a lack of novelty advantage
  23. Biotic and abiotic factors affecting the Tasmanian distribution and density of the introduced New Zealand porcelain crab Petrolisthes elongatus
  24. Mitigating uncertainty using alternative information sources and expert judgement in aquatic non-indigenous species risk assessment
  25. Assessing the port to port risk of vessel movements vectoring non-indigenous marine species within and across domestic Australian borders
  26. A review of international, regional and national biosecurity risk assessment frameworks
  27. The effect of vessel speed on the survivorship of biofouling organisms at different hull locations
  28. Reproductive phenology of the introduced kelp Undaria pinnatifida (Phaeophyceae, Laminariales) in Port Phillip Bay (Victoria, Australia)
  29. Effect of vessel voyage speed on survival of biofouling organisms: implications for translocation of non-indigenous marine species
  30. The Vessel as a Vector – Biofouling, Ballast Water and Sediments
  31. Characterizing Vectors of Marine Invasion
  32. Latitudinal Patterns of Biological Invasions in Marine Ecosystems: A Polar Perspective
  33. Ballast water risk assessment: principles, processes, and methods
  34. Seaweed Invasions
  35. Non-Native Aquaculture Species Releases: Implications for Aquatic Ecosystems
  36. Impacts of introduced seaweeds
  37. Introductions of seaweeds: accidental transfer pathways and mechanisms
  38. Critical review of the IMO international convention on the management of ships’ ballast water and sediments
  39. Distribution, density, and habitat use among native and introduced populations of the Australasian burrowing isopod Sphaeroma quoianum
  40. Ballast Water Management for European Seas - Is There a Need for a Decision Support System?
  41. Survey evaluations to assess marine bioinvasions
  42. Novel method for assessing the en route survivorship of biofouling organisms on various vessel types
  43. Mechanisms for the prevention of marine bioinvasions for better biosecurity
  44. Nonindigenous biota on artificial structures: could habitat creation facilitate biological invasions?
  45. Introduced Macroalgae – a Growing Concern
  46. Abundance of the introduced seastar, Asterias amurensis, and spatial variability in soft sediment assemblages in SE Tasmania: Clear correlations but complex interpretation
  47. Mesoscale dispersal of the introduced kelp Undaria pinnatifida attached to unstable substrata
  48. Defining the seaward extent of New Zealand's coastal zone
  49. A hierarchical framework to aid biodiversity assessment for coastal zone management and marine protected area selection
  50. Efficacy of physical removal of a marine pest: the introduced kelp Undaria pinnatifida in a Tasmanian Marine Reserve
  51. Reproductive phenology of the introduced kelpUndaria pinnatifida(Phaeophyceae, Laminariales) in Tasmania, Australia
  52. Marine introductions in the Shark Bay World Heritage Property, Western Australia: a preliminary assessment
  53. Management of exogenous threats to Antarctica and the sub-Antarctic Islands: balancing risks from TBT and non-indigenous marine organisms
  54. Invasive species—vectors and management strategies
  55. New Zealand marine biosecurity: Delivering outcomes in a fluid environment
  56. Marine biosecurity post‐border management: Developing incursion response systems for New Zealand
  57. Interaction and impacts of two introduced species on a soft-sediment marine assemblage in SE Tasmania
  58. Introduced and cryptogenic species in Port Phillip Bay, Victoria, Australia
  59. Ships' sea-chests: an overlooked transfer mechanism for non-indigenous marine species?
  60. Variability in the impact of an introduced predator (Asterias amurensis: Asteroidea) on soft-sediment assemblages
  61. Marine introductions in the Southern Ocean: an unrecognised hazard to biodiversity
  62. Marine Biosecurity Issues in the World Oceans: Global Activities and Australian Directions
  63. Assessing the ecological impacts of an introduced seastar: the importance of multiple methods
  64. Development and evaluation of a PCR-based test for detection of Asterias (Echinodermata : Asteroidea) larvae in Australian plankton samples from ballast water
  65. Heterogeneous zooplankton distribution in a ship's ballast tanks
  66. Invasion success: does size really matter?
  67. Distribution and Biodiversity of Australian Tropical Marine Bioinvasions
  68. Risk Assessment of Marine Biological Invasions
  69. Toward Understanding Patterns of Coastal Marine Invasions: A Prospectus
  70. Impact of introduced seastars Asterias amurensis on survivorship of juvenile commercial bivalves Fulvia tenuicostata
  71. A new species of large and highly contractile hydroid in the genus Candelabrum (Hydrozoa: Anthoathecatae) from southern Oregon, U.S.A.
  72. THE AUSTRALIAN DISTRIBUTION OF THE INTRODUCED SPHAEROMATID ISOPOD, PARACERCEIS SCULPTA
  73. A new species of large and highly contractile hydroid in the genus <i>Candelabrum</i> (Hydrozoa: Anthoathecatae) from southern Oregon, U.S.A.
  74. Outbreak ofMytilopsis sallei(Récluz, 1849) (Bivalvia: Dreissenidae) in Australia
  75. Hierarchy underlies Patterns of Variability in Species Inhabiting Natural Microcosms
  76. Microcosms as Models for Generating and Testing Community Theory
  77. A hydrozoan, Zanclella bryozoophila n.gen., n.sp. (Zancleidae), symbiotic with a bryozoan, with a discussion of the Zancleoidea
  78. Canals, Invasion Corridors and Introductions
  79. Introduced macroalgae — A growing concern
  80. Marine Bioinvasion Management: Structural Framework
  81. Examples of Current International, Regional and National Regulatory Frameworks for Preventing and Managing Marine Bioinvasions