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Paracorophium excavatum
Differential Impacts of Shared Parasites on Fitness Components Among Competing Hosts
Ecotoxicology of Estuarine Amphipod Paracorophium Excavatum
Are Parasite Richness and Abundance Linked to Prey Species Richness and Individual Feeding Preferences in fish Hosts?
Greater Amphipod Diversity Associated with Environmental Heterogeneity in Deep-Sea Habitats……………………………………………………………
Population Genetic Structure of New Zealand's Endemic Corophiid
Amphipod Newsletter 23
Parasites Shape Community Structure and Dynamics in Freshwater Crustaceans Cambridge.Org/Par
Hutt Estuary Fine Scale Monitoring 2016/17
Corophiine Amphipods of the Genera Chelicorophium
Population Expansion and Bottlenecks of Helminth Parasites Through Their Complex Life Cycle
A New Species of Hedruris (Nematoda: Hedruridae
AMPHIPOD Newsletter 35 (2011)
Do Parasites Adopt Different Strategies in Different Intermediate Hosts? Host
Trophic Transmission, Distribution and Host-Specificity in Hedruris Spinigera (Nematoda: Hedruridae)
Handbook Elasmopoides 627
Bering Sea Marine Invasive Species Assessment Alaska Center for Conservation Science
Amphipod Newsletter 32
Multi-Locus Phylogenetic Analysis of Amphipoda Indicates a Single Origin of the Pelagic Suborder Hyperiidea
Top View
Amphipod Newsletter 24
Species Roles and Link Roles: a Richer Perspective on Network Ecology
Parasites Shape Community Structure and Dynamics in Freshwater Crustaceans Cambridge.Org/Par
Local Diversity Reduces Infection Risk Across Multiple Freshwater Host-Parasite Associations
The Amphipods Caprella Penantis and Hyale Schmidtii As Biomonitors of Trace Metal Contamination in Intertidal Ecosystems of Algeciras Bay, Southern Spain
1 Amphipoda of the Northeast Pacific
Hutt Estuary: Fine Scale Monitoring 2011/12
Fine Scale Monitoring 2009/10
Fish Fauna of the Avon-Heathcote Estuary, Christchurch
Using Amphipods As Bioindicators of Metal Pollution in the Marine Environment
The Ecological Importance of Amphipod–Parasite Associations for Aquatic Ecosystems
A Classification of Tasmanian Estuaries and Assessment of Their Conservation Significance Using Ecological and Physical Attributes, Population and Land Use
Amphipod Newsletter 22