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David Strayer

Fuller, Matthew R., M. W. Doyle, and David L. Strayer. 2015. “Causes and Consequences of Habitat Fragmentation in River Networks”. Annals of the New York Academy of Sciences, n/a - n/a. doi:10.1111/nyas.12853.
Teixeira, Mariana, Mary Budd, and David L. Strayer. 2015. “Responses of Epiphytic Aquatic Macroinvertebrates to Hypoxia”. Inland Waters 5 (1): 75-80. doi:10.5268/IW10.5268/IW-5.1.010.5268/IW-5.1.764.
Teixeira, Mariana, and David L. Strayer. 2014. “Hypoxia Tolerance of the Invertebrates Associated With Water-Chestnut (Trapa Natans) Beds in the Hudson River”. Final Reports of the Tibor T. Polgar Fellowship Program, 2013, Hudson Research Foundation.
Strayer, David L. 2014. “Sycamores”. Poughkeepsie Journal. http://www.caryinstitute.org/newsroom/stately-sycamores-are-more-beautiful-utilitarian.
Strayer, David L., Kathryn A. Hattala, Andrew Kahnle, Robert D. Adams, and Aaron Fisk. 2014. “Has the Hudson River Fish Community Recovered from the Zebra Mussel Invasion Along With Its Forage Base?”. Canadian Journal of Fisheries and Aquatic Sciences 71 (8): 1146-57. doi:10.1139/cjfas-2013-0549.
Findlay, Stuart E. G., David L. Strayer, S.D. Smith, and Neil Curri. 2014. “Magnitude and Patterns of Change in Submerged Aquatic Vegetation of the Tidal Freshwater Hudson River”. Estuaries and Coasts 37 (5): 1233-42. doi:10.1007/s12237-013-9758-1.
Nakano, Daisuke, and David L. Strayer. 2014. “Biofouling Animals in Fresh Water: Biology, Impacts, and Ecosystem Engineering”. Frontiers in Ecology and the Environment 12 (3): 167-75. doi:10.1890/130071.
Strayer, David L., Jonathan J. Cole, Stuart E. G. Findlay, David T. Fischer, Jessica A. Gephart, Heather M. Malcom, Michael L. Pace, and Emma J. Rosi-Marshall. 2014. “Decadal-Scale Change in a Large-River Ecosystem”. BioScience 64 (6): 496-510. doi:10.1093/biosci/biu061.
Harris, Cornelia, David L. Strayer, and Stuart E. G. Findlay. 2014. “The Ecology of Freshwater Wrack Along Natural and Engineered Hudson River Shorelines”. Hydrobiologia 722 (1): 233-45. doi:10.1007/s10750-013-1706-3.
Strayer, David L. 2013. “Pot Smokers May Be Green, But Growers Usually aren’t”. Poughkeepsie Journal. http://www.caryinstitute.org/newsroom/pot-smokers-may-be-green-growers-usually-arent.