James (Jeb) Byers
Department of Zoology
University of New Hampshire
46 College Rd.
Durham, NH 03824-2617
Ph.D., University of California, Santa
Barbara
Post-doctoral Fellow, Friday Harbor Laboratories, University
of Washington
Assistant Professor, Dept. of Zoology,University of New Hampshire
Associate Professor, Dept. of Zoology, University of New Hampshire
jebyers@unh.edu
(603) 862-0006
Marine community and population ecology; Biological invasions;
Conservation biology
I have a broad base of ecological research interests that
involve the study of species interactions in nearshore, estuarine,
and marsh environments. The majority of my research focuses on
quantitatively measuring impacts of non-indigenous species on
native biota in invaded marine communities. Interactions with
non-indigenous species are now the second leading cause of endangerment
and extinction of native species. Therefore I have sought to
develop and implement new quantitative tools that 1) aid our
understanding of how and when invading species will impact native
systems and 2) help increase our ability to predict outcomes
of future invasions.
Some of my additional projects and interests include the study
of:
- Modification of ecological interactions by parasites
- Physical-biological coupling in estuaries
- Design and function of marine reserves
- Development of biological indicators for detection of environmental
perturbations
- Community-level effects of Paralytic Shellfish Poisoning
on aquatic systems
I approach all of my projects with experimental manipulations
and modeling, and in general, I am a strong proponent of incorporating
quantitative approaches in ecological studies whenever possible.
In many of my field experiments I have utilized molluscs as study
organisms, because this phylum is well suited to experimental
manipulation and typically associated with a wide range of digenetic
parasites.
My
interests in ecology extend beyond those in which I am currently
involved. I welcome graduate students with a strong work ethic
who are eager to address ecological questions with quantitative
rigor and innovation. I push students into developing strong,
independent, creative ideas and I stress the importance of placing
research into a broad context that is relevant to important ecological
and conservation questions.
Selected Publications:
- Byers, J. E. 1999. The distribution of an introduced mollusc
and its role in the long-term demise of a native confamilial
species. Biological Invasions 1(4): 339-353 pdf
- Parker, I., D. Simberloff, M. Lonsdale, K. Goodell, M. Wonham,
P. Kareiva, M. Williamson, B. Von Holle, P. Moyle, J. E. Byers,
L. Goldwasser. 1999. Impact: toward a framework for understanding
the ecological effects of invaders. Biological Invasions
1(1): 3-19 Abstract;
pdf
- Byers, J. E. 2000. Competition between two estuarine snails:
implications for invasions of exotic species. Ecology
81(5): 1225-1239 Abstract;
pdf
- Byers, J. E. 2000. Effects of body size and resource availability
on dispersal in a native and a non-native estuarine snail. Journal
of Experimental Marine Biology and Ecology 248(2): 133-150
Abstract;
pdf
- Byers, J. E. 2000. Differential susceptibility to hypoxia
aids estuarine invasion. Marine Ecology Progress Series
203: 123-132 Abstract;
pdf
- Byers, J. E. and L. Goldwasser. 2001. Exposing the mechanism
and timing of impact of non-indigenous species on native species.
Ecology 82(5): 1330-1343 Abstract;
pdf
- Lenihan, H. S., C. H. Peterson, J. E. Byers, J. H. Grabowski,
and G. Thayer. 2001. Cascading of habitat degradation: oyster
reefs invaded by refugee fishes escaping stress. Ecological
Applications 11(3): 764-782 Abstract;
pdf
- Byers, J. E. 2002. Physical habitat attribute mediates biotic
resistance to non-indigenous species invasion. Oecologia 130(1):
146-156 Article;
pdf
- Byers, J. E., S. Reichard, J. Randall, I. Parker, et al.
2002. Directing research to reduce the impacts of nonindigenous
species. Conservation Biology 16(3): 630-640 Abstract;
pdf
- Byers, J. E., 2002. Impact of non-indigenous species enhanced
by anthropogenic alteration of selection regimes. Oikos 97(3):
449-458 Abstract;
pdf
- Byers, J. E. and E. Noonburg 2003. Scale dependent effects
of biotic resistance to biological invasion. Ecology 84(6):
1428-1433 Abstract;
pdf
- Meyer, J. and J. E. Byers 2005. As good as dead? Sublethal
predation faciliates lethal predation on an intertidal clam.
Ecology Letters 8(2): 160-166 Abstract;
pdf
Byers, J. E.
2005. Marine reserves enhance abundance but not competitive impacts
of a harvested nonindigneous species. Ecology 86(2): 487-500
Abstract;
pdf
- Noonburg, E. G. and J. E. Byers 2005. More harm than good:
when invader vulnerability to predators enhances impact on native
species. Ecology 86(10): 2555-2560 Abstract;
pdf
- Torchin, M., J. E. Byers, and T. Huspeni. 2005. Differential
parasitism of native and introduced snails: replacement of a
parasite fauna. Biological Invasions 7(6): 885-894. Abstract;
pdf
- Byers, J. E. 2005. Quantifying geographical variation in
physiological performance to address the absence of invading
species. Ecoscience 12(3): 358-365; [Special volume: Spatial
and temporal dynamics of biological invasions] Abstract;
pdf
- Reusink, J., H. Lenihan, A. Trimble, K. Heiman, F. Micheli,
J. E. Byers, and M. Kay. 2005. Introduction of non-native
oysters: ecosystem effects and restoration implications. Annual
Review of Ecology, Evolution, and Systematics 36: 643-689.
Abstract;
pdf
- Griffen, B. D. and J. E. Byers. 2006. Partitioning mechanisms
of predator interference in different habitats. Oecologia
146(4): 608-614. pdf
- Byers, J. E. and J. Pringle. 2006. Going against the flow:
retention, range limits and invasions in advective environments.
Marine Ecology Progress Series 313: 27-41. pdf
- Griffen, B. D. and J. E. Byers. 2006. Intraguild predation
reduces redundancy of predator species in multiple predator assemblage.
Journal of Animal Ecology 75: 959-966. pdf
- Freeman, A. and J. E. Byers. 2006. Divergent induced responses
to an invasive predator in marine mussel populations. Science
313 (5788): 831-833. pdf ;
- [Article summarized in Science for "News of the
Week, Evolution" pdf;
- Audio
Archive of story on National Public Radio]
- Byers, J. E., K. Cuddington, C. Jones, T. Talley, A. Hastings,
J. Lambrinos, J. Crooks, W. Wilson. 2006. Using ecosystem engineers
to restore ecological systems. Trends in Ecology & Evolution
21(9): 493-500. pdf
- Griffiths, J., M. Dethier, A. Newsom, J. E. Byers, J. Meyer,
F. Oyarzun, and H. Lenihan. 2006. Invertebrate community responses
to recreational clam digging. Marine Biology 149(6): 1489-1497.
pdf
- Hastings, A., J. E. Byers, J. Crooks, K. Cuddington, C. Jones,
J. Lambrinos, T. Talley, A., W. Wilson. 2007. Ecosystem engineering
in space and time. Ecology Letters 10(2): 153-164. pdf
- Tyrell, M. C. and J. E. Byers. 2007. Do artificial substrates
favor nonindigenous fouling species over natives? Journal
of Experimental Marine Biology and Ecology 342: 54-60. pdf
available on request
- Wood, C. L., J. E. Byers, K. Cottingham, I. Altman, M. Donahue,
and A. Blakeslee. 2007. Parasites alter community structure.
Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences 104(22):
9335-9339. pdf
- Byers, J. E. and E. G. Noonburg. 2007. Poaching, enforcement,
and the efficacy of marine reserves. Ecological Applications
17(7): 1851-1856. pdf
- Byers, J. E. 2007. Lessons from disparate ecosystem engineers.
In: Ecosystem engineering: plants to protists. Eds.: K.
Cuddington, J. E. Byers, W. Wilson & A. Hastings. Academic
Press.
- Byers, J. E., A. Blakeslee, E. Linder, A. Cooper, and T.
Maguire. 2008. Controls of spatial variation in the prevalence
of trematode parasites infecting a marine snail. Ecology
89(2): 439-451. pdf
(or for low resolution version click here: pdf)
- Blakeslee, A. and J. E. Byers. 2008. Using parasites to inform
ecological history: comparisons among three congeneric marine
snails. Ecology 89(4):1068-1078. pdf
- Byers, J. E. (in press). Impacts of invasive animals in salt
marshes. In: Anthropogenic modification of North American
salt marshes: causes, consequences, and recommendations, Eds.:
Brian Silliman, Mark Bertness, & Edwin Grosholz. University
of California Press.
- Byers, J. E. (in press). Competition in Marine Invasions.
In: Marine Bioinvasions: Ecology, Conservation, and Management
Perspectives, Eds. Gil Rilov & Jeff Crooks. Springer.
- BOOK
K. Cuddington, J. E. Byers, W. Wilson and A. Hastings, editors.
2007. Ecosystem engineering: plants to protists. Academic
Press. book
jacket
UNH Zoology
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