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Bruce A. Snyder

Researcher at Georgia College & State University

Publications -  25
Citations -  837

Bruce A. Snyder is an academic researcher from Georgia College & State University. The author has contributed to research in topics: Amynthas & Megascolecidae. The author has an hindex of 10, co-authored 24 publications receiving 721 citations. Previous affiliations of Bruce A. Snyder include Kansas State University & University of Wisconsin–Green Bay.

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Pandora's Box Contained Bait : The Global Problem of Introduced Earthworms

TL;DR: A number of endogenous and exogenous factors that may contribute to the successful establishment and spread of peregrine species are identified and quantification of these factors may help to determine why certain species become invasive while others do not.
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Current and Potential Roles of Soil Macroinvertebrates (Earthworms, Millipedes, and Isopods) in Ecological Restoration

TL;DR: How large obligate detritivores (earthworms, millipedes, and isopods) have been used to accomplish restoration goals, assess restoration progress, and function as bioindicators are reviewed.
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Dietary flexibility aids Asian earthworm invasion in North American forests.

TL;DR: The interaction between two of the most widespread earthworm invaders in the world is explored and the effects of species invasiveness and habitat invasibility separately are studied separately through an alternative approach of "third habitat" in Tennessee, USA.
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Spatial variability of an invasive earthworm (Amynthas agrestis) population and potential impacts on soil characteristics and millipedes in the Great Smoky Mountains National Park, USA

TL;DR: Evidence for potentially negative interactions between millipedes and A. agrestis suggests that expansion of the non-native earthworm into new habitats in the Great Smoky Mountains National Park may alter soil physical properties and could pose a threat to native millipede diversity.
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Competition between invasive earthworms (Amynthas corticis, Megascolecidae) and native North American millipedes (Pseudopolydesmus erasus, Polydesmidae): Effects on carbon cycling and soil structure.

TL;DR: In this paper, the effects of earthworms and millipedes on soil structure were investigated in the southern Appalachian Mountains in southeastern North America and the results indicated that invasion of ecosystems by A. corticis is unlikely to be limited by litter species and these earthworms are likely to compete directly for food resources with native millipeds.