J
Janet W. Reid
Researcher at Virginia Museum of Natural History
Publications - 86
Citations - 2097
Janet W. Reid is an academic researcher from Virginia Museum of Natural History. The author has contributed to research in topics: Cyclopoida & Cyclopidae. The author has an hindex of 22, co-authored 86 publications receiving 1953 citations. Previous affiliations of Janet W. Reid include Smithsonian Institution & National Museum of Natural History.
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Chave de identificação e lista de referências bibliográficas para as espécies continentais sulamericanas de vida livre da ordem Cyclopoida (Crustacea, Copepoda)
TL;DR: Uma chave ilustrada e fornecida para auxiliar na identificacao das 108 especies, subespecies e formas de Copepoda, Cyclopoida (Crustacea) de vida livre, conhecidas da America do Sul continental, including as Ilhas Malvinas/Falklands, Aruba and Curacao, gue podem ocorrer em estuarios e lagoas salobras.
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Diversity, ecology and evolution of groundwater copepods
TL;DR: Copepod distributions at small spatial scales are most strongly affected by habitat type and heterogeneity, with sediment grain size and availability of organic matter being important habitat characteristics, and phylogenetic and distributional relicts and a high degree of endemism at different taxonomic levels are reflected.
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The impact of an introduced bivalve (Corbicula fluminea) on the benthos of a sandy stream
Christine C. Hakenkamp,Suzanna G. Ribblett,Margaret A. Palmer,Christopher M. Swan,Janet W. Reid,Mike R. Goodison +5 more
TL;DR: Investigating the effect of an exotic, burrowing bivalve (Corbicula fluminea) on the benthic fauna of a sandy-bottomed stream found it to have the potential to influence the streambed community in different ways, particularly when it both filter- and pedal-feeds.
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Control of Larval Aedes aegypti (Diptera: Culicidae) by Cyclopoid Copepods in Peridomestic Breeding Containers
TL;DR: Mesocyclops longisetus (Thiébaud) should be of practical value for community-based Ae.
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Disturbance and the community structure of stream invertebrates: patch-specific effects and the role of refugia
TL;DR: Despite the fact that past work has shown that refugia may confer enhanced resistance and resilience of copepod and chironomid assemblages in terms of total faunal abundances, the present work suggests that resistance and resilient of the species composition of the community apparently are no greater in refugium patches than in non-refugia patches.