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A
Aldous, Allison, Jenny Brown, Adrien Elseroad, and The Nature Conservancy in Oregon. The Coastal Connection: Assessing Oregon Estuaries for Conservation Planning. Portland, Or.: The Nature Conservancy in Oregon, 2008.
Almasi, Kama N., and Peter M. Eldridge. "A dynamic model of an estuarine invasion by a non-native seagrass." Estuaries and Coasts 31 (2008): p.163-176.
Anonymous. "Is the clam, Tellina bodegensis, on the increase?" Research Briefs. Fish Commission of Oregon 3 (1950): p.32.
Anonymous. "US oyster farms fear green crab." Fish Farming International 24 (1997): p.27.
Anonymous. "Oregon Fish Warden’s annual report." Pacific Fisherman 9, no. 1 (1911): p.12.
Anonymous. "For Better Oysters: Eastern Bivalves To Be Planted In Yaquina Bay. A Carload Now on Its Way to San Francisco -- Promising New Industry." Morning Oregonian (1896): p.8.
Anonymous. "News from the fisheries districts. Columbia River." Pacific Fisherman 8, no. 6 (1910): p.20.
B
Baker, Patrick. "Review of ecology and fishery of the Olympia oyster, Ostrea lurida with annotated bibliography." Journal of Shellfish Research 14 (1995): 501-518.
Bayer, Range D.. Audubon Important Bird Areas Program in Oregon: Site Nomination Form [Yaquina Bay]., 2002.
Bayer, Range D.. American Bird Conservancy: Site Nomination Form., 1998.
Breese, Wilbur P., and Robert E. Malouf. Hatchery manual for the Pacific oyster In ORESU-H. Vol. no.75-002. Corvallis, Or.: Oregon State University, 1975.
Breese, Wilbur P.. Practical problems of phasing an oyster hatchery into production In Proceedings of the National Shellfisheries Association. Vol. 60., 1969.
Breese, Wilbur P., and William Q. Wick. Oyster farming: culturing, harvesting, and processing a product of the Pacific coast area In S.G.. Vol. no.13. Corvallis, OR: Oregon State University, 1974.
Burgess, Fred J., and Roland E. Dimick. Pulp Mill Waste Degredation in Marine Waters: April 1, 1964 through March 31, 1966. Corvallis, Or.: Oregon State University, 1966.
C
Carlton, James T.. "Introduced marine and estuarine mollusks of north America: an end-of-the 20th-century perspective." Journal of Shellfish Research 11 (1992): p.489-505.
Carlton, James T.. History, Biogeography, and Ecology of the Introduced Invertebrates of the Pacific Coast of North America. Ph. D. ed. Davis, California: University California, Davis, 1979.
Carlton, James T., and J. Hodder. "Biogeography and dispersal of coastal marine organisms: experimental studies on a replica of a 16th-century sailing vessel." Marine Biology 121 (1995): 721-730.
Carlton, James T., John W. Chapman, Jonathan B. Geller, Jessica A. Miller, Gregory M. Ruiz, Deborah A. Carlton, Megan I. McCuller, Nancy C. Treneman, Brian P. Steves, Ralph A. Breitenstein et al. "Ecological and biological studies of ocean rafting: Japanese tsunami marine debris in North America and the Hawaiian Islands." Aquatic Invasions 13, no. 1 (2018): p.1-9.
Castillo, Gonzalo C.. Benthic Biological Invasions in Two Temperate Estuaries and Their Effects on Trophic Relations of Native Fish and Community Stability. Ph. D. ed. Corvallis, Or.: Oregon State University, 2000.
Chapman, John W., Ralph Arthur Breitenstein, and Marine Bioinvasions Lab. Estuary Inhabitants Species List for Yaquina and Coos Bays, Oregon., 2012.
Chapman, John W., Jingchun Li, Michael F. McGowan, Ralph A. Breitenstein, Ralph Appy, Kathryn A. Hieb, Christina N. Piotrowski, and Leanne E. Elder. "A doubled down invasion of the northeast Pacific by the Asian mud shrimp, Upogebia major, and its coevolved bopyrid isopod parasite, Orthione griffenis." Aquatic Invasions 16 (2021): p.721-749.
Chapman, John W.. "Invasions of the Northeast Pacific by Asian and Atlantic gammaridean amphipod crustaceans, including a new species of Corophium." Journal of Crustacean Biology 8 (1988): 364-382.
Cordell, Jeffery R., Lucinda M. Tear, and Stephen M. Bollens. "Modelling physico-chemical factors affecting occurrences of a non-indigenous planktonic copepod in northeast Pacific estuaries." Biological Invasions 12 (2010): p.1427-1445.
Cordell, Jeffrey R., and Sean M. Morrison. "The invasive Asian copepod, Pseudodiaptomus inopinus, in Oregon, Washington, and British Columbia estuaries." Estuaries 19 (1996): 629-638.

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