Project | Data Management Plan |
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Does larval transport or physiological tolerance set the southern range boundary of a northern blue mussel? |
Principal Investigator: Michael A. McCartney (University of North Carolina at Wilmington)
INTEGRATIVE AND COMPARATIVE BIOLOGY~2011~51~McCartney, MA; Lima, TG~10.1093/icb/icr07~474~484~~http://wok-ws.isiknowledge.com/WoS?recid=199938238#000293908300015~Evolutionary Consequences of Introgression at M7 Lysin, a Gamete Recognition Locus, Following Secondary Contact Between Blue Mussel Species~Y~~~~~~
PLOS One~2012~7~Charles E. Tilburg, Michael A. McCartney, Philip O. Yund~~1-16~~~~Across-Shelf Transport of Bivalve Larvae: Can the Interface between a Coastal Current and Inshore Waters Act as an Ecological Barrier to Larval Dispersal?~~~~~~~
PLoS One~2014~9~Klibansky, L.K.J. & McCartney, M.A~10.1371/journal.pone.0108433~e108433~~~~Conspecific sperm precedence is a reproductive barrier between free-spawning marine mussels in the Northwest Atlantic Mytilus hybrid zone.~~~~~~~
Molecular Biology and Evolution~2013~30~Lima, T.G. & McCartney, M.A.~doi:10.1093/molbev/mst165~2688~~~~Adaptive evolution of M3 lysin?a candidate gamete recognition protein in the Mytilus edulis species complex.~~~~~~~
PLoS One~2012~7~Tilburg, C. E, M. A. McCartney, and P. O. Yund~10.1371/journal.pone.0048960~e48960~~~~Across-shelf transport of bivalve larvae: Can the interface between a coastal current and inshore waters act as an ecological barrier to larval dispersal?~~~~~~~