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Ecology and Evolution

D-Index
35
Citations
4537
World Ranking
7400
National Ranking
459

Overview

Sarah A. Bailey is affiliated with Fisheries and Oceans Canada in Canada, focusing on environmental science with a specialization in global and planetary change, ecology, oceanography, nature and landscape conservation, and genetics.

Their research covers several main topics, including:

  • Marine Ecology and Invasive Species
  • Marine Biology and Ecology Research
  • Parasite Biology and Host Interactions
  • Aquatic Invertebrate Ecology and Behavior
  • Environmental DNA in Biodiversity Studies
  • Marine Biology and Environmental Chemistry
  • Identification and Quantification in Food

Among their recent publications are:

  • "Drivers of future alien species impacts: An expert-based assessment" (2020) in Global Change Biology
  • "Trends in the detection of aquatic non-indigenous species across global marine, estuarine and freshwater ecosystems: A 50-year perspective" (2020) in Diversity and Distributions
  • "Taming the terminological tempest in invasion science" (2024) in Biological reviews/Biological reviews of the Cambridge Philosophical Society
  • "Marine ecosystem-based management: challenges remain, yet solutions exist, and progress is occurring" (2024) in npj Ocean Sustainability
  • "First evaluation of ballast water management systems on operational ships for minimizing introductions of nonindigenous zooplankton" (2022) in Marine Pollution Bulletin

The scientist frequently coauthors with a number of colleagues, including:

  • Oscar Casas-Monroy (13 publications)
  • Dawson Ogilvie (7 publications)
  • Jocelyn Kydd (6 publications)
  • R. Rozon (6 publications)
  • Hugh J. MacIsaac (4 publications)

Regular publication venues for their work include:

  • Marine Pollution Bulletin (4 publications)
  • Frontiers in Marine Science (4 publications)
  • Management of Biological Invasions (4 publications)
  • Diversity and Distributions (2 publications)
  • Biological reviews/Biological reviews of the Cambridge Philosophical Society (2 publications)

Best Publications

  • Characterised and projected costs of nonindigenous species in Canada

    Robert I Colautti;Sarah A Bailey;Colin D. A. van Overdijk;Keri Amundsen

  • Drivers of future alien species impacts: An expert-based assessment.

    Franz Essl;Franz Essl;Bernd Lenzner;Sven Bacher;Sarah Bailey

  • An overview of thirty years of research on ballast water as a vector for aquatic invasive species to freshwater and marine environments

    Sarah A. Bailey

  • Trends in the detection of aquatic non‐indigenous species across global marine, estuarine and freshwater ecosystems: A 50‐year perspective

    Sarah A. Bailey;Lyndsay Brown;Marnie L. Campbell;João Canning-Clode

  • Climate change opens new frontiers for marine species in the Arctic: current trends and future invasion risks

    Farrah T. Chan;Keara Stanislawczyk;Anna C. Sneekes;Alexander Dvoretsky

  • Viability of invertebrate diapausing eggs collected from residual ballast sediment

    Sarah A. Bailey;Ian C. Duggan;Colin D. A. van Overdijk;Philip T. Jenkins

  • Evaluating efficacy of an environmental policy to prevent biological invasions.

    Sarah A. Bailey;Matthew G. Deneau;Laurent Jean;Chris J. Wiley

  • Invertebrates associated with residual ballast water and sediments of cargo-carrying ships entering the Great Lakes

    Ian C Duggan;Colin Da van Overdijk;Sarah A Bailey;Philip T Jenkins

  • Invasion risk posed by macroinvertebrates transported in ships' ballast tanks.

    Elizabeta Briski;Sara Ghabooli;Sarah A. Bailey;Hugh J. MacIsaac

  • Use of DNA barcoding to detect invertebrate invasive species from diapausing eggs

    Elizabeta Briski;Melania E. Cristescu;Sarah A. Bailey;Sarah A. Bailey;Hugh J. MacIsaac

  • Performance comparison of genetic markers for high-throughput sequencing-based biodiversity assessment in complex communities.

    Aibin Zhan;Sarah A. Bailey;Daniel D. Heath;Hugh J. Macisaac

  • Relative risk assessment for ballast-mediated invasions at Canadian Arctic ports.

    Farrah T. Chan;Sarah A. Bailey;Chris J. Wiley;Hugh J. MacIsaac

  • Relative importance of vessel hull fouling and ballast water as transport vectors of nonindigenous species to the Canadian Arctic

    Farrah T. Chan;Hugh J. MacIsaac;Sarah A. Bailey

  • Salinity tolerance of diapausing eggs of freshwater zooplankton

    Sarah A. Bailey;Ian C. Duggan;Colin D.A. van Overdijk;Thomas H. Johengen

  • Invertebrate resting stages in residual ballast sediment of transoceanic ships

    Sarah A Bailey;Ian C Duggan;Philip T Jenkins;Hugh J MacIsaac

  • Beyond propagule pressure: importance of selection during the transport stage of biological invasions

    Elizabeta Briski;Farrah T Chan;John A Darling;Velda Lauringson

  • Relationship between propagule pressure and colonization pressure in invasion ecology: a test with ships' ballast.

    Elizabeta Briski;Sarah A. Bailey;Oscar Casas-Monroy;Claudio DiBacco

  • Domestic ballast operations on the Great Lakes: potential importance of Lakers as a vector for introduction and spread of nonindigenous species

    Michael P. RupM.P. Rup;Michael P. RupM.P. Rup;Michael P. RupM.P. Rup;Sarah A. BaileyS.A. Bailey;Sarah A. BaileyS.A. Bailey;Sarah A. BaileyS.A. Bailey;Chris J. WileyC.J. Wiley;Chris J. WileyC.J. Wiley;Chris J. WileyC.J. Wiley;Mark S. MintonM.S. Minton;Mark S. MintonM.S. Minton;Mark S. MintonM.S. Minton

  • INVASIVESNET towards an International Association for Open Knowledge on Invasive Alien Species

    Frances Lucy;Helen Roy;Annie Simpson;James T. Carlton

  • Is salinity an obstacle for biological invasions

    Filipa Paiva;Andrea Barco;Yiyong Chen;Alireza Mirzajani

  • Invertebrates and their dormant eggs transported in ballast sediments of ships arriving to the Canadian coasts and the Laurentian Great Lakes

    Elizabeta Briski;Elizabeta Briski;Sarah A. Bailey;Sarah A. Bailey;Hugh J. MacIsaac

Frequent Co-Authors

Hugh J. MacIsaac
Hugh J. MacIsaac University of Windsor
Elizabeta Briski
Elizabeta Briski GEOMAR Helmholtz Centre for Ocean Research Kiel
Gregory M. Ruiz
Gregory M. Ruiz Smithsonian Environmental Research Center
Aibin Zhan
Aibin Zhan Chinese Academy of Sciences
Suzanne Roy
Suzanne Roy Université du Québec à Rimouski
André Rochon
André Rochon Université du Québec à Rimouski
Maiju Lehtiniemi
Maiju Lehtiniemi Finnish Environment Institute
Thomas H. Johengen
Thomas H. Johengen University of Michigan–Ann Arbor
Marcel J.W. Veldhuis
Marcel J.W. Veldhuis Apollo Vredestein

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