Journal articles (please email me if you would like to request for article pdfs):
16. Srivastava, D.S., Coristine, L., Angert, A.L., Bontrager, M., Amundrud, S.L., Williams, J., Yeung, A.C.Y., de Zwaan, D.R., Thompson, P.L., Aitken, S.N., Sunday, J.M., O’Connor, M.I., Whitton, J., Brown, N.E.M., MacLeod, C.D., Wegener Parfrey L., Bernhardt, J.R., Carrillo, J., Harley, C.D.G., Martone, P.T., Freeman, B.G., Tseng, M., Donner, S.D. (2021). Wildcards in climate change biology. Ecological Monographs, 91, e01471 (Link).
15. de Paula, F.R., Richardson, J.S., Yeung, A.C.Y., Mitchell, S.J., Bahaguna, D. (2020). Decadal-scale changes in spanning wood after riparian recruitment in managed stands in headwater streams of coastal British Columbia, Canada. Earth Surface Processes and Landforms, 45, 1974-1989 (Link).
14. Yeung, A.C.Y., Kreutzweiser, D.P., Richardson, J.S. (2019). Stronger effects of litter origin on the processing of conifer than broadleaf leaves: a test of home-field advantage of stream litter breakdown. Freshwater Biology, 64, 1755-1768 (Link).
13. Yeung, A.C.Y., Stenroth, K., Richardson, J.S. (2019). Modelling biophysical controls on stream organic matter standing stocks under a range of forest harvesting impacts. Limnologica, 78, 125714 (Link).
12. Yeung, A.C.Y., Paltsev, A., Daigle, A., Duinker, P.N., Creed, I.F. (2019). Atmospheric change as a driver of change in the Canadian boreal zone. Environmental Reviews, 27, 346-376 (Link). *see virtual issue of the Boreal 2050 project
11. Yeung, A.C.Y. (2018). Promoting environmental conservation one stamp at a time. Biodiversity and Conservation, 27, 3843-3844 (Link) (View-only version).
10. Sutherland, I.J., Villamagna, A.M., Ouellet Dallaire, C., Bennett, E.M., Chin, A.T.M., Yeung, A.C.Y., Tomscha, S.A., Lamothe, K.A., Cormier, R. (2018). Undervalued and under pressure: a plea for greater attention toward regulating ecosystem services. Ecological Indicators, 94, 23-32 (Link).
9. Yeung, A.C.Y., Musetta-Lambert, J.L., Kreutzweiser, D.P., Sibley, P.K., Richardson, J.S. (2018). Relations of interannual differences in stream litter breakdown with discharge: bioassessment implications. Ecosphere, 9, e02423 (Link) (Download article).
8. Yeung, A.C.Y., Richardson, J.S. (2018). Expanding resilience comparisons to address management needs: a response to Ingrisch and Bahn. Trends in Ecology and Evolution, 33, 647-649 (Link).
7. Yeung, A.C.Y. (2018). Arctic nations must adopt renewables to adapt to thaw. Nature, 557, 166 (Link).
6. Yeung, A.C.Y., Lecerf A., Richardson, J.S. (2017). Assessing the long-term ecological effects of riparian management practices on headwater streams in a coastal temperate rainforest. Forest Ecology and Management, 384, 100-109 (Link).
5. Yeung, A.C.Y., Richardson, J.S. (2016). Some conceptual and operational considerations when measuring 'resilience': a response to Hodgson et al. Trends in Ecology and Evolution, 31, 2-3 (Link) (Faculty featured publication).
4. Yeung, A.C.Y., Dudgeon, D. (2015). Do adult snails in headwater streams make upstream migrations to compensate for spate-induced washout? A test using three populations of a tropical caenogastropod. Journal of Molluscan Studies, 81, 417-420 (Link).
3. Yeung, A.C.Y., Dudgeon, D. (2014). Limited life-history variations in a tropical stream caenogastropod, Sulcospira hainanensis, in habitats with contrasting resource availability. Journal of Molluscan Studies, 80, 190-197 (Link).
2. Yeung, A.C.Y., Dudgeon, D. (2014). Production and population dynamics of the prosobranch snail Sulcospira hainanensis (Pachychilidae), a major secondary consumer in Hong Kong streams. Hydrobiologia, 724, 21-39 (Link).
1. Yeung, A.C.Y., Dudgeon, D. (2013). A manipulative study of macroinvertebrate grazers in Hong Kong streams: do snails compete with insects?. Freshwater Biology, 58, 2299-2309 (Link).
Thesis:
2. Yeung, A.C.Y. (2019). Assessing and managing stream detrital dynamics under forest disturbances. Ph.D. thesis, The University of British Columbia, Vancouver. (Link).
1. Yeung, A.C.Y. (2013). Population dynamics and secondary production of a dominant molluscan primary consumer in Hong Kong streams, Sulcospira hainanensis (Gastropoda: Pachychilidae), and their implications for benthic productivity. M.Phil. thesis, The University of Hong Kong, Hong Kong. (Link) [View & Download statistics] [**Non-watermarked pdf on request].
Miscellaneous:
3. Ripple, W.J., et al. (2017). World Scientists’ Warning to Humanity: A Second Notice. Bioscience, 67, 1026-1028: English-to-Chinese translation [Link; also available in the supplementary material of Ripple et al. (2018)].
2. Ecology Alumni, The University of Hong Kong (2014). Comments on the Ecological Impact Assessment of the Environmental Impact Assessment Report on the Expansion of Hong Kong International Airport into a Three-Runway System: Editor (Link)
[* Reported by Hong Kong-based newspapers including Apple Daily, Oriental Daily and The Sun, and featured on online media (1) (2); Letter to the editor of South China Morning Post published on Aug 17, 2014 (Link)]
1. IUCN Species Survival Commission Amphibian Specialist Group (2010). China Herpetological Conservation Action Plan I: Amphibians: Partial Chinese-to-English translation (Link).