References - Section 5
Davies, D.J., E. N. Powell, and R. J. Stanton, Jr, (1989). Relative rates of shell dissolution and net sediment accumulation–a commentary: Can shell beds form by the gradual accumulation of biogenic debris on the sea floor? Lethaia, 22: 207-212
Harding, J. M., Mann, R., M. Southworth, and J. Wesson. (2010). Management of the Piankatank River, Virginia, in support of oyster (Crassostrea virginica, Gmelin 1791) fishery repletion. J. Shellfish Research 29: 1-22
Mann, R. and E. N. Powell. (2007). Why oyster restoration goals in the Chesapeake Bay are not and probably cannot be achieved. J. Shellfish Research 26: 905-917.
Mann, R, M. Southworth, J. M. Harding, and J. A. Wesson. (2009). Population studies of the native oyster, Crassostrea virginica (Gmelin, 1791), in the James River, Virginia, USA. J. Shellfish Research 28: 193-220.
Powell, E.N., and J. M. Klinck, J.M., 2007. Is oyster shell a sustainable estuarine resource? J. Shellfish Research 26, 181-194.
Powell, E.N., J. M. Klinck, K. Ashton-Alcox, E. E. Hofmann, and J. Morson. 2012. The rise and fall of Crassostrea virginica oyster reefs: The role of disease and fishing in their demise and a vignette on their management. J. Marine Research 70: 505-558.
Southworth, M., J. M. Harding, R. Mann and J. Wesson. (2010). Oyster (Crassostrea virginica Gmelin 1791) population dynamics on public reefs in the Great Wicomico River, Virginia, USA. J. Shellfish Research 29: 271-290.
Waldbusser, G.G., R. A. Steenson, and M. A. Green. 2011. Oyster Shell Dissolution Rates in Estuarine Waters: Effects of pH and Shell Legacy. J. Shellfish Research 30: 659-669.
Waldbusser, G.G., Powell, E.N., Mann, R., 2013. Ecosystem effects of shell aggregations and cycling in coastal waters: an example of Chesapeake Bay oyster reefs. Ecology 94, 895-903.