Below, there are a variety of papers that deal with terrestrial invertebrates in Oceania (especially Palau, where possible).
Here's a nice blog post that outlines some of what we know and what we still don't know about land snails in the tropics (doesn't count as a peer-reviewed paper, but could be nice background reading):
https://landsnailsandslugs.wordpress.com/community-ecology-of-tropical-forest-snails-30-years-after-solem/
Terrestrial invertebrates
Casquet, J., Bourgeois, Y.X.C., Cruaud, C., Gavory, F., Gillespie, R.G., & Thébaud, C. (2015) Community assembly on remote islands: a comparison of Hawaiian and Mascarene spiders. Journal of biogeography, 42, 39–50.
Chiba, S. & Cowie, R.H. (2016) Evolution and Extinction of Land Snails on Oceanic Islands. Annual review of ecology, evolution, and systematics, 47, 123–141.
Clouse, R.M., Janda, M., Blanchard, B., Sharma, P., Hoffmann, B.D., Andersen, A.N., Czekanski-Moir, J.E., Krushelnycky, P., Rabeling, C., Wilson, E.O., Economo, E.P., Sarnat, E.M., General, D.M., Alpert, G.D., & Wheeler, W.C. (2015) Molecular phylogeny of Indo-Pacific carpenter ants (Hymenoptera: Formicidae, Camponotus) reveals waves of dispersal and colonization from diverse source areas. Cladistics: the international journal of the Willi Hennig Society, 31, 424–437.
Cowie, R.H., Fontaine, B., & Bouchet, P. (2017) Measuring the sixth extinction: what do mollusks tell us? The Nautilus, 131, 3–41.
Craven, D., Thakur, M.P., Cameron, E.K., Frelich, L.E., Beauséjour, R., Blair, R.B., Blossey, B., Burtis, J., Choi, A., Dávalos, A., & Others (2017) The unseen invaders: introduced earthworms as drivers of change in plant communities in North American forests (a meta-analysis). Global change biology, 23, 1065–1074.
Economo, E.P., Janda, M., Guénard, B., & Sarnat, E. (2017) Assembling a species--area curve through colonization, speciation and human-mediated introduction. Journal of biogeography, 44, 1088–1097.
Economo, E.P. & Sarnat, E.M. (2012) Revisiting the ants of Melanesia and the taxon cycle: historical and human-mediated invasions of a tropical archipelago. The American naturalist, 180, E1–16.
Economo, E.P., Sarnat, E.M., Janda, M., Clouse, R., Klimov, P.B., Fischer, G., Blanchard, B.D., Ramirez, L.N., Andersen, A.N., Berman, M., Guénard, B., Lucky, A., Rabeling, C., Wilson, E.O., & Knowles, L.L. (2015) Breaking out of biogeographical modules: range expansion and taxon cycles in the hyperdiverse ant genus Pheidole. Journal of biogeography, 42, 2289–2301.
Gillespie, R.G., Brewer, M.S., & Roderick, G.K. (2017) Ancient biogeography of generalist predators on remote oceanic islands. Journal of biogeography, 44, 1098–1109.
Glasby, C.J., Mogi, M., Takahashi, K.-I., & Others (2003) Occurrence of the polychaete Namalycastis hawaiiensis Johnson, 1903 (Nereididae: Namanereidinae) in Pandanus leaf axils on Palau, west Pacific. Beagle: Records of the Museums and Art Galleries of the Northern Territory, The, 19, 97.
Green, P.T., O’Dowd, D.J., Abbott, K.L., Jeffery, M., Retallick, K., & Mac Nally, R. (2011) Invasional meltdown: Invader–invader mutualism facilitates a secondary invasion. Ecology, 92, 1758–1768.
Gressitt, L.J. (1954) Introduction: Insects of Micronesia. Bernice P. Bishop Museum,
http://hbs.bishopmuseum.org/pubs-online/pdf/iom1.pdf
Hembry, D.H., Okamoto, T., McCormack, G., & Gillespie, R.G. (2013) Phytophagous insect community assembly through niche conservatism on oceanic islands. Journal of biogeography, 40, 225–235.
Krushelnycky, P.D. & Gillespie, R.G. (2010) Sampling across space and time to validate natural experiments: an example with ant invasions in Hawaii. Biological invasions, 12, 643–655.
Morrison, L.W. (2015) Species Assembly Patterns in Polynesian Ants. Pacific science, 69, 81–94.
O’Dowd, D.J., Green, P.T., & Lake, P.S. (2003) Invasional “meltdown”on an oceanic island. Ecology letters, 6, 812–817.
Rodriguez, L.J., Bain, A., Chou, L.-S., Conchou, L., Cruaud, A., Gonzales, R., Hossaert-McKey, M., Rasplus, J.-Y., Tzeng, H.-Y., & Kjellberg, F. (2017) Diversification and spatial structuring in the mutualism between Ficus septica and its pollinating wasps in insular South East Asia. BMC evolutionary biology, 17, 207.
Rundell, R.J. (2008) Cryptic diversity, molecular phylogeny and biogeography of the rock- and leaf litter-dwelling land snails of Belau (Republic of Palau, Oceania). Philosophical transactions of the Royal Society of London. Series B, Biological sciences, 363, 3401–3412.
Schilthuizen, M., Teräväinen, M.I.F., Tawith, N.F.K., Ibrahim, H., Chea, S.M., Chuan, C.P., Daim, L.J., Jubaidi, A., Madjapuni, M.J., Sabeki, M., & Mokhtar, A. (2002) MICROSNAILS AT MICROSCALES IN BORNEO: DISTRIBUTIONS OF PROSOBRANCHIA VERSUS PULMONATA. The Journal of molluscan studies, 68, 255–258.
Simberloff, D. (2006) Invasional meltdown 6 years later: important phenomenon, unfortunate metaphor, or both? Ecology letters, 9, 912–919.
Wall, A.F., Yanes, Y., Miller, J.H., Miller - Biodiversity and Conservation, A.I., & 2017 (2017) Bellwether of the Canaries: anthropogenic effects on the land snail fauna of the Canary Islands. Springer, .
Wardle, D.A. & Peltzer, D.A. (2017) Impacts of invasive biota in forest ecosystems in an aboveground–belowground context. Biological invasions, 1–16.
Wepfer, P.H., Guénard, B., & Economo, E.P. (2016) Influences of climate and historical land connectivity on ant beta diversity in East Asia. Journal of biogeography, 43, 2311–2321.
Wilder, S.M., Holway, D.A., Suarez, A.V., LeBrun, E.G., & Eubanks, M.D. (2011) Intercontinental differences in resource use reveal the importance of mutualisms in fire ant invasions. Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences of the United States of America, 108, 20639–20644.
Here's a nice blog post that outlines some of what we know and what we still don't know about land snails in the tropics (doesn't count as a peer-reviewed paper, but could be nice background reading):
https://landsnailsandslugs.wordpress.com/community-ecology-of-tropical-forest-snails-30-years-after-solem/
Terrestrial invertebrates
Casquet, J., Bourgeois, Y.X.C., Cruaud, C., Gavory, F., Gillespie, R.G., & Thébaud, C. (2015) Community assembly on remote islands: a comparison of Hawaiian and Mascarene spiders. Journal of biogeography, 42, 39–50.
Chiba, S. & Cowie, R.H. (2016) Evolution and Extinction of Land Snails on Oceanic Islands. Annual review of ecology, evolution, and systematics, 47, 123–141.
Clouse, R.M., Janda, M., Blanchard, B., Sharma, P., Hoffmann, B.D., Andersen, A.N., Czekanski-Moir, J.E., Krushelnycky, P., Rabeling, C., Wilson, E.O., Economo, E.P., Sarnat, E.M., General, D.M., Alpert, G.D., & Wheeler, W.C. (2015) Molecular phylogeny of Indo-Pacific carpenter ants (Hymenoptera: Formicidae, Camponotus) reveals waves of dispersal and colonization from diverse source areas. Cladistics: the international journal of the Willi Hennig Society, 31, 424–437.
Cowie, R.H., Fontaine, B., & Bouchet, P. (2017) Measuring the sixth extinction: what do mollusks tell us? The Nautilus, 131, 3–41.
Craven, D., Thakur, M.P., Cameron, E.K., Frelich, L.E., Beauséjour, R., Blair, R.B., Blossey, B., Burtis, J., Choi, A., Dávalos, A., & Others (2017) The unseen invaders: introduced earthworms as drivers of change in plant communities in North American forests (a meta-analysis). Global change biology, 23, 1065–1074.
Economo, E.P., Janda, M., Guénard, B., & Sarnat, E. (2017) Assembling a species--area curve through colonization, speciation and human-mediated introduction. Journal of biogeography, 44, 1088–1097.
Economo, E.P. & Sarnat, E.M. (2012) Revisiting the ants of Melanesia and the taxon cycle: historical and human-mediated invasions of a tropical archipelago. The American naturalist, 180, E1–16.
Economo, E.P., Sarnat, E.M., Janda, M., Clouse, R., Klimov, P.B., Fischer, G., Blanchard, B.D., Ramirez, L.N., Andersen, A.N., Berman, M., Guénard, B., Lucky, A., Rabeling, C., Wilson, E.O., & Knowles, L.L. (2015) Breaking out of biogeographical modules: range expansion and taxon cycles in the hyperdiverse ant genus Pheidole. Journal of biogeography, 42, 2289–2301.
Gillespie, R.G., Brewer, M.S., & Roderick, G.K. (2017) Ancient biogeography of generalist predators on remote oceanic islands. Journal of biogeography, 44, 1098–1109.
Glasby, C.J., Mogi, M., Takahashi, K.-I., & Others (2003) Occurrence of the polychaete Namalycastis hawaiiensis Johnson, 1903 (Nereididae: Namanereidinae) in Pandanus leaf axils on Palau, west Pacific. Beagle: Records of the Museums and Art Galleries of the Northern Territory, The, 19, 97.
Green, P.T., O’Dowd, D.J., Abbott, K.L., Jeffery, M., Retallick, K., & Mac Nally, R. (2011) Invasional meltdown: Invader–invader mutualism facilitates a secondary invasion. Ecology, 92, 1758–1768.
Gressitt, L.J. (1954) Introduction: Insects of Micronesia. Bernice P. Bishop Museum,
http://hbs.bishopmuseum.org/pubs-online/pdf/iom1.pdf
Hembry, D.H., Okamoto, T., McCormack, G., & Gillespie, R.G. (2013) Phytophagous insect community assembly through niche conservatism on oceanic islands. Journal of biogeography, 40, 225–235.
Krushelnycky, P.D. & Gillespie, R.G. (2010) Sampling across space and time to validate natural experiments: an example with ant invasions in Hawaii. Biological invasions, 12, 643–655.
Morrison, L.W. (2015) Species Assembly Patterns in Polynesian Ants. Pacific science, 69, 81–94.
O’Dowd, D.J., Green, P.T., & Lake, P.S. (2003) Invasional “meltdown”on an oceanic island. Ecology letters, 6, 812–817.
Rodriguez, L.J., Bain, A., Chou, L.-S., Conchou, L., Cruaud, A., Gonzales, R., Hossaert-McKey, M., Rasplus, J.-Y., Tzeng, H.-Y., & Kjellberg, F. (2017) Diversification and spatial structuring in the mutualism between Ficus septica and its pollinating wasps in insular South East Asia. BMC evolutionary biology, 17, 207.
Rundell, R.J. (2008) Cryptic diversity, molecular phylogeny and biogeography of the rock- and leaf litter-dwelling land snails of Belau (Republic of Palau, Oceania). Philosophical transactions of the Royal Society of London. Series B, Biological sciences, 363, 3401–3412.
Schilthuizen, M., Teräväinen, M.I.F., Tawith, N.F.K., Ibrahim, H., Chea, S.M., Chuan, C.P., Daim, L.J., Jubaidi, A., Madjapuni, M.J., Sabeki, M., & Mokhtar, A. (2002) MICROSNAILS AT MICROSCALES IN BORNEO: DISTRIBUTIONS OF PROSOBRANCHIA VERSUS PULMONATA. The Journal of molluscan studies, 68, 255–258.
Simberloff, D. (2006) Invasional meltdown 6 years later: important phenomenon, unfortunate metaphor, or both? Ecology letters, 9, 912–919.
Wall, A.F., Yanes, Y., Miller, J.H., Miller - Biodiversity and Conservation, A.I., & 2017 (2017) Bellwether of the Canaries: anthropogenic effects on the land snail fauna of the Canary Islands. Springer, .
Wardle, D.A. & Peltzer, D.A. (2017) Impacts of invasive biota in forest ecosystems in an aboveground–belowground context. Biological invasions, 1–16.
Wepfer, P.H., Guénard, B., & Economo, E.P. (2016) Influences of climate and historical land connectivity on ant beta diversity in East Asia. Journal of biogeography, 43, 2311–2321.
Wilder, S.M., Holway, D.A., Suarez, A.V., LeBrun, E.G., & Eubanks, M.D. (2011) Intercontinental differences in resource use reveal the importance of mutualisms in fire ant invasions. Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences of the United States of America, 108, 20639–20644.