The following pages link to Ian Pearse, PhD (Q48523):
Displayed 50 items.
- Fine-scale plant defence variability increases top-down control of an herbivore (Q145940) (← links)
- Long‐term surveys support declines in early‐season forest plants used by bumblebees (Q145952) (← links)
- Plants trap pollen to feed predatory arthropods as an indirect resistance against herbivory (Q149199) (← links)
- Genomic identity of white oak species in an eastern North American syngameon (Q149283) (← links)
- From Manitoba to Texas: A study of the population genetic structure of bur oak (Quercus macrocarpa) (Q149316) (← links)
- Species profile: Quercus parvula (Q149345) (← links)
- The development and delivery of species distribution models to inform decision-making (Q149651) (← links)
- Non-native plants have greater impacts because of differing per-capita effects and non-linear abundance-impact curves (Q149749) (← links)
- SPCIS: Standardized Plant Community with Introduced Status database (Q150132) (← links)
- Addressing detection uncertainty in Bombus affinis (Hymenoptera: Apidae) surveys can improve inferences made from monitoring (Q150161) (← links)
- Grasshopper species composition differs between prairie dog colonies and undisturbed sites in a sagebrush grassland (Q150412) (← links)
- Root hemiparasitic plants are associated with more even communities across North America (Q150848) (← links)
- Population ecology and spatial synchrony in abundance within and among populations of valley oak (Quercus lobata) leaf gall wasps (Q155685) (← links)
- Loss of branches due to winter storms could favor deciduousness in oaks (Q156369) (← links)
- Combining local, landscape, and regional geographies to assess plant community vulnerability to invasion impact (Q156522) (← links)
- The relationship between invader abundance and impact (Q156901) (← links)
- Direct and indirect effects of a keystone engineer on a shrubland-prairie food web (Q157364) (← links)
- Negative effects of an allelopathic invader on AM fungal plant species drive community‐level responses (Q157365) (← links)
- Fitness homeostasis across an experimental water gradient predicts species' geographic range and climatic breadth (Q157379) (← links)
- Predicting the phenology of invasive grasses under a changing climate to inform mapping and management (Q226990) (← links)
- Predicting risk of annual grass invasion following fire in sagebrush steppe and rangeland ecosystems (Q227018) (← links)
- INHABIT: A web-based decision support tool for invasive plant species habitat visualization and assessment across the contiguous United States (Q227146) (← links)
- Long-term trends in midwestern milkweed abundances and their relevance to monarch butterfly declines (Q239771) (← links)
- Biogeography and phylogeny of masting: Do global patterns fit functional hypotheses? (Q253147) (← links)
- Generalizing indirect defense and resistance of plants (Q253363) (← links)
- From theory to experiments for testing the proximate mechanisms of mast seeding: An agenda for an experimental ecology (Q253456) (← links)
- Life-history plasticity and water-use trade-offs associated with drought resistance in a clade of California jewelflowers (Q253466) (← links)
- Mast seeding patterns are asynchronous at a continental scale (Q253595) (← links)
- Associational effects of plant ontogeny on damage by a specialist insect herbivore (Q253621) (← links)
- Phylogenetic escape from pests reduces pesticides on some crop plants (Q253625) (← links)
- Predictor importance in habitat suitability models for invasive terrestrial plants (Q254175) (← links)
- The importance of forests in bumble bee biology and conservation (Q256382) (← links)
- Non-native plant invasion after fire in western USA varies by functional type and with climate (Q258684) (← links)
- The roles of phenotypic plasticity and adaptation in morphology and performance of an invasive species in a novel environment (Q258907) (← links)
- Understanding mast seeding for conservation and land management (Q258921) (← links)
- The evolution of glandularity as a defense against herbivores in the tarweed clade (Q263112) (← links)
- Masting is uncommon in trees that depend on mutualist dispersers in the context of global climate and fertility gradients (Q263389) (← links)
- Modeling habitat suitability across different levels of invasive plant abundance (Q264891) (← links)
- INHABIT: A web-based decision support tool for invasive plant species habitat visualization and assessment across the contiguous United States (Q265703) (← links)
- North American tree migration paced by climate in the West, lagging in the East (Q266747) (← links)
- Invaders at the doorstep: Using species distribution modeling to enhance invasive plant watch lists (Q269493) (← links)
- The effects of ENSO and the North American monsoon on mast seeding in two Rocky Mountain conifer species (Q270881) (← links)
- Plant size, latitude, and phylogeny explain within-population variability in herbivory (Q272169) (← links)
- MASTREE+: Time-series of plant reproductive effort from six continents (Q272322) (← links)
- Range-wide genetic analysis of an endangered bumble bee (Bombus affinis, Hymenoptera: Apidae) reveals population structure, isolation by distance, and low colony abundance (Q273972) (← links)
- Extensive regional variation in the phenology of insects and their response to temperature across North America (Q276411) (← links)
- Climate teleconnections synchronize Picea glauca masting and fire disturbance: Evidence for a fire‐related form of environmental prediction (Q277352) (← links)
- Limits to reproduction and seed size-number trade-offs that shape forest dominance and future recovery (Q278996) (← links)
- Hurricanes: An unexpected mechanism linking disturbance and seed production in trees (Q279626) (← links)
- Nutrient scarcity as a selective pressure for mast seeding (Q280198) (← links)