Pages that link to "Item:Q163920"
From geokb
The following pages link to Catherine S. Jarnevich, PhD (Q163920):
Displayed 50 items.
- Misleading prioritizations from modelling range shifts under climate change (Q145111) (← links)
- Iterative near-term ecological forecasting: Needs, opportunities, and challenges (Q145283) (← links)
- Comparison of four modeling tools for the prediction of potential distribution for non-indigenous weeds in the United States (Q145669) (← links)
- Diet and conservation implications of an invasive chameleon, Chamaeleo jacksonii (Squamata: Chamaeleonidae) in Hawaii (Q147370) (← links)
- Running a network on a shoestring: the Global Invasive Species Information Network (Q147703) (← links)
- Simulating long-term effectiveness and efficiency of management scenarios for an invasive grass (Q147789) (← links)
- Citizen science contributes to our knowledge of invasive plant species distributions (Q148124) (← links)
- The development and delivery of species distribution models to inform decision-making (Q149651) (← links)
- Developing an expert elicited simulation model to evaluate invasive species and fire management alternatives (Q149820) (← links)
- Models combining multiple scales of inference capture hydrologic and climatic drivers of riparian tree distributions (Q150323) (← links)
- Regional models do not outperform continental models for invasive species (Q150574) (← links)
- Climate matching with the climatchR R package (Q150685) (← links)
- Potential cheatgrass abundance within lightly invaded areas of the Great Basin (Q150732) (← links)
- Assessing range-wide habitat suitability for the Lesser Prairie-Chicken (Q151142) (← links)
- Regional modeling of large wildfires under current and potential future climates in Colorado and Wyoming, USA (Q151645) (← links)
- Modeling the geographic distribution of <i>Ixodes scapularis</i> and <i>Ixodes pacificus</i> (Acari: Ixodidae) in the contiguous United States (Q152672) (← links)
- Integrating remote sensing with species distribution models; Mapping tamarisk invasions using the Software for Assisted Habitat Modeling (SAHM) (Q153089) (← links)
- Federated or cached searches: providing expected performance from multiple invasive species databases (Q153770) (← links)
- Challenges of predicting the potential distribution of a slow-spreading invader: a habitat suitability map for an invasive riparian tree (Q153902) (← links)
- Distribution and abundance of saltcedar and Russian olive in the western United States (Q153955) (← links)
- Regional distribution models with lack of proximate predictors: Africanized honeybees expanding north (Q154739) (← links)
- Forecasting an invasive species’ distribution with global distribution data, local data, and physiological information (Q156890) (← links)
- The relationship between invader abundance and impact (Q156901) (← links)
- Creating a North Central Regional Invasive Species and Climate Change (NC RISCC) Management Network (Q160134) (← links)
- Managing Ecological Transformation to Enhance Carbon Storage and Biodiversity (Q160243) (← links)
- Future Aquatic Invaders of the Northeast U.S.: How Climate Change, Human Vectors, and Natural History Could Bring Southern and Western Species North (Q160368) (← links)
- Developing A New Software Package to Enhance Species Distribution Model Functionality (Q160776) (← links)
- The Role of Climate in Shaping Invasive Plant Abundance across Different Spatial Locations (Q160805) (← links)
- Fostering greater use of habitat models for managing rare and invasive plants on public lands (Q226926) (← links)
- Climate matching with the climatchR R package (Q226960) (← links)
- Predicting the phenology of invasive grasses under a changing climate to inform mapping and management (Q226990) (← links)
- Assessing the Proliferation, Connectivity, and Consequences of Invasive Fine Fuels on the Sagebrush Biome (Q227009) (← links)
- Predicting risk of annual grass invasion following fire in sagebrush steppe and rangeland ecosystems (Q227018) (← links)
- Economic assessment of addressing annual invasive grasses across the sagebrush biome (Q227040) (← links)
- Developing habitat models for rare plants to inform decision making on multiple-use public lands (Q227074) (← links)
- INHABIT: A web-based decision support tool for invasive plant species habitat visualization and assessment across the contiguous United States (Q227146) (← links)
- Species Distribution Modeling (Q229737) (← links)
- Documenting, Mapping, and Predicting Invasive Species Using the Fort Collins Science Center's RAM (Resource for Advanced Modeling) (Q229756) (← links)
- Resource for Advanced Modeling (RAM) (Q229914) (← links)
- Using the Maxent program for species distribution modelling to assess invasion risk (Q234427) (← links)
- Caveats for correlative species distribution modeling (Q234597) (← links)
- Modeling the present and future geographic distribution of the Lone star tick, Amblyomma americanum (Ixodida: Ixodidae), in the continental United States (Q234613) (← links)
- Mapping current and potential distribution of non-native Prosopis juliflora in the Afar region of Ethiopia (Q236792) (← links)
- From hybrid swarms to swarms of hybrids (Q236837) (← links)
- Modeling suitable habitat of invasive red lionfish Pterois volitans (Linnaeus, 1758) in North and South America’s coastal waters (Q238287) (← links)
- Integrating subsistence practice and species distribution modeling: assessing invasive elodea’s potential impact on Native Alaskan subsistence of Chinook salmon and whitefish (Q238481) (← links)
- Ecology and space: A case study in mapping harmful invasive species (Q239009) (← links)
- Evaluating simplistic methods to understand current distributions and forecast distribution changes under climate change scenarios: An example with coypu (Myocastor coypus) (Q239025) (← links)
- Accounting for sampling patterns reverses the relative importance of trade and climate for the global sharing of exotic plants (Q239218) (← links)
- Designing ecological climate change impact assessments to reflect key climatic drivers (Q239228) (← links)