PUBLICATIONS
 

Click on [PDF] next to each citation for reprints

Published Papers

Brudvig, L.A., E.I. Damschen, J.J. Tewksbury, N.M. Haddad, and D.J. Levey. 2009. Landscape connectivity promotes plant biodiversity spillover into non-target habitats. Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences. [pdf]

Harrison, S., E. Damschen, B.M. Going. In Press. Climate Gradients, Climate Change, and Special Edaphic Floras. Northeastern Naturalist.

Damschen, E.I., L.A. Brudvig*, N.M. Haddad*, D.L. Levey*, J.L. Orrock*, and J.J. Tewksbury* (*=alphabetical authorship after first author). 2008. The movement ecology and dynamics of plant communities in fragmented landscapes. Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences 105(49):19078-19083. [pdf] [pdf supporting information]

Damschen, E.I.  2007. Book Review: Hierarchical modeling for the environmental sciences: statistical methods
and applications. Quarterly Review of Biology 82(3):299.

Orrock, J.L., E.I. Damschen. 2007. The effect of burial depth on seed removal of Phytolacca americana. Southeastern Naturalist. 6(1):151-158. [PDF]

Wyer, M., D. Murphy-Medley, E.I. Damschen, K. M. Rosenfeld, and T. Wentworth. 2007. No quick fixes: Adding content about women to ecology course materials. Psychology of Women Quarterly. [PDF]

Damschen, E.I., N.M. Haddad, J.L. Orrock, J.J. Tewksbury, and D.J. Levey. 2006. Corridors increase plant species richness at large scales. Science. [PDF] [PDF Supp. Materials]

Orrock, J.L., D.J. Levey, B.J. Danielson, and E.I. Damschen. 2006. Seed predation, not seed dispersal, explains the landscape-level abundance of an early-successional plant. Journal of Ecology 94:838-845. [PDF]

Damschen, E.I., K.M. Rosenfeld, M. Wyer, D. Murphy-Medley, T.R. Wentworth, and N.M. Haddad. 2006. Women in Ecology. Frontiers in Ecology and the Environment 4(1):9-10. [PDF]

Damschen, E.I., K.M. Rosenfeld, M. Wyer, D. Murphy-Medley, T.R. Wentworth, and N.M. Haddad. 2005. Visibility matters: Student knowledge of women's contributions to ecology. Frontiers in Ecology and the Environment 3(4): 212-219. [PDF]

Orrock, J.L, and E.I. Damschen. 2005. Fungi-mediated mortality of seeds of two oldfield plant species. Journal of the Torrey Botanical Society 132:613-617. [PDF]

Orrock, J.L, and E.I. Damschen. 2005. Corridors cause differential seed predation. Ecological Applications 15(3): 793-798. [PDF]

Louda, S.M., A.M. Parkhurst, K.L. Bradley, E. Bakker, A. Joern, J. Knops, E.I. Damschen, and L.M. Young. 2004. Spatial heterogeneity, not visitation bias, dominates variation in herbivory: Reply. Ecology 85(10): 2906-2910. [PDF]

Bradley, K.L., E. I. Damschen, L. M. Young, D. Kuefler, S. Went, G. Wray, N. M. Haddad, J. M. H. Knops, S. M. Louda. 2003. Spatial heterogeneity, not visitation bias, dominates variation in herbivory. Ecology 84(8): 2214-2221. [PDF]

Tewksbury, J.J., D. J. Levey, N. M. Haddad, S. Sargent, J. L. Orrock, A. Weldon, B. J. Danielson, J. Brinkerhoff, E.I. Damschen , and P. Townsend. 2002. Corridors affect plants, animals, and their interactions in fragmented landscapes. Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences USA 99(20): 12923-12926. Awarded the 2002 Outstanding Paper in Landscape Ecology, International Association of Landscape Ecology. [PDF]

 

In Revision:

Haddad, N.M., B. Hudgens, E.I. Damschen*, D.J. Levey*, J.L. Orrock*, J.J. Tewksbury*, A.J. Weldon* (*=alphabetical authorship after first two authors). Assessing positive and negative ecological effects of corridors. Book chapter for: Perspectives from Source-Sink Dynamics.

 

In Review:

Damschen, E.I., S. Harrison, and J.B. Grace. An endemic-rich flora declines in response to 57 years of climate change.

Damschen, E.I., K.M. Kostelnik, N.M. Haddad, and T.R. Wentworth.  How connectivity affects seed bank recolonization in an experimental landscape.

 

In Preparation:

Damschen, E.I., and L.A. Brudvig. Corridor effects on local and regional species richness relationships over time.

Damschen, E.I., J.L. Orrock, E.Y. Long, S. Woolard, S. Gabris, and D. Imm.  An experimental test of edge effects on plant communities.

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