All Stories

  1. Faculty of 1000 evaluation for Airborne laser-guided imaging spectroscopy to map forest trait diversity and guide conservation.
  2. The changing role of fire in mediating the relationships among oaks, grasslands, mesic temperate forests, and boreal forests in the Lake States
  3. Hemiboreal forest: natural disturbances and the importance of ecosystem legacies to management
  4. Earthworm invasion impacts biodiversity
  5. Forest dynamics
  6. Temperature and leaf nitrogen affect performance of plant species at range overlap
  7. Impact of wind-induced microsites and disturbance severity on tree regeneration patterns: Results from the first post-storm decade
  8. Fire in upper Midwestern oak forest ecosystems: an oak forest restoration and management handbook
  9. Invasive earthworms interact with abiotic conditions to influence the invasion of common buckthorn (Rhamnus cathartica)
  10. Earthworm invasion alters enchytraeid community composition and individual biomass in northern hardwood forests of North America
  11. How to Become a Forest Ecologist In Only 40 Years
  12. Resident plant diversity and introduced earthworms have contrasting effects on the success of invasive plants
  13. Temperate tree expansion into adjacent boreal forest patches facilitated by warmer temperatures
  14. Earthworm Invasions in Northern Hardwood Forests: a Rapid Assessment Method
  15. Do vegetation boundaries display smooth or abrupt spatial transitions along environmental gradients? Evidence from the prairie–forest biome boundary of historic Minnesota, USA
  16. Linking direct and indirect pathways mediating earthworms, deer, and understory composition in Great Lakes forests
  17. Climate and interrelated tree regeneration drivers in mixed temperate–boreal forests
  18. Food webs above and below ground influnce how forests respond to climate change
  19. Sapling growth responses to warmer temperatures ‘cooled’ by browse pressure
  20. Leaf Litter Disappearance in Earthworm-Invaded Northern Hardwood Forests: Role of Tree Species and the Chemistry and Diversity of Litter
  21. Interactive effects of global warming and ‘global worming’ on the initial establishment of native and exotic herbaceous plant species
  22. Understorey diversity in southern boreal forests is regulated by productivity and its indirect impacts on resource availability and heterogeneity
  23. The wave towards a new steady state: effects of earthworm invasion on soil microbial functions
  24. Fine-scale heterogeneity in overstory composition contributes to heterogeneity of wildfire severity in southern boreal forest
  25. Poor recruitment is changing the structure and species composition of an old-growth hemlock-hardwood forest
  26. Flowering phenology and height growth pattern are associated with maximum plant height, relative growth rate and stem tissue mass density in herbaceous grassland species
  27. Experimental warming induces degradation of a Tibetan alpine meadow through trophic interactions
  28. Vegetation controls vary across space and spatial scale in a historic grassland-forest biome boundary
  29. Will environmental changes reinforce the impact of global warming on the prairie–forest border of central North America?
  30. European buckthorn and Asian soybean aphid as components of an extensive invasional meltdown in North America
  31. Detecting wind disturbance severity and canopy heterogeneity in boreal forest by coupling high-spatial resolution satellite imagery and field data
  32. Patterns of plant community structure within and among primary and second-growth northern hardwood forest stands
  33. Regional climate change adaptation strategies for biodiversity conservation in a midcontinental region of North America
  34. Wilderness Conservation in an Era of Global Warming and Invasive Species: A Case Study from Minnesota's Boundary Waters Canoe Area Wilderness
  35. Conservation Biology The Vanishing Present: Wisconsin's Changing Lands, Water, and Wildlife . Edited by DonaldM.Waller and ThomasP.Rooney. Chicago (Illinois): University of Chicago Press. $40.00. xiv 507 p. 16 pl.; ill.; index. 9780226871714. 2008.
  36. Tree rings detect earthworm invasions and their effects in northern Hardwood forests
  37. Litter decomposition in earthworm-invaded northern hardwood forests: Role of invasion degree and litter chemistry
  38. Site factors affecting black ash ring growth in northern Minnesota
  39. MOSS HARVEST TRUNCATES THE SUCCESSIONAL DEVELOPMENT OF EPIPHYTIC BRYOPHYTES IN THE PACIFIC NORTHWEST
  40. Exotic earthworm effects on hardwood forest floor, nutrient availability and native plants: a mesocosm study
  41. Wind-throw mortality in the southern boreal forest: effects of species, diameter and stand age
  42. REGIONAL EXTENT OF AN ECOSYSTEM ENGINEER: EARTHWORM INVASION IN NORTHERN HARDWOOD FORESTS
  43. Effects of Earthworm Invasion on Plant Species Richness in Northern Hardwood Forests
  44. Earthworm invasion into previously earthworm-free temperate and boreal forests
  45. CHANGES IN HARDWOOD FOREST UNDERSTORY PLANT COMMUNITIES IN RESPONSE TO EUROPEAN EARTHWORM INVASIONS
  46. Effects of European Earthworm Invasion on Soil Characteristics in Northern Hardwood Forests of Minnesota, USA
  47. PATHWAYS IN OLD-FIELD SUCCESSION TO WHITE PINE: SEED RAIN, SHADE, AND CLIMATE EFFECTS
  48. EXOTIC EUROPEAN EARTHWORM INVASION DYNAMICS IN NORTHERN HARDWOOD FORESTS OF MINNESOTA, USA
  49. Examining the effects of alternative management strategies on landscape-scale forest patterns in northeastern Minnesota using LANDIS
  50. Logging versus fire: how does disturbance type influence the abundance of Pinus strobus regeneration?
  51. Allometric Equations for Estimation of Ash-free Dry Mass from Length Measurements for Selected European Earthworm Species (Lumbricidae) in the Western Great Lakes Region
  52. Seed rain, safe sites, competing vegetation, and soil resources spatially structure white pine regeneration and recruitment
  53. Perspectives on development of definitions and values related to old-growth forests
  54. Fine-scale environmental variation and structure of understorey plant communities in two old-growth pine forests
  55. Forest Dynamics and Disturbance Regimes
  56. Comparing the Importance of Seedbed and Canopy Type in the Restoration of Upland Thuja occidentalis Forests of Northeastern Minnesota
  57. Influence of Logging, Fire, and Forest Type on Biodiversity and Productivity in Southern Boreal Forests
  58. INFLUENCE OF LOGGING, FIRE, AND FOREST TYPE ON BIODIVERSITY AND PRODUCTIVITY IN SOUTHERN BOREAL FORESTS
  59. Multiple scale composition and spatial distribution patterns of the north-eastern Minnesota presettlement forest
  60. Discordance in spatial patterns of white pine (Pinus strobus) size-classes in a patchy near-boreal forest
  61. Seedbed and Moisture Availability Determine Safe Sites for Early Thuja occidentalis (Cupressaceae) Regeneration
  62. Conservation implications of browsing by Odocoileus virginianus in remnant upland Thuja occidentalis forests
  63. Minireviews: Neighborhood Effects, Disturbance Severity, and Community Stability in Forests
  64. Are Large, Infrequent Disturbances Qualitatively Different from Small, Frequent Disturbances?
  65. Evidence for Two Alternate Stable States in an Ungulate Grazing System
  66. EVIDENCE FOR TWO ALTERNATE STABLE STATES IN AN UNGULATE GRAZING SYSTEM
  67. Effects of White-Tailed Deer on Populations of an Understory Forb in Fragmented Deciduous Forests
  68. Disturbance Severity and Threshold Responses in the Boreal Forest
  69. Neighbourhood effects in forests: implications for within-stand patch structure
  70. Modeling for ecosystem management in Minnesota pine forests
  71. A Structural Alternative to Chronosequence Analysis for Uneven-Aged Northern Hardwood Forests
  72. Spatial Patterns and Succession in a Minnesota Southern-Boreal Forest
  73. Neighborhood effects, disturbance, and succession in forests of the western Great Lakes Region1
  74. Age-class distribution and spatial patterns in an old-growth hemlock–hardwood forest
  75. Patch Formation and Maintenance in an Old-Growth Hemlock-Hardwood Forest
  76. Forest-Tree Growth Rates and Probability of Gap Origin: A Reply to Clark
  77. Effects of Invasion by Tsuga Canadensis on a North American Forest Ecosystem
  78. A Simulation of Landscape-Level Stand Dynamics in the Northern Hardwood Region
  79. Natural Disturbance Regimes in Hemlock-Hardwood Forests of the Upper Great Lakes Region
  80. A methodology for estimating canopy disturbance frequency and intensity in dense temperate forests
  81. Red pine growth and chemical composition of foliage and forest floors across a precipitation-chemistry gradient in Wisconsin
  82. A methodology for estimating canopy disturbance frequency and intensity in dense temperate forests
  83. Historical trends in tree-ring growth and chemistry across an air-quality gradient in Wisconsin
  84. Estimating Gap Origin Probabilities for Canopy Trees
  85. Current and predicted long-term effects of deer browsing in hemlock forests in Michigan, USA
  86. A Simulation of Equilibrium Diameter Distributions of Sugar Maple (Acer saccharum)
  87. Temperate Coniferous Forests
  88. Boreal Biome
  89. Faculty of 1000 evaluation for Understanding ecosystem retrogression.
  90. Restoration ecology
  91. Faculty of 1000 evaluation for Greenhouse-gas emissions from soils increased by earthworms.
  92. The disturbance regime and its components
  93. Sampling and interpretation of stand disturbance history
  94. Disturbance, stand development, and successional trajectories
  95. The study of disturbance and landscape structure
  96. The disturbance regime and landscape structure
  97. Preface
  98. The forest setting
  99. Disturbance in fragmented landscapes
  100. References
  101. Appendix 1
  102. Forest stability over time and space
  103. Faculty of 1000 evaluation for Climate change intensification of herbivore impacts on tree recruitment.
  104. Faculty of 1000 evaluation for Boreal carbon loss due to poleward shift in low-carbon ecosystems.
  105. Faculty of 1000 evaluation for Recolonizing wolves trigger a trophic cascade in Wisconsin (USA).
  106. Faculty of 1000 evaluation for Ecological constraints increase the climatic debt in forests.
  107. Faculty of 1000 evaluation for Diversity-disturbance relationship in forest landscapes.
  108. Faculty of 1000 evaluation for Classification and dynamics of developmental stages in late-successional temperate forests.
  109. Faculty of 1000 evaluation for Examining historical and current mixed-severity fire regimes in ponderosa pine and mixed-conifer forests of Western North America.
  110. Faculty of 1000 evaluation for Postglacial climate and fire-mediated vegetation change on the western Olympic Peninsula, Washington (USA).
  111. Faculty of 1000 evaluation for Fine-grain modeling of species' response to climate change: holdouts, stepping-stones, and microrefugia.
  112. Faculty of 1000 evaluation for Density dependence in forests is stronger in tropical and subtropical climates among closely related species.
  113. Faculty of 1000 evaluation for Do Earthworms Have a Greater Influence on Nitrogen Dynamics Than Atmospheric Nitrogen Deposition?
  114. Earthworm invasion into previously earthworm-free temperate and boreal forests
  115. Faculty of 1000 evaluation for Tree species traits cause divergence in soil acidification during four decades of postagricultural forest development.
  116. Faculty of 1000 evaluation for Where do they come from and where do they go? European natural habitats as donors of invasive alien plants globally
  117. Faculty of 1000 evaluation for Causes and implications of the correlation between forest productivity and tree mortality rates.
  118. Faculty of 1000 evaluation for Incoming! Association of landscape features with dispersing mountain pine beetle populations during a range expansion event in western Canada.
  119. Faculty of 1000 evaluation for Geography, topography, and history affect realized to potential tree species richness patterns in Europe.
  120. Faculty of 1000 evaluation for Agricultural intensification and biodiversity partitioning in European landscapes comparing plants, carabids, and birds.
  121. Faculty of 1000 evaluation for Open areas in a landscape enhance pollen-mediated gene flow of a species: evidence from northern Switzerland.
  122. Faculty of 1000 evaluation for Variation in local weather explains differences in fire regimes within a Québec south-eastern boreal forest landscape.
  123. Faculty of 1000 evaluation for Landscape controls on the timing of spring, autumn, and growing season length in mid-Atlantic forests.
  124. Faculty of 1000 evaluation for Linking vegetation change, carbon sequestration and biodiversity: insights from island ecosystems in a long-term natural experiment.
  125. Faculty of 1000 evaluation for The relative importance of deforestation, precipitation change, and temperature sensitivity in determining the future distributions and diversity of Amazonian plant species.
  126. Faculty of 1000 evaluation for Recent burning of boreal forests exceeds fire regime limits of the past 10,000 years.
  127. Faculty of 1000 evaluation for Pliocene Warmth, Polar Amplification, and Stepped Pleistocene Cooling Recorded in NE Arctic Russia.
  128. Faculty of 1000 evaluation for The influence of geomorphic processes on plant distribution and abundance as reflected in plant tolerance curves.
  129. Faculty of 1000 evaluation for Multiple successional pathways and precocity in forest development: can some forests be born complex?
  130. Faculty of 1000 evaluation for Geomorphic principles of terrain organization and vegetation gradients.