Zobrazeno 1 - 10
of 14
pro vyhledávání: '"Sandra L Brantley"'
Autor:
Wallace M Meyer, Jeffrey A Eble, Kimberly Franklin, Reilly B McManus, Sandra L Brantley, Jeff Henkel, Paul E Marek, W Eugene Hall, Carl A Olson, Ryan McInroy, Emmanuel M Bernal Loaiza, Richard C Brusca, Wendy Moore
Publikováno v:
PLoS ONE, Vol 10, Iss 9, p e0135210 (2015)
The few studies that have addressed past effects of climate change on species distributions have mostly focused on plants due to the rarity of historical faunal baselines. However, hyperdiverse groups like Arthropoda are vital to monitor in order to
Externí odkaz:
https://doaj.org/article/03ca2c12c7824ee8837ee6cad123567d
Autor:
Sandra L. Brantley
Publikováno v:
Diversity, Vol 12, Iss 396, p 396 (2020)
Diversity
Volume 12
Issue 10
Diversity
Volume 12
Issue 10
Catastrophic wildfire is increasingly common in forests of the western United States because climate change is increasing ambient temperatures and periods of drought. In 2011, the Las Conchas wildfire burned in the Santa Fe National Forest of New Mex
Publikováno v:
Western North American Naturalist. 77:369-384
The disturbance history, plant species composition, productivity, and structural complexity of a site can exert bottom-up controls on arthropod diversity, abundance, and trophic structure. Regulation alters the hydrology and disturbance regimes of ri
Ward, Mark A., Brantley, Sandra L., Miller, Kelly B. (2017): Trachypachus inermis Motschulsky (Coleoptera: Trachypachidae), a New State Record for New Mexico, USA. The Coleopterists Bulletin 71 (2): 372-373, DOI: 10.1649/0010-065X-71.2.372, URL: http
Externí odkaz:
https://explore.openaire.eu/search/publication?articleId=doi_dedup___::96527a1b93d5f239edb59933fe8b01df
https://zenodo.org/record/5364144
https://zenodo.org/record/5364144
Publikováno v:
Western North American Naturalist. 74:162-184
We documented the effect of drought-induced mortality of pinyon pine (Pinus edulis Engelm.) on communities of ground-dwelling arthropods. Tree mortality alters microhabitats utilized by ground-dwelling arthropods by increasing solar radiation, dead w
Publikováno v:
The Southwestern Naturalist. 56:44-53
Little information is available on spiders in the Chihuahuan Desert. In the Jornada del Muerto of southern New Mexico, we collected ca. 120 species of spiders in the past 30 years. We report four state records and five potential undescribed species.
Autor:
Gerardo Ceballos, James H. Brown, Eduardo Ponce, David C. Lightfoot, Rurik List, David Toledo, Ana D. Davidson, Juan Cruzado, Rodrigo Sierra-Corona, Sandra L. Brantley, Ed L. Fredrickson
Publikováno v:
Ecology. 91:3189-3200
Megaherbivores and small burrowing mammals commonly coexist and play important functional roles in grassland ecosystems worldwide. The interactive effects of these two functional groups of herbivores in shaping the structure and function of grassland
Publikováno v:
Western North American Naturalist. 68:83-102
We examined the biogeographic patterns of ground-dwelling arthropod communities across a heterogeneous semiarid region of the Southern Rio Grande Rift Valley of New Mexico. Our 3 sites included portions of 5 ecoregions, with the middle site a transit
Autor:
Reilly McManus, Richard C. Brusca, Jeff Henkel, Paul E. Marek, Ryan McInroy, Carl A. Olson, Emmanuel M. Bernal Loaiza, Wallace M. Meyer, W. Eugene Hall, Kimberly Franklin, Wendy Moore, Sandra L. Brantley, Jeff A. Eble
Publikováno v:
PLoS ONE, Vol 10, Iss 9, p e0135210 (2015)
PLoS ONE
PLoS ONE
The few studies that have addressed past effects of climate change on species distributions have mostly focused on plants due to the rarity of historical faunal baselines. However, hyperdiverse groups like Arthropoda are vital to monitor in order to
Publikováno v:
Ecosphere. 5:art5
Stand-replacing wildfire is an infrequent but important disturbance in southwestern pinyon-juniper woodlands. A typical successional cycle in these woodlands is approximately 300 years or more after a stand-replacing fire. Arthropods, especially grou