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COS 24
- Climate Change: Ranges And Phenology 1
COS 24-
Winter and spring drivers of phenology are consistent but drivers of productivity differ among vegetation types in northern Alaska
Katharine C. Kelsey
,
University of Colorado-Denver
;
Stine Højlund Pedersen
,
Colorado State University, University of Alaska Anchorage
;
A. Joshua Leffler
,
South Dakota State University
;
Joseph O. Sexton
,
TerraPulse
;
Jeffrey M. Welker
,
University of Oulu, University of Alaska Anchorage
COS 24-
Comparing management strategies for conserving climate-threatened species with a stochastic metacommunity model
Gregory Backus
,
University of California, Davis
;
Yansong Huang
,
Nanjing University
;
Marissa L. Baskett
,
University of California, Davis
COS 24-
Snowmelt timing has a larger effect on phenology of subalpine plants than temperature
Diana Jerome
,
Northwestern University
;
William Petry
,
Princeton University
;
Kailen A. Mooney
,
University of California, Ivine
;
Amy Iler
,
Northwestern University
COS 24-
Differential effects of winter and spring warming on the timing of cherry blossoms across a latitudinal gradient
Hsin-Wu Hsu
,
University of Washington, Taiwan Forest Bureau
;
Kyungdahm Yun
,
University of Washington
;
Soo-Hyung Kim
,
University of Washington
COS 24-
Increase in coexistence among colonial nesting least terns (
Sternula antillarum
) and black skimmers (
Rynchops niger
) with 42 years of climate change
David Tattoni
,
Stanford University
;
Erin Mordecai
,
Stanford University
;
Michelle Stantial
,
State University of New York, College of Environmental Science and Forestry
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