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Lewis, David
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- Creator:
- Lewis, David J. and Polasky, Stephen
- Abstract:
- The provision of many ecosystem services depends on the spatial pattern of land use across multiple landowners. Even holding land use constant, ecosystem service provision may change through time due to climate change. This paper develops an auction mechanism that implements an optimal solution for providing ecosystem services through time...
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- Article
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- Change David J. Lewis Oregon State University lewisda@oregonstate.edu Stephen Polasky
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- Creator:
- Dundas, Steven J. and Lewis, David J.
- Abstract:
- Estimating nonmarket benefits for erosion protection can help inform better decision making and policies for communities to adapt to climate change. We estimate private values for a coastal protection option in an empirical setting subject to irreversible loss from coastal erosion and a land-use policy that provides identifying variation in...
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- Article
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- for Coastal Protection: Evidence from Oregon’s Planning Goal 18 Steven J. Dundas, David J. Lewis
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- Creator:
- Jones, Kelly W. and Lewis, David J.
- Abstract:
- Deforestation and conversion of native habitats continues to be the leading driver of biodiversity and ecosystem service loss. A number of conservation policies and programs are implemented—from protected areas to payments for ecosystem services (PES)—to deter these losses. Currently, empirical evidence on whether these approaches stop or slow land cover...
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- Techniques Kelly W. Jones1*, David J. Lewis2 1 Department of Human Dimensions of Natural Resources, Colorado
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- Creator:
- Polasky, Stephen, Lewis, David J., Plantinga, Andrew J., and Nelson, Erik
- Abstract:
- Many ecosystem services are public goods whose provision depends on the spatial pattern of land use. The pattern of land use is often determined by the decisions of multiple private landowners. Increasing the provision of ecosystem services, while beneficial for society as a whole, may be costly to private landowners....
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- Article
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- , University of Minnesota Email: polasky@umn.edu; Phone: 612-625-9213 David J. Lewis, Oregon State
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- Creator:
- Rudd, W. G., Lewis, Ted G., El-Rewi, Hesham, Judge, David V., Handley, Scott, and Kim, Inkyu
- Resource Type:
- Technical Report
- Full Text:
- -Rewini David V. Judge Scott Handley Inkyu Kirn Oregon Advanced Computing Institute (OACIS
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- Creator:
- Jordan, Tuajuanda C., Burnett, Sandra H., Carson, Susan, Caruso, Steven M., Clase, Kari, DeJong, Randall J., Dennehy, John J., Denver, Dee R., Dunbar, David, Elgin, Sarah C. R., Findley, Ann M., Gissendanner, Chris R., Golebiewska, Urszula P., Guild, Nancy, Hartzog, Grant A., Grillo, Wendy H., Hollowell, Gail P., Hughes, Lee E., Johnson, Allison, King, Rodney A., Lewis, Lynn O., Li, Wei, Rosenzweig, Frank, Rubin, Michael R., Saha, Margaret S., Sandoz, James, Shaffer, Christopher D., Taylor, Barbara, Temple, Louise, Vazquez, Edwin, Ware, Vassie C., Barker, Lucia P., Bradley, Kevin W., Jacobs-Sera, Deborah, Pope, Welkin H., Russell, Daniel A., Cresawn, Steven G., Lopatto, David, Bailey, Cheryl P., and Hatfull, Graham F.
- Abstract:
- Engaging large numbers of undergraduates in authentic scientific discovery is desirable but difficult to achieve. We have developed a general model in which faculty and teaching assistants from diverse academic institutions are trained to teach a research course for first-year undergraduate students focused on bacteriophage discovery and genomics. The course...
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- J. DeJong,f John J. Dennehy,g Dee R. Denver,h David Dunbar,i Sarah C. R. Elgin,j Ann M. Findley,k
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- Creator:
- Jordan, Tuajuanda C., Burnett, Sandra H., Carson, Susan, Caruso, Steven M., Clase, Kari, DeJong, Randall J., Dennehy, John J., Denver, Dee R., Dunbar, David, Elgin, Sarah C. R., Findley, Ann M., Gissendanner, Chris R., Golebiewska, Urszula P., Guild, Nancy, Hartzog, Grant A., Grillo, Wendy H., Hollowell, Gail P., Hughes, Lee E., Johnson, Allison, King, Rodney A., Lewis, Lynn O., Li, Wei, Rosenzweig, Frank, Rubin, Michael R., Saha, Margaret S., Sandoz, James, Shaffer, Christopher D., Taylor, Barbara, Temple, Louise, Vazquez, Edwin, Ware, Vassie C., Barker, Lucia P., Bradley, Kevin W., Jacobs-Sera, Deborah, Pope, Welkin H., Russell, Daniel A., Cresawn, Steven G., Lopatto, David, Bailey, Cheryl P., and Hatfull, Graham F.
- Abstract:
- Engaging large numbers of undergraduates in authentic scientific discovery is desirable but difficult to achieve. We have developed a general model in which faculty and teaching assistants from diverse academic institutions are trained to teach a research course for first-year undergraduate students focused on bacteriophage discovery and genomics. The course...
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- Creator:
- Jordan, Tuajuanda C., Burnett, Sandra H., Carson, Susan, Caruso, Steven M., Clase, Kari, DeJong, Randall J., Dennehy, John J., Denver, Dee R., Dunbar, David, Elgin, Sarah C. R., Findley, Ann M., Gissendanner, Chris R., Golebiewska, Urszula P., Guild, Nancy, Hartzog, Grant A., Grillo, Wendy H., Hollowell, Gail P., Hughes, Lee E., Johnson, Allison, King, Rodney A., Lewis, Lynn O., Li, Wei, Rosenzweig, Frank, Rubin, Michael R., Saha, Margaret S., Sandoz, James, Shaffer, Christopher D., Taylor, Barbara, Temple, Louise, Vazquez, Edwin, Ware, Vassie C., Barker, Lucia P., Bradley, Kevin W., Jacobs-Sera, Deborah, Pope, Welkin H., Russell, Daniel A., Cresawn, Steven G., Lopatto, David, Bailey, Cheryl P., and Hatfull, Graham F.
- Abstract:
- Engaging large numbers of undergraduates in authentic scientific discovery is desirable but difficult to achieve. We have developed a general model in which faculty and teaching assistants from diverse academic institutions are trained to teach a research course for first-year undergraduate students focused on bacteriophage discovery and genomics. The course...
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- Article
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- Creator:
- Deans, Andrew R., Lewis, Suzanna E., Huala, Eva, Anzaldo, Salvatore S., Ashburner, Michael, Balhoff, James P., Blackburn, David C., Blake, Judith A., Burleigh, J. Gordon, Chanet, Bruno, Cooper, Lauren D., Courtot, Mélanie, Csösz, Sándor, Cul, Hong, Dahdul, Wasila, Das, Sandip, Dececchi, T. Alexander, Dettal, Agnes, Diogo, Rui, Druzinsky, Robert E., Dumontier, Michel, Franz, Nico M., Friedrich, Frank, Gkoutos, George V., Haendel, Melissa, Harmon, Luke J., Hayamizu, Terry F., He, Yongqun, Hines, Heather M., Ibrahim, Nizar, Jackson, Laura M., Jaiswal, Pankaj, James-Zorn, Christina, Köhler, Sebastian, Lecointre, Guillaume, Lapp, Hilmar, Lawrence, Carolyn J., Le Novère, Nicolas, Lundberg, John G., Macklin, James, Mast, Austin R., Midford, Peter E., Mikó, István, Mungall, Christopher J., Oellrich, Anika, Osumi-Sutherland, David, Parkinson, Helen, Ramírez, Martín J., Richter, Stefan, Robinson, Peter N., Ruttenberg, Alan, Schulz, Katja S., Segerdell, Erik, Seltmann, Katja C., Sharkey, Michael J., Smith, Aaron D., Smith, Barry, Specht, Chelsea D., Squires, R. Burke, Thacker, Robert W., Thessen, Anne, Fernandez-Triana, Jose, Vihinen, Mauno, Vize, Peter D., Vogt, Lars, Wall, Christine E., Walls, Ramona L., Westerfeld, Monte, Wharton, Robert A., Wirkner, Christian S., Woolley, James B., Yoder, Matthew J., Zorn, Aaron M., and Mabee, Paula
- Abstract:
- Despite a large and multifaceted effort to understand the vast landscape of phenotypic data, their current form inhibits productive data analysis. The lack of a community-wide, consensus-based, human- and machine-interpretable language for describing phenotypes and their genomic and environmental contexts is perhaps the most pressing scientific bottleneck to integration across...
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- . Lewis2, Eva Huala3,4, Salvatore S. Anzaldo5, Michael Ashburner6, James P. Balhoff7, David C. Blackburn8
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- Creator:
- Gene Ontology Consortium, Berardini, Tanya Z., Li, Donghui, Huala, Eva, Bridges, Susan, Burgess, Shane, McCarthy, Fiona, Carbon, Seth, Lewis, Suzanna E., Mungall, Christopher J., Abdulla, Amina, Wood, Valerie, Feltrin, Erika, Valle, Giorgio, Chisholm, Rex L., Fey, Petra, Gaudet, Pascale, Kibbe, Warren, Basu, Siddhartha, Bushmanova, Yulia, Eilbeck, Karen, Siegele, Deborah A., McIntosh, Brenley, Renfro, Daniel, Zweifel, Adrienne, Hu, James C., Harris, Midori A., Deegan, Jennifer I., Ireland, Amelia, Lomax, Jane, Jaiswal, Pankaj, Chibucos, Marcus, Gwinn-Giglio, Michelle, Wortman, Jennifer, Hannick, Linda, Madupu, Ramana, Botstein, David, Dolinski, Kara, Livstone, Michael S., Oughtred, Rose, Blake, Judith A., Bult, Carol, Diehl, Alexander D., Dolan, Mary, Drabkin, Harold, Eppig, Janan T., Hill, David P., Ni, Li, Ringwald, Martin, Sitnikov, Dmitry, Collmer, Candace, Torto-Alalibo, Trudy, Laulederkind, Stan, Shimoyama, Mary, Twigger, Simon, D'Eustachio, Peter, Matthews, Lisa, Balakrishnan, Rama, Binkley, Gail, Cherry, J. Michael, Christie, Karen R., Costanzo, Maria C., Engel, Stacia R., Fisk, Dianna G., Hirschman, Jodi E., Hitz, Benjamin C., Hong, Eurie L., Krieger, Cynthia J., Miyasato, Stuart R., Nash, Robert S., Park, Julie, Skrzypek, Marek S., Weng, Shuai, Wong, Edith D., Aslett, Martin, Chan, Juancarlos, Kishore, Ranjana, Sternberg, Paul, Van Auken, Kimberly, Khodiyar, Varsha K., Lovering, Ruth C., and Talmud, Philippa J.
- Abstract:
- The Gene Ontology (GO) Consortium (http://www.geneontology.org) (GOC) continues to develop, maintain and use a set of structured, controlled vocabularies for the annotation of genes, gene products and sequences. The GO ontologies are expanding both in content and in structure. Several new relationship types have been introduced and used, along with...
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- Article
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- -Faruque, Rolf Apweiler, Andrea Auchinchloss, Amos Bairoch, Daniel Barrell, David Binns, Marie-Claude