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- Creator:
- Borer, Elizabeth T., Seabloom, Eric W., Gruner, Daniel S., O'Halloran, Lydia R., Gruner, Daniel S., Harpole, W. Stanley, Hillebrand, Helmut, Lind, Eric M., Alder, Peter B., Alberti, Juan, Anderson, T. Michael, Bakker, Jonathan D., Biederman, Lori, Blumenthal, Dana, Brown, Cynthia S., Brudvig, Lars A., Buckley, Yvonne M., Cadotte, Marc, Chu, Chengjin, Cleland, Elsa E., Crawley, Michael J., Daleo, Pedro, Damschen, Ellen I., Davies, Kendi F., Decrappeo, Nicole M., Du, Guozhen, Firn, Jennifer, Hautier, Yann, Heckman, Robert W., Hector, Andy, HelleRisLambers, Janneke, Iribarne, Oscar, Klein, Julia A., Knops, Johannes M. H., La Pierre, Kimbery J., Leakey, Andrew D. B., Li, Wei, MacDougall, Andrew S., McCulley, Rebecca L., Melbourne, Brett A., Mitchell, Charles E., Moore, Joslin L., Mortensen, Brent, Orrock, John L., Pascual, Jesus, Prober, Suzanne M., Pyke, David A., Risch, Anita C., Schuetz, Martin, Smith, Melinda D., Stevens, Carly J., Sullivan, Lauren L., Williams, Ryan J., Wragg, Peter D., Wright, Justin P., and Yang, Louie H.
- Abstract:
- Human alterations to nutrient cycles[superscript 1,2] and herbivore communities³⁻⁷ are affecting global biodiversity dramatically². Ecological theory predicts these changes should be strongly counteractive: nutrient addition drives plant species loss through intensified competition for light, whereas herbivores prevent competitive exclusion by increasing ground-level light, particularly in productive systems[superscript 8,9]. Here we...
- Resource Type:
- Article
- Full Text:
- . Seabloom1, Daniel S. Gruner2,W. StanleyHarpole3, HelmutHillebrand4, EricM. Lind1, Peter B. Adler5, Juan
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- Creator:
- Alderman, S. C., Anderson, N. P., Ball, Daniel A. (Daniel Allen), 1954-, Banowetz, G. M., Chastain, T. G., Curtis, D. W., Derkatch, A. V., Dreves, A. J., Dugger, B. D., Garbacik, C. J., Garcia, T. S., Giannico, G. R., Gerth, W. J., Gervais, J. A., Griffith, S. M., Herlihy, A. T., Hinds-Cook, B. J., Hoffman, G. D., Hulting, A. G., Kaser, J. M., Li, J. L., Mallory-Smith, C. A., Maxfield-Taylor, S., Mellbye, M. E., Mueller-Warrant, G. W., Oregon State University. Department of Crop Science, Pfender, W. F., Rao, S., Rondon, Silvia I., Silberstein, T. B., Stephen, W. P., Skyrm, K. M., United States. Agricultural Research Service, Walenta, D. L., Whittaker, G. W., Wysocki, D. J., Wyss, L. A., and Young, William C., III
- Resource Type:
- Other
- Full Text:
- to being weighed, pollen samples were dried at 140°F for 24 hrs. Each pollen sample was then
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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...
- Full Text:
- ., Carson, S., Caruso, S. M., Clase, K., DeJong, R. J., ... & Hatfull, G. F. (2014). A Broadly
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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:
- Kamoun, Sophien, Furzer, Oliver, Jones, Jonathan D. G., Judelson, Howard S., Ali, Gul Shad, Dalio, Ronaldo J. D., Roy, Sanjoy Guha, Schena, Leonardo, Zambounis, Antonios, Panabières, Franck, Cahill, David, Ruocco, Michelina, Figueiredo, Andreia, Chen, Xiao-Ren, Hulvey, Jon, Stam, Remco, Lamour, Kurt, Gijzen, Mark, Tyler, Brett M., Grünwald, Niklaus J., Mukhtar, M. Shahid, Tomé, Daniel F. A., Tör, Mahmut, Van den Ackerveken, Guido, McDowell, John, Daayf, Fouad, Fry, William E., Lindqvist-Kreuze, Hannele, Meijer, Harold J. G., Petre, Benjamin, Ristaino, Jean, Yoshida, Kentaro, Birch, Paul R. J., and Govers, Francine
- Abstract:
- Oomycetes form a deep lineage of eukaryotic organisms that includes a large number of plant pathogens which threaten natural and managed ecosystems. We undertook a survey to query the community for their ranking of plant-pathogenic oomycete species based on scientific and economic importance. In total, we received 263 votes from...
- Resource Type:
- Article
- Full Text:
- . GRÜNWALD18, M. SHAHID MUKHTAR19,20, DANIEL F. A. TOMÉ21, MAHMUT TÖR22, GUIDO VAN DEN ACKERVEKEN23, JOHN
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- Creator:
- Hautier, Yann, Seabloom, Eric W., Borer, Elizabeth T., Adler, Peter B., Harpole, W. Stanley, Hillebrand, Helmut, Lind, Eric M., MacDougall, Andrew S., Stevens, Carly J., Bakker, Jonathan D., Buckley, Yvonne M., Chu, Chengjin, Collins, Scott L., Daleo, Pedro, Damschen, Ellen I., Davies, Kendi F., Fay, Philip A., Firn, Jennifer, Gruner, Daniel S., Jin, Virginia L., Klein, Julia A., Knops, Johannes M. H., La Pierre, Kimberly J., Li, Wei, McCulley, Rebecca L., Melbourne, Brett A., Moore, Joslin L., O'Halloran, Lydia R., Prober, Suzanne M., Risch, Anita C., Sankaran, Mahesh, Schuetz, Martin, and Hector, Andy
- Abstract:
- Studies of experimental grassland communities¹⁻⁷ have demonstrated that plant diversity can stabilize productivity through species asynchrony, in which decreases in the biomass of some species are compensated for by increases in others[superscript 1,2]. However, it remains unknown whether these findings are relevant to natural ecosystems, especially those for which species...
- Resource Type:
- Article
- Full Text:
- , Kendi F. Davies15, Philip A. Fay16, Jennifer Firn17, Daniel S. Gruner18, Virginia L. Jin19, Julia A
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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...
- Resource Type:
- Article
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- Creator:
- Grace, James B., Adler, Peter B., Seabloom, Eric W., Borer, Elizabeth T., Hillebrand, Helmut, Hautier, Yann, Hector, Andy, Harpole, W. Stanley, O'Halloran, Lydia R., Anderson, T. Michael, Bakker, Jonathan D., Brown, Cynthia S., Buckley, Yvonne M., Collins, Scott L., Cottingham, Kathryn L., Crawley, Michael J., Damschen, Ellen I., Davies, Kendi F., DeCrappeo, Nicole M., Fay, Philip A., Firn, Jennifer, Gruner, Daniel S., Hagenah, Nicole, Jin, Virginia L., Kirkman, Kevin P., Knops, Johannes M. H., La Pierre, Kimberly J., Lambrinos, John G., Melbourne, Brett A., Mitchell, Charles E., Moore, Joslin L., Morgan, John W., Orrock, John L., Prober, Suzanne M., Stevens, Carly J., Wragg, Peter D., and Yang, Louie H.
- Abstract:
- Pan et al. claim that our results actually support a strong linear positive relationship between productivity and richness, whereas Fridley et al. contend that the data support a strong humped relationship. These responses illustrate how preoccupation with bivariate patterns distracts from a deeper understanding of the multivariate mechanisms that control...
- Resource Type:
- Article
- Full Text:
- F. Davies,17 Nicole M. DeCrappeo,18 Philip A. Fay,19 Jennifer Firn,20 Daniel S. Gruner,21 Nicole
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- Creator:
- Armisen, David, Rajakumar, Rajendhran, Friedrich, Markus, Benoit, Joshua B., Robertson, Hugh M., Panfilio, Kristen A., Ahn, Seung-Joon, Poelchau, Monica F., Chao, Hsu, Dinh, Huyen, Doddapaneni, Harsha Vardhan, Dugan, Shannon, Gibbs, Richard A., Hughes, Daniel S. T., Han, Yi, Lee, Sandra L., Murali, Shwetha C., Muzny, Donna M., Qu, Jiaxin, Worley, Kim C., Munoz-Torres, Monica, Abouheif, Ehab, Bonneton, Francois, Chen, Travis, Chiang, Li-Mei, Childers, Christopher P., Cridge, Andrew G., Crumiere, Antonin J. J., Decaras, Amelie, Didion, Elise M., Duncan, Elizabeth J., Elpidina, Elena N., Fave, Marie-Julie, Finet, Cedric, Jacobs, Chris G. C., Jarvela, Alys M. Cheatle, Jennings, Emily C., Jones, Jeffery W., Lesoway, Maryna P., Lovegrove, Mackenzie R., Martynov, Alexander, Oppert, Brenda, Lillico-Ouachour, Angelica, Rajakumar, Arjuna, Refki, Peter Nagui, Rosendale, Andrew J., Santos, Maria Emilia, Toubiana, William, van der Zee, Maurijn, Jentzsch, Iris M. Vargas, Lowman, Aidamalia Vargas, Viala, Severine, Richards, Stephen, and Khila, Abderrahman
- Abstract:
- Background: Having conquered water surfaces worldwide, the semi-aquatic bugs occupy ponds, streams, lakes, mangroves, and even open oceans. The diversity of this group has inspired a range of scientific studies from ecology and evolution to developmental genetics and hydrodynamics of fluid locomotion. However, the lack of a representative water strider...
- Resource Type:
- Article
- Full Text:
- , Seung-Joon Ahn8,9, Monica F. Poelchau10, Hsu Chao11, Huyen Dinh11, Harsha Vardhan Doddapaneni11, Shannon
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- Creator:
- Floudas, Dimitrios, Binder, Manfred, Riley, Robert, Barry, Kerrie, Blanchette, Robert A., Henrissat, Bernard, Martínez, Angel T., Otillar, Robert, Spatafora, Joseph W., Yadav, Jagjit S., Aerts, Andrea, Benoit, Isabelle, Boyd, Alex, Carlson, Alexis, Copeland, Alex, Coutinho, Pedro M., de Vries, Ronald P., Ferreira, Patricia, Findley, Keisha, Foster, Brian, Gaskell, Jill, Glotzer, Dylan, Gorecki, Pawel, Heitman, Joseph, Hesse, Cedar, Hori, Chiaki, Igarashi, Kiyohiko, Jurgens, Joel A., Kallen, Nathan, Kersten, Phil, Kohler, Annegret, Kues, Ursula, Kumar, T. K. Arun, Kuo, Alan, LaButti, Kurt, Larrondo, Luis F., Lindquist, Erika, Ling, Albee, Lombard, Vincent, Lucas, Susan, Lundell, Taina, Martin, Rachael, McLaughlin, David J., Morgenstern, Ingo, Morin, Emanuelle, Murat, Claude, Nagy, Laszlo G., Nolan, Matt, Ohm, Robin A., Patyshakuliyeva, Aleksandrina, Rokas, Antonis, Ruiz-Duenas, Francisco J., Sabat, Grzegorz, Salamov, Asaf, Samejima, Masahiro, Schmutz, Jeremy, Slot, Jason C., St. John, Franz, Stenlid, Jan, Sun, Hui, Sun, Sheng, Syed, Khajamohiddin, Tsang, Adrian, Wiebenga, Ad, Young, Darcy, Pisabarro, Antonio, Eastwood, Daniel C., Martin, Francis, Cullen, Dan, Grigoriev, Igor V., and Hibbett, David S.
- Abstract:
- Wood is a major pool of organic carbon that is highly resistant to decay, owing largely to the presence of lignin. The only organisms capable of substantial lignin decay are white rot fungi in the Agaricomycetes, which also contains non–lignin-degrading brown rot and ectomycorrhizal species. Comparative analyses of 31 fungal...
- Full Text:
- , Kurt LaButti, Luis F. Larrondo, Erika Lindquist, Albee Ling, Vincent Lombard, Susan Lucas, Taina