Luquillo Bibliography
Filters: Author is Walker, L.R. [Clear All Filters]
(In Press). Landslides cause spatial and temporal gradients at multiple scales in the Luquillo Mountains of Puerto Rico.
Ecological Gradient Analyses in a Tropical Ecosystem.
(2013). Changes in abiotic influences on seed plants and ferns during 18 years of primary succession on Puerto Rican landslides.
Journal of Ecology. 1-17. Abstract
(2013). Landslide Ecology.
(2012). Long-Term Research in the Luquillo Mountains: synthesis and foundations for the future.
(, Ed.).A Caribbean Forest Tapestry: The Multidimensional Nature of Disturbance and Response. 361-441. Abstract
(2012). Management Implications and Applications of Long-Term Ecological Research.
(, Ed.).A Caribbean Forest Tapestry: The Multidimensional Nature of Disturbance and Response. Abstract
(2012). Response to Disturbance.
(, Ed.).A Caribbean Forest Tapestry: The Multidimensional Nature of Disturbance and Response. Abstract
(2011). The Biology of Disturbed Habitats.
(2011). Integration of the study of natural and anthropogenic disturbances using severity gradients.
Austral Ecology. 36, 916-922.
(2011). Four opportunities for studies of ecological succession.
Trends in Ecology and Evolution. 26(3), 119-123.
(2010). Current and future directions in fern ecology.
(, Ed.).Fern Ecology. 360-378.
(2010). Fern Ecology.
(2010). Problem ferns: their impact and management.
(, Ed.).Fern Ecology. 255-322.
(2010). Ecological importance of ferns.
(, Ed.).Fern Ecology. 1-21.
(2010). Ecological insights from fern population dynamics.
(, Ed.).Fern Ecology. 61-110.
(2010). Ferns, disturbance and succession.
(, Ed.).Fern Ecology. 177-219.
(2009). Applying lessons from ecological succession to the restoration of landslides.
Plant and Soil. 324(1-2), 157-168. Abstract
(2009). Lessons from primary succession for restoration of severely damaged habitats.
Applied Vegetation Science. 12, 55-67.
(2008). Post-disturbance erosion impacts carbon fluxes and plant succession on recent tropical landslides.
Plant and Soil. 313, 205-216.
(2008). Soil factors predict initial plant colonization on Puerto Rican landslides.
Plant Ecology. 195, 165-178.
(2008). Transition dynamics in succession: implications for rates, trajectories and restoration.
(, Ed.).New Models for Ecosystem Dynamics and Restoration. 33-49.
(2007). Old field succession: development of concepts.
(, Ed.).Old Fields: Dynamics and Restoration of Abandoned Farmland. 17-30.
(2007). Forging a new alliance between succession and restoration.
(, Ed.).Linking Restoration and Ecological Succession. 1-18.
(2007). Insights gained from succession for the restoration of landscape structure and function.
(, Ed.).Linking Restoration and Ecological Succession. 19-44.
(2007). Integrating restoration and succession.
(, Ed.).Linking Restoration and Ecological Succession. 168-179.
(2006). Organic matter inputs create variable resource patches on Puerto Rican landslides.
Plant Ecology. 184, 223-236.
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