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An actively curated bibliography of high impact LTER research products dating from 1980.

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LTER Bibliography

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Pickett STA. The wild and the city. In: Fearn E 2010-2011 state of the wild: a global portrait. 2010-2011 state of the wild: a global portrait. Washington, DC; 2010. p. 153-159.
Burgi M. Wie ver. Schweiz Z. Forstwes. 1998;149(10):758-769.
Porter TM, Schadt CW, Rizvi L, Martin AP, Schmidt SK, Scott-Denton L, Vilgalys R, Moncalvo J-M. Widespread occurrence and phylogenetic placement of a soil clone group adds a prominent new branch to the fungal tree of life. 2007;46:635-644.
van Mantgem PJ, Taylor AH, Veblen TT, Stephenson NL, Byrne JC, Daniels LD, Franklin JF, Ful, Harmon ME, Larson AJ. Widespread increase of tree mortality rates in the western United States. Science [Internet]. 2009;323:521-524. Available from: http://andrewsforest.oregonstate.edu/pubs/pdf/pub4479.pdf
Bassirirad H, Sehtiya H, Salim S, Constable J, Lussenhop J, Kimball B, Norby R, Oechel W, Reich P, Schlesinger W. Widespread foliage 15N depletion under elevated CO2: inferences for the nitrogen cycle. Global Change Biology. 2003;9:1-9.
Hollibaugh JT, Bano N, Ducklow HW. Widespread distribution in polar oceans of a 16S rRNA gene sequence with affinity to Nitrosospira-like ammonia-oxidizing bacteria. Applied Environemntal Microbiology. 2002;68:1478-1484.
Clark JS. Why Trees Migrate So Fast: Confronting Theory with Dispersal Biology and the Paleorecord. The American Naturalist [Internet]. 1998;152(2):204-224. Available from: http://cwt33.ecology.uga.edu/publications/13.pdf
Westley F, Carpenter SR, Brock WA, Holling CS, Gunderson LH. Why systems of people and nature are not just social and ecological systems. In: Holling CS Panarchy : understanding transformations in human and natural systems. Panarchy : understanding transformations in human and natural systems. Washington, DC; 2002. p. 103-19.
Hollweg KS, Pea CH, Berkowitz AR. Why is understanding urban ecosystems an important frontier for education and educators?. In: Hollweg KS Understanding urban ecosystems: a new frontier for science and education. Understanding urban ecosystems: a new frontier for science and education. New York; 2003. p. 19-38.
Li B-L. Why is the holistic approach becoming so important in landscape ecology?. 2000;50:27-41.
McMurtrie R, Norby R, Medlyn B, Dewar R, Pepper D, Reich P, Barton CVM. Why is plant-growth response to elevated CO2 amplified when water is limiting, but reduced when nitrogen is limiting? A growth-optimisation hypothesis. FUNCTIONAL PLANT BIOLOGY. 2008;35:521.
Pickett STA. Why is developing a broad understanding of urban ecosystems important to science and scientists?. In: Hollweg KS Understanding urban ecosystems: a new frontier for science and education. Understanding urban ecosystems: a new frontier for science and education. New York; 2003. p. 58-72.
Likens GE. Why has Hubbard Brook Forest stopped growing?. 1996;3(8):1-6.
Bennett EM, Carpenter SR, Peterson GD, Cumming GS, Zurek MB, Pingali PL. Why global scenarios need ecology. Frontiers in Ecology and the Environment. 2003;1(6):322-329.
Clark JS. Why environmental scientists are becoming Bayesians. Ecology Letters [Internet]. 2005;8:2-14. Available from: http://cwt33.ecology.uga.edu/publications/3006.pdf
Briggs JM, Spielmann KA, Schaafsma HA, Kintigh KW, Kruse MW, Morehouse KW, Schollmeyer KW. Why ecology needs archaeologists and archaeology needs ecologists. 2006;4:180-188.
Aber JD. Why don't we believe the models?. Bulletin of the Ecological Society of America. 1997;78:232-233.
Makarieva AM, Gorshkov VG, Li B-L. Why do population density and inverse home range scale differently with body size? Implications for ecosystem stability. 2005;2:259-271.
Ridgway T, Gates RD. Why are there so few genetic markers available for coral population analyses?. [Internet]. 2006;41(1):1-7. Available from: <Go to ISI>://000237345200001
Srivastava DS, Trzcinski MK, Richardson BA, Gilbert B. Why are predators more sensitive to habitat size than their prey? Insights from bromeliad insect food webs. American Naturalist. 2008;172:761-771 [DOI: 10.1086/592868].
Lusk C, Reich P, Montgomery R, Ackerly D, Cavender-Bares J. Why are evergreen leaves so contrary about shade?. TRENDS IN ECOLOGY &EVOLUTION. 2008;23:299.
Huntington TG, Ryan DF. Whole-tree harvesting effects on soil nitrogen and carbon. 1990;31:193-204.
Johnson CE, Johnson AH, Huntington TG, Siccama TG. Whole-tree clear-cutting effects on soil horizons and organic-matter pools. 1991;55:497-502.
Johnson CE, Johnson AH, Siccama TG. Whole-tree clear-cutting effects on exchangeable cations and soil acidity. 1991;55:502-508.
Tritton LM, Martin CW, Hornbeck JW, Pierce RS, Smith CT. Whole-tree clearcutting as perturbation of the forest ecosystem. 1987;68(3):433.

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