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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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Journal Article
Tilman D, Hill J, Lehman C. Response to comment on Carbon-negative biofuels from low-input high-diversity grassland biomass. 316. 2007;(1567).
Ritchie ME, Tilman D. Responses of legumes to herbivores and nutrients during succession on a nitrogen-poor soil. Ecology 76(8):2648-2655. 1995.
Craine J, Reich P, Tilman D, Ellsworth D, Fargione J, Knops J, Naeem S. The role of plant species in biomass production and response to elevated CO2 and N. Ecology Letters. 2003;6:623-630.
Tilman D. The schism between theory and ardent empiricism: a reply to Shipley and Peters. The American Naturalist 138:1283-1286. 1991.
Tilman D. Secondary succession and the pattern of plant dominance along experimental nitrogen gradients. Ecological Monographs 57:189-214. 1987.
Kitajima K, Tilman D. Seed banks and seedling establishment on an experimental productivity gradient. Oikos 76:381-391. 1996.
Foster B, Tilman D. Seed limitation and the regulation of community structure in oak savanna grassland. Journal of Ecology. 2003;91:999-1007.
Smith G, Grime J, Tilman D. Seedling resistance to herbivory as a predictor of relative abundance in a synthesized prairie community. Oikos. 2003;101:345-353.
Knops J, Ritchie ME, Tilman D. Selective herbivory on a nitrogen fixing legume (Lathyrus venosus) influences productivity and ecosystem nitrogen pools in an oak savanna. Ecoscience 7(2):166-174. 2000.
Siemann E, Haarstad J, Tilman D. Short-term and long-term effects of burning on oak savanna arthropods. American Midland Naturalist 137:349-361. 1997.
McGinley MA, Tilman D. Short-term response of old-field plant communities to fire and disturbance. American Midland Naturalist 129:409-413. 1993.
Holt RD, Grover J, Tilman D. Simple rules for interspecific dominance in systems with exploitative and apparent competition. The American Naturalist 144:741-771. 1994.
Tilman D, Kareiva P. Spatial Ecology: The Role of Space in Population Dynamics and Interspecific Interactions. Princeton University Press, New Jersey. 1997.
Reich P, Tilman D, Naeem S, Ellsworth D, Knops J, Craine J, Wedin D, Trost J. Species and functional group diversity independently influence biomass accumulation and its response to CO2 and N. Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences. 2004;101:10101-10106.
Tilman D. Species composition, species diversity, and ecosystem processes: understanding the impacts of global change. Pages 452-472 in, M. L. Pace and P. M. Groffman, eds., Successes, Limitations, and Frontiers in Ecosystems Science. Springer-Verlag, New York. 1998.
Wedin DA, Tilman D. Species effects on nitrogen cycling: a test with perennial grasses. Oecologia 84:433-441. 1990.
Tilman D, Lehman C, May R, Nowak M. Species fragmentation or area loss? (Reply to Budiansky.) Nature 382:215-216. 1996.
Symstad AJ, Tilman D, Willson J, Knops JMH. Species loss and ecosystem functioning: effects of species identity and community composition. Oikos 81:389-397. 1998.
Tilman D. Species richness of experimental productivity gradients: How important is colonization limitation? Ecology 74:2179-2191. 1993.
Reich P, Buschena C, Tjoelker M, Wrage K, Knops J, Tilman D, Machado J. Variation in growth rate and ecophysiology among 34 grassland and savanna species under contrasting N supply: a test of functional group differences. New Phytologist. 2003;157:617-631.

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