2018

*with undergraduate co-authors; †With graduate student co-authors

  • *Baranowski, A.K., and E.L. Preisser. 2018. Predator cues increase silkmoth mortality. Frontiers in Ecology and Evolution 6: 220. [PDF]
  • Ellison, A.M., Orwig, D.A., Fitzpatrick, M.C., and E.L. Preisser. 2018. The past, present, and future of the hemlock woolly adelgid (Adelges tsugae) and its ecological interactions with eastern hemlock (Tsuga canadensis) forests. Insects 9(4): 172; doi: 10.3390/insects9040172. Invited review for special feature on the hemlock woolly adelgid. [PDF]
  • †*Wilson, C.M., Schaeffer, R.N., Hickin, M., Rigsby, C.M., Sommi, A., Thornber, C.S., Orians, C.M., and E.L. Preisser. 2018. Chronic impacts of invasive herbivores on a foundational forest species: a whole-tree perspective. Ecology 99(8): 1783-1791. [PDF]
  • Lany, N.K., Zarnetske, P.L., Schliep, E.M., Schaeffer, R.N., Orians, C.M., Orwig, D.A., and E.L. Preisser. 2018. Asymmetric biotic interactions and abiotic niche differences revealed by a dynamic joint species distribution model. Ecology 99(5): 1018-1023. [PDF]
  • *Baranowski, A.K., and E.L. Preisser. 2018. Can Darapsa myron (Lepidoptera: Sphingidae) successfully use the invasive plant Ampelopsis brevipedunculata as a food resource? Journal of the Lepidopterist’s Society 72(2): 152-154. [PDF]
  • Huggett, B.A., Savage, J., Hao, G.Y., Preisser, E.L., and N.M. Holbrook. 2018. Impact of hemlock woolly adelgid (Adelges tsugae) infestation on xylem structure and function and leaf physiology in eastern hemlock (Tsuga canadensis). Functional Plant Biology 45(5): 501-508. [PDF]
  • Schaeffer, R.N., Wang, Z., Thornber, C.S., Preisser, E.L., and C.M. Orians. 2018. Two invasive herbivores on a shared host: patterns and consequences of phytohormone induction. Oecologia 186(4): 973-982. [PDF]
  • Schliep, E.M., Lany, N.K., Zarnetske, P.L., Schaeffer, R.N., Orians, C.M., Orwig, D.A., and E.L. Preisser. 2018. Joint species distribution modeling for spatio-temporal occurrence and ordinal abundance data. Global Ecology and Biogeography 27(1): 142-155. [PDF]