Resilience and Adaptation

Resilience

How do phenomena such as changing climates, land-use, human needs, and invasive species affect global change and how can we use our understanding of these effects to predict future responses?

RECENT PUBLICATIONS:

OCTOBER 1, 2019

Spatial and temporal dynamics of 20th century carbon storage and emissions after wildfire in an old-growth forest landscape

Harris, L. B., Scholl, A. E., Young, A. B., Estes, B. L., & Taylor, A. H. 

JULY 22, 2019

Considerations for maximizing the adaptive potential of restored coral populations in the western Atlantic

Baums, I. B., Baker, A. C., Davies, S. W., Grottoli, A. G., Kenkel, C. D., Kitchen, S. A., ... Shantz, A. A.

APRIL 15, 2019

Broader niches revealed by fossil data do not reduce estimates of range loss and fragmentation of African montane trees

Ivory, S., Russell, J., Early, R., & Sax, D. F.

APRIL 1, 2019

A trait-based approach to predict population genetic structure in bees

Lopez-Uribe, M. M., Jha, S., & Soro, A. 

MARCH 1, 2019

Invasive shrub removal benefits native plants in an eastern deciduous forest of North America

Maynard-Bean, E., & Kaye, M. W.

MARCH, 2019

Global change impacts on forest and fire dynamics using paleoecology and tree census data for eastern North America

Abrams, M. D., & Nowacki, G. J. 

FEBRUARY 8, 2019

Assessing the relative vulnerabilities of Mid‐Atlantic freshwater wetlands to projected hydrologic changes

Wardrop, D. H., Hamilton, A. T., Nassry, M. Q., West, J. M., & Britson, A. J. 


FACULTY IN RESILIENCE AND ADAPTATION:

Hong Wu

Stuckeman Career Development Assistant Professor in Design