STINSON LAB PUBLICATIONS

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Author names in Italics denote graduate student, postdoctoral, and undergraduate advisees.

Rapp, J.M., Lutz, D.A., Huish, R.D., Dufour, B., Ahmed, S., Morelli, T., and Stinson, K.A. (2020). Sugar maple responses to climate change: We’ll boil it down for you. Forest Ecology & Management https://doi.org/10.1016/j.foreco.2019.117760.

Rapp, J.M., Lutz, D.A., Huish, R.D., DuFour, B., Ahmed, S., Morelli, T.L., and Stinson, K.A. (2019). Finding the sweet spot: Shifting climate optima for maple syrup production in North America. Forest Ecology and Management 448. https://doi.org/10.1016/j.foreco.2019.05.045.

Anthony, M.A., Stinson, K.A., Trautwig, A.N. Coates-Connor, E. and Frey, S. D. (2019). Fungal communities do not recover after removing invasive Alliaria petiolata (garlic mustard) Biological Invasions 21: 3085. https://doi.org/10.1007/s10530-019-02031-8.

Stinson, K. A., L. Carley, L. M. S. Hancock, and K. Donohue. (2019). Effects of maternal source and progeny microhabitat on natural selection and population dynamics in Alliaria petiolata. American Journal of Botany.

Stinson, K.A., Argetsinger, S., Jackson, M.R., Coates-Connor, E., and Meadows-McDonnell, M. (2018). Here's the Dirt: The Newest Recommendations for Garlic Mustard Management. Environmental Conservation Educational Materials.

Urbanowicz, C., Pasquerella, V., and Stinson, K.A. (2018). Differences in landscape drivers of garlic mustard invasion within and across ecoregions. Biological Invasions, 1-10.

Urbanowicz, C., Hutyra, L., and Stinson, K.A. (2018). The effects of urbanization and land use on ragweed distribution. Ecosphere 9(12), e02512.

Case, M. and Stinson, K.A. (2018). Climate change impacts on the distribution of the allergenic plant, common ragweed (Ambrosia artemisiifolia) in eastern United States. PLoS One.

Stinson, K.A., Wheeler, J.A., Record, S., and Jennings, J.L. (2018). Regional variation in timing, duration, and production of flowers by allergenic ragweed. Plant Ecology 219: 1081-1092 doi 10.1007/s11258-018-0860-0.

Haines, D.F., Aylward, J.A., and Stinson, K.A. (2018) Regional patterns of floristic diversity and composition in forests Invaded by garlic mustard (Alliaria petiolata). Northeastern Naturalist 25: 399-417.

Stinson, K.A., Frey, S.D., Jackson, M.R., Coates-Connor, E., Anthony, M., and Martinez, K. (2018) Responses of non-native earthworms to experimental eradication of garlic mustard, and implications for native vegetation. Ecosphere 9(7): e02353.

Bradley, B.A., Allen, J.M., O’Neill, M.W., Wallace, R.D., Bargeron, C.T., Richburg, J.A., and Stinson, K.A. (2018) Invasive species risk assessments need more consistent spatial abundance data. Ecosphere 9(7):e02302.

Stinson, K.A., Albertine, J. M., Seidler, T. G., and Rogers, C. A. (2017) Elevated CO2 boosts reproduction and alters selection in northern but not southern ecotypes of allergenic ragweed. American Journal of Botany 104:1313-1322.

Wheeler, J.A., Frey, S.D. and Stinson, K.A. (2017) Tree seedling responses to multiple environmental stresses: Interactive effects of soil warming, nitrogen fertilization, and plant invasion. Forest Ecology and Management 403: 44-51.

Anthony, M.A., Frey, S.D., and Stinson, K.A. (2017) Fungal community homogenization, shift in dominant trophic guild, and appearance of novel taxa with biotic invasion. Ecosphere 8: e01951.

Wheeler, J.A., Gonzalez, N.M., and Stinson, K.A. (2016) Red hot maples: Acer rubrum phenology, growth and biomass allocation under climate warming. Canadian Journal of Forest Research 47(2): 159-165.

Stinson, K. A., Albertine, J. M., Hancock, L.M.S., Seidler, T. G., Rogers, C. A. (2016) Northern ragweed ecotypes flower earlier and longer in response to elevated CO2: What are you sneezing at? Oecologia 182: 587–594.

Stinson, K.A., and Seidler, T.G. (2014) Physiological constraints on the spread of Alliaria petiolata populations in Massachusetts. Ecosphere 5:art96.

Albertine, J.A., Manning, W.J., Muilenburg, M.L., Stinson, K.A., and Rogers, C.A. (2014) Projected carbon dioxide to increase grass pollen and allergen exposure despite higher ozone levels. PLoS One 9:e111712.

Barto, K., Antunes, P., Stinson, K.A., Koch, A., Klironomos, J., and Cipollini, D. (2012) Differences in arbuscular mycorrhizal fungal communities associated with sugar maple seedlings in and outside of invaded garlic mustard forest patches. Biological Invasions 13:2755-2762.

Stinson, K.A., Brophy, C., and Connolly J. (2011) Catching up on global change: CO2 reverses genotypic dominance in common ragweed. Ecosphere 2:46-52.

Dukes, J., Pontius, J., Orwig, D., Warren, G., Cooke, B., Brazee, N. Ayres, M., Harrington, R., Rodgers, V., Theoharides, K., Lerdau, M., Wick, R., Ehrenfeld, J., Gurevitch, J., Strange, E., and Stinson, K.A. (2009) Responses of pests, pathogens and invasive species to climate change in the forests of Northeastern North America: What can we predict? Canadian Journal of Forest Research 39:231-248.

Wolfe, B.E., Rodgers, V.L., Stinson, K.A., and Pringle, A. (2008) The invasive plant Alliaria petiolata (garlic mustard) inhibits ectomycorrhizal fungi in its introduced range. Journal of Ecology 96:777-783.

Rodgers, V.L., Stinson, K.A., and Finzi, A.C. (2008) Ready or not, garlic mustard is moving in: Alliaria petiolata as a member of Eastern North American Forests. Bioscience 58:428-436.

Callaway R.M., Cipollini, D., Barto, K., Thelen, G.C., Hallett, G., Prati, D., Stinson, K.A., and Klironomos, J. (2008) Novel weapons: invasive plant suppresses fungal mutualists in America but not in its native Europe. Ecology 89:1043-1055.

Stinson, K.A., Kaufman, S.R, Durbin, L.M., and Lowenstein, F. (2007) Responses of a New England Forest community to increasing levels of invasion by garlic mustard (Alliaria petiolata). Northeastern Naturalist 14:73-88.

Stinson, K.A., Tran, J.H., Petzold, J.M., and Bazzaz, F.A. (2006) Architectural and physiological mechanisms of reduced size inequality in CO2-enriched stands of common ragweed (Ambrosia artemisiifolia). Global Change Biology 12:1680-1689.

Stinson, K.A., Campbell, S.A., Powell, J.R., Wolfe, B.E., Callaway, R.M., Thelen, G.C., Hallett, S.G., Prati, D., and Klironomos, J.N. (2006) Invasive plant suppresses the growth of native tree seedlings by disrupting belowground mutualisms. PLOS Biology 4:727-731.

Stinson, K.A., and Bazzaz, F.A. (2006) CO2-enrichment reduces reproductive dominance in competing stands of Ambrosia artemisiifolia (common ragweed). Oecologia 147:155-163.

Sudderth, E.A., Stinson, K.A., and Bazzaz, F.A. (2005) Host specific aphid population responses to elevated CO2 and increased N availability. Global Change Biology 11:1‑12.

Ellison, A.E., et al. (2005) Loss of foundation species: consequences for the structure and dynamics of forested ecosystems. Frontiers in Ecology 3:479-486.

Stinson, K.A., (2005) Effects of snowmelt timing and neighbor density on the distribution of the high altitude plant, Potentilla diversifolia. Arctic, Antarctic and Alpine Research 37:379386.

Stinson, K.A. (2004) Natural selection favors rapid reproductive phenology in Potentilla pulcherrima (Rosaceae) at opposite ends of a subalpine snowmelt gradient. American Journal of Botany 91:531-539.