- Home
- News & Events
- Programs
- Monitoring and Assessment
- Ecological Site Descriptions (ESD)
- Landscape Toolbox
- Long Term Ecological Research
- Data Catalogs
- Long Term Agricultural Research
- People
- Publications
- Plans & Reports
- Education
- The Jornada
- Partners
- USDA-ARS Range Management Research
- U.S. LTER Network
- U.S. National Science Foundation
- Natural Resource Conservation Service
- Bureau of Land Management
- USGS
- NEON
- NOAA National Climatic Data Center
- USDA UV-B Monitoring & Research Program
- New Mexico State University
- Chihuahuan Desert Rangeland Research Center
- USDA-ARS Southwestern Cotton Ginning Research Lab
- Western Snow Conference
To view a PDF of any publication, simply click on the title of the publication and then click on the highlighted URL address below the abstract. If there is no URL address, the PDF is not yet available. Please contact us for access to the PDF if required.
Woody plant proliferation in North American drylands: a synthesis of impacts on ecosystem carbon balance. Journal Geophysical Research - Biogeosciences. In Press.
Perspectives on global change theory. In: The Theory of Ecology. Chicago: University of Chicago Press; 2011. p. 261-81. Abstract
Long-term trends in ecological systems: an introduction to cross-site comparisons and relevance to global change studies.; 2011. (Long-term trends in ecological systems: a basis for understanding responses to global change).
Patterns of net primary production across sites. Cross-site comparisons of state change dynamics.; 2011. (Long-term trends in ecological systems: a basis for understanding responses to global change).
Long-term trends in production, abundance, and richness of plants and animals.; 2011. (Long-term trends in ecological systems: a basis for understanding responses to global change).
Long-term trends in human demography and economy across sites.; 2011. (Long-term trends in ecological systems: a basis for understanding responses to global change).
Long-term trends in precipitation and surface water chemistry.; 2011. (Long-term trends in ecological systems: a basis for understanding responses to global change).
Long-term trends in climate and climate-related drivers.; 2011. (Long-term trends in ecological systems: a basis for understanding responses to global change).
Approaches to predicting broad-scale regime shifts using changing pattern-process relationships across scales. In: Real World Ecology: Large-scale and long-term case studies and methods. New York; 2009. p. 47-72. Abstract


















