Publications

The Institute communicates its scientific and educational information in a number of ways. One major outlet is peer-reviewed publications and reports.  Cary Institute staff regularly publish in the best-rated journals in their respective fields.

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S. J. Meiners, M. L. Cadenasso, and S. T. A. Pickett, “Effects of plant invasions on the species richness of abandoned agricultural land”, Ecography, vol. 24, p. 633-644, 2001.
K. Schwarz, S. T. A. Pickett, R. G. Lathrop, K. C. Weathers, R. V. Pouyat, and M. L. Cadenasso, “The effects of the urban built environment on the spatial distribution of lead in residential soils”, Environ. Poll., vol. 163, p. 32-39, 2012.
A. Whitmer, et al., “The engaged university: providing a platform for research that transforms society”, Front. Ecol. Environ., vol. 8, p. 314-321, 2010.
S. I. Higgins, W. J. Bond, and S. T. A. Pickett, “Environmental stochasticity cannot save declining populations: reply from Higgins, Bond, and Pickett”, Trends Ecol. Evol., vol. 16, p. 177, 2001.
S. J. Meiners, M. L. Cadenasso, and S. T. A. Pickett, “Ever since Clements: from succession to vegetation dynamics and understanding to intervention”, Appl. Veg. Sci., vol. 12, p. 9-21, 2009.
M. L. Cadenasso, et al., “Exchanges across land-water-scape boundaries in urban systems: Strategies for reducing nitrate pollution”, in R. S. Ostfeld and W. H. Schlesinger (eds.). The Year in Ecology and Conservation Biology. Annals of the New York Academy of Sciences, vol. 1134, 2008, p. 213-232.
S. J. Meiners, M. L. Cadenasso, and S. T. A. Pickett, “Exotic plant invasions in successional systems: the utility of a long-term approach”, S. L. C. Fosbroke, and K. W. Gottschalk (eds.). p. 70-72, 2003.
S. J. Meiners, M. L. Cadenasso, and S. T. A. Pickett, “Exotic plant invasions over 40 years of old field succession: community patterns and associations”, Ecography, vol. 25, p. 215-223, 2002.
L. C. Foxcroft, S. T. A. Pickett, and M. L. Cadenasso, “Expanding the conceptual frameworks of plant invasion ecology”, Persp. Plant Ecol. Evol. Syst., vol. 13, p. 89-100, 2011.
M. L. Cadenasso, S. T. A. Pickett, and P. J. Morin, “Experimental test of the role of mammalian herbivores on old field succession: community structure and seedling survival”, J. Torrey Bot. Soc., vol. 129, p. 228-237, 2002.
M. J. McDonnell, A. K. Hahs, and S. T. A. Pickett, “Exposing an urban ecology straw man: critique of Ramalho and Hobbs”, Trends in Ecology and Evolution, vol. 27, p. 255-256, 2012.
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K. C. Weathers, M. L. Cadenasso, and S. T. A. Pickett, “Forest edges as nutrient and pollutant concentrators: potential synergisms between fragmentation, forest canopies, and the atmosphere”, Conserv. Biol., vol. 15, p. 1506-1514, 2001.
R. O. Bustamante, I. A. Serey, and S. T. A. Pickett, “Forest fragmentation, plant regeneration and invasion processes across edges in central Chile”, in G. A. Bradshaw, P. A. Marquet, and H. A. Mooney, (eds.). How Landscapes Change: Human Disturbance and Ecosystem Disruption in the Americas. Ecological Studies, Volume 162., 2003, p. 145-160.
C. J. Peterson and S. T. A. Pickett, “Forest reorganization: a case study in an old-growth forest catastrophic blowdown”, Ecology, vol. 76, p. 763-774, 1995.
M. L. Cadenasso, S. T. A. Pickett, M. J. McDonnell, and R. V. Pouyat, “Forest vegetation along an urban-rural gradient in the New York City metropolitan area: patterns and relationships to ecosystem processes”, Transactions of the Linnean Society of New York, vol. 10, p. 79-99, 2007.
K. E. Medley, M. J. McDonnell, and S. T. A. Pickett, “Forest-landscape structure along an urban-to-rural gradient”, Prof. Geogr., vol. 47, p. 159-168, 1995.
J. J. Armesto and S. T. A. Pickett, “Foreword”, Rev. Chil. Hist. Nat., vol. 64, p. 389, 1991.
M. L. Cadenasso, S. T. A. Pickett, K. C. Weathers, and C. G. Jones, “A framework for a theory of ecological boundaries”, BioScience, vol. 53, p. 750-758, 2003.
S. T. A. Pickett, M. L. Cadenasso, M. J. McDonnell, and W. R. Burch, “Frameworks for urban ecosystem studies: Gradients, patch dynamics, and the human ecosystem”, in M. J. McDonnell, A. K. Hahs, and J. Breuste (eds.). Ecology of Cities and Towns: A Comparative Approach, 2009, p. 25-50.
M. L. Cadenasso, M. M. Traynor, and S. T. A. Pickett, “Functional location of forest edges: gradients of multiple physical factors”, Can. J. For. Res., vol. 27, p. 774-782, 1997.
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S. T. A. Pickett, M. L. Cadenasso, and C. G. Jones, “Generation of heterogeneity by organisms: creation, maintenance, and transformation”, in M. J. Hutchings, E. A. John, and A. J. A. Stewart (eds.). The Ecological Consequences of Environmental Heterogeneity: The 40th Symposium of the British Ecological Society, 2000, p. 33-52.
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R. Rozzi, J. J. Armesto, F. Massarco, S. T. A. Pickett, and S. Lehmann, “Hacia una unidad entre ecólogos y ambientalistas”, Ambiente y Desarrollo, vol. 12, p. 81-86, 1996.
L. E. Band, M. L. Cadenasso, C. S. B. Grimmond, J. M. Grove, and S. T. A. Pickett, “Heterogeneity in urban ecosystems: Patterns and process”, in G. M Lovett, C. G. Jones, M. Turner, and K. C. Weathers (eds.). Ecosystem Function in Heterogeneous Landscapes, 2005, p. 257-278.
S. T. A. Pickett, S. L. Collins, and J. J. Armesto, “A hierarchical consideration of causes and mechanisms of succession”, Vegetatio, vol. 69, p. 109-114, 1987.
V. T. Parker and S. T. A. Pickett, “Historical contingency and multiple scales of dynamics within plant communities”, in D. I. Peterson and V. T. Parker (eds.). Ecological Scale: Theory and Applications, 1998, p. 171-191.

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