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Katharine L. Stuble

Researcher at University of California, Davis

Publications -  31
Citations -  1007

Katharine L. Stuble is an academic researcher from University of California, Davis. The author has contributed to research in topics: Climate change & Species richness. The author has an hindex of 17, co-authored 28 publications receiving 800 citations. Previous affiliations of Katharine L. Stuble include University of Oklahoma & University of Tennessee.

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Interpreting variation to advance predictive restoration science

TL;DR: In this paper, the authors focus on the variability of restoration outcomes and the causes of this variability, and propose that the variability should decrease with the number of factors constraining restoration and increase with the specificity of the goal.
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Tradeoffs, competition, and coexistence in eastern deciduous forest ant communities

TL;DR: Ant species appear to temporally partition foraging times such that behaviourally dominant species foraged more intensely at night, while foraging by subdominant species peaked during the day, with one notable exception.
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Foraging by forest ants under experimental climatic warming: a test at two sites

TL;DR: It is found that while climatic warming may alter patterns of foraging activity in predictable ways, these shifts vary among species and between sites, and more southerly sites and species with lower critical thermal maxima are likely to be at greater risk to ongoing Climatic warming.
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Every restoration is unique: testing year effects and site effects as drivers of initial restoration trajectories

TL;DR: In this article, the authors established grassland restoration plots identically across three sites in northern California, in each of four establishment years (for 12 site-year combinations) and found that the resulting plant communities differed significantly across sites and across establishment years.
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Using priority effects to manipulate competitive relationships in restoration

TL;DR: Data from a set of four priority experiments, carried out at each of three sites in restoration settings in California grasslands, indicate that both short-term priority (1–3 weeks) and long-termpriority (1 year) can profoundly shift interspecific relationships and benefit otherwise subordinate plant species.