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Nash E. Turley
Researcher at Michigan State University
Publications - 27
Citations - 1412
Nash E. Turley is an academic researcher from Michigan State University. The author has contributed to research in topics: Restoration ecology & Herbivore. The author has an hindex of 14, co-authored 24 publications receiving 1085 citations. Previous affiliations of Nash E. Turley include University of Central Florida & University of Toronto.
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Journal ArticleDOI
The ecological importance of intraspecific variation
Simone Des Roches,David M. Post,Nash E. Turley,Joseph K. Bailey,Andrew P. Hendry,Michael T. Kinnison,Jennifer A. Schweitzer,Eric P. Palkovacs +7 more
TL;DR: A meta-analysis comparing the ecological effects of variation within a species with the effects of species replacement or renewal shows that intraspecific effects may be comparable to, or sometimes stronger than, species effects.
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Adaptive geographical clines in the growth and defense of a native plant
TL;DR: To address heritable clinal variation and adaptation of growth and defense traits of common milkweed, seed was planted from 22 populations encompassing the species' latitudinal range in common gardens near the range center (New York) and toward the range edges (New Brunswick and North Carolina).
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Interpreting variation to advance predictive restoration science
Lars A. Brudvig,Rebecca S. Barak,Jonathan T. Bauer,T. Trevor Caughlin,Daniel C. Laughlin,Loralee Larios,Jeffrey W. Matthews,Katharine L. Stuble,Nash E. Turley,Chad R. Zirbel +9 more
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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Community genetics: what have we accomplished and where should we be going?
TL;DR: Key areas of research are identified that will increase the understanding of the ecology and evolution of complex communities but that are currently missing in community genetics and suggested experiments designed to meet these current gaps are suggested.
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The impact of domestication on resistance to two generalist herbivores across 29 independent domestication events
TL;DR: The results show that domestication can alter plant defenses, but does not cause strong allocation tradeoffs as predicted by plant defense theory.