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Nathan P. Lemoine
Researcher at Marquette University
Publications - 54
Citations - 2831
Nathan P. Lemoine is an academic researcher from Marquette University. The author has contributed to research in topics: Herbivore & Ecosystem. The author has an hindex of 21, co-authored 47 publications receiving 1954 citations. Previous affiliations of Nathan P. Lemoine include Florida International University & Colorado State University.
Papers
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Journal ArticleDOI
Overfishing and nutrient pollution interact with temperature to disrupt coral reefs down to microbial scales
Jesse R. Zaneveld,Deron E. Burkepile,Andrew A. Shantz,Catharine E. Pritchard,Ryan McMinds,Jérôme P. Payet,Rory M. Welsh,Adrienne M. S. Correa,Nathan P. Lemoine,Stephanie M. Rosales,Corinne Fuchs,Jeffrey Maynard,Rebecca Vega Thurber +12 more
TL;DR: Overfishing and nutrient pollution impact reefs down to microbial scales, killing corals by sensitizing them to predation, above-average temperatures and bacterial opportunism.
Journal ArticleDOI
Multiple facets of biodiversity drive the diversity–stability relationship
Dylan Craven,Nico Eisenhauer,William D. Pearse,Yann Hautier,Forest Isbell,Christiane Roscher,Michael Bahn,Carl Beierkuhnlein,Gerhard Bönisch,Nina Buchmann,Chaeho Byun,Jane A. Catford,Bruno Enrico Leone Cerabolini,J. Hans C. Cornelissen,Joseph M. Craine,Enrica De Luca,Anne Ebeling,John N. Griffin,Andy Hector,Jes Hines,Anke Jentsch,Jens Kattge,Jürgen Kreyling,Vojtěch Lanta,Nathan P. Lemoine,Sebastian T. Meyer,Vanessa Minden,Vanessa Minden,Vladimir G. Onipchenko,H. Wayne Polley,Peter B. Reich,Jasper van Ruijven,Brandon S. Schamp,Melinda D. Smith,Nadejda A. Soudzilovskaia,David Tilman,Alexandra Weigelt,Brian J. Wilsey,Peter Manning +38 more
TL;DR: It is found that high species richness and phylogenetic diversity stabilize biomass production via enhanced asynchrony in the performance of co-occurring species and enhances ecosystem stability directly, albeit weakly.
Journal ArticleDOI
Moving beyond noninformative priors: why and how to choose weakly informative priors in Bayesian analyses
TL;DR: Ecologists can and should debate the appropriate form of prior information, but should consider weakly informative priors as the new ‘default’ prior for any Bayesian model.
Journal ArticleDOI
Do invasive species perform better in their new ranges
John D. Parker,Mark E. Torchin,Ruth A. Hufbauer,Nathan P. Lemoine,Christina Alba,Dana M. Blumenthal,Oliver Bossdorf,James E. Byers,Alison M. Dunn,Robert W. Heckman,Martin Hejda,Vojtěch Jarošík,Vojtěch Jarošík,Andrew Kanarek,Lynn B. Martin,Sarah E. Perkins,Petr Pyšek,Petr Pyšek,Kristina A. Schierenbeck,Carmen Schlöder,Rieks D. van Klinken,Kurt J. Vaughn,Wyatt Williams,Lorne M. Wolfe +23 more
TL;DR: Although some invasive species are performing better in their new ranges, the pattern is not universal, and just as many are performing largely the same across ranges.
Journal ArticleDOI
Asymmetric responses of primary productivity to precipitation extremes: A synthesis of grassland precipitation manipulation experiments
Kevin R. Wilcox,Zheng Shi,Laureano A. Gherardi,Nathan P. Lemoine,Sally E. Koerner,David L. Hoover,Edward W. Bork,Kerry M. Byrne,James F. Cahill,Scott L. Collins,Sarah E. Evans,Anna Katarina Gilgen,Petr Holub,Lifen Jiang,Alan K. Knapp,Daniel R. LeCain,Junyi Liang,Pablo García-Palacios,Josep Peñuelas,William T. Pockman,Melinda D. Smith,Shanghua Sun,Shannon R. White,Laura Yahdjian,Kai Zhu,Kai Zhu,Yiqi Luo +26 more
TL;DR: Policy and land management decisions related to global change scenarios should consider how ANPP and BNPP responses may differ, and that ecosystem responses to extreme events might not be predicted from relationships found under moderate environmental changes.