Details

Name: Kevin Wilcox
Phone:
Address:
Email: wilcoxkr@rams.colostate.edu
Interests:
Dataset code(s):
Publications:
Year Citation
2016 Koerner, S.E., M.L. Avolio, K.J. La Pierre, K.R. Wilcox, M.D. Smith, and S.L. Collins. Nutrient additions cause divergence of tallgrass prairie plant communities resulting in loss of ecosystem stability. Journal of Ecology 104
2016 Smith, M.D., A.K. Knapp, S.L. Collins, D.E. Burkepile, K.P. Kirkman, S.E. Koerner, D.I. Thompson, J.M. Blair, C.E. Burns, S. Eby, E.J. Forrestel, R.W.S. Fynn, N. Govender, N. Hagenah, D.L. Hoover, K. R. Wilcox.. Shared Drivers but Divergent Ecological Responses: Insights from Long-Term Experiments in Mesic Savanna Grasslands. Bioscience 66
2016 Wilcox, K.R., J.M. Blair, and A.K. Knapp. Stability of grassland soil C and N pools despite 25 years of an extreme climatic and disturbance regime. Journal of Geophysical Research: Biogeosciences 121
2016 Wilcox, K.R., J.M. Blair, M.D. Smith, and A.K. Knapp. Does ecosystem sensitivity to precipitation at the site-level conform to regional-scale predictions?. Ecology 97
2015 Wilcox, K.R., J.C. Von Fischer, J.M. Muscha, M.K. Petersen, and A.K. Knapp. Contrasting above- and belowground sensitivity of three Great Plains grasslands to altered rainfall regimes. Global Change Biology 21
2015 Knapp, A.K., D.L. Hoover, K.R. Wilcox, M.L. Avolio, S.E. Koerner, K.J. La Pierre, M.E. Loik, Y. Luo, O.E. Sala, and M.D. Smith. Characterizing differences in precipitation regimes of extreme wet and dry years: Implications for climate change experiments. Global Change Biology 21
2015 Yu, Q., K.R. Wilcox, K.J. La Pierre, A.K. Knapp, X. Han, and M.D. Smith. Stoichiometric homeostasis predicts plant species dominance, temporal stability and responses to global change. Ecology 96
2015 Wilcox, K.R. . Assessing Grassland sensitivity to global change.
2014 Kirkman, K., S.L. Collins, M.D. Smith, A.K. Knapp, D.E. Burkepile, C.E. Burns, R.W.S. Fynn, N. Hagenah, S.E. Koerner, K.J. Matchett, D.I. Thompson, K.R. Wilcox, and P.D. Wragg. Responses to fire differ between South African and North American grassland communities. Journal of Vegetation Science 25
2014 Eby, S., D.E. Burkepile, R.W.S. Fynn, C.E. Burns, N. Govender, N. Hagenah, S.E. Koerner, K.J. Matchett, D.I. Thompson, K.R. Wilcox, S.L. Collins, K.P. Kirkman, A.K. Knapp, and M.D. Smith. Loss of a large grazer impacts savanna grassland plant communities similarly in North America and South Africa. Oecologia 175
Total Records:13 - Showing Page: 1 of 2 << < > >>