OSU College of Forestry - Biennial Report - 1516

Page 74

REFEREED PUBLICATIONS 2015 1.

2.

3.

Abrams, J., Davis, E.J., and Moseley, C. 2015. Community-based organizations and institutional work in the remote rural West. Review of Policy Research 32(6): 675-698. Akamani, K., and Hall, T. E. 2015. Determinants of the process and outcomes of household participation in collaborative forest management in Ghana: A quantitative test of a community resilience model. Journal of environmental management 147: 1-11. DOI: 10.1016/j.jenvman.2014.09.007 Akamani, K., Wilson, P. I., & Hall, T. E. 2015. Barriers to collaborative forest management and implications for building the resilience of forestdependent communities in the Ashanti region of Ghana. Journal of environmental management 151: 11-21. DOI: 10.1016/j.jenvman.2014.12.006

4.

Ambauen, S., Leshchinsky, B., Xie, Y., & Rayamajhi, D. 2015. Service-state behavior of reinforced soil walls supporting spread footings: a parametric study using finiteelement analysis. Geosynthetics International, 1-15.

5.

Antony, F., Schimleck, L. R., Daniels, R. F., Clark, A., Borders, B., Kane, M. and Burkhart, H. E. 2015. Whole tree bark and wood properties of loblolly pine from intensively managed plantations. For. Sci. 61(1), 55-66.

6.

Bachelet, D., Turner D. (Eds). 2015. Global Vegetation Dynamics: Concepts and Applications in the MC1 Model. American Geophysical Union (Geophysical Monograph Series). 208 pages.

7.

Backman, K.F. and Munanura, I.E. (Eds). 2015. Editors of Special Issue titled: Ecotourism in Africa Over the Past 30 Years. Journal of Ecotourism 14 (2-3):1-200.

8.

Backman, K.F. and Munanura, I.E. 2015. Introduction to the special issue on ecotourism in Africa over the past 30 years. Journal of Ecotourism. 14 (2-3): 95-98.

9.

Batchelor, J. L., Ripple, W. J., Wilson, T. M., and Painter, L. E. 2015. Restoration of Riparian Areas Following the Removal of Cattle in the Northwestern Great Basin. Environmental Management 55(4): 930-942.

10. Baur, J. W. R., Tynon, J. F., Ries, P., & Rosenberger, R. (2016). Public attitudes about urban forest ecosystem services management: A case study in Oregon cities. Urban Forestry & Urban Greening 17: 42-53. DOI: 10.1016/j. ufug.2016.03.012 11.

Beck, S.J.C., M.J. Olsen, J. Sessions, and M.G. Wing. 2015. Automated extraction offorest road network geometry from aerial LiDAR. European Journal of Forest Engineering 1(1): 21-23.

12. Berner LT, and Law, B.E. 2015. Water limitations on forest carbon cycling and conifer traits along a steep climatic gradient in the Cascade Mountains, Oregon. Biogeosciences 12: 6617-6635. 13. Beschta, R., and Ripple, W.J. 2015. Divergent patterns of riparian cottonwood recovery after the return of wolves in Yellowstone, USA. Ecohydrology 8: 58-66.

CIP

14. Bettinger, P., Dermirci, M., & K. Boston. 2015. Search Reversion within s-Metaheuristics: Impacts Illustrated with a Forest Planning Problem. Silva Fennica.

IMF

15. Betts, M.G., Hadley, A.S. and Kress, W.J. 2015. Pollinator recognition by a keystone tropical plant. Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences of the USA 112: 3433–3438.

HPC

16. Bi, J., Knyazikhin, Y., Choi, S., Park, T., Barichivich, J., Ciais, P., Fu, R., Ganguly, S.,Hall, F., Hilker, T., Huete, A., Jones, M., Kimbal, J., Lyapustin, A. I., Mõttus, M., Nemani, R. R., Piao, S., Myneni, R. B. 2014. Sunlight Mediated Seasonality in Canopy Structure and Photosynthetic Activity of Amazonian Rainforests. Environmental Research Letters, 10 (6), 064014

RE

17.

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Buhl C., Strauss S.H., Lindroth R.L. 2015. Down-regulation of gibberellic acid in poplar has negligible effects on host-plant suitability and insect pest response. Arthropod-Plant Interactions 9(1): 85-95.

18. C.A. Gonzalez-Benecke, A.J. Riveros-Walker, T.A. Martin, and G.F. Peter. 2015. Automated quantification of intra-annual density fluctuations using microdensity profiles of mature Pinus taeda in a replicated irrigation experiment, Trees Structure and Function 29:185-197. 19. C.A. Gonzalez-Benecke, L.J. Samuelson, Jr., T.A. Stokes, T.A. Martin, W.P. Cropper, Jr.and K.H. Johnsen. 2015. Understory plant biomass dynamics of prescribed burned Pinus palustris stands, Forest Ecology and Management 344: 84-94. 20. C.A. Gonzalez-Benecke, L.J. Samuelson, T.A. Martin, W.P. Cropper, Jr., T.A. Stokes, J. R. Butnor, K.H. Johnsen and P.H. Anderson. 2015. Modeling the effects of forest management on in situ and ex situ longleaf pine forest carbon stocks, Forest Ecology and Management 355: 24-36. 21. Caldwell, P., C. Segura, S. G. Laird, G. Sun, S. G. McNulty, M. Sandercock, J. Boggs, and J. M. Vose 2015, Short-term stream water temperature observations permit rapid assessment of potential climate change impacts, Hydrological Processes, 29(9), 2196-2211, doi:10.1002/hyp.10358. 22. Cheyney, M.J., Olsen, C.S., Bovbjerg, M., Everson, C., Darragh, I., and Potter, B. 2015. Practitioner and practice characteristics of Certified Professional Midwifes in the United States: Results of the 2011 North American Registry of Midwives Survey. Journal of Midwifery & Women’s Health 60(5): 534-545. 23. Chung, W. 2015. Optimizing Fuel Treatments to Reduce Wildland Fire Risk. Current Forestry Report 1: 44-51. 24. Creighton, J.H., Blatner, K.A., and Carroll, M.S. 2015. For the love of the land: generational land transfer and the future of family forests in western Washington state, USA. Small-Scale Forestry 15(1): 1-15. (DOI) 10.1007/ s11842-015-9301-2. 25. Dahlen, J., Antony, F., Li, A., Love-Myers, K., Schimleck, L. R., and Schilling, E. 2015. Automated timedomain reflectometry signal analysis for prediction of loblolly pine and sweetgum moisture content. Bioresources 10(3), 4947-4960. 26. DeChenne, S. E., Koziol, N., Needham, M., & Enochs, L. 2015. Modeling sources of teaching self-efficacy for science, technology, engineering, and mathematics graduate teaching assistants. CBE-Life Sciences Education, 14(3), 1-14. 27. Dickens, S.J.M., Mangla, S, Preston, K.L., and Suding, K.N.. 2015. Embracing variability: environmental dependence and plant community context in ecological restoration. Restoration Ecology 24(1): 119–127. 28. Driscoll A., Ries, P.D., Tilt, J.H., and Ganio, L.M. 2015. Needs and Barriers to Expanding Urban Forestry Programs: An Assessment of Community Leaders and Program Managers in the Portland-Vancouver Metropolitan Region. Urban Forestry & Urban Greening 14(1): 48-55. 29. Dunn, C.J. and J.D. Bailey. 2015. Modeling the direct effects of salvage logging on longterm temporal fuel dynamics in dry-mixed conifer forests. For. Ecol. Mgt. 341:93-109. (Impact: 2.7; 1 citation already) 30. Edson, C., & Wing, M. G. 2015. LiDAR Elevation and DEM Errors in ForestedSettings. Modern Applied Science 9(2): 139-157. 31. Eisenberg, C., Hibbs, D. E., & Ripple, W. J. 2015. Effects of predation risk on elk (Cervus elaphus) landscape use in a wolf (Canis lupus) dominated system. Canadian Journal of Zoology 93(2): 99-111. 32. Emelko, M.B., Stone, M., Silins, U., Allin, D., Collins, A.L., Williams, C.H.S., Martens, A.M., and Bladon, K.D. 2015. Sediment-phosphorus dynamics can shift aquatic ecology and cause downstream legacy effects after wildfire in large river systems. Global Change Biology. DOI: 10.1111/gcb.13073. (Impact Factor: 8.224; SCImago Rank: 3/293 Ecology). 33. Faramarzi, M., Srinivasan, R., Iravani, M., Bladon, K.D., Abbaspour, K., Zehnder, A., and Goss, G. 2015. Setting up a hydrological model: Data discrimination analyses prior to calibration. Environmental Modelling and Software. 74:48-65. DOI: 10.1016/j.envsoft.2015.09.006 (Impact Factor: 4.538; SCImago Rank: 2/171 Environmental Engineering).


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