Search Results - "Huey, Raymond B."

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  1. 1

    Temperature extremes: geographic patterns, recent changes, and implications for organismal vulnerabilities by Buckley, Lauren B., Huey, Raymond B.

    Published in Global change biology (01-12-2016)
    “…Extreme temperatures can injure or kill organisms and can drive evolutionary patterns. Many indices of extremes have been proposed, but few attempts have been…”
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    Increase in crop losses to insect pests in a warming climate by Deutsch, Curtis A, Tewksbury, Joshua J, Tigchelaar, Michelle, Battisti, David S, Merrill, Scott C, Huey, Raymond B, Naylor, Rosamond L

    “…Insect pests substantially reduce yields of three staple grains-rice, maize, and wheat-but models assessing the agricultural impacts of global warming rarely…”
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    Climate change tightens a metabolic constraint on marine habitats by Deutsch, Curtis, Ferrel, Aaron, Seibel, Brad, Pörtner, Hans-Otto, Huey, Raymond B.

    “…Warming of the oceans and consequent loss of dissolved oxygen (O2) will alter marine ecosystems, but a mechanistic framework to predict the impact of multiple…”
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  4. 4

    Global metabolic impacts of recent climate warming by Dillon, Michael E, Wang, George, Huey, Raymond B

    Published in Nature (London) (07-10-2010)
    “…Documented shifts in geographical ranges, seasonal phenology, community interactions, genetics and extinctions have been attributed to recent global warming…”
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    Thermal-safety margins and the necessity of thermoregulatory behavior across latitude and elevation by Sunday, Jennifer M., Bates, Amanda E., Kearney, Michael R., Colwell, Robert K., Dulvy, Nicholas K., Longino, John T., Huey, Raymond B.

    “…Physiological thermal-tolerance limits of terrestrial ectotherms often exceed local air temperatures, implying a high degree of thermal safety (an excess of…”
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    Can we predict ectotherm responses to climate change using thermal performance curves and body temperatures? by Sinclair, Brent J., Marshall, Katie E., Sewell, Mary A., Levesque, Danielle L., Willett, Christopher S., Slotsbo, Stine, Dong, Yunwei, Harley, Christopher D. G., Marshall, David J., Helmuth, Brian S., Huey, Raymond B.

    Published in Ecology letters (01-11-2016)
    “…Thermal performance curves (TPCs), which quantify how an ectotherm's body temperature (Tb) affects its performance or fitness, are often used in an attempt to…”
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    Fifty Years of Mountain Passes: A Perspective on Dan Janzen’s Classic Article by Sheldon, Kimberly S., Huey, Raymond B., Kaspari, Michael, Sanders, Nathan J.

    Published in The American naturalist (01-05-2018)
    “…In 1967, Dan Janzen published “Why Mountain Passes Are Higher in the Tropics” in The American Naturalist. Janzen’s seminal article has captured the attention…”
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  8. 8

    Why “Suboptimal” Is Optimal: Jensen’s Inequality and Ectotherm Thermal Preferences by Martin, Tara Laine, Huey, Raymond B.

    Published in The American naturalist (01-03-2008)
    “…Body temperature (T b) profoundly affects the fitness of ectotherms. Many ectotherms use behavior to controlT bwithin narrow levels. These temperatures are…”
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  9. 9

    Evolution caused by extreme events by Grant, Peter R., Grant, B. Rosemary, Huey, Raymond B., Johnson, Marc T. J., Knoll, Andrew H., Schmitt, Johanna

    “…Extreme events can be a major driver of evolutionary change over geological and contemporary timescales. Outstanding examples are evolutionary diversification…”
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  10. 10

    Impacts of climate warming on terrestrial ectotherms across latitude by Deutsch, Curtis A, Tewksbury, Joshua J, Huey, Raymond B, Sheldon, Kimberly S, Ghalambor, Cameron K, Haak, David C, Martin, Paul R

    “…The impact of anthropogenic climate change on terrestrial organisms is often predicted to increase with latitude, in parallel with the rate of warming. Yet the…”
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    Thermodynamic Effects on Organismal Performance: Is Hotter Better? by Angilletta, Michael J., Huey, Raymond B., Frazier, Melanie R.

    Published in Physiological and biochemical zoology (01-03-2010)
    “…Despite decades of research on the evolution of thermal physiology, at least one fundamental issue remains unresolved: whether the maximal performance of a…”
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  12. 12

    Mountaineers on Mount Everest: Effects of age, sex, experience, and crowding on rates of success and death by Huey, Raymond B, Carroll, Cody, Salisbury, Richard, Wang, Jane-Ling

    Published in PloS one (26-08-2020)
    “…Mount Everest is an extreme environment for humans. Nevertheless, hundreds of mountaineers attempt to summit Everest each year. In a previous study we analyzed…”
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    Thermodynamics Constrains the Evolution of Insect Population Growth Rates: “Warmer Is Better” by Frazier, M. R., Huey, Raymond B., Berrigan, David

    Published in The American naturalist (01-10-2006)
    “…Diverse biochemical and physiological adaptations enable different species of ectotherms to survive and reproduce in very different temperature regimes, but…”
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    Why tropical forest lizards are vulnerable to climate warming by Raymond B. Huey, Curtis A. Deutsch, Joshua J. Tewksbury, Laurie J. Vitt, Paul E. Hertz, Héctor J. Álvarez Pérez, Theodore Garland, Jr

    “… Although tropical lowland lizards live in environments that are warm all year, macrophysiological analyses indicate that some tropical lineages…”
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    Are Lizards Toast? by Huey, Raymond B., Losos, Jonathan B., Moritz, Craig

    “…Warming is held responsible for a rash of extinctions of global lizard populations. Lizards should be relatively invulnerable to warming: They are very good at…”
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    Behavioral Drive versus Behavioral Inertia in Evolution: A Null Model Approach by Huey, Raymond B., Hertz, Paul E., Sinervo, B.

    Published in The American naturalist (01-03-2003)
    “…Some biologists embrace the classical view that changes in behavior inevitably initiate or drive evolutionary changes in other traits, yet others note that…”
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  20. 20

    Hypoxia, Global Warming, and Terrestrial Late Permian Extinctions by Huey, Raymond B., Ward, Peter D.

    “…A catastrophic extinction occurred at the end of the Permian Period. However, baseline extinction rates appear to have been elevated even before the final…”
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