Peer-reviewed publications
Note: undergraduate students indicated by underlining
21) Kiekebusch, E., A. Louthan, W. Morris, B. Hudgens, and N. Haddad. Vital rate responses to temperature lead to butterfly population declines under future warming scenarios. In revision at Journal of Animal Ecology.
20) Doak, D., E. Waddle, R. Langendorf, A. Louthan, N. Chardon, R. Dibner, R. Shriver, C. Linares, M. Begona Garcia, S. Fitzpatrick, W.F. Morris, M. DeMarche. 2022. Reply to Ellner et al.’s comment on Doak et al. 2021. In press at Ecology.
19) Ratajczak, Z., S.L. Collins, J. Blair, S. Koerner, A. Louthan, M. Smith, J. Taylor, and J.B. Nippert. Reintroducing bison results in long running and resilient increases in grassland diversity. Proc. Natl. Acad. Sci. U.S.A. 119: e2210433119.
18) Louthan, A.M., M. Keighron, E. Kiekebusch, H. Cayton, A. Terando, and W. F. Morris. 2022. Climate change weakens the impact of disturbance interval on the growth rate of natural populations of Venus flytrap. Ecol. Monogr. 92: e1528.
17) Alston, J.M., C.G. Reed, L.M. Khasoha, B.R.P. Brown, G. Busienei, N. Carlson, T.C. Coverdale, M. Dudenhoeffer, M.A. Dyck, J. Ekeno, A.A. Hassan, R. Hohbein, R.P. Jakopak, B. Kimiti, S. Kurukura, P. Lokeny, A.M. Louthan, S. Musila, P.M. Musili, T. Tindall, S. Weiner, T.R. Kartzinel, T.M. Palmer, R.M. Pringle, and J.R. Goheen. 2022. Ecological consequences of large herbivore exclusion in an African savanna: 12 years of data from the UHURU experiment. Ecology 103: e3649.
16) Louthan, A.M., M.L. DeMarche*, and L.G. Shoemaker*. 2021. Climate sensitivity across latitude: scaling physiology to communities. Trends in Ecology and Evolution 36: 931-942. *these authors contributed equally.* Received F1000 Award, designed to increase article publicity.
15) Louthan, A.M., J. Walters, A.J. Terando, V. Garcia, and W.F. Morris. 2021. Shifting correlations among multiple aspects of climate complicate predicting future demography of a threatened species. Ecosphere 12: e03740.
14) Louthan, A., and W. Morris. 2021. Climate change impacts on population growth across a species’ range differ due to nonlinear responses of populations to climate and variation in rates of climate change. PLoS ONE 16(3): e0247290.
13) Doak, D., E. Waddle, R. Langendorf, A. Louthan, N. Chardon, R. Dibner, D. Keinath, E. Lombardi, C. Steenbock, R. Shriver, C. Linares, M. Begona Garcia, W.C. Funk, S. Fitzpatrick, W.F. Morris, and M. DeMarche. 2021. A critical comparison of the strengths and weaknesses of integral projection models and matrix projection models. Ecol. Monogr. https://doi.org/10.1002/ecm.1447
12) Morris, W.F., J. Ehrlén, J.P. Dahlgren, A.K. Loomis, and A.M. Louthan. 2020. Biotic and anthropogenic forces rival climatic/abiotic factors in determining global plant population growth and fitness. Proc. Natl. Acad. Sci. U.S.A. 117:1107-1112. [link]
11) Louthan, A., E. Valencia, D.J. Martins, T. Guy, J. Goheen, T. Palmer, and D. Doak. 2019. Large mammals generate both top-down effects and extended trophic cascades on floral-visitor assemblages. J. Trop. Ecol. 35:185-198. [link]
10) Dibner, R.R., M.L. DeMarche, A.M. Louthan, and D.F. Doak. 2019. Multiple mechanisms confer stability to isolated populations of a rare endemic plant. Ecol. Monogr. 89: e01360. [link]
9) Louthan, A., and D. Doak. 2018. Measurement error of state variables creates substantial bias in results of demographic population models. Ecology 99: 2308-2317. [link]
8) Goheen, J.R., D.J. Augustine, K.E. Veblen, D.M. Kimuyu, T.M. Palmer, L.M. Porensky, R.M. Pringle, J. Ratnam, C. Riginos, M. Sankaran, A.T. Ford, A.A. Hassan, R. Jakopak, T.R. Kartzinel, S. Kurukura, A.M. Louthan, W.O. Odadi, T.O. Otieno, A.M. Wambua, H.S. Young, and T.P. Young. 2018. Conservation lessons from large-mammal manipulations in East African savannas: the KLEE, UHURU, and GLADE experiments. Ann. N. Y. Acad. Sci. 1429: 31-49. [link] *Invited contribution to the special volume The Year in Ecology and Conservation Biology.
7) Louthan, A.M., R.M. Pringle, J.R. Goheen, T.M. Palmer, W.F. Morris, and D.F. Doak. 2018. Aridity weakens population-level effects of multiple species interactions on Hibiscus meyeri. Proc. Natl. Acad. Sci. U.S.A. 115:543-548. [link]
6) Louthan, A.M., D.F. Doak, and A.L. Angert. 2015. Where and when do species interactions set range limits? Trends Ecol. Evol. 30: 780-792. [link]
5) Doak, D.F., G.K. Himes Boor, V.J. Bakker, W.F. Morris, A. Louthan, S.A. Morrison, A. Stanley, L.B. Crowder. 2015. Recommendations for improving recovery criteria under the US Endangered Species Act. BioScience 65:189-199. [link]
4) Louthan, A.M., D.F. Doak, J.R. Goheen, T.M. Palmer, and R.M. Pringle. 2014. Mechanisms of plant-plant interactions: concealment from herbivores is more important that abiotic-stress mediation in an African savannah. Proc. R. Soc. Lond.: B 281: 20132647. 10.1098/rspb.2013.2647 [link]
3) Louthan, A.M., D.F. Doak, J.R. Goheen, T.M. Palmer, and R.M. Palmer. 2013. Climatic stress mediates the impact of herbivory on plant population structure and components of individual fitness. J. Ecol. 101: 1074-1083. [link] * featured on the J. Ecol. podcast.
2) Louthan, A.M., and K.M. Kay. 2011. Comparing the adaptive landscape across trait types: larger QTL effect size in traits under biotic selection. BMC Evol. Biol. 11: 749-760. [link] * Received F1000 Award, designed to increase article publicity.
1) Eckhart, V.M., I. Singh, A.M. Louthan, A.J. Keledjian, A. Chu, D.A. Moeller, and M.A. Geber. 2010. Plant-Soil Water Relations and Species Border of Clarkia xantiana ssp. xantiana. Int. J. Plant Sci., 171: 749-760. [link]
20) Doak, D., E. Waddle, R. Langendorf, A. Louthan, N. Chardon, R. Dibner, R. Shriver, C. Linares, M. Begona Garcia, S. Fitzpatrick, W.F. Morris, M. DeMarche. 2022. Reply to Ellner et al.’s comment on Doak et al. 2021. In press at Ecology.
19) Ratajczak, Z., S.L. Collins, J. Blair, S. Koerner, A. Louthan, M. Smith, J. Taylor, and J.B. Nippert. Reintroducing bison results in long running and resilient increases in grassland diversity. Proc. Natl. Acad. Sci. U.S.A. 119: e2210433119.
18) Louthan, A.M., M. Keighron, E. Kiekebusch, H. Cayton, A. Terando, and W. F. Morris. 2022. Climate change weakens the impact of disturbance interval on the growth rate of natural populations of Venus flytrap. Ecol. Monogr. 92: e1528.
17) Alston, J.M., C.G. Reed, L.M. Khasoha, B.R.P. Brown, G. Busienei, N. Carlson, T.C. Coverdale, M. Dudenhoeffer, M.A. Dyck, J. Ekeno, A.A. Hassan, R. Hohbein, R.P. Jakopak, B. Kimiti, S. Kurukura, P. Lokeny, A.M. Louthan, S. Musila, P.M. Musili, T. Tindall, S. Weiner, T.R. Kartzinel, T.M. Palmer, R.M. Pringle, and J.R. Goheen. 2022. Ecological consequences of large herbivore exclusion in an African savanna: 12 years of data from the UHURU experiment. Ecology 103: e3649.
16) Louthan, A.M., M.L. DeMarche*, and L.G. Shoemaker*. 2021. Climate sensitivity across latitude: scaling physiology to communities. Trends in Ecology and Evolution 36: 931-942. *these authors contributed equally.* Received F1000 Award, designed to increase article publicity.
15) Louthan, A.M., J. Walters, A.J. Terando, V. Garcia, and W.F. Morris. 2021. Shifting correlations among multiple aspects of climate complicate predicting future demography of a threatened species. Ecosphere 12: e03740.
14) Louthan, A., and W. Morris. 2021. Climate change impacts on population growth across a species’ range differ due to nonlinear responses of populations to climate and variation in rates of climate change. PLoS ONE 16(3): e0247290.
13) Doak, D., E. Waddle, R. Langendorf, A. Louthan, N. Chardon, R. Dibner, D. Keinath, E. Lombardi, C. Steenbock, R. Shriver, C. Linares, M. Begona Garcia, W.C. Funk, S. Fitzpatrick, W.F. Morris, and M. DeMarche. 2021. A critical comparison of the strengths and weaknesses of integral projection models and matrix projection models. Ecol. Monogr. https://doi.org/10.1002/ecm.1447
12) Morris, W.F., J. Ehrlén, J.P. Dahlgren, A.K. Loomis, and A.M. Louthan. 2020. Biotic and anthropogenic forces rival climatic/abiotic factors in determining global plant population growth and fitness. Proc. Natl. Acad. Sci. U.S.A. 117:1107-1112. [link]
11) Louthan, A., E. Valencia, D.J. Martins, T. Guy, J. Goheen, T. Palmer, and D. Doak. 2019. Large mammals generate both top-down effects and extended trophic cascades on floral-visitor assemblages. J. Trop. Ecol. 35:185-198. [link]
10) Dibner, R.R., M.L. DeMarche, A.M. Louthan, and D.F. Doak. 2019. Multiple mechanisms confer stability to isolated populations of a rare endemic plant. Ecol. Monogr. 89: e01360. [link]
9) Louthan, A., and D. Doak. 2018. Measurement error of state variables creates substantial bias in results of demographic population models. Ecology 99: 2308-2317. [link]
8) Goheen, J.R., D.J. Augustine, K.E. Veblen, D.M. Kimuyu, T.M. Palmer, L.M. Porensky, R.M. Pringle, J. Ratnam, C. Riginos, M. Sankaran, A.T. Ford, A.A. Hassan, R. Jakopak, T.R. Kartzinel, S. Kurukura, A.M. Louthan, W.O. Odadi, T.O. Otieno, A.M. Wambua, H.S. Young, and T.P. Young. 2018. Conservation lessons from large-mammal manipulations in East African savannas: the KLEE, UHURU, and GLADE experiments. Ann. N. Y. Acad. Sci. 1429: 31-49. [link] *Invited contribution to the special volume The Year in Ecology and Conservation Biology.
7) Louthan, A.M., R.M. Pringle, J.R. Goheen, T.M. Palmer, W.F. Morris, and D.F. Doak. 2018. Aridity weakens population-level effects of multiple species interactions on Hibiscus meyeri. Proc. Natl. Acad. Sci. U.S.A. 115:543-548. [link]
6) Louthan, A.M., D.F. Doak, and A.L. Angert. 2015. Where and when do species interactions set range limits? Trends Ecol. Evol. 30: 780-792. [link]
5) Doak, D.F., G.K. Himes Boor, V.J. Bakker, W.F. Morris, A. Louthan, S.A. Morrison, A. Stanley, L.B. Crowder. 2015. Recommendations for improving recovery criteria under the US Endangered Species Act. BioScience 65:189-199. [link]
4) Louthan, A.M., D.F. Doak, J.R. Goheen, T.M. Palmer, and R.M. Pringle. 2014. Mechanisms of plant-plant interactions: concealment from herbivores is more important that abiotic-stress mediation in an African savannah. Proc. R. Soc. Lond.: B 281: 20132647. 10.1098/rspb.2013.2647 [link]
3) Louthan, A.M., D.F. Doak, J.R. Goheen, T.M. Palmer, and R.M. Palmer. 2013. Climatic stress mediates the impact of herbivory on plant population structure and components of individual fitness. J. Ecol. 101: 1074-1083. [link] * featured on the J. Ecol. podcast.
2) Louthan, A.M., and K.M. Kay. 2011. Comparing the adaptive landscape across trait types: larger QTL effect size in traits under biotic selection. BMC Evol. Biol. 11: 749-760. [link] * Received F1000 Award, designed to increase article publicity.
1) Eckhart, V.M., I. Singh, A.M. Louthan, A.J. Keledjian, A. Chu, D.A. Moeller, and M.A. Geber. 2010. Plant-Soil Water Relations and Species Border of Clarkia xantiana ssp. xantiana. Int. J. Plant Sci., 171: 749-760. [link]
Non-peer-reviewed publications
Doak, D.F., R. Dibner, A. Louthan, and M.L. DeMarche. 2016. Final report on Desert Yellowhead (Yermo xanthocephalus) conservation status. Report and recommendations to the Bureau of Land Management and the U.S. Fish and Wildlife Service.
Louthan, A., Préserver la biodiversité face au changement climatique, In: Deyrolle: à la croisée des saviors. Louis Albert de Broglie and Sylvie Albou-Tabart, ed., Éditions de La Martinière, 70, 2015.
Louthan, A., Préserver la biodiversité face au changement climatique, In: Deyrolle: à la croisée des saviors. Louis Albert de Broglie and Sylvie Albou-Tabart, ed., Éditions de La Martinière, 70, 2015.