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Janneke HilleRisLambers

Janneke HilleRisLambers

D-Index & Metrics

Ecology and Evolution

D-Index
54
Citations
18518
World Ranking
3058
National Ranking
1077

Overview

Janneke HilleRisLambers is affiliated with the University of Washington in the United States. Their work primarily spans the field of Environmental Science, with a total of 36 publications.

Their research includes several subfields, notably Nature and Landscape Conservation, Global and Planetary Change, Ecology, Atmospheric Science, and Ecology, Evolution, Behavior and Systematics. Within these areas, their contributions focus on specific topics such as Ecology and Vegetation Dynamics Studies, Plant Water Relations and Carbon Dynamics, Tree-ring Climate Responses, Plant and Animal Studies, Species Distribution and Climate Change, Tree Root and Stability Studies, and Remote Sensing in Agriculture.

Janneke HilleRisLambers has authored multiple recent papers, including:

  • Continent-wide tree fecundity driven by indirect climate effects, 2021, Nature Communications
  • Aridity drives coordinated trait shifts but not decreased trait variance across the geographic range of eight Australian trees, 2020, New Phytologist
  • Increasing climate sensitivity of subtropical conifers along an aridity gradient, 2020, Forest Ecology and Management
  • Detecting Montane Flowering Phenology with CubeSat Imagery, 2020, Remote Sensing
  • Sheltered or suppressed? Tree regeneration in unmanaged European forests, 2023, Journal of Ecology

The scientist frequently publishes in several venues, with multiple contributions to Global Change Biology, Nature Communications, and Nature Ecology & Evolution. Other publication outlets include New Phytologist and Forest Ecology and Management.

Collaborations are an important part of their research process, as reflected by frequent coauthors. These collaborators include Rubén D. Manzanedo, Inés Ibáñez, Alana R. O. Chin, Arthur Geßler, and James S. Clark, with the number of joint publications ranging from two to four.

Best Publications

  • Rethinking Community Assembly through the Lens of Coexistence Theory

    J. HilleRisLambers;P. B. Adler;W. S. Harpole;J. M. Levine

  • A niche for neutrality.

    Peter B. Adler;Janneke HilleRisLambers;Jonathan M. Levine

  • Increased structure and active learning reduce the achievement gap in introductory biology.

    David C. Haak;Janneke HilleRisLambers;Emile Pitre;Scott Freeman

  • Seed Dispersal Near and Far: Patterns Across Temperate and Tropical Forests

    James S. Clark;Miles Silman;Ruth Kern;Eric Macklin

  • Herbivores and nutrients control grassland plant diversity via light limitation

    Elizabeth T. Borer;Eric W. Seabloom;Daniel S. Gruner;W. Stanley Harpole

  • The importance of niches for the maintenance of species diversity

    Jonathan M. Levine;Janneke HilleRisLambers

  • Global change and local solutions: Tapping the unrealized potential of citizen science for biodiversity research

    E.J. Theobald;A.K. Ettinger;H.K. Burgess;L.B. DeBey

  • Plant functional trait change across a warming tundra biome

    Anne D. Bjorkman;Anne D. Bjorkman;Isla H. Myers-Smith;Sarah C. Elmendorf;Sarah C. Elmendorf;Sarah C. Elmendorf;Signe Normand

  • Soil microbes drive the classic plant diversity–productivity pattern

    Stefan A. Schnitzer;Stefan A. Schnitzer;John N. Klironomos;Janneke HilleRisLambers;Linda L. Kinkel

  • Productivity Is a Poor Predictor of Plant Species Richness

    Peter B. Adler;Eric W. Seabloom;Elizabeth T. Borer;Helmut Hillebrand

  • Interpreting recruitment limitation in forests.

    J. S. Clark;B. Beckage;P. Camill;B. Cleveland

  • From selection to complementarity: shifts in the causes of biodiversity–productivity relationships in a long-term biodiversity experiment

    Joseph Fargione;David Tilman;Ray Dybzinski;Janneke Hille Ris Lambers

  • The science of citizen science: Exploring barriers to use as a primary research tool

    H.K. Burgess;L.B. DeBey;H.E. Froehlich;N. Schmidt

  • Density-dependent mortality and the latitudinal gradient in species diversity

    Janneke Hille Ris Lambers;James S. Clark;Brian Beckage;Brian Beckage

  • Climate variability has a stabilizing effect on the coexistence of prairie grasses

    Peter B. Adler;Janneke HilleRisLambers;Phaedon C. Kyriakidis;Qingfeng Guan

  • How will biotic interactions influence climate change-induced range shifts?

    Janneke HilleRisLambers;Melanie A. Harsch;Ailene K. Ettinger;Kevin R. Ford

  • ESTIMATING POPULATION SPREAD: WHAT CAN WE FORECAST AND HOW WELL?

    James S. Clark;Mark Lewis;Jason S. McLachlan;Janneke HilleRisLambers

  • Within-species patterns challenge our understanding of the leaf economics spectrum.

    Leander D. L. Anderegg;Leander D. L. Anderegg;Logan T. Berner;Logan T. Berner;Grayson Badgley;Meera L. Sethi

  • Mechanisms responsible for the positive diversity–productivity relationship in Minnesota grasslands

    Janneke Hille Ris Lambers;W. Stanley Harpole;David Tilman;Johannes Knops

  • High‐dimensional coexistence based on individual variation: a synthesis of evidence

    James S. Clark;David Bell;Chengjin Chu;Benoit Courbaud

  • Integrating the underlying structure of stochasticity into community ecology.

    Lauren G. Shoemaker;Lauren G. Shoemaker;Lauren G. Shoemaker;Lauren L. Sullivan;Lauren L. Sullivan;Ian Donohue;Juliano S. Cabral

Frequent Co-Authors

Leander D. L. Anderegg
Leander D. L. Anderegg University of California, Santa Barbara
Jonathan M. Levine
Jonathan M. Levine Princeton University
Peter B. Adler
Peter B. Adler Utah State University
James S. Clark
James S. Clark Duke University
Margaret M. Mayfield
Margaret M. Mayfield University of Queensland
Peter B. Reich
Peter B. Reich University of Minnesota
Jerry F. Franklin
Jerry F. Franklin University of Washington
Joshua J. Tewksbury
Joshua J. Tewksbury University of Colorado Boulder
Johannes M. H. Knops
Johannes M. H. Knops Xi’an Jiaotong-Liverpool University
Yvonne M. Buckley
Yvonne M. Buckley Trinity College Dublin

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