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D-Index & Metrics

Ecology and Evolution

D-Index
51
Citations
11484
World Ranking
3607
National Ranking
1260

Overview

Juliet C. Stromberg is affiliated with Arizona State University in the United States. Their research primarily lies within Environmental Science, with specific emphasis on Ecology and related subfields.

The scientist's main areas of study include Wildlife Ecology and Conservation, Ecology and biodiversity studies, Veterinary Equine Medical Research, Rangeland Management and Livestock Ecology, Archaeology and Natural History, Botany, Ecology, and Taxonomy Studies, and Rangeland and Wildlife Management.

Recent publications authored or co-authored by Stromberg span from 2020 to 2023 and include:

  • Equids engineer desert water availability, 2021, Science
  • Feral equids' varied effects on ecosystems-Response, 2021, Science
  • Monitoring the Results of Stream Corridor Restoration, 2021, University of Arizona Press eBooks
  • CONSERVATION OF THE CIENEGA ENDEMIC, ERYNGIUM SPARGANOPHYLLUM HEMSL. (APIACEAE), 2020, The Southwestern Naturalist
  • Rewilding: The Radical New Science of Ecological Recovery; The Illustrated Edition by Paul Jepson and Cain Blythe (review), 2023, Great Plains research

Coauthors frequently collaborating with Stromberg include Erick Lundgren, Daniel Ramp, Jianguo Wu, Martin Sluk, and Karla T. Moeller.

The primary venues publishing this scientist's work are:

  • Science
  • University of Arizona Press eBooks
  • The Southwestern Naturalist
  • Great Plains research

Stromberg has contributed to book publications as well, with the book Bringing Home the Wild, published by the University of Arizona Press in 2023.

Best Publications

  • Don't judge species on their origins

    Mark A. Davis;Matthew K. Chew;Richard J. Hobbs;Ariel E. Lugo

  • Riparian vegetation: Degradation, alien plant invasions, and restoration prospects

    David M. Richardson;Patricia M. Holmes;Karen J. Esler;Susan M. Galatowitsch

  • Effects of Groundwater Decline on Riparian Vegetation of Semiarid Regions: The San Pedro, Arizona

    Juliet Stromberg;R. Tiller;B. Richter

  • RIPARIAN VEGETATION RESPONSE TO ALTERED DISTURBANCE AND STRESS REGIMES

    Patrick B. Shafroth;Juliet C. Stromberg;Duncan T. Patten

  • Importance of low-flow and high-flow characteristics to restoration of riparian vegetation along rivers in arid south-western United States

    Juliet Stromberg;V. B. Beauchamp;M. D. Dixon;S. J. Lite

  • Restoration of riparian vegetation in the south-western United States: importance of flow regimes and fluvial dynamism

    Juliet C. Stromberg

  • Altered stream-flow regimes and invasive plant species : the Tamarix case

    Juliet C. Stromberg;Sharon J. Lite;Roy Marler;Charles Paradzick

  • Establishment of woody riparian vegetation in relation to annual patterns of streamflow, Bill Williams River, Arizona

    Patrick B. Shafroth;Patrick B. Shafroth;Gregor T. Auble;Juliet C. Stromberg;Duncan T. Patten

  • Woody riparian vegetation response to different alluvial water table regimes.

    Patrick B. Shafroth;Patrick B. Shafroth;Juliet C. Stromberg;Duncan T. Patten

  • Surface water and ground-water thresholds for maintaining Populus–Salix forests, San Pedro River, Arizona

    S. J. Lite;Juliet Stromberg

  • Flood flows and dynamics of Sonoran riparian forests

    Juliet Stromberg;D. T. Patten;B. D. Richter

  • Riparian plant species richness along lateral and longitudinal gradients of water stress and flood disturbance, San Pedro River, Arizona, USA

    S. J. Lite;K. J. Bagstad;Juliet Stromberg

  • Dynamics of Fremont cottonwood (Populus fremontii) and saltcedar (Tamarix chinensis) populations along the San Pedro River, Arizona

    Juliet Stromberg

  • Changing Perceptions of Change: The Role of Scientists in Tamarix and River Management

    Juliet C. Stromberg;Matthew K. Chew;Pamela L. Nagler;Edward P. Glenn

  • Riparian vegetation instream flow requirements: a case study from a diverted stream in the eastern Sierra Nevada, California, USA.

    Julie C. Stromberg;Duncan T. Patten

  • Effects of stream flow patterns on riparian vegetation of a semiarid river: Implications for a changing climate

    Juliet Stromberg;S. J. Lite;M. D. Dixon

  • Response of a Sonoran riparian forest to a 10-year return flood

    J. C. Stromberg;B. D. Richter;D. T. Patten;L. G. Wolden

  • The ecological and hydrological significance of ephemeral and intermittent streams in the arid and semi-arid American Southwest

    Lainie R. Levick;David C. Goodrich;Mariano Hernandez;Julia Fonseca

  • Effects of stream flow intermittency on riparian vegetation of a semiarid region river (San Pedro River, Arizona)

    Juliet C. Stromberg;Kenneth J. Bagstad;James M. Leenhouts;Sharon J. Lite

  • Growth and survivorship of Fremont cottonwood, Gooding willow, and salt cedar seedlings after large floods in central Arizona

    Juliet Stromberg

Frequent Co-Authors

Patrick B. Shafroth
Patrick B. Shafroth United States Geological Survey
David C. Goodrich
David C. Goodrich US Department of Agriculture
Thomas Meixner
Thomas Meixner University of Arizona
Kenneth J. Bagstad
Kenneth J. Bagstad United States Geological Survey
David S. Brookshire
David S. Brookshire University of New Mexico
Daniel L. Childers
Daniel L. Childers Arizona State University
Kevin E. Lansey
Kevin E. Lansey University of Arizona
Richard J. Hobbs
Richard J. Hobbs University of Western Australia
Kathleen A. Lohse
Kathleen A. Lohse Idaho State University
David M. Merritt
David M. Merritt US Forest Service

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