David M. Medvigy, Ph.D.
Affiliations: | 2006 | Harvard University, Cambridge, MA, United States |
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"David Medvigy"Parents
Sign in to add mentorPaul R. Moorcroft | grad student | 2006 | Harvard | |
(The state of the regional carbon cycle: Results from a constrained coupled ecosystem -atmosphere model.) |
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Publications
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Xu X, van der Sleen P, Groenendijk P, et al. (2024) Constraining long-term model predictions for woody growth using tropical tree rings. Global Change Biology. 30: e17075 |
Willson AM, Trugman AT, Powers JS, et al. (2022) Climate and hydraulic traits interact to set thresholds for liana viability. Nature Communications. 13: 3332 |
Wu D, Vargas G G, Powers JS, et al. (2021) Reduced ecosystem resilience quantifies fine-scale heterogeneity in tropical forest mortality responses to drought. Global Change Biology |
Powers JS, Vargas-G G, Brodribb TJ, et al. (2020) A catastrophic tropical drought kills hydraulically vulnerable tree species. Global Change Biology |
Oh Y, Zhuang Q, Liu L, et al. (2020) Reduced net methane emissions due to microbial methane oxidation in a warmer Arctic Nature Climate Change. 10: 317-321 |
Kim D, Medvigy D, Maier CA, et al. (2019) Biomass increases attributed to both faster tree growth and altered allometric relationships under long-term carbon dioxide enrichment at a temperate forest. Global Change Biology |
Levy-Varon JH, Batterman SA, Medvigy D, et al. (2019) Tropical carbon sink accelerated by symbiotic dinitrogen fixation. Nature Communications. 10: 5637 |
Smith-Martin CM, Xu X, Medvigy D, et al. (2019) Allometric scaling laws linking biomass and rooting depth vary across ontogeny and functional groups in tropical dry forest lianas and trees. The New Phytologist |
Medvigy D, Wang G, Zhu Q, et al. (2019) Observed variation in soil properties can drive large variation in modeled forest functioning and composition during tropical forest secondary succession. The New Phytologist |
Longo M, Knox RG, Levine NM, et al. (2019) The biophysics, ecology, and biogeochemistry of functionally diverse, vertically and horizontally heterogeneous ecosystems: the Ecosystem Demography model, version 2.2 – Part 2: Model evaluation for tropical South America Geoscientific Model Development. 12: 4347-4374 |