Rebecca L. Selden

Affiliations: 
Ecology Evolution and Marine Biology University of California, Santa Barbara, Santa Barbara, CA, United States 
Area:
fisheries, food webs
Google:
"Rebecca Selden"
BETA: Related publications

Publications

You can help our author matching system! If you notice any publications incorrectly attributed to this author, please sign in and mark matches as correct or incorrect.

Liu OR, Ward EJ, Anderson SC, et al. (2023) Species redistribution creates unequal outcomes for multispecies fisheries under projected climate change. Science Advances. 9: eadg5468
Brodie S, Smith JA, Muhling BA, et al. (2022) Recommendations for quantifying and reducing uncertainty in climate projections of species distributions. Global Change Biology
Kitchel ZJ, Conrad HM, Selden RL, et al. (2022) The role of continental shelf bathymetry in shaping marine range shifts in the face of climate change. Global Change Biology
Fredston A, Pinsky M, Selden RL, et al. (2021) Range edges of North American marine species are tracking temperature over decades. Global Change Biology
Pinsky ML, Fenichel E, Fogarty M, et al. (2020) Fish and fisheries in hot water: What is happening and how do we adapt? Population Ecology. 63: 17-26
Friedland KD, Langan JA, Large SI, et al. (2019) Changes in higher trophic level productivity, diversity and niche space in a rapidly warming continental shelf ecosystem. The Science of the Total Environment. 135270
Pinsky ML, Selden RL, Kitchel ZJ. (2019) Climate-Driven Shifts in Marine Species Ranges: Scaling from Organisms to Communities. Annual Review of Marine Science
Fey SB, Vasseur DA, Alujević K, et al. (2019) Opportunities for behavioral rescue under rapid environmental change. Global Change Biology
Gutiérrez NL, Valencia SR, Branch TA, et al. (2019) Correction: Eco-Label Conveys Reliable Information on Fish Stock Health to Seafood Consumers. Plos One. 14: e0210844
Brodie SJ, Thorson JT, Carroll G, et al. (2019) Trade‐offs in covariate selection for species distribution models: a methodological comparison Ecography. 43: 11-24
See more...