Elsa E. Cleland, Ph.D.

Affiliations: 
Stanford University, Palo Alto, CA 
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"Elsa Cleland"

Parents

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Harold A. Mooney grad student 2005 Stanford
 (The influence of multiple interacting global changes on the structure and function of a California annual grassland ecosystem.)
Christopher B. Field grad student 1999-2005 Stanford

Children

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Sherlynette Pérez Castro grad student 2013-2018 UCSD (Microtree)
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Publications

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Waterton J, Mazer SJ, Cleland EE. (2023) When the neighborhood matters: contextual selection on seedling traits in native and non-native California grasses. Evolution; International Journal of Organic Evolution
Waterton J, Cleland EE. (2021) Vertebrate herbivory weakens directional selection for earlier emergence in competition. Evolution Letters. 5: 265-276
Firn J, McGree JM, Harvey E, et al. (2020) Author Correction: Leaf nutrients, not specific leaf area, are consistent indicators of elevated nutrient inputs. Nature Ecology & Evolution
Sitters J, Wubs ERJ, Bakker ES, et al. (2020) Nutrient availability controls the impact of mammalian herbivores on soil carbon and nitrogen pools in grasslands. Global Change Biology
Gilbert B, MacDougall AS, Kadoya T, et al. (2020) Climate and local environment structure asynchrony and the stability of primary production in grasslands Global Ecology and Biogeography. 29: 1177-1188
Pérez Castro S, Esch EH, Eviner VT, et al. (2020) Exotic herbaceous species interact with severe drought to alter soil N cycling in a semi-arid shrubland Geoderma. 361: 114111
Esch EH, Lipson D, Cleland EE. (2019) Invasion and drought alter phenological sensitivity and synergistically lower ecosystem production. Ecology. e02802
Pérez Castro S, Cleland EE, Wagner R, et al. (2019) Soil microbial responses to drought and exotic plants shift carbon metabolism. The Isme Journal
Firn J, McGree JM, Harvey E, et al. (2019) Leaf nutrients, not specific leaf area, are consistent indicators of elevated nutrient inputs. Nature Ecology & Evolution
Puritty CE, Esch EH, Castro SP, et al. (2019) Drought in Southern California coastal sage scrub reduces herbaceous biomass of exotic species more than native species, but exotic growth recovers quickly when drought ends Plant Ecology. 220: 151-169
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