Michael Stastny, Ph.D.
Affiliations: | Cornell University, Ithaca, NY, United States |
Area:
Evolutionary Ecology, Plant-Insect InteractionsGoogle:
"Michael Stastny"Parents
Sign in to add mentorAnurag A. Agrawal | grad student | 2010 | Cornell | |
(Ecological consequences of relatedness: The role of competition and herbivory in the community structure of co-occurring asteraceae.) | ||||
Todd Palmer | post-doc | Natural Resources Canada (Terrestrial Ecology Tree) |
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Publications
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Stastny M, Russell-Mercier JL, Sargent RD. (2020) No evidence that rapid adaptation impedes biological control of an invasive plant. Evolutionary Applications. 13: 2472-2483 |
Stastny M, Sargent RD. (2017) Evidence for rapid evolutionary change in an invasive plant in response to biological control. Journal of Evolutionary Biology |
Stastny M, Agrawal AA. (2014) Love thy neighbor? Reciprocal impacts between plant community structure and insect herbivory in co-occurring Asteraceae Ecology. 95: 2915-2923 |
Zovi D, Stastny M, Battisti A, et al. (2008) Ecological costs on local adaptation of an insect herbivore imposed by host plants and enemies. Ecology. 89: 1388-98 |
Buffo E, Battisti A, Stastny M, et al. (2007) Temperature as a predictor of survival of the pine processionary moth in the Italian Alps Agricultural and Forest Entomology. 9: 65-72 |
Battisti A, Stastny M, Buffo E, et al. (2006) A rapid altitudinal range expansion in the pine processionary moth produced by the 2003 climatic anomaly Global Change Biology. 12: 662-671 |
Stastny M, Battisti A, Petrucco-Toffolo E, et al. (2006) Host-plant use in the range expansion of the pine processionary moth, Thaumetopoea pityocampa Ecological Entomology. 31: 481-490 |
Battisti A, Stastny M, Netherer S, et al. (2005) Expansion of geographic range in the pine processionary moth caused by increased winter temperatures Ecological Applications. 15: 2084-2096 |
Stastny M, Schaffner U, Elle E. (2005) Do vigour of introduced populations and escape from specialist herbivores contribute to invasiveness? Journal of Ecology. 93: 27-37 |