Robert T. Paine
Affiliations: | Zoology | University of Washington, Seattle, Seattle, WA |
Google:
"Robert Paine"Cross-listing: BME Tree - Marine Ecology Tree
Children
Sign in to add traineeCollaborators
Sign in to add collaboratorPeter M. Kareiva | collaborator | The Nature Conservancy (Marine Ecology Tree) | |
Simon Asher Levin | collaborator | 1973- | Princeton |
Mary Ruckelshaus | collaborator | 1990-1994 | Stanford (Marine Ecology Tree) |
BETA: Related publications
See more...
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. |
Paine RT, Buhle ER, Levin SA, et al. (2017) Short-range dispersal maintains a volatile marine metapopulation: the brown alga Postelsia palmaeformis. Ecology |
Johnson LE, Paine RT. (2016) Consistency in a marine algal-grazer interaction over multiple scales. Journal of Phycology |
Worm B, Paine RT. (2016) Humans as a Hyperkeystone Species. Trends in Ecology & Evolution |
Pfister CA, Roy K, Wootton JT, et al. (2016) Historical baselines and the future of shell calcification for a foundation species in a changing ocean. Proceedings. Biological Sciences / the Royal Society. 283 |
Pfister CA, Paine RT, Wootton JT. (2016) The iconic keystone predator has a pathogen Frontiers in Ecology and the Environment. 14: 285-286 |
Levin SA, Marks PL, Paine RT. (2013) Resolution of Respect: Dick Root Bulletin of the Ecological Society of America. 94: 210-215 |
Estes JA, Terborgh J, Brashares JS, et al. (2011) Trophic downgrading of planet Earth. Science (New York, N.Y.). 333: 301-6 |
Paine RT. (2010) Macroecology: does it ignore or can it encourage further ecological syntheses based on spatially local experimental manipulations? (American Society of Naturalists address). The American Naturalist. 176: 385-93 |
Gleick PH, Adams RM, Amasino RM, et al. (2010) Climate change and the integrity of science. Science (New York, N.Y.). 328: 689-90 |
Harley CD, Paine RT. (2009) Contingencies and compounded rare perturbations dictate sudden distributional shifts during periods of gradual climate change. Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences of the United States of America. 106: 11172-6 |