J Emmett Duffy
Affiliations: | Virginia Institute of Marine Science, Gloucester Point, VA, United States |
Area:
biodiversity, food webs, evolutionary ecologyGoogle:
"J Duffy"Cross-listing: Evolution Tree
Children
Sign in to add traineeCarmen J Ritter | research assistant | ||
Ross Whippo | research assistant | 2015-2021 | Smithsonian Institution |
Althea Moore | grad student | Virginia Institute of Marine Science | |
Matthew A. Whalen | grad student | Virginia Institute of Marine Science | |
Solomon Chak | grad student | 2011- | Virginia Institute of Marine Science |
Kenneth S. Macdonald | grad student | 2002 | William and Mary |
Jennifer M. Rhode | grad student | 2002 | William and Mary |
Ruben Rios Gonzalez | grad student | 2003 | William and Mary |
Kristin E. France | grad student | 2007 | William and Mary |
James G. Douglass | grad student | 2002-2008 | |
Rachael E. Blake | grad student | 2012 | William and Mary |
Jonathan S. Lefcheck | grad student | 2009-2015 | Virginia Institute of Marine Science |
Pamela L. Reynolds | post-doc | Virginia Institute of Marine Science | |
Zachary T. Long | post-doc | 2004-2007 | Virginia Institute of Marine Science (Microtree) |
Kristin Hultgren | post-doc | 2007-2009 | Smithsonian Institution |
Simon J. Brandl | post-doc | 2015-2017 |
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. |
Chak STC, Harris SE, Hultgren KM, et al. (2022) Demographic inference provides insights into the extirpation and ecological dominance of eusocial snapping shrimps. The Journal of Heredity |
Duffy JE, Stachowicz JJ, Reynolds PL, et al. (2022) A Pleistocene legacy structures variation in modern seagrass ecosystems. Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences of the United States of America. 119: e2121425119 |
Beatty DS, Aoki LR, Rappazzo B, et al. (2022) Predictable Changes in Eelgrass Microbiomes with Increasing Wasting Disease Prevalence across 23° Latitude in the Northeastern Pacific. Msystems. e0022422 |
Ashton GV, Freestone AL, Duffy JE, et al. (2022) Predator control of marine communities increases with temperature across 115 degrees of latitude. Science (New York, N.Y.). 376: 1215-1219 |
Gross CP, Duffy JE, Hovel KA, et al. (2022) The biogeography of community assembly: latitude and predation drive variation in community trait distribution in a guild of epifaunal crustaceans. Proceedings. Biological Sciences. 289: 20211762 |
Lefcheck JS, Edgar GJ, Stuart-Smith RD, et al. (2021) Publisher Correction: Species richness and identity both determine the biomass of global reef fish communities. Nature Communications. 12: 7361 |
Lefcheck JS, Edgar GJ, Stuart-Smith RD, et al. (2021) Species richness and identity both determine the biomass of global reef fish communities. Nature Communications. 12: 6875 |
de Pablo LX, Lefcheck JS, Harper L, et al. (2021) A doubling of stony coral cover on shallow forereefs at Carrie Bow Cay, Belize from 2014 to 2019. Scientific Reports. 11: 19185 |
Hovel KA, Duffy JE, Stachowicz JJ, et al. (2021) Joint effects of patch edges and habitat degradation on faunal predation risk in a widespread marine foundation species. Ecology. e03316 |
Whalen MA, Whippo RDB, Stachowicz JJ, et al. (2020) Climate drives the geography of marine consumption by changing predator communities. Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences of the United States of America |