Paul E. Bourdeau

Affiliations: 
2014- Biological Sciences Humboldt State University, Arcata, CA, United States 
Area:
phenotypic plasticity, community ecology
Google:
"Paul Bourdeau"

Parents

Sign in to add mentor
Dianna K. Padilla grad student 2001-2009 SUNY Stony Brook
 (Predator-induced behavioral and morphological plasticity in marine snails, Nucella spp.)
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.

Hu N, Bourdeau PE, Harlos C, et al. (2022) Meta-analysis reveals variance in tolerance to climate change across marine trophic levels. The Science of the Total Environment. 827: 154244
Murie KA, Bourdeau PE. (2021) Energetic context determines the effects of multiple upwelling-associated stressors on sea urchin performance. Scientific Reports. 11: 11313
Fieber AM, Bourdeau PE. (2021) Elevated pCO reinforces preference among intertidal algae in both a specialist and generalist herbivore. Marine Pollution Bulletin. 168: 112377
Murie KA, Bourdeau PE. (2020) Fragmented kelp forest canopies retain their ability to alter local seawater chemistry. Scientific Reports. 10: 11939
Murie KA, Bourdeau PE. (2019) Predator identity dominates non-consumptive effects in a disease-impacted rocky shore food web. Oecologia
Bourdeau PE, Padilla DK. (2019) Cue specificity of predator-induced phenotype in a marine snail: is a crab just a crab? Marine Biology. 166
Flagor TE, Bourdeau PE. (2018) First record of the predatory snail Acanthinucella spirata (Blainville, 1832) north of its known range Marine Biodiversity Records. 11
Hull WW, Bourdeau PE. (2017) Can crabs kill like a keystone predator? A field-test of the effects of crab predation on mussel mortality on a northeast Pacific rocky shore. Plos One. 12: e0183064
Hollander J, Bourdeau PE. (2016) Evidence of weaker phenotypic plasticity by prey to novel cues from non-native predators. Ecology and Evolution. 6: 5358-65
Bourdeau PE, Bach MT, Peacor SD. (2016) Predator presence dramatically reduces copepod abundance through condition-mediated non-consumptive effects Freshwater Biology. 61: 1020-1031
See more...