Ken Paige, Ph.D.
Affiliations: | Animal Biology | University of Illinois, Urbana-Champaign, Urbana-Champaign, IL |
Website:
http://www.life.illinois.edu/paige/Google:
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Publications
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Mesa JM, Paige KN. (2023) Molecular constraints on tolerance-resistance trade-offs: Is there a cost? Plant-Environment Interactions (Hoboken, N.J.). 4: 317-323 |
Allsup CM, Lankau RA, Paige KN. (2021) Herbivory and Soil Water Availability Induce Changes in Arbuscular Mycorrhizal Fungal Abundance and Composition. Microbial Ecology |
Mesa JM, Juvik JA, Paige KN. (2019) Individual and interactive effects of herbivory on plant fitness: endopolyploidy as a driver of genetic variation in tolerance and resistance. Oecologia |
Ramula S, Paige KN, Lennartsson T, et al. (2019) Overcompensation: a 30-year perspective. Ecology. e02667 |
Mesa JM, Scholes DR, Juvik J, et al. (2017) Molecular constraints on resistance-tolerance tradeoffs. Ecology |
Scholes DR, Rasnick EN, Paige KN. (2017) Characterization of Arabidopsis thaliana regrowth patterns suggests a trade-off between undamaged fitness and damage tolerance. Oecologia |
Scholes DR, Dalrymple J, Mesa JM, et al. (2016) An assessment of the molecular mechanisms contributing to tolerance to apical damage in natural populations of Arabidopsis thaliana Plant Ecology. 218: 265-276 |
Siddappaji MH, Scholes DR, Krishnankutty SM, et al. (2015) The role of invertases in plant compensatory responses to simulated herbivory. Bmc Plant Biology. 15: 278 |
Allsup CM, Paige KN. (2015) Belowground fungal associations and water interact to influence the compensatory response of Ipomopsis aggregata. Oecologia |
Scholes DR, Wszalek AE, Paige KN. (2015) Regrowth patterns and rosette attributes contribute to the differential compensatory responses of Arabidopsis thaliana genotypes to apical damage. Plant Biology (Stuttgart, Germany) |