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Publications
Maunsall, S.C, Burwell, C.J., Morris, R.J., McDonald, W.J.F., Edwards, E.D., Oberprieler, R.G. and Kitching, R.L. (2016). Elevational turnover in the composition of leaf-miners and their interactions with host plants in Australian subtropical rainforest. Austral Ecology, early view. DOI: 10.1111/aec.12339
Manning, P., Slade, E.M., Beynon, S.A. and Lewis, O.T. (2016). Functionally rich dung beetle assemblages are required to provide multiple ecosystem services. Agriculture, Ecosystems and Environment, 10.1016/j.agee.2015.11.007
Visakorpi, K., Wirta, H. K., Ek, M. Schmidt, N. M. & Roslin, T. (2015) No detectable trophic cascade in a high-Arctic arthropod food web. Basic and Applied Ecology, 16, 652-660.
Slade, E.M., Roslin, T., Santalahti, M. & Bell, T. (2015) Disentangling the ‘brown world’ faecal-detritus interaction web: dung beetle effects on soil microbial properties. Oikos, doi: 10.1111/oik.02640
Lähteenmäki, S., Slade, E.M., Hardwick, B., Schiffler, G., Louzada, J., Barlow, J. & Roslin, T. (2014) MESOCLOSURES – Increasing realism in mesocosm studies of ecosystem functioning. Methods in Ecology and Evolution, 6(8), 916-924.
Morris, R.J., Sinclair, F. & Burwell, C.J. (2015) Food web structure changes with elevation but not rainforest strata. Ecography, 38, 792–802. doi: 10.1111/ecog.01078
Pumarino, L., Sileshi, G. W., Gripenberg, S., Kaartinen, R., Barrios, E., Muchane, M. N., Midega, C. & Jonsson, M. (2015) Effects of agroforestry on pest, disease and weed control: A meta-analysis. Basic and Applied Ecology, 16, 573-582.
Dover, J.W., Bourn, N.A., Lewis, O.T., & Shreeve, T. G. (2015). The ecology and conservation of butterflies and moths. Journal of Insect Conservation, 19, 183-184.
Mehrabi, Z., Bell, T., & Lewis, O. T. (2015). Plant‐soil feedbacks from 30‐year family‐specific soil cultures: phylogeny, soil chemistry and plant life stage. Ecology and Evolution, 5, 2333–2339 (doi: 10.1002/ece3.1487)
Schilthuizen, M., Vairappan, C.S., Slade, E.M., Mann, D.J.& Miller, J.A. (2015) Specimens as primary data: museums and “open science”. Trends in Ecology and Evolution, doi:10.1016/j.tree.2015.03.002.