CURRICULUM VITAE - University of Montana



JOHN LAWRENCE MARON

ADDRESS

Division of Biological Sciences, University of Montana, Missoula, MT 59812,

Phone: 406-243-6202, Fax: 406-243-4184, e-mail: john.maron@mso.umt.edu

EDUCATION

Ph.D. U.C. Davis, Ecology 1996

M.S. University of North Dakota, Biology 1983

B.S. U.C. Davis, Renewable Resources 1980

PROFESSIONAL POSITIONS

Program Director, Organismal Biology and Ecology

Division of Biological Sciences, University of Montana 2009-2012

Professor, Biological Sciences, University of Montana. 2009-Present

Associate Professor, Biological Sciences, University of Montana. 2004-2009

Assistant Professor, Biological Sciences, University of Montana. 2002-2004

Adjunct Assistant Professor, Zoology, University of Washington. 1999-2002

Assistant Professor, Botany Department, University of Washington. 1998-2002

Postdoctoral Fellow, with Dr. Susan Harrison, U.C. Davis. 1997-1998

Museum Scientist, Bodega Marine Reserve, U.C. Davis. 1996-1997

Assistant Museum Scientist, Bodega Marine Reserve, U.C. Davis. 1987-1997

TEACHING

University of Montana

Conservation Ecology (Undergraduate lecture course) 2014

Graduate Policies and Regulations (Graduate discussion course) 2008-2011

Population and Community Ecology (Graduate lecture & discussion course;

one of two instructors). 2010, 2011, 2013

Population Biology (Graduate lecture & discussion course; one of two instructors). 2009

Terrestrial Plant Ecology (Undergraduate lecture & discussion course). 2002-08, 10, 15

Rocky Mountain Flora (Undergraduate lecture & laboratory course). 2005, 2007, 2009

Plant-Consumer Interactions (Graduate lecture & discussion course). 2004, 2008, 11, 15

Intro. Biology (Undergraduate lecture & laboratory course; one of four instructors). 2003

Trends in Plant Ecology, (Graduate seminar course; one of two instructors). 2003

University of Washington

Advanced Ecology (Graduate lecture & discussion course; one of four instructors). 2001

General Ecology (Undergraduate lecture & laboratory course; one of three instructors). 2001

Plant-Consumer Interactions (Graduate lecture & discussion course). 1999

Introduction to Plant Ecology (Graduate lecture & laboratory course). 1998-2001

Other institutions

Conservation Biology, Universitat Autònoma, Barcelona (one of two instructors) 2006

Sub-Tropical Field Ecology, Universidad de Cordoba, Argentina. 1992

Field Ecology, U.C. Bodega Marine Laboratory (one of two instructors). 1985-1991

FELLOWSHIPS/AWARDS/HONORS

University of Montana Distinguished Scholar Award 2014

Catalunya PIV Fellowship, Universitat Autònoma de Barcelona 2005-2006

RESEARCH GRANTS

Current

Texas EcoLab, “Direct and indirect effects of variable precipitation across

the Edwards plateau on Texas bluebonnet abundance and nitrogen inputs”

$4,984. 2015-2016

Previous

NSF, “Indirect effects of apex predators in a grassland ecosystem.”

$578,295. (Co-PI. D. Pearson). 2010-2013

EPA STAR, “Does intensive herbicide-use in natural areas indirectly drive

declines in pollinator abundance?” $111,000. (Written by J. Palladini). 2010-2013

NSF, “The role of soil microbes in plant invasions: inhibition at

home and facilitation away?” $625,000. (Co-PI: R. Callaway). 2006-2012

USDA, Managed Ecosystems program, “Assessing the indirect effects

of top predators on the diversity, productivity and health of grassland

systems,” $300,000. (Co-PI: D. Pearson). 2005-2010

BLM, “Effects of top predators on grassland communities,” $11,000. 2008-2009

NSF, “Interacting effects of native plant diversity and resource

availability on community invasibility and invader impact,”

$368,998. (Co-PI: M. Marler). 2004-2009

NSF ROA, “Interacting effects of native plant diversity and resource

availability on community invasibility and invader impact,”

$19,898. (Co-PI: P. Kittelson). 2005-2009

USDA McIntire-Stennis program, “Effects of top predators on the

management of grassland-forest ecotones in western Montana,” $89,942. 2005-2008

BLM, “Effects of top predators on grassland communities,” $11,000. 2007-2008

NSF, “Foxes and seabirds: the role of top-down processes in

controlling marine subsidies to a terrestrial ecosystem,”

$332,701. (Co-PIs: J. Estes and D. Croll). 2000-2007

NSF, “Dissertation Research: Population dynamics of an invasive

plant: Cynoglossum officinale in its native and introduced ranges,”

$12,000 (written by: J. Williams) 2005-2007

National Parks/ESA Research Fellowship, “Assessing trophic

control of Aspen demography across spatial and temporal

scales in the Rocky Mountains.” $150,000. (PI: M. Kauffman). 2004-2007

NSF, “Dissertation Research: Wildlife poaching, seed dispersal,

and the functional similarity of mammalian frugivores

in Thailand,” $8,242 (written by: J. Brodie) 2005-2006

NSF REU, “Interacting effects of native plant diversity and resource

availability on community invasibility and invader impact,” $6,000. 2006

BLM, “Effects of top predators on grassland communities,” $5,000. 2005-2006

BLM, “Effects of top predators on grassland communities,” $5,000. 2004-2005

Montana Weed Trust, “Interacting effects of native plant diversity

and resource availability on community invasibility and invader

impact,” $14,633. (Co-PI: M. Marler). 2003-2004

NSF, “Invasion and subsequent biological control of St. John’s

Wort (Hypericum perforatum): rapid evolution of herbivore

resistance?” $100,000. 2000-2004

Missoula Weed Board, “Interacting effects of native plant diversity

and resource availability on community invasibility and invader

impact,” $6,000. (Co-PI: M. Marler). 2002-2003

NSF REU, “Invasion and subsequent biological control of

St. John’s Wort (Hypericum perforatum): rapid evolution of

herbivore resistance?” $6,000. 2002-2003

NSF REU, “Interacting effects of insect herbivory and rodent

granivory on plant population dynamics,” $7,000. 2001-2002

NSF, “Interacting effects of insect herbivory and rodent granivory

on plant population dynamics,” $283,051. (Co-PI: E Simms). 1997-2002

NSF REU, “Interacting effects of insect herbivory and rodent

granivory on plant population dynamics,” $5,000. 2000-2001

Royalty Research Fund, University of Washington, “Do biological

control targets evolve resistance/tolerance to biological control

agents?” $32,500. 2000-2001

PROFESSIONAL SERVICE

Editorial Board, American Naturalist 2007-2014

Panel Member, NSF, Ecology 2006, 2012

External “Frontiers in Ecology” Workshop, NSF 2006

Review Panel Member, NSF, Dissertation Improvement Grants 2002

External Workshop, NSF, Project NEON 2000

INVITED SEMINARS

Brigham Young University 2015

Schexnayder Lecture, Louisiana State University 2014

University of Georgia 2014

Cornell University 2012

Montana Natural History Center 2012

University of California San Diego 2012

University of Wisconsin 2012

Uppsala University 2011

University of Stockholm 2011

University of Florida 2010 UFZ Research Institute, Halle, Germany 2010

CABI Bioscience, Delemont Switzerland 2010

Estación Biológica de Doñana (EBD-CSIC), Sevilla, Spain 2009

“Darwin Lecture Series”, Fundation La Caixa, Madrid, Spain 2009

Guelph University 2008

Washington State University 2008

Miami University 2008

Colorado State University 2007

U.C. Davis 2007

Indiana University 2007

Fire Sciences Lab, U.S. Forest Service, Missoula 2007

University of Vermont 2006

Institute for Plant Sciences, University of Zurich 2006

Leibniz Institute of Plant Genetics and Crop Plant Research 2006

Université de Fribourg 2005

Universitat Autònoma de Barcelona 2005

“Eminent Ecologist Series”, Michigan State University 2005

UFZ Research Institute, Halle, Germany 2005

Plant protection meeting, Leysin, Switzerland 2005

CABI Bioscience, Delemont Switzerland 2005

University of Toronto Mississauga 2005

University of Toronto 2005

Idaho State University 2004

University Nevada Reno 2004

Cedar Point Biological Station, University of Nebraska 2003

Cornell University 2003

Bodega Marine Laboratory, U.C. Davis 2003

U.C. Santa Cruz 2002

University of Montana 2001

Native Plant Society, Seattle Chapter 2001

Duke University 2001

Smithsonian Environmental Research Center, Edgewater 2001

Bodega Marine Laboratory, U.C. Davis 2000

Universitat Autònoma de Barcelona 2000

Simon Fraser University 2000

U.C. Santa Cruz 1997

University of Toronto 1996

Sonoma State University 1995

INVITED CONFERENCES AND WORKSHOPS

Workshop on top carnivore conservation, Yale University 2013

NSF-sponsored meeting on Climate Change and Species Interactions. 2012

NSF-sponsored Research Coordination Network Meeting on Invasives. 2012

ESA workshop, “Are invasives different?” 2009

Invasive Species in Natural Areas Conference. 2008

Symposium on Insect-Plant Interactions (#13). 2007

Vice-Presidential Symposium, American Society of Naturalists. 2007

NSF-sponsored Project Baseline Workshop. 2007

Joint U.S.-Indian Forum on Invasive Plants. 2006

NCEAS Working Group- Natural Enemies Hypothesis. 2004, 2005

NSF Workshop-Model Systems in Community Ecology. 2004

USDA Conference on Biological Control of Weeds. 2004

University of Minnesota Symposium- Evolutionary Consequences of

Invasions by Exotic Species. 2002

ESA Symposium-Phenotypic Change in Introduced Organisms. 2000

U.C. Bodega Marine Laboratory colloquium- Use of Model Systems in

Ecological and Evolutionary Research. 1997

NCEAS Workshop- Spatial and Temporal Population Dynamics 1996

PUBLICATIONS (Reviewed Journal Articles; 98 total)

Yang, L., J.L. Maron and R.M. Callaway. 2015. High plant species diversity ameliorates the inhibitory effects of soil biota expressed at low diversity. Oecologia 179: 519-525.

Maron, J.L., W. Luo, R.M. Callaway, and R.W. Pal. 2015. Do exotic plants lose resistance to pathogenic soil biota from home? A test with Solidago gigantea. Oecologia 179: 447-454.

Sun, Y., H. Müller-Schärer, J.L. Maron and U. Schaffner. 2015. Origin matters: diversity affects the performance of alien invasive species but not of native species. American Naturalist 185: 725-736.

Sun, Y., H. Müller-Schärer, J.L. Maron and U. Schaffner. 2015. Biogeographic effects on early establishment of an invasive alien plant. American Journal of Botany 102: 1-5.

Brodie, J.F., C.E. Aslan, H.S. Rogers, K.H. Redford, J.L. Maron, J.L. Bronstein, and C.R. Groves. 2014. Secondary extinctions of biodiversity. Trends in Ecology and Evolution 29: 664-672.

Maron, J.L., K. Baer and A.L. Angert. 2014. Disentangling the drivers of context-dependent plant-animal interactions. Journal of Ecology 102: 1485-1496.

Palladini, J.D. and J.L. Maron. 2014. Reproduction and survival of a solitary bee along native and exotic floral resource gradients. Oecologia 176: 789-798.

Pinto, S.M., D.E. Pearson and J.L. Maron. 2014. Seed dispersal is more limiting to native grassland diversity than competition or seed predation. Journal of Ecology 102: 1258-1265.

Maron, J.L., H. Auge, D.E. Pearson, L. Korell, I. Hensen, K. Suding, and C. Stein. 2014. Staged invasions across disparate grasslands: effects of seed provenance, consumers, and disturbance on productivity and species richness. Ecology Letters 17: 499-507.

Molins, M.P., J.M. Corral, O.M. Aliyu, M.A. Koch, A. Betzin, J.L. Maron and T.F. Sharbel. 2014. Biogeographic variation in genetic variability, apomixes expression and ploidy of St. John’s wort (Hypericum perforatum L.) across its native and introduced range. Annals of Botany 113: 417-427.

Maron, J.L., J. Klironomos, L. Waller and R.M. Callaway. 2014. Invasive plants escape from suppressive soil biota at regional scales. Journal of Ecology 102: 19-27.

Palladini, J.D. and J.L. Maron. 2013. Indirect competition for pollinators is weak compared to direct resource competition: pollination and performance in the face of a potent invader. Oecologia 172: 1061-1069.

Maron, J.L., L. Waller, M. Han, A. Diaconu, R. Pal, H. Müller-Schärer, and R.M. Callaway. 2013. Effects of soil pathogens, disturbance, propagule pressure and competition on exotic plant recruitment at home and abroad. Journal of Ecology 101: 924-932.

Callaway, R.M., D. Montesinos, K. Williams, and J.L. Maron. 2013. Native congeners provide biotic resistance to invasive Potentilla through soil biota. Ecology 94: 1223-1229.

Parsons, E.W.R., J.L. Maron and T. Martin. 2013. Elk herbivory alters small mammal assemblages in high-elevation drainages. Journal of Animal Ecology 82: 459-467.

Agrawal, A.A., M.T.J. Johnson, A.P. Hastings, and J.L. Maron. 2013. A field experiment demonstrating plant life-history evolution and its eco-evolutionary feedback to seed predator populations. American Naturalist 181: S35-S45.

Karban, R., P. Grof-Tisza, J.L. Maron and M. Holyoak. 2012. The importance of host plant limitation for caterpillars (Platyprepia virginalis) varies spatially. Ecology 93: 2216-2226.

Pearson, D., T. Potter and J.L. Maron. 2012. Biotic resistance: exclusion of native rodent consumers releases populations of a weak invader. Journal of Ecology 100:1383-1390.

Maron, J.L., T. Potter, Y. Ortega, and D. Pearson. 2012. Seed size and evolutionary origin mediate the impacts of disturbance and rodent seed predation on community assembly. Journal of Ecology 100:1492-1500.

Agrawal, A.A., A.P. Hastings, M.T. Johnson, J.L. Maron, and J-P. Salminn. 2012. Insects as drivers of community and evolutionary change. Science 338: 113-116.

Callaway, R.M., U. Schaffner, G.C. Thelen, A. Khamraev, T. Juginisov and J.L. Maron. 2012.

Impact of Acroptilon repens on co-occurring native plants is greater in the invader’s non-

native range. Biological Invasions 14:1143-1155.

Ortega, Y.K., D.E. Pearson, L.P. Waller, N.J. Sturdevant, and J.L. Maron. 2012. Population-level compensation impedes biological control of an invasive forb and indirect release of a native grass. Ecology 93:783-792.

Martin, T.E. and J.L. Maron. 2012. Climate impacts on bird and plant communities from an altered plant-animal interaction. Nature Climate Change 2: 195-200.

Bricker, M. and J.L. Maron. 2012. Seed predation lowers population growth rate in a long-lived perennial forb (Lithospermum ruderale). Ecology 93:532-543.

Callaway, R.M., L.P. Waller, A. Diaconu, R. Pal, A.R. Colllins, H. Müller-Schärer and J.L. Maron. 2011. Escape from competition: Neighbors reduce C. stoebe performance at home but not away. Ecology 92: 2208-2013.

Huntzinger, M., R. Karban and J.L. Maron. 2011. Small mammals cause non-trophic effects on habitat and associated snails in a native system. Oecologia 167:1085-1091.

Pearson, D.E., R.M. Callaway and J.L. Maron. 2011. Biotic resistance via post-dispersal seed predation: establishment by invasive, naturalized, and native Asters reflects generalist granivore preferences. Ecology 92:1748-1757.

Maron, J.L. and D.E. Pearson. 2011. Vertebrate predators have minimal cascading indirect effects on plant production in an intact grassland ecosystem. Ecology Letters 14:661-669.

Vilà, M., J.M. Espinar, M. Hejda, P.E. Hulme, V. Jarošík, J.L. Maron, J. Pergl, P. Pyšek, U. Schaffner, and Y. Sun. 2011. Ecological impacts of plant invaders. Ecology Letters 14:702-708.

Maron, J.L., M. Marler, J. Klironomos, and C. Cleveland. 2011. Soil pathogens contribute to the positive plant diversity-productivity relationship. Ecology Letters 14: 36-41.

Maron, J.L., D.E. Pearson and R. Fletcher Jr. 2010. Counter-intuitive effects of large-scale predator removal on a mid-latitude rodent community. Ecology 91: 3719-3729.

Williams, J.L., H. Auge, and J.L. Maron. 2010. Effects of disturbance and herbivory on invasive plant abundance at home and abroad. Ecology 91: 1355-1366.

Bricker, M., D. Pearson and J.L. Maron. 2010. Small mammal seed predation limits the recruitment and abundance of two perennial grassland forbs. Ecology 91: 85-92.

Maron, J.L., C.C. Horvitz and J.L. Williams. 2010. Using experiments, demography and population models to estimate interaction strength based on transient and asymptotic dynamics. Journal of Ecology 98: 290-301.

Colautti, R.I., J.L. Maron and S.C.H. Barrett. 2009. Common garden comparisons of native and introduced plant populations: latitudinal clines can obscure evolutionary inference. Evolutionary Applications 2: 187-199.

Johnson, M.T.J., A. Agrawal, J.L. Maron and J-P. Salminen. 2009. Heritability, covariation and natural selection on 24 traits of common evening primrose (Oenothera biennis) from a field experiment. Journal of Evolutionary Biology 22: 1295-1307.

Brodie, J., O.E. Helmy, W.Y. Brockelman and J.L. Maron. 2009. Bushmeat poaching reduces the seed dispersal and population growth rate of a mammal-dispersed tree. Ecological Applications 19: 854-863.

Seifert, E.K., J.D. Bever and J.L. Maron. 2009. Evidence for the evolution of reduced mycorrhizal dependence during plant invasion. Ecology 90: 1055-1062.

Brodie, J., O.E. Helmy and W.Y. Brockelman and J.L. Maron. 2009. Functional differences within a guild of tropical mammalian frugivores. Ecology 90:688-698.

Maron, J.L. and M. Marler. 2008. Field based competitive impacts of invaders on natives at varying resource supply. Journal of Ecology 96: 1187-1197.

Williams, J.L., H. Auge, and J.L. Maron. 2008. Different gardens, different results: Native and introduced populations exhibit contrasting phenotypes across common gardens. Oecologia 157: 239-248.

Maron, J.L. and M. Marler. 2008. Effects of native species diversity and resource additions on invader impact. American Naturalist 172: S18-S33.

Kittelson, P.M., J.L. Maron and M. Marler. 2008. Native diversity and invader impact: an exotic alters the leaf traits of two natives. Ecology 89: 1344-1351.

Maron, J.L. and M. Marler. 2007. Native plant diversity resists invasion at both low and high resource levels. Ecology 88: 2651-2661.

Maron, J.L., S. Elmendorf and M. Vilà. 2007. Contrasting plant physiological adaptation to climate in the native and introduced range. Evolution 61: 1912-1924.

Morris, W.F., R.A. Hufbauer, A.A. Agrawal, J.D. Bever, V.A. Borowicz, G.S. Gilbert, J.L. Maron, C.E. Mitchell, I.M. Parker, A.G. Power, M.E. Torchin, D.P. Vázquez. 2007. Direct and interactive effects of enemies and mutualists on plant performance: a meta-analysis. Ecology 88:1021-1029.

Agrawal, A.A., D.D. Ackerly, F. Adler, B. Arnold, C. Cáceres, D. Doak, E. Post, P. Hudson, J. Maron, K. Mooney, M. Power, D. Schemske, J. Stachowicz, S. Strauss, M. Turner, and E. Werner. 2007. Frontiers in population and community ecology. Frontiers in Ecology and the Environment 5:145-152.

Maron, J.L. 2006. The relative importance of latitude matching and propagule pressure in the colonization success of an invasive forb. Ecography 29:819-826.

Amsberry, L.K. and J.L. Maron. 2006. Effects of herbivore identity on plant fecundity. Plant Ecology 187: 39-48.

Kauffman, M. and J.L. Maron. 2006. Influence of density-dependence and seed bank dynamics in habitat-specific population dynamics of bush lupine, Lupinus arboreus. American Naturalist 168:454-470.

Maron, J.L. and E. Crone. 2006. Herbivory: effects on plant abundance, distribution, and population growth. Proceedings of the Royal Society B 273:2575-2584.

Callaway, R.M. and J.L. Maron. 2006. What have exotic invasions taught us over the past twenty years? Trends in Ecology and Evolution 21:369-374.

Mitchell, C.E., A.A. Agrawal, J.D. Bever, G.S. Gilbert, R.A. Hufbauer, J.N. Klironomos, J.L. Maron, W.F. Morris, I.M. Parker, A.G. Power, E.W. Seabloom, M.E. Torchin, D.P. Vázquez. 2006. Biotic interactions and plant invasions. Ecology Letters 9:726-240.

Maron, J.L., J.A. Estes, D.A. Croll, E.M. Danner, S.C. Elmendorf, and S. Buckalew. 2006. An introduced predator transforms Aleutian Island plant communities by disrupting spatial subsidies. Ecological Monographs 76:3-24.

Maron, J.L. and M. Kauffman. 2006. Habitat-specific consumer impacts on plant population dynamics. Ecology 87:113-124.

Croll, D.A., J.L. Maron, J.A. Estes, E.M. Danner, and G.V. Byrd. 2005. Introduced predators transform subarctic islands from grassland to tundra. Science 307:1959-1961.

Vilà, M., J.L. Maron and L. Marco. 2005. Evidence for the enemy release hypothesis in Hypericum perforatum L. Oecologia 142:474-479.

Hierro, J., J.L. Maron and R.M. Callaway. 2005. A biogeographical approach to plant invasion biology: The importance of studying exotics in their introduced and native range. Journal of Ecology 93:5-15.

Maron, J.L., M. Vilà, and J. Arnason. 2004. Loss of natural enemy resistance among introduced populations of St. John’s Wort, Hypericum perforatum. Ecology 85:3243-3253.

Maron, J.L., M. Vilà, R. Bommarco, S. Elmendorf and P. Beardsley. 2004. Rapid evolution of an invasive plant. Ecological Monographs 74:261-280.

Umbanhowar, J., J.L. Maron and S.P. Harrison. 2003. Density dependent foraging behaviors in a parasitoid lead to density dependent parasitism of its host. Oecologia 137:123-130.

Vilà, M., A. Gómez and J.L. Maron. 2003. Are alien plants more competitive than their native conspecifics? A test using St. John’s Wort (Hypericum perforatum). Oecologia 137:211-215.

Rudgers, J.A. and J.L. Maron. 2003. Facilitation between coastal dune shrubs: a non-nitrogen fixing shrub facilitates establishment of a nitrogen-fixer. Oikos 102:75-84.

Karban, R., J. Maron, G.W. Felton, G. Ervin and H. Eichenseer. 2003. Herbivore damage to sagebrush induces resistance in wild tobacco: evidence for eavesdropping between plants. Oikos 100:325-332.

Maron, J.L., J.K. Combs and S.L. Louda. 2002. Convergent demographic effects of insect herbivory on related thistles in coastal vs. continental dunes. Ecology 83:3382-3392.

Karban, R. and J.L. Maron. 2002. The fitness consequences of interspecific eavesdropping between plants. Ecology 83:1209-1213.

Kittelson, P.M. and J.L. Maron. 2001. Fine scale genetically-based differentiation of life-history traits in the perennial shrub, Lupinus arboreus. Evolution 55:2429-2438.

Maron, J.L. and M. Vilà. 2001. Do herbivores affect plant invasion? Evidence for the natural enemies and biotic resistance hypotheses. Oikos 95:363-373.

Maron, J.L. and R.L. Jefferies. 2001. Restoring enriched grasslands: effects of mowing on species richness, productivity and nitrogen retention. Ecological Applications 11:1088-1100.

Maron, J.L. and E.L. Simms. 2001. Rodent limited establishment of bush lupine: Field experiments on the cumulative effect of granivory. Journal of Ecology 89:578-588.

Maron, J.L., S. Harrison, and M.E. Greaves. 2001. Origin of an insect outbreak: escape in space or time from natural enemies? Oecologia 126:595-602.

Maron, J.L. 2001. Intraspecific competition and subterranean insect herbivory: individual and interactive effects on bush lupine. Oikos 92:178-186.

Harrison, S., K.J. Rice and J.L. Maron. 2001. Habitat patchiness promotes invasion by alien grasses (Avena fatua and Bromus hordeaceus) on serpentine soil in California. Biological Conservation 100:45-53.

Alpert, P. and J.L. Maron. 2000. Carbon addition as a countermeasure against biological invasion by plants. Biological Invasions 2:33-40.

Polis, G.A., D.R. Strong, G.R. Huxel, A.L.W. Sears and J.L. Maron. 2000. When is a trophic cascade a trophic cascade? Trends in Ecology and Evolution 15:473-475.

Maron, J.L. and S.N. Gardner. 2000. Consumer pressure, seed versus safe-site limitation, and plant population dynamics. Oecologia 124:260-269.

Harrison, S., J.L. Maron and G. Huxel. 2000. Local extinction, colonization and large-scale patterns of fluctuation in five plants confined to serpentine seeps. Conservation Biology 14:769-779.

Kittelson, P.M. and J.L. Maron. 2000. Outcrossing rate and inbreeding depression in the perennial yellow bush lupine, Lupinus arboreus (Fabaceae). American Journal of Botany 87:652-660.

Grosholz, E.D., G.M. Ruiz, C.A. Dean, K.A. Shirley, J.L. Maron and P.G. Connors. 2000. The impacts of a non-indigenous marine predator in a California bay. Ecology 81:1206-1224.

Maron, J.L. and R.L. Jefferies. 1999. Bush lupine mortality, altered resource availability and alternative vegetation states. Ecology 80:443-454.

Maron, J.L. 1998. Individual and joint effects of below- and above-ground insect herbivory on perennial plant fitness. Ecology 79:1281-1293.

Maron, J.L. and S. Harrison. 1997. Spatial pattern formation in an insect host-parasitoid system. Science 278:1619-1621.

Maron, J.L. and E.L. Simms. 1997. Effects of seed predation on seed bank size and seedling recruitment of bush lupine (Lupinus arboreus). Oecologia 111:76-83.

Maron, J.L. 1997. Interspecific competition and insect herbivory reduce seedling survival in bush lupine, Lupinus arboreus. Oecologia 110:285-290.

Jefferies, R.L. and J.L. Maron. 1997. An embarrassment of riches: anthropogenic deposition of nitrogen and community and ecosystem processes. Trends in Ecology and Evolution 12:74-78.

Strong, D.R., H.K. Kaya, A. Whipple, A. Child, S. Kraig, M. Bondonno, K. Dyer, and J.L. Maron. 1996. Entomopathogenic nematodes: natural enemies of root-feeding caterpillars on bush lupine. Oecologia 108:167-173.

Maron, J.L. and P.G. Connors. 1996. A native nitrogen-fixing shrub facilitates weed invasion. Oecologia 105:302-312.

Strong, D.R., J.L. Maron, P.G. Connors, A. Whipple, S. Harrison, and R.L. Jefferies. 1995. High mortality, fluctuation in numbers, and heavy subterranean insect herbivory in bush lupine, Lupinus arboreus. Oecologia 104:85-92.

Harrison, S. and J.L. Maron. 1995. Impacts of defoliation by tussock moths (Orgyia vetusta) on the growth and reproduction of bush lupine (Lupinus arboreus). Ecological Entomology 20:223-229.

Johnson, O.W., P.G. Connors, P.L. Bruner, and J.L. Maron. 1993. Breeding ground fidelity and mate retention in the Pacific Golden-plover. Wilson Bulletin 105:60-67.

Connors, P.G., B.J. McCaffery and J.L. Maron. 1993. Speciation in golden-plovers, Pluvialis dominica and Pluvialis fulva: evidence from the breeding grounds. Auk 110:9-20.

Myers, J.P., M. Sallaberry A., E. Ortiz, G. Castro, L.M. Gordon, J.L. Maron, C.T. Schick, E. Tabilo, P. Antas, and T. Below. 1990. Migration routes of New World sanderling (Calidris alba). Auk: 107:172-180.

Maron, J.L. and J.P. Myers. 1985. Seasonal changes in feeding success, activity patterns, and weights of non-breeding sanderlings, (Calidris alba). Auk 102:580-586.

Maron, J.L. and J.P. Myers. 1984. An evaluation of two techniques for sexing wintering sanderlings (Calidris alba). Journal of Field Ornithology 55:336-342.

Myers, J.P, J.L. Maron, and M. Sallaberry. 1984. Going to extremes: why sanderlings migrate to the neotropics. Ornithological Monographs 36:520-535.

Myers, J.P., G. Castro, B. Harrington, M. Howe, J.L Maron, E. Ortiz, M. Sallaberry, C.T. Schick, and E. Tabilo. 1984. The Pan American Shorebird Program: a progress report. Wader Study Group Bulletin 42:26-30.

Myers, J.P., J.L. Maron, E. Ortiz T., G. Castro V., M.A. Howe, R.I.G. Morrison, and B.A. Harrington. 1983. Rationale and suggestions for a hemispheric color-marking scheme for shorebirds: A way to avoid chaos. Wader Study Group Bulletin 38:30-32.

Maron, J.L. 1982. Shell-dropping behavior of western gulls. Auk 99:565-569.

PUBLICATIONS (Peer-Reviewed Book Chapters)

Maron, J.L. and M. Vilà. 2008. Exotic plants in an altered enemy landscape: effects on enemy resistance. Pages 280-295 In: Specialization, Speciation and Radiation: the Evolutionary Biology of Herbivorous Insects (Kelley J. Tilmon, Ed.).  University of California Press, Berkeley.

Strong, D.R., J.L. Maron, and P.G. Connors. 1996. Top down from underground? The underappreciated influence of subterranean food webs on above ground ecology. In Food Webs (G.A. Polis and K.O. Winemiller, eds.), pp 170-175. Chapman and Hall, New York.

MANUSCRIPTS IN REVIEW

Luce, M., C. Cleveland, Y. Lekberg, J.L. Maron, L. Philippot, and R.M. Callaway. In Revision. Exotic plant invaders increase productivity and nitrogen supply in intermountain grasslands. Journal of Ecology.

Rudgers, J.A., B. Fletcher, E. Olivas, C.A. Young, N.D. Charlton, D. Pearson and J.L. Maron. In Review. Exclusion of ungulates reduces fungal symbiont frequency within host plants in native grasslands. Oecologia.

Larios, L., D.E. Pearson and J.L. Maron. In Review. Generalist rodent seed predators: impacts and implications for population and community theory. Journal of Ecology.

Waller, L.P., H. Maherali, Y. Lekberg, J.N. Klironomos, G.W.T. Wilson, and J.L. Maron. In Review. Plant functional traits predict mycorrhizal growth responsiveness in two different plant communities. New Phytologist.

Maron, J.L., A. Smith, D.E. Pearson, Y. Ortega, and R.M. Callaway. In Review. Negative pant-soil feedbacks increase with plant abundance, and are unchanged by competition. Ecology.

MANUSCRIPTS IN PREPARATION

Waller, L.P., R.M. Callaway, J.N. Klironomos, and J.L. Maron. Reduced mycorrhizal responsiveness and increased competitive ability in an exotic plant. For Journal of Ecology.

GRADUATE ADVISING

Current Graduate Students:

Katie Baer, Ph.D., 2011-present

Ryan Hegstad, Ph.D., 2014-present

Current Postdoctoral Fellows:

Dr. Loralee Larios, 2013-present

Dr. Phil Hahn, 2015-present

Past Graduate Students:

Lindsay Amsberry, MS 2003

Jedediah Brodie, Ph.D. 2007

Jennifer Williams, Ph.D. 2008

Mary Bricker, Ph.D. 2009

Elliott Parsons, Ph.D. 2011

Jennifer Palladini, Ph.D. 2013

Sarah Pinto, Ph.D. 2013

Lauren Waller, Ph.D., 2015

Past Postdoctoral Fellows:

Dr. Matthew Kauffman, 2004-2006. Currently Co-Op Leader, USGS, University of Wyoming.

Dr. Riccardo Bommarco, 1999-2000. Currently Swedish University of Agricultural Sciences, Uppsala, Sweden.

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