Joel M. Gramling
Ph.D. student working with Robert Peet
Biology Program
Research: Species pools and plant diversity
in the Southeastern US; Relating productivity
and diversity at multiple spatial scales;
Diversity dynamics of Southeastern wetland
plant communities.
Phone: 919-962-6934
Fax: 919-962-6930
Email: joel@unc.edu
Office: 409 Coker Hall
Mailing Address:
Department of Biology, CB#3280, Coker Hall
The
Selected Publications:
Peet, R.K., S. Carr, and J.M. Gramling.
2006.
Fire-adapted pineland vegetation of northern and
central Florida: A framework for inventory, management,
and restoration. Final Report. Florida Fish and Wildlife
Conservation Commission. Project NG 98-016. (In press)
Drake, J.M., E.E. Cleland, C. Bowles, K.M. Carney,
M.C. Horner-Devine, S.M. Emery, J.M. Gramling,
A. Nardoni-Laws, M.D. Smith, D.B. Vandermast,
E. Fleishman, J.B. Grace, and D. Tilman. (In review).
Do non-native plant species affect the shape of
productivity-diversity relationships? Evaluating the curvature
hypothesis in six North American ecosystems.
Functional Ecology. (Submitted)
Cleland, E.E, M.D. Smith, S.J. Andelman,
C. Bowles,
K.M. Carney, M.C. Horner-Devine, J.M. Drake, S.M. Emery,
J.M. Gramling, and D.B. Vandermast. 2004. Invasion in
space and time: non-native species richness and relative
abundance respond to interannual variation n
productivity
and diversity. Ecology Letters
7:947-957. ( PDF)
Marko, P.B., S.C. Lee, A.M. Rice, J.M. Gramling,
T.M. Fitzhenry, J.S. McAlister, G.R. Harper and
A.L. Moran. 2004. Mislabelling of a depleted
reef fish. Nature 430:310. (PDF)
Peet, R.K., J.D. Fridley and J.M. Gramlling. 2003.
Variation
in species richness and species pool size across a pH
gradient in forests of the southern Blue Ridge Mountains.
Folio Geobotanica 38:391-401. (PDF)

