PUBLICATIONS (Peer-reviewed)
2022
Ciafré, C. , Gienger, C., Rehm, E., and Estes, D. 2022. Deterministic and stochastic factors jointly drive wetland plant community composition and diversity across an environmental gradient. Wetlands. 42(71). https://doi.org/10.1007/s13157-022-01580-4
Yelenik, S., Rehm, E., and D’Antonio, C. 2022. Can the impact of canopy trees on soil and understory be altered using litter additions? Ecological Applications. 32(1):e02477.10.1002/eap.2477
2021
Rehm, E.M., Yelenik, S. and D’Antonio, C. 2021. Freezing temperatures restrict woody plant recruitment in abandoned montane pastures. Global Ecology and Conservation. 26:e01462
2020
Yelenik,S., D’Antonio, C., Rehm, E., and Caldwell, I. 2020. Multiple feedbacks due to biotic interactions across trophic levels can lead to persistent novel conditions that hinder restoration. In Plant Invasions: the role of biotic interactions. Eds. A. Traveset and D. Richardson. Pg 402-420
Pollock, H., Fricke, E., Rehm, E., Kastner, M., Suckow, N., Savidge, J., and Rogers, H. 2020. Såli (Micronesian starling – Aplonis opaca) as a key seed dispersal agent across a tropical archipelago. Journal of Tropical Ecology. 36:56-64
Rehm, E., Yelenik, S., Puanani Smith, M., and C. D'Antonio. In Press. Architecture of remnant trees influences native woody plant recruitment in abandoned Hawaiian pastures. Plant Ecology.
2019
Rehm, E.M., Thomas, M., Yelenik, S., Bouck, D. and C. D'Antonio. 2019. Bryophyte abundance, composition, and importance to woody plant recruitment in natural and restoration forests. Forest Ecology and Management 444: 405-413
Rehm, E., Fricke, E., Bender, J., Savidge, J., and Rogers, H. 2019. Animal movement drives variation in seed dispersal distance in a plant-animal network. Proceedings of the Royal Society Series B 286: 20182007.
Fricke, E., Bender, J., Rehm, E.M. and Rogers, H. Accepted. Functional outcomes of mutualistic network interactions: a community-scale study of frugivore gut passage on germination. Journal of Ecology
2018
Rehm, E.M., M.B. Balsat, N.P. Lemoine and J.A. Savidge. Spatial dynamics of habitat use informs reintroduction efforts in the presence of an invasive predator. Journal of Applied Ecology 55:1790-1798
Rehm, E.M., J. Chojnacki, H.S. Rogers and J.A. Savidge. Differences among avian frugivores in seed dispersal to degraded habitats. Restoration Ecology 26:760-766
2016
Rehm, E.M. and Feeley, K.J. 2016. Seedling transplants reveal species-specific responses of high elevation tropical treeline trees to climate change. Oecologia. 181: 1233-1242 PDF
Rehm, E.M. and Feeley, K.J. 2016. Many species risk mountain top extinction long before they reach the top? Frontiers of Biogeography e27788. https://escholarship.org/uc/item/6zz183hd
Beer, K.C.J., E.M. Rehm, & J.A. Savidge. 2016. First record of the Ashy Minivet (Pericrocotus divaricatus), a passerine bird, for Saipan, Commonwealth of the Northern Mariana Islands. Micronesica. 2016-2: 1-4.
2015
Rehm, E.M., Olivas, P., Stroud, J., and Feeley, K.J. 2015. Losing your edge: climate change and the conservation value of range-edge populations. Ecology and Evolution 5: 4315-4326. http://onlinelibrary.wiley.com/doi/10.1002/ece3.1645/abstract_
Rehm, E.M. 2015. Factors affecting current and future treeline locations and dynamics in the Peruvian Andes. PhD Dissertation
Rehm, E.M. and Feeley, K.J. 2015. The inability of tropical cloud forest species to invade grasslands above treeline during climate change: potential explanations and consequences. Ecography 38:1167-1175 Editor's Choice. http://onlinelibrary.wiley.com/doi/10.1111/ecog.01050/abstract
Rehm, E.M. and Feeley, K.J. 2015. Freezing temperatures as a limit to forest recruitment above tropical Andean treelines. Ecology. 96: 1856-1865 http://www.esajournals.org/doi/abs/10.1890/14-1992.1
Feeley, K.J. and Rehm, E.M. 2015. The downward shift of montane grasslands exemplifies the dual threat of human disturbances to cloud forest biodiversity (Letter). Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences 112:E6084. doi: 10.1073/pnas.1518708112
2014
Rehm, E.M., Lenz, A., Hoch, G., and Körner, C. 2014. Spring patterns of freezing resistance and photosynthesis in Hedera helix. Basic and Applied Ecology 15: 543-550. PDF
Rehm, E.M. 2014. Rates of upslope shifts for tropical species depend on life history and dispersal mode. Proceedings of the National Academy of Science. 111: 1676. doi: 10.1073/pnas.1403417111
Stroud, J.T., Rehm, E.M., Ladd, M. Olivas, P., and Feeley, K.J. Accepted. Is conservation research money being spent wisely? Changing trends in conservation research priorities. Journal for Nature Conservation. http://www.sciencedirect.com/science/article/pii/S1617138114000557
Feeley, K.J., Rehm, E.M., and J. Stroud. 2014. There are many barriers to species’ migrations. Frontiers of Biogeography. 6: 63-66.
Feeley, K.J. and Rehm, E.M.. 2014. Corridors are meant for connecting. Nature Climate Change. 4: 405-406.
2013
Rehm, E.M. and Feeley, K.J. 2013. Forest patches and the upward migration of timberline in the tropical Andes. Forest Ecology and Management. 305: 204-211.
2012
Feeley, K.J. and Rehm, E.M.. 2012 Amazon’s vulnerability to climate change heightened by deforestation and man-made dispersal barriers. Global Change Biology. 18: 1335-1341.
Feeley, K.J., Rehm, E.M., and B. Machovina. 2012. The responses of tropical forest species to global climate change: acclimate, adapt, migrate, or go extinct? Frontiers of Biogeography. 4(2): 69-84
Pre-2012
Rehm, E.M. and Bladassarre, G.A.. 2007. Temporal variation in detection of marsh birds during broadcast of conspecific calls. Journal of Field Ornithology. 78(1): 56-63.
Rehm, E.M. and Bladassarre, G.A.. 2007. The influence of interspersion on marsh bird abundance in New York. The Wilson Journal of Ornithology. 119(4): 648-654.
Rehm, E.M. 2005. Factors affecting marsh bird abundance and species richness of wetland birds in New York. M.S. thesis. SUNY College of Environmental Science and Forestry, Syracuse, NY.
2022
Ciafré, C. , Gienger, C., Rehm, E., and Estes, D. 2022. Deterministic and stochastic factors jointly drive wetland plant community composition and diversity across an environmental gradient. Wetlands. 42(71). https://doi.org/10.1007/s13157-022-01580-4
Yelenik, S., Rehm, E., and D’Antonio, C. 2022. Can the impact of canopy trees on soil and understory be altered using litter additions? Ecological Applications. 32(1):e02477.10.1002/eap.2477
2021
Rehm, E.M., Yelenik, S. and D’Antonio, C. 2021. Freezing temperatures restrict woody plant recruitment in abandoned montane pastures. Global Ecology and Conservation. 26:e01462
2020
Yelenik,S., D’Antonio, C., Rehm, E., and Caldwell, I. 2020. Multiple feedbacks due to biotic interactions across trophic levels can lead to persistent novel conditions that hinder restoration. In Plant Invasions: the role of biotic interactions. Eds. A. Traveset and D. Richardson. Pg 402-420
Pollock, H., Fricke, E., Rehm, E., Kastner, M., Suckow, N., Savidge, J., and Rogers, H. 2020. Såli (Micronesian starling – Aplonis opaca) as a key seed dispersal agent across a tropical archipelago. Journal of Tropical Ecology. 36:56-64
Rehm, E., Yelenik, S., Puanani Smith, M., and C. D'Antonio. In Press. Architecture of remnant trees influences native woody plant recruitment in abandoned Hawaiian pastures. Plant Ecology.
2019
Rehm, E.M., Thomas, M., Yelenik, S., Bouck, D. and C. D'Antonio. 2019. Bryophyte abundance, composition, and importance to woody plant recruitment in natural and restoration forests. Forest Ecology and Management 444: 405-413
Rehm, E., Fricke, E., Bender, J., Savidge, J., and Rogers, H. 2019. Animal movement drives variation in seed dispersal distance in a plant-animal network. Proceedings of the Royal Society Series B 286: 20182007.
Fricke, E., Bender, J., Rehm, E.M. and Rogers, H. Accepted. Functional outcomes of mutualistic network interactions: a community-scale study of frugivore gut passage on germination. Journal of Ecology
2018
Rehm, E.M., M.B. Balsat, N.P. Lemoine and J.A. Savidge. Spatial dynamics of habitat use informs reintroduction efforts in the presence of an invasive predator. Journal of Applied Ecology 55:1790-1798
Rehm, E.M., J. Chojnacki, H.S. Rogers and J.A. Savidge. Differences among avian frugivores in seed dispersal to degraded habitats. Restoration Ecology 26:760-766
2016
Rehm, E.M. and Feeley, K.J. 2016. Seedling transplants reveal species-specific responses of high elevation tropical treeline trees to climate change. Oecologia. 181: 1233-1242 PDF
Rehm, E.M. and Feeley, K.J. 2016. Many species risk mountain top extinction long before they reach the top? Frontiers of Biogeography e27788. https://escholarship.org/uc/item/6zz183hd
Beer, K.C.J., E.M. Rehm, & J.A. Savidge. 2016. First record of the Ashy Minivet (Pericrocotus divaricatus), a passerine bird, for Saipan, Commonwealth of the Northern Mariana Islands. Micronesica. 2016-2: 1-4.
2015
Rehm, E.M., Olivas, P., Stroud, J., and Feeley, K.J. 2015. Losing your edge: climate change and the conservation value of range-edge populations. Ecology and Evolution 5: 4315-4326. http://onlinelibrary.wiley.com/doi/10.1002/ece3.1645/abstract_
Rehm, E.M. 2015. Factors affecting current and future treeline locations and dynamics in the Peruvian Andes. PhD Dissertation
Rehm, E.M. and Feeley, K.J. 2015. The inability of tropical cloud forest species to invade grasslands above treeline during climate change: potential explanations and consequences. Ecography 38:1167-1175 Editor's Choice. http://onlinelibrary.wiley.com/doi/10.1111/ecog.01050/abstract
Rehm, E.M. and Feeley, K.J. 2015. Freezing temperatures as a limit to forest recruitment above tropical Andean treelines. Ecology. 96: 1856-1865 http://www.esajournals.org/doi/abs/10.1890/14-1992.1
Feeley, K.J. and Rehm, E.M. 2015. The downward shift of montane grasslands exemplifies the dual threat of human disturbances to cloud forest biodiversity (Letter). Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences 112:E6084. doi: 10.1073/pnas.1518708112
2014
Rehm, E.M., Lenz, A., Hoch, G., and Körner, C. 2014. Spring patterns of freezing resistance and photosynthesis in Hedera helix. Basic and Applied Ecology 15: 543-550. PDF
Rehm, E.M. 2014. Rates of upslope shifts for tropical species depend on life history and dispersal mode. Proceedings of the National Academy of Science. 111: 1676. doi: 10.1073/pnas.1403417111
Stroud, J.T., Rehm, E.M., Ladd, M. Olivas, P., and Feeley, K.J. Accepted. Is conservation research money being spent wisely? Changing trends in conservation research priorities. Journal for Nature Conservation. http://www.sciencedirect.com/science/article/pii/S1617138114000557
Feeley, K.J., Rehm, E.M., and J. Stroud. 2014. There are many barriers to species’ migrations. Frontiers of Biogeography. 6: 63-66.
Feeley, K.J. and Rehm, E.M.. 2014. Corridors are meant for connecting. Nature Climate Change. 4: 405-406.
2013
Rehm, E.M. and Feeley, K.J. 2013. Forest patches and the upward migration of timberline in the tropical Andes. Forest Ecology and Management. 305: 204-211.
2012
Feeley, K.J. and Rehm, E.M.. 2012 Amazon’s vulnerability to climate change heightened by deforestation and man-made dispersal barriers. Global Change Biology. 18: 1335-1341.
Feeley, K.J., Rehm, E.M., and B. Machovina. 2012. The responses of tropical forest species to global climate change: acclimate, adapt, migrate, or go extinct? Frontiers of Biogeography. 4(2): 69-84
Pre-2012
Rehm, E.M. and Bladassarre, G.A.. 2007. Temporal variation in detection of marsh birds during broadcast of conspecific calls. Journal of Field Ornithology. 78(1): 56-63.
Rehm, E.M. and Bladassarre, G.A.. 2007. The influence of interspersion on marsh bird abundance in New York. The Wilson Journal of Ornithology. 119(4): 648-654.
Rehm, E.M. 2005. Factors affecting marsh bird abundance and species richness of wetland birds in New York. M.S. thesis. SUNY College of Environmental Science and Forestry, Syracuse, NY.