* = graduate student; ** = undergraduate student
Sodium-enriched nectar shapes plant-pollinator interactions in a subalpine meadow.
2024. Van Valkenburg**, E., T. Gonçalves-Souza, N.J. Sanders, P.J. CaraDonna.
Ecology & Evolution [in press]
Predicting plant-pollinator interactions: concepts, methods, and challenges.
2024. Peralta, G., P.J. CaraDonna, D. Rakosy, J. Fründ, M.P. Pascual Tudanca, C.F. Dormann, L.A. Burkle, C.N. Kaiser-Bunbury, T.M. Knight, J. Resasco, R. Winfree, N. Blüthgen, W. Castillo, D.P. Vázquez. Trends in Ecology & Evolution 39: 494–505
The Reproductive ecology of Erigeron speciosus, a montane perennial herb: evidence of self-incompatibility.
2024. Ingold**, D.I., P.J. CaraDonna, J.L. Dooley, D.J. Ingold, and A.M. Iler.
Southwestern Naturalist 68: 13–19
Can the collaboration of science and art broaden our understanding of nature?
2023. CaraDonna, P.J. and M. Dorf. Plant Science Bulletin 69(3):198-201
[pdf] [special issue on art and botany]
Book review: Foundations of Ecology II: Classic Papers with Commentaries.
2023. P.J. CaraDonna. Quarterly Review of Biology 98: 97–98
The effects of decline of a keystone plant species on a dune community plant-pollinator network.
2023. Sandacz*, D., P. Vitt, T.M. Knight, P.J. CaraDonna, K. Havens.
Frontiers in Conservation Science. [doi:10.3389/fcosc.2023.1183976]
Genotype accounts for intraspecific variation in the timing and duration of life cycle events.
2023. Iler, A.M., P.J. CaraDonna, L. Richardson*, E. Wu, K. Pfeiler**, G. Greymiller**, K. Godfrey**, A. Gorman**, N. Wilson**, M. Whitford**, G. Edmonds**, C. Stratton**, and E. Jules.
American Journal of Botany. 110:e16112 [doi.org/10.1002/ajb2.16112]
The shifting importance of abiotic and biotic factors across the life cycles of wild pollinators.
2022. Ogilvie, J.E. and P.J. CaraDonna.
Journal of Animal Ecology 91:2412–2423 [pdf] [doi.org/10.1111/1365-2656.13825]
[editor's research highlight]
Ecological drivers and consequences of bumble bee body size variation.
2022. Fitzgerald*, J.L., J.E. Ogilvie, and P.J. CaraDonna.
Environmental Entomology 51:1055–1068 [pdf] [doi.org/10.1093/ee/nvac093]
Removing flowers of a generalist plant changes pollinator visitation, composition, and interaction network structure.
2022. Bain*, J.A., R.G. Dickson**, A.M. Gruver*, and P.J. CaraDonna.
Ecosphere. 13:e4154 [pdf] [doi.org/10.1002/ecs2.4154]
Reef fishes weaken dietary preferences after coral mortality, altering resource overlap.
2022. Semmler*, R., N. Sanders, P.J. CaraDonna, A. Baird, J. Xing, J. Robinson, N. Graham, and S. Keith.
Journal of Animal Ecology. 91:2125–2134 [https://doi.org/10.1111/1365-2656.13796]
Response to Pyke and Ren: How to study interactions.
2022. Finkelstein**, C., P.J. CaraDonna, A.M. Gruver*, E. Welti, M. Kaspari, and N.J. Sanders.
Journal of Pollination Ecology. 31: i-ii. [pdf] [https://doi.org/10.26786/1920-7603(2022)709]
Sodium-enriched floral nectar increases pollinator visitation rate and diversity.
2022. Finkelstein**, C., P.J. CaraDonna, A.M. Gruver*, E. Welti, M. Kaspari, and N.J. Sanders.
Biology Letters. 18: 20220016 [pdf] [https://doi.org/10.1098/rsbl.2022.0016]
Seeing through the static: the temporal dimension of plant-animal mutualistic interactions.
2021. CaraDonna, P.J., L. Burkle, B. Schwarz*, J. Resasco, T. Knight, G. Benadi, C. Dormann, Q. Fang, J. Fründ, B. Gauzens, C. Kaiser-Bunbury, R. Winfree, and D.P. Vázquez.
Ecology Letters 24:149–161 [https://doi.org/10.1111/ele.13623] [open access]
Demographic consequences of phenological shifts in response to climate change.
2021. Iler, A.M., P.J. CaraDonna, J.R.K. Forrest, and E. Post.
Annual Review of Ecology, Evolution & Systematics. 52:221–245 [pdf] [https://doi.org/10.1146/annurev-ecolsys-011921-032939]
Conceptual and practical issues limit the utility of statistical estimators of phenological events.
2021. Iler, A.M., P. Humphrey, J. Ogilvie, and P.J. CaraDonna.
Ecosphere 12(11): e03828 [pdf] [10.1002/ecs2.3828]
Plant-pollinator interaction niche broadens in response to severe drought perturbations.
2021. Endres, K. C. Morozumi, L. Xingwen, H.M. Briggs, P.J. CaraDonna, A.M. Iler, D. Picklum, and B. Brosi.
Oecologia 197:577–688 [pdf]
Chicago bees: urban areas support diverse bee communities but with more non-native bee species compared to suburban areas.
2021. Gruver*, A.M. and P.J. CaraDonna.
Environmental Entomology. 50:982-994 [pdf] [https://doi.org/10.1093/ee/nvab048]
Trait positions for elevated invasiveness in adaptive ecological networks.
2021. Hui, C., D.M. Richardson, P. Landi, H.O. Minoarivelo, H.E. Roy, G. Latombe, X. Jing, P.J. CaraDonna, D. Gravel, B. Beckage, and J. Molofsky.
Biological Invasions [https://doi.org/10.1007/s10530-021-02484-w] [open access]
Temporal flexibility in the structure of plant-pollinator interaction networks.
2020. CaraDonna, P.J. and N.W. Waser.
Oikos 129:1369–1380 [pdf] [doi: 10.1111/oik.07526]
Temporal scale-dependence of plant-pollinator networks.
2020. Schwarz*, B., D.P. Vázquez, P.J. CaraDonna, T.M. Knight, G. Benadi, C.F. Dormann, B. Gauzens, E. Motivans, J. Resasco, N. Blüthgen, L.A. Burkle, Q. Fang, C.N. Kaiser‐Bunbury, R. Alarcón, J.A. Bain*, N.P. Chacoff, S-Q Huang, G. LeBuhn, M. MacLeod, T. Petanidou, C. Rasmussen, M.P. Simanonok, A.H. Thompson, J. Fründ.
Oikos 129: 1289–1302 [pdf] [doi: 10.1111/oik.07303] [open access]
First records of Megachile apicalis (Hymenoptera: Megachilidae) from Illinois found in heavily urbanized areas within the City of Chicago.
2020. Gruver*, A.M. and P.J. CaraDonna.
The Great Lakes Entomologist. 53:41–45 [pdf]
Contrasting effects of climate change on seasonal survival of a hibernating mammal.
2020. Cordes, L.S., K.B. Armitage, D. Blumstein, P.J. CaraDonna, D.Z. Childs, B.D. Gerber, M. Oli, and A.Ozgul.
Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences, USA 117: 18119-18126
[https://doi.org/10.1073/pnas.1918584117]
Untangling the seasonal dynamics of plant-pollinator communities.
2020. Bramon Mora*, B., E. Shin, P.J. CaraDonna, and D.B. Stouffer.
Nature Communications 11:4086 [doi.org/10.1038/s41467-020-17894-y]
Reproductive losses due to climate change-induced earlier flowering are not the primary threat to plant population viability in a perennial herb.
2019. Iler, A.M., A. Compagnoni, D.W. Inouye, J.L. Williams, P.J. CaraDonna, A. Anderson, and T.E.X. Miller.
Journal of Ecology 107: 1931–1943 [https://doi.org/10.1111/1365-2745.13146] [link]
Uneven global distribution of food web studies under climate change.
2019. Cameron, E., M. Sundqvist, S. Keith, P.J. CaraDonna, E. Mousing, K. Nilsson, D. Metcalfe, and A. Classen.
Ecosphere 10 (3): e02645 [link]
Two-year bee, or not two-year bee? How voltinism is affected by temperature and season-length in a high elevation solitary bee.
2019. Forrest, J.R.K., R. Cross*, and P.J. CaraDonna.
The American Naturalist 193: 560–574 [pdf]
Atypical flowers can be as profitable as typical hummingbird flowers.
2018. Waser, N.M., P.J. CaraDonna, and M.V. Price.
The American Naturalist 192: 644–653. [pdf]
Experimental warming in the field delays phenology and reduces body size, fat content, and survival: implications for the persistence of a pollinator under climate change.
2018. CaraDonna, P.J., J.L. Cunningham** and A.M. Iler.
Functional Ecology 32: 2345–2356. [pdf]
Art/Science Collaborations: New Explorations of Ecological Systems, Values, and their Feedbacks.
2018. Ellison, A., C. LeRoy, K. Landesbergen, E. Bosanquet, D. Buckley Borden, P.J. CaraDonna, K. Cheney, R. Crystal-Ornelas, A. DeFreece, L. Goralnik, E. Irons, B. Garmaon Merkle, K. O’Connell, C. Penick, L. Rustad, M. Schulze, N. Waser, L. Wysong.
Bulletin of the Ecological Society of America 99: 180–191. [pdf]
Interaction rewiring and the rapid turnover of plant-pollinator networks.
2017. CaraDonna, P.J., W.K. Petry, R.M. Brennan, J.L. Cunningham**, N.M. Waser, J.L. Bronstein, and N.J. Sanders.
Ecology Letters 20: 385–394. [pdf]
Frost sensitivity of leaves and flowers of subalpine plants is related to tissue type and phenology.
2016. CaraDonna, P.J. and J.A. Bain**.
Journal of Ecology 104: 55–64. [pdf]
Phenological responses to climate change do not exhibit phylogenetic signal in a subalpine plant community.
2015. CaraDonna, P.J. and D.W. Inouye.
Ecology 96: 355–361. [pdf]
Phenological shifts and the fate of mutualism.
2015. Rafferty, N.E., P.J. CaraDonna, J.L. Bronstein.
Oikos 124: 14–21. [cover article] [pdf]
Shifts in flowering phenology reshape a subalpine plant community.
2014. CaraDonna, P.J. (!), A.M. Iler (!) and D.W. Inouye. *equal author contributions, listed alphabetically
Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences, USA 111: 4916–4921. [pdf]
(! = co-first authors)
Phenological overlap of interacting species in a changing climate: an assessment of available approaches.
2013. Rafferty, N.E., P.J. CaraDonna, L.A. Burkle, A.M. Iler, and J.L. Bronstein.
Ecology & Evolution 3: 3183-3193. [pdf]
Asynchronous changes in phenology of migrating Broad-tailed Hummingbirds and their early-season nectar resources.
2012. McKinney, A.M., P.J. CaraDonna, D.W. Inouye, W.A. Barr, C.D. Bertelsen, and N.M. Waser.
Ecology 93: 1987-1993. [cover article] [pdf]
Reproductive assurance for a rewardless epiphytic orchid in Puerto Rico, Pleurothallis ruscifolia (Orchidaceae, Pleurothallidinae)
2012. CaraDonna, P.J. and J.D. Ackerman.
The Caribbean Journal of Science 46 (2-3): 249-257. [pdf]
Manuscripts submitted, in review, or in revision [pdfs available upon request]
In revision. Fitness consequences of non-native floral resource use for subalpine solitary bees: evidence of an ecological trap?
Cahill**, C.M., P.J. CaraDonna, and J.R.K. Forrest.
In revision. Pollination deficits increase with urbanization on urban farms in Chicago.
Zink*, A., P.J. CaraDonna, K. Larsen, and A.M. Iler
In revision. Intraspecific body size variation across distributional moments reveals trait filtering processes. Fitzgerald, J.L.*, J.E. Ogilvie, and P.J. CaraDonna.
In revision. Setting goals for pollinator gardens. Dorian, N.N., M. Murphey, A. Iler, P.J. CaraDonna.
In revision. Protocal to increase accuracy and fidelty of metagenomic barcoding using Angiosperms353: a case study using pollen loads from wild bumble bees.
Benkendorf, R.*, E. Woodworth*, P.J. CaraDonna, J.E. Ogilvie, S. Taddeo, and J. Fant.
...
Sodium-enriched nectar shapes plant-pollinator interactions in a subalpine meadow.
2024. Van Valkenburg**, E., T. Gonçalves-Souza, N.J. Sanders, P.J. CaraDonna.
Ecology & Evolution [in press]
Predicting plant-pollinator interactions: concepts, methods, and challenges.
2024. Peralta, G., P.J. CaraDonna, D. Rakosy, J. Fründ, M.P. Pascual Tudanca, C.F. Dormann, L.A. Burkle, C.N. Kaiser-Bunbury, T.M. Knight, J. Resasco, R. Winfree, N. Blüthgen, W. Castillo, D.P. Vázquez. Trends in Ecology & Evolution 39: 494–505
The Reproductive ecology of Erigeron speciosus, a montane perennial herb: evidence of self-incompatibility.
2024. Ingold**, D.I., P.J. CaraDonna, J.L. Dooley, D.J. Ingold, and A.M. Iler.
Southwestern Naturalist 68: 13–19
Can the collaboration of science and art broaden our understanding of nature?
2023. CaraDonna, P.J. and M. Dorf. Plant Science Bulletin 69(3):198-201
[pdf] [special issue on art and botany]
Book review: Foundations of Ecology II: Classic Papers with Commentaries.
2023. P.J. CaraDonna. Quarterly Review of Biology 98: 97–98
The effects of decline of a keystone plant species on a dune community plant-pollinator network.
2023. Sandacz*, D., P. Vitt, T.M. Knight, P.J. CaraDonna, K. Havens.
Frontiers in Conservation Science. [doi:10.3389/fcosc.2023.1183976]
Genotype accounts for intraspecific variation in the timing and duration of life cycle events.
2023. Iler, A.M., P.J. CaraDonna, L. Richardson*, E. Wu, K. Pfeiler**, G. Greymiller**, K. Godfrey**, A. Gorman**, N. Wilson**, M. Whitford**, G. Edmonds**, C. Stratton**, and E. Jules.
American Journal of Botany. 110:e16112 [doi.org/10.1002/ajb2.16112]
The shifting importance of abiotic and biotic factors across the life cycles of wild pollinators.
2022. Ogilvie, J.E. and P.J. CaraDonna.
Journal of Animal Ecology 91:2412–2423 [pdf] [doi.org/10.1111/1365-2656.13825]
[editor's research highlight]
Ecological drivers and consequences of bumble bee body size variation.
2022. Fitzgerald*, J.L., J.E. Ogilvie, and P.J. CaraDonna.
Environmental Entomology 51:1055–1068 [pdf] [doi.org/10.1093/ee/nvac093]
Removing flowers of a generalist plant changes pollinator visitation, composition, and interaction network structure.
2022. Bain*, J.A., R.G. Dickson**, A.M. Gruver*, and P.J. CaraDonna.
Ecosphere. 13:e4154 [pdf] [doi.org/10.1002/ecs2.4154]
Reef fishes weaken dietary preferences after coral mortality, altering resource overlap.
2022. Semmler*, R., N. Sanders, P.J. CaraDonna, A. Baird, J. Xing, J. Robinson, N. Graham, and S. Keith.
Journal of Animal Ecology. 91:2125–2134 [https://doi.org/10.1111/1365-2656.13796]
Response to Pyke and Ren: How to study interactions.
2022. Finkelstein**, C., P.J. CaraDonna, A.M. Gruver*, E. Welti, M. Kaspari, and N.J. Sanders.
Journal of Pollination Ecology. 31: i-ii. [pdf] [https://doi.org/10.26786/1920-7603(2022)709]
Sodium-enriched floral nectar increases pollinator visitation rate and diversity.
2022. Finkelstein**, C., P.J. CaraDonna, A.M. Gruver*, E. Welti, M. Kaspari, and N.J. Sanders.
Biology Letters. 18: 20220016 [pdf] [https://doi.org/10.1098/rsbl.2022.0016]
Seeing through the static: the temporal dimension of plant-animal mutualistic interactions.
2021. CaraDonna, P.J., L. Burkle, B. Schwarz*, J. Resasco, T. Knight, G. Benadi, C. Dormann, Q. Fang, J. Fründ, B. Gauzens, C. Kaiser-Bunbury, R. Winfree, and D.P. Vázquez.
Ecology Letters 24:149–161 [https://doi.org/10.1111/ele.13623] [open access]
Demographic consequences of phenological shifts in response to climate change.
2021. Iler, A.M., P.J. CaraDonna, J.R.K. Forrest, and E. Post.
Annual Review of Ecology, Evolution & Systematics. 52:221–245 [pdf] [https://doi.org/10.1146/annurev-ecolsys-011921-032939]
Conceptual and practical issues limit the utility of statistical estimators of phenological events.
2021. Iler, A.M., P. Humphrey, J. Ogilvie, and P.J. CaraDonna.
Ecosphere 12(11): e03828 [pdf] [10.1002/ecs2.3828]
Plant-pollinator interaction niche broadens in response to severe drought perturbations.
2021. Endres, K. C. Morozumi, L. Xingwen, H.M. Briggs, P.J. CaraDonna, A.M. Iler, D. Picklum, and B. Brosi.
Oecologia 197:577–688 [pdf]
Chicago bees: urban areas support diverse bee communities but with more non-native bee species compared to suburban areas.
2021. Gruver*, A.M. and P.J. CaraDonna.
Environmental Entomology. 50:982-994 [pdf] [https://doi.org/10.1093/ee/nvab048]
Trait positions for elevated invasiveness in adaptive ecological networks.
2021. Hui, C., D.M. Richardson, P. Landi, H.O. Minoarivelo, H.E. Roy, G. Latombe, X. Jing, P.J. CaraDonna, D. Gravel, B. Beckage, and J. Molofsky.
Biological Invasions [https://doi.org/10.1007/s10530-021-02484-w] [open access]
Temporal flexibility in the structure of plant-pollinator interaction networks.
2020. CaraDonna, P.J. and N.W. Waser.
Oikos 129:1369–1380 [pdf] [doi: 10.1111/oik.07526]
Temporal scale-dependence of plant-pollinator networks.
2020. Schwarz*, B., D.P. Vázquez, P.J. CaraDonna, T.M. Knight, G. Benadi, C.F. Dormann, B. Gauzens, E. Motivans, J. Resasco, N. Blüthgen, L.A. Burkle, Q. Fang, C.N. Kaiser‐Bunbury, R. Alarcón, J.A. Bain*, N.P. Chacoff, S-Q Huang, G. LeBuhn, M. MacLeod, T. Petanidou, C. Rasmussen, M.P. Simanonok, A.H. Thompson, J. Fründ.
Oikos 129: 1289–1302 [pdf] [doi: 10.1111/oik.07303] [open access]
First records of Megachile apicalis (Hymenoptera: Megachilidae) from Illinois found in heavily urbanized areas within the City of Chicago.
2020. Gruver*, A.M. and P.J. CaraDonna.
The Great Lakes Entomologist. 53:41–45 [pdf]
Contrasting effects of climate change on seasonal survival of a hibernating mammal.
2020. Cordes, L.S., K.B. Armitage, D. Blumstein, P.J. CaraDonna, D.Z. Childs, B.D. Gerber, M. Oli, and A.Ozgul.
Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences, USA 117: 18119-18126
[https://doi.org/10.1073/pnas.1918584117]
Untangling the seasonal dynamics of plant-pollinator communities.
2020. Bramon Mora*, B., E. Shin, P.J. CaraDonna, and D.B. Stouffer.
Nature Communications 11:4086 [doi.org/10.1038/s41467-020-17894-y]
Reproductive losses due to climate change-induced earlier flowering are not the primary threat to plant population viability in a perennial herb.
2019. Iler, A.M., A. Compagnoni, D.W. Inouye, J.L. Williams, P.J. CaraDonna, A. Anderson, and T.E.X. Miller.
Journal of Ecology 107: 1931–1943 [https://doi.org/10.1111/1365-2745.13146] [link]
Uneven global distribution of food web studies under climate change.
2019. Cameron, E., M. Sundqvist, S. Keith, P.J. CaraDonna, E. Mousing, K. Nilsson, D. Metcalfe, and A. Classen.
Ecosphere 10 (3): e02645 [link]
Two-year bee, or not two-year bee? How voltinism is affected by temperature and season-length in a high elevation solitary bee.
2019. Forrest, J.R.K., R. Cross*, and P.J. CaraDonna.
The American Naturalist 193: 560–574 [pdf]
Atypical flowers can be as profitable as typical hummingbird flowers.
2018. Waser, N.M., P.J. CaraDonna, and M.V. Price.
The American Naturalist 192: 644–653. [pdf]
Experimental warming in the field delays phenology and reduces body size, fat content, and survival: implications for the persistence of a pollinator under climate change.
2018. CaraDonna, P.J., J.L. Cunningham** and A.M. Iler.
Functional Ecology 32: 2345–2356. [pdf]
Art/Science Collaborations: New Explorations of Ecological Systems, Values, and their Feedbacks.
2018. Ellison, A., C. LeRoy, K. Landesbergen, E. Bosanquet, D. Buckley Borden, P.J. CaraDonna, K. Cheney, R. Crystal-Ornelas, A. DeFreece, L. Goralnik, E. Irons, B. Garmaon Merkle, K. O’Connell, C. Penick, L. Rustad, M. Schulze, N. Waser, L. Wysong.
Bulletin of the Ecological Society of America 99: 180–191. [pdf]
Interaction rewiring and the rapid turnover of plant-pollinator networks.
2017. CaraDonna, P.J., W.K. Petry, R.M. Brennan, J.L. Cunningham**, N.M. Waser, J.L. Bronstein, and N.J. Sanders.
Ecology Letters 20: 385–394. [pdf]
Frost sensitivity of leaves and flowers of subalpine plants is related to tissue type and phenology.
2016. CaraDonna, P.J. and J.A. Bain**.
Journal of Ecology 104: 55–64. [pdf]
Phenological responses to climate change do not exhibit phylogenetic signal in a subalpine plant community.
2015. CaraDonna, P.J. and D.W. Inouye.
Ecology 96: 355–361. [pdf]
Phenological shifts and the fate of mutualism.
2015. Rafferty, N.E., P.J. CaraDonna, J.L. Bronstein.
Oikos 124: 14–21. [cover article] [pdf]
Shifts in flowering phenology reshape a subalpine plant community.
2014. CaraDonna, P.J. (!), A.M. Iler (!) and D.W. Inouye. *equal author contributions, listed alphabetically
Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences, USA 111: 4916–4921. [pdf]
(! = co-first authors)
Phenological overlap of interacting species in a changing climate: an assessment of available approaches.
2013. Rafferty, N.E., P.J. CaraDonna, L.A. Burkle, A.M. Iler, and J.L. Bronstein.
Ecology & Evolution 3: 3183-3193. [pdf]
Asynchronous changes in phenology of migrating Broad-tailed Hummingbirds and their early-season nectar resources.
2012. McKinney, A.M., P.J. CaraDonna, D.W. Inouye, W.A. Barr, C.D. Bertelsen, and N.M. Waser.
Ecology 93: 1987-1993. [cover article] [pdf]
Reproductive assurance for a rewardless epiphytic orchid in Puerto Rico, Pleurothallis ruscifolia (Orchidaceae, Pleurothallidinae)
2012. CaraDonna, P.J. and J.D. Ackerman.
The Caribbean Journal of Science 46 (2-3): 249-257. [pdf]
Manuscripts submitted, in review, or in revision [pdfs available upon request]
In revision. Fitness consequences of non-native floral resource use for subalpine solitary bees: evidence of an ecological trap?
Cahill**, C.M., P.J. CaraDonna, and J.R.K. Forrest.
In revision. Pollination deficits increase with urbanization on urban farms in Chicago.
Zink*, A., P.J. CaraDonna, K. Larsen, and A.M. Iler
In revision. Intraspecific body size variation across distributional moments reveals trait filtering processes. Fitzgerald, J.L.*, J.E. Ogilvie, and P.J. CaraDonna.
In revision. Setting goals for pollinator gardens. Dorian, N.N., M. Murphey, A. Iler, P.J. CaraDonna.
In revision. Protocal to increase accuracy and fidelty of metagenomic barcoding using Angiosperms353: a case study using pollen loads from wild bumble bees.
Benkendorf, R.*, E. Woodworth*, P.J. CaraDonna, J.E. Ogilvie, S. Taddeo, and J. Fant.
...