Publications - as of 9/27/23, the H index for these publications is 43, with 9,849 citations (Google Scholar)
67. Dalton, Rebecca M., Nora C. Underwood, D. W. Inouye, Michael E. Soulé, and Brian D. Inouye. Long-term declines in insect abundance and biomass in a subalpine habitat. 2023. Ecosphere 14(8):e4620. http://doi.org/10.1002/ecs2.4620
66. Dunn, P. O., Insiyaa Ahmed, Elise Armstrong, Natasha Barlow, Malcolm A. Barnard, Marc Belisle, T.J. Benson, Lisha L. Berzins, Chloe K. Boynton, T. Anders Brown, Melissa Cady, Kyle Cameron, Xuan Chen, Robert G. Clark, Ethan D. Clotfelter, Kara Cromwell, Russell D. Dawson, Elsie Denton, Andrew Forbes, Kendrick Fowler, Kevin C. Fraser, Dany Garant, Megan Hiebert, Claire Houchen, Jennifer Houtz, Tara L. Imlay, Brian D. Inouye, David W. Inouye, Michelle Jackson, Andrew P. Jacobson, Kristin Jayd, Christy Juteau, Andrea Kautz, Caroline Killian, Elliot Kinnea, Kimberly J Komatsu, Kirk Larsen, Andrew Laughlin, Valerie Levesque-Beaudin, Ryan Leys, Elizabeth Long, Stephen C. Lougheed, Stu Mackenzie, Jen Marangelo Colleen Miller, Brenda Molano-Flores, Christy A. Morrissey, Emony Nicholls, Jessica M. Orlofske, Ian S. Pearse, Fanie Pelletier, Amber Pitt, Joe Poston, Danielle M. Racke, Jeannine A. Randall, Matthew L. Richardson, Olivia Rooney, A. Rose Ruegg, Scott Rush, Sadie Ryan, Mitchell Sadowski, Ivana Schoepf, Lindsay Schulz, Brenna Shea, Thomas N. Sheehan, Lynn Siefferman, Derek Sikes, Mark Stanback, John D. Styrsky, Conor C. Taff, Jennifer J. Uehling, Kathleen Uvino, Thomas Wassmer, Kathryn Weglarz, Megan Weinberger, John Wenzel, and Linda A. Whittingham. 2023. Extensive regional variation in the phenology of insects and their response to temperature across North America. Ecology 104(5):e4036.
65. Prather, R. M., R. M. Dalton, b. barr, D. T. Blumstein, C. L. Boggs, A. K. Brody, D. W. Inouye, R. E. Irwin, J. G. A. Martin, R. J. Smith, D. H. Van Vuren, C. P. Wells, H. H. Whiteman, B. D. Inouye, and N. Underwood. 2023. Current and lagged climate affects phenology across diverse taxonomic groups. Proceedings of the Royal Society B: Biological Sciences 290: 20222181.
64. Stemkovski, Michael, Rachel G. Dickson, Sean R. Griffin, Brian D. Inouye, David W. Inouye, Gabriella L. Pardee, Nora Underwood, and Rebecca E. Irwin. 2023. Skewness in bee and flower phenological distributions. Ecology e3890. doi.org/10.1002/ecy.3890
63. Rixen, C., T. Høye, P. Macek, A. Rien, J. Alatalo, J. Anderson, P. Srnold, I. C. Barrio, J. Bjerke, M. P. Björkman, D. Blok, G. Blume-Werry, J. Boike, S. Bokhorst, M. Carbognani, C. Christiansen, P. Convey, E. Cooper, J. Cornelissen, S. Coulson, E. Dorrepaal, B. Elberling, S. Elmendorf, C. Elphinstone, T. G. Whittingham Forte, E. R. Frei, S. Geange, F. Gehrmann, C. Gibson, P. Grogan, A. Halbritter Rechsteiner, J. Harte, G. Henry, D. Inouye, R. E. Irwin, G. Jespersen, I. S. Jónsdóttir, J. Y. Jung, D. Klinges, G. Kudo, J. Lämsä, H. Lee, J. Lembrechts, S. Lett, J. Lynn, M. Mastepanov, J. Morse, I. Myers-Smith, J. Olofsson, R. Paavola, A. Petraglia, G. Phoenix, H. M. Mann, P. Semenchuk, M. Siewert, R. Slatyer, M. Spasojevic, K. Suding, P. Sullivan, K. Thompson, M. Väisänen, V. Vandvik, S. Venn, J. Walz, R. Way, J. Welker, S. Wipf, and S. Zong. 2022. Winters are changing: Snow effects on Arctic and alpine tundra ecosystems. Arctic Science 8(3):572-608
62. Pardee, Gabriella L. S. R. Griffin, M. Stemkovski, T. Harrison, Z. M. Portman, M. R. Kazenel, J. S. Lynn, D. W. Inouye, and R. E. Irwin. 2022. Life history traits predict responses of wild bees to climate variation. Proceedings of the Royal Society B: Biological Sciences. 289(1973):20212697.
61. Inouye, D. W. Climate change and phenology. 2022. Wiley Interdisciplinary Reviews 13(3) e764. https://doi.org/10.1002/wcc.764
60. Evers, Sanne M., Aldo Compagnoni, D. W. Inouye, Tom E. X. Miller, Rob Salguero-Gómez, Amy M. Iler, and Tiffany M. Knight. 2021. Lagged and dormant-season climate better predict plant vital rates than climate during the growing season. Global Change Biology 27(9): 1927-1941.
59. Stemkovski, M., W. D. Pearse, S. Griffin, G. L. Pardee, J. Gibbs, T. Griswold, J. L. Neff, R. Oram, M. G. Rightmyer, C. S. Sheffield, K. Wright, B. D. Inouye, D. W. Inouye, and R. E. Irwin. 2020. Bee phenology is predicted by climatic variation and functional traits. Ecology Letters 23(11): 1589-1598.
58. Inouye, D. W. 2019. Effects of climate change on alpine plants and their pollinators. In: The Year in Ecology and Conservation Biology. Annals of the NY Academy of Sciences. https://doi.org/10.1111/nyas.14104
57. Pardee, G. L., I. O. Jensen, D. W. Inouye, and R. E. Irwin. 2019. The individual and combined effects of snowmelt timing and frost exposure on the reproductive success of montane forbs. Journal of Ecology 107:1970-1981.
56. Inouye, B.D., J. Ehrlen and N. Underwood. 2019. Phenology as a process rather than an event: from individual reaction norms to community metrics. Ecological Monographs 89(2): e01352
55. Iler, AM, A. Compagnoni, DW Inouye, JL Williams, PJ CaraDonna, A Anderson and TEX Miller. 2019. Reproductive losses due to climate change-induced earlier flowering are not the primary threat to plant population viability in a perennial herb. Journal of Ecology in press. DOI: 10.1111/13652745.13146
54. Wadgymar, Susana, J. E. Ogilvie, D. W. Inouye, and J. T. Anderson. 2018. Phenological responses to multiple environmental drivers under climate change: insights from a long-term observational study and a manipulative field experiment. New Phytologist 218(2):517-529
53. Pearse, W. D., C. C. Davis, D. W. Inouye, R. Primack, and T. J. Davis. 2017. A statistical estimator for determining the limits of contemporary and historic phenology. Nature Ecology & Evolution 1:1876
52. Pardee, G., D. W. Inouye, and R. E. Irwin. 2017. Direct and indirect effects of episodic frost on plant growth and reproduction in subalpine wildflowers. Global Change Biology 24(2):848-857.
51. Robinson, Ayla, D. W. Inouye, J. E. Ogilvie, and E. H. Mooney. 2017. Multitrophic interactions mediate the effects of climate change on herbivore abundance. Oecologia 185:181-190.
50. Ogilvie, J. E., S. R. Griffin, Z. J. Gezon, B. D. Inouye, N. C. Underwood, D. W. Inouye, and R. E. Irwin. 2017. Interannual bumble bee abundance is driven by indirect climate effects on floral resource phenology. Ecology Letters 20: 1507-1515.
49. Rafferty, NE, and PD Nabity. 2017. A global test for phylogenetic signal in shifts in flowering time under climate change. Journal of Ecology 105(3):627-633.
48. Iler, A.M., D.W. Inouye, N.M. Schmidt, T.T. Høye. 2017. Detrending phenological time series improves climate-phenology analyses and reveals evidence of plasticity. Ecology 98(3):647-655.
47. de Keyzer, C. W., N. E. Rafferty, D. W. Inouye, and J. D. Thomson. 2016. Confounding effects of spatial variation on temporal shifts in phenology. Global Change Biology 23(5):1783-1791.
46. Compagnoni, A., AJ Bibian, BM Ochocki, HS Rogers,E Schultz, ME Sneck, BD Elderd, AM Iler, DW Inouye, H Jacquemyn and TEX Miller. 2016. The effect of demographic correlations on the stochastic population dynamics of perennial plants. Ecological Monographs 86: 480–494. DOI: 10.1002/ecm.1228
45. Petry, W. K., J. D. Soule, A. M. Iler, A. Chicas-Mosier, D. W. Inouye, T. E. X. Miller, K. A. Mooney. 2016. Sex-specific responses to climate change drive rapid shifts in population sex ratio. Science 353: 69-71.
44. Gezon, Z. J., D. W. Inouye, and R. E. Irwin. 2016. Phenological change: implications for pollination and plant fitness. Global Change Biology 22(5): 1779-1793.
43. Pyke, G. H., J. D. Thomson, D. W. Inouye and T. J. Miller. 2016. Effects of climate change on phenologies and distributions of bumble bees and the plants they visit. Ecosphere 7(3)
42. Gezon, Z. J., E. S. Wyman, J. S. Ascher, D. W. Inouye, and R. E. Irwin. 2015. The effect of repeated, lethal sampling on wild bee abundance and diversity. Methods in Ecology and Evolution 6(9):1044-1054.
41. CaraDonna, P. J. and D. W. Inouye. 2015. Phenological responses to climate change do not exhibit phylogenetic signal in a subalpine plant community. Ecology 96(2):355-361.
40. Wright, Karen W., K. L. Vanderbilt, D. W. Inouye, C. D. Bertelsen, and T. M. Crimmins. 2015. Turnover and reliability of flower communities in extreme environments: Insights from long-term phenology data sets. Journal of Arid Environments 115:27-34.
39. Che-Castaldo, J. and D. W. Inouye. 2015. Interspecific competition between a non-native metal-hyperaccumulating plant (Noccaea caerulescens, Brassicaceae) and a native congener across a soil-metal gradient. Australian Journal of Botany 63(2):141-151
38. Fagan, W. F., S. Bewick, S. Cantrell, C. Cosner, I. G. Varassin, and D. W. Inouye. 2014. Phenologically explicit models for studying plant-pollinator interactions under climate change. Theoretical Ecology 7:289-297.
37. CaraDonna, P. J., A. M. Iler, and D. W. Inouye. 2014. Shifts in flowering phenology reshape a subalpine plant community. Proc. Nat. Acad. Sci. (USA) 111(13): 4916-4921. [Recommended by Faculty of 1000]
36. Che-Castaldo, J. P., and D. W. Inouye. 2014. Field germination and survival of experimentally introduced metal hyperaccumulator Noccaea caerulescens (Brassicaceae) across a soil metal gradient. American Midland Naturalist 171(2): 229-245
35--. Inouye, D. W., and F.-E. Wielgolaski. 2013. Phenology of high-altitude climates. Pages 249-272 in: Phenology: An Integrative Environmental Science (M. D. Schwartz, ed.) Kluwer Academic Publishers.
34. Iler, A. M., D. W. Inouye, T. T. Høye, A. J. Miller-Rushing, L. A. Burkle, and E. Johnston. 2013. Maintenance of temporal synchrony between syrphid flies and their floral resources despite differential phenological responses to climate. Global Change Biology 19(8):2348–2359.
33. Mazer, S. J., S. E. Travers, B. I. Cook, T. J. Davies, K. Bolmgren, N. J. B. Kraft, N. Salamin, and D. W. Inouye. 2013. Flowering date of taxonomic families predicts phenological sensitivity to temperature: Implications for forecasting the effects of climate change on unstudied taxa. Amer. J. Bot. 100(7):1381-1397.
32. Iler, A. M., T. T. Høye, D. W. Inouye, and N. M. Schmidt. 2013. Nonlinear flowering responses to climate: Are species approaching their limits of phenological change? Philosophical Transactions of the Royal Society, themed issue 368: 20120489
31. Iler, A. M., T. T. Høye, D. W. Inouye, and N. M. Schmidt. 2013. Long-term trends mask variation in the direction and magnitude of short-term phenological shifts. Amer. J. Bot. 100(7): 1398-1406.
30. Iler, A. M., and D. W. Inouye. 2013. Effects of climate change on mast-flowering cues in a clonal montane herb, Veratrum tenuipetalum (Melanthiaceae). Amer. J. Bot. 100:1-7.
29. Pyke, G. H., D. W. Inouye, and J. D. Thomson. 2012. Local geographic distributions of bumble bees near Crested Butte, Colorado: Competition and community structure revisited. Environmental Entomology 41(6):1332-49
28. McKinney, A. M., P. J. CaraDonna, D. W. Inouye, b. barr, D. Bertelson, and N. M. Waser. 2012. Asynchronous changes in phenology of migrating Broad-tailed Hummingbirds and their early-season nectar resources. Ecology 93(9):1987-1993.
27. Anderson, J. T., D. W. Inouye, A. McKinney, and T. Mitchell-Olds. 2012. Phenotypic plasticity and adaptive evolution contribute to advancing flowering phenology in response to climate change. Philosophical Transactions of the Royal Society 279(1743): 3843-3852. [Rated “must read” by Faculty of 1000]
26. Diez, J. M., A. J. Miller-Rushing, S. J. Mazer, T. M. Crimmins, M. A. Crimmins, C. D. Bertelsen, and D. W. Inouye. 2012. Forecasting phenology: from species variability to community forecasts. Ecology Letters 15: 545-553.
25. Boggs, C. L., and D. W. Inouye. 2012. A single climate driver has direct and indirect effects on pollinator numbers. Ecology Letters 15(5):502-508. [Rated “must read” by Faculty of 1000]
24. Che-Castaldo, J. P., and D. W. Inouye. 2011. The effects of dataset length and mast seeding on the demography of Frasera speciosa, a long-lived monocarpic plant. Ecosphere 2011 2:11, art126, 18 p.
23. Inouye, D. W. 2011. Effects of frost on wildflowers: an unexpected consequence of climate change. EcoEd Digital Library http://ecoed.esa.org/ [collection of 22 photographs and graphs]
22. Pyke, G. H., D. W. Inouye, and J. D. Thomson. 2012. Local geographic distributions of bumble bees near Crested Butte, Colorado: Competition and community structure revisited. Environmental Entomology 41(6):1332-49.
21. Aldridge, G., D. W. Inouye, J. R. K. Forrest, W. A. Barr, and A. J. Miller-Rushing. 2011. Emergence of a mid-season period of low floral resources in a montane meadow ecosystem associated with climate change. Journal of Ecology. DOI: 10.1111/j.1365-2745.2011.01826.x
20. Lambert, A., A. J. Miller-Rushing, and D. W. Inouye. 2010. Changes in snowmelt date and summer precipitation affect the flowering phenology of Erythronium grandiflorum Pursh (glacier lily, Liliaceae). American Journal of Botany 97(9): 1431–1437.
19. Forrest, J., D. W. Inouye, and J. D. Thomson. 2010. Flowering phenology in subalpine communities: Does climate variation reshuffle species assemblages? Ecology 91(2):431-440.
18. Miller-Rushing, A. J., Toke T. Høye, D. W. Inouye, and E. Post. 2010. The effects of phenological mismatch on demography. Philosophical Transactions of the Royal Society B 365: 3177-3186.
17. White, M. A., de Beurs, K. M., Didan, K., D. W. Inouye, A. D. Richardson, O. P. Jensen, J. Magnuson, J. O’Keefe, G. Zhang, R. R. Nemani, W. J. D. van Leeuwen, J. F. Brown, A. de Wit, M. Schaepman, X. Lin, M. Dettinger, A. Bailey, J. Kimball, M. D. Schwartz, D. D. Baldocchi, and W. K. Lauenroth. 2009. Intercomparison, interpretation, and assessment of spring phenology in North America estimated from remote sensing for 1982 to 2006. Global Change Biology 15(10):2335-2359.
16. Miller-Rushing, A. J. and D. W. Inouye. 2009. Variation in the impact of climate change on flowering phenology and abundance: An examination of two pairs of closely related wildflower species. American Journal of Botany 96:1821-1829.
15. Post, E., and D. W. Inouye. 2008. Phenology: response, driver, and integrator. (Introduction to Special Feature). Ecology 89(2): 319-320.
14. Miller-Rushing, A. J., D. W. Inouye, and R. B. Primack. 2008. How well do first flowering dates measure plant responses to climate change? The effects of population size and sampling frequency. Journal of Ecology 96: 1289-1296.
13. Inouye, D. W. 2008. Consequences of climate change for phenology, frost damage, and floral abundance of sub-alpine wildflowers. Ecology 89(2): 353-362.
12. Lambrecht, S., M. E. Loik, D. W. Inouye, and J. Harte. 2007. Carbon costs of reproduction under experimental warming in a subalpine meadow. New Phytologist 173: 121-134.
11. Morales, M. A., G. J. Dodge, and D. W. Inouye. 2005. A phenological mid-domain effect in flowering diversity. Oecologia 142(1): 83-89.
10. Inouye, D. W., and F.-E. Wielgolaski. 2003. Phenology of high-altitude climates. Pages 195-214 in: Phenology: An Integrative Environmental Science (M. D. Schwartz, ed.) Kluwer Academic.
9. Saavedra, F., D. W. Inouye, M. V. Price and J. Harte. 2003. Changes in flowering and abundance of Delphinium nuttallianum (Ranunculaceae) in response to a subalpine climate warming experiment. Global Change Biology 9: 885-894.
8. Inouye, D. W., F. Saavedra, and W. Lee-Yang. 2003. Environmental influences on the phenology and abundance of flowering by Androsace septentrionalis L. (Primulaceae). American Journal of Botany 90(6):905-910.
7. Inouye, D. W., M. Morales, and G. Dodge. 2002. Variation in timing and abundance of flowering by Delphinium barbeyi Huth (Ranunculaceae): the roles of snowpack, frost, and La Niña, in the context of climate change. Oecologia 130: 543-550.
6. Inouye, D. W., W. A. Barr, K. B. Armitage, and B. D. Inouye. 2000. Climate change is affecting altitudinal migrants and hibernating species. Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences 97(4): 1630-1633.
5. Inouye, D. W. 2000. The ecological and evolutionary significance of frost in the context of climate change. Ecology Letters 3(5):457-463.
4. Inouye, D. W. and A. D. McGuire. 1991. Effects of snowpack on the timing and abundance of flowering in Delphinium nelsonii: implications for climate change. American Journal of Botany 78(7):997-1001.
3. Inouye, D. W., W. A. Calder and N. M. Waser. 1991. The effect of floral abundance on feeder censuses of hummingbird populations. Condor 93:279-285.
2. Inouye, D. W., and G. H. Pyke. 1988. Pollination biology in the Snowy Mts. of Australia, with comparisons with montane Colorado, U.S.A. Australian Journal of Ecology 13:191-210.
1. Inouye, D. W. 1988. Natural variation in plant and animal populations, and its implications for studies of recovering ecosystems. Pages 39-50 in Cairns, J., editor. Rehabilitating Damaged Ecosystems. CRC Press. Second edition 1995.
66. Dunn, P. O., Insiyaa Ahmed, Elise Armstrong, Natasha Barlow, Malcolm A. Barnard, Marc Belisle, T.J. Benson, Lisha L. Berzins, Chloe K. Boynton, T. Anders Brown, Melissa Cady, Kyle Cameron, Xuan Chen, Robert G. Clark, Ethan D. Clotfelter, Kara Cromwell, Russell D. Dawson, Elsie Denton, Andrew Forbes, Kendrick Fowler, Kevin C. Fraser, Dany Garant, Megan Hiebert, Claire Houchen, Jennifer Houtz, Tara L. Imlay, Brian D. Inouye, David W. Inouye, Michelle Jackson, Andrew P. Jacobson, Kristin Jayd, Christy Juteau, Andrea Kautz, Caroline Killian, Elliot Kinnea, Kimberly J Komatsu, Kirk Larsen, Andrew Laughlin, Valerie Levesque-Beaudin, Ryan Leys, Elizabeth Long, Stephen C. Lougheed, Stu Mackenzie, Jen Marangelo Colleen Miller, Brenda Molano-Flores, Christy A. Morrissey, Emony Nicholls, Jessica M. Orlofske, Ian S. Pearse, Fanie Pelletier, Amber Pitt, Joe Poston, Danielle M. Racke, Jeannine A. Randall, Matthew L. Richardson, Olivia Rooney, A. Rose Ruegg, Scott Rush, Sadie Ryan, Mitchell Sadowski, Ivana Schoepf, Lindsay Schulz, Brenna Shea, Thomas N. Sheehan, Lynn Siefferman, Derek Sikes, Mark Stanback, John D. Styrsky, Conor C. Taff, Jennifer J. Uehling, Kathleen Uvino, Thomas Wassmer, Kathryn Weglarz, Megan Weinberger, John Wenzel, and Linda A. Whittingham. 2023. Extensive regional variation in the phenology of insects and their response to temperature across North America. Ecology 104(5):e4036.
65. Prather, R. M., R. M. Dalton, b. barr, D. T. Blumstein, C. L. Boggs, A. K. Brody, D. W. Inouye, R. E. Irwin, J. G. A. Martin, R. J. Smith, D. H. Van Vuren, C. P. Wells, H. H. Whiteman, B. D. Inouye, and N. Underwood. 2023. Current and lagged climate affects phenology across diverse taxonomic groups. Proceedings of the Royal Society B: Biological Sciences 290: 20222181.
64. Stemkovski, Michael, Rachel G. Dickson, Sean R. Griffin, Brian D. Inouye, David W. Inouye, Gabriella L. Pardee, Nora Underwood, and Rebecca E. Irwin. 2023. Skewness in bee and flower phenological distributions. Ecology e3890. doi.org/10.1002/ecy.3890
63. Rixen, C., T. Høye, P. Macek, A. Rien, J. Alatalo, J. Anderson, P. Srnold, I. C. Barrio, J. Bjerke, M. P. Björkman, D. Blok, G. Blume-Werry, J. Boike, S. Bokhorst, M. Carbognani, C. Christiansen, P. Convey, E. Cooper, J. Cornelissen, S. Coulson, E. Dorrepaal, B. Elberling, S. Elmendorf, C. Elphinstone, T. G. Whittingham Forte, E. R. Frei, S. Geange, F. Gehrmann, C. Gibson, P. Grogan, A. Halbritter Rechsteiner, J. Harte, G. Henry, D. Inouye, R. E. Irwin, G. Jespersen, I. S. Jónsdóttir, J. Y. Jung, D. Klinges, G. Kudo, J. Lämsä, H. Lee, J. Lembrechts, S. Lett, J. Lynn, M. Mastepanov, J. Morse, I. Myers-Smith, J. Olofsson, R. Paavola, A. Petraglia, G. Phoenix, H. M. Mann, P. Semenchuk, M. Siewert, R. Slatyer, M. Spasojevic, K. Suding, P. Sullivan, K. Thompson, M. Väisänen, V. Vandvik, S. Venn, J. Walz, R. Way, J. Welker, S. Wipf, and S. Zong. 2022. Winters are changing: Snow effects on Arctic and alpine tundra ecosystems. Arctic Science 8(3):572-608
62. Pardee, Gabriella L. S. R. Griffin, M. Stemkovski, T. Harrison, Z. M. Portman, M. R. Kazenel, J. S. Lynn, D. W. Inouye, and R. E. Irwin. 2022. Life history traits predict responses of wild bees to climate variation. Proceedings of the Royal Society B: Biological Sciences. 289(1973):20212697.
61. Inouye, D. W. Climate change and phenology. 2022. Wiley Interdisciplinary Reviews 13(3) e764. https://doi.org/10.1002/wcc.764
60. Evers, Sanne M., Aldo Compagnoni, D. W. Inouye, Tom E. X. Miller, Rob Salguero-Gómez, Amy M. Iler, and Tiffany M. Knight. 2021. Lagged and dormant-season climate better predict plant vital rates than climate during the growing season. Global Change Biology 27(9): 1927-1941.
59. Stemkovski, M., W. D. Pearse, S. Griffin, G. L. Pardee, J. Gibbs, T. Griswold, J. L. Neff, R. Oram, M. G. Rightmyer, C. S. Sheffield, K. Wright, B. D. Inouye, D. W. Inouye, and R. E. Irwin. 2020. Bee phenology is predicted by climatic variation and functional traits. Ecology Letters 23(11): 1589-1598.
58. Inouye, D. W. 2019. Effects of climate change on alpine plants and their pollinators. In: The Year in Ecology and Conservation Biology. Annals of the NY Academy of Sciences. https://doi.org/10.1111/nyas.14104
57. Pardee, G. L., I. O. Jensen, D. W. Inouye, and R. E. Irwin. 2019. The individual and combined effects of snowmelt timing and frost exposure on the reproductive success of montane forbs. Journal of Ecology 107:1970-1981.
56. Inouye, B.D., J. Ehrlen and N. Underwood. 2019. Phenology as a process rather than an event: from individual reaction norms to community metrics. Ecological Monographs 89(2): e01352
55. Iler, AM, A. Compagnoni, DW Inouye, JL Williams, PJ CaraDonna, A Anderson and TEX Miller. 2019. Reproductive losses due to climate change-induced earlier flowering are not the primary threat to plant population viability in a perennial herb. Journal of Ecology in press. DOI: 10.1111/13652745.13146
54. Wadgymar, Susana, J. E. Ogilvie, D. W. Inouye, and J. T. Anderson. 2018. Phenological responses to multiple environmental drivers under climate change: insights from a long-term observational study and a manipulative field experiment. New Phytologist 218(2):517-529
53. Pearse, W. D., C. C. Davis, D. W. Inouye, R. Primack, and T. J. Davis. 2017. A statistical estimator for determining the limits of contemporary and historic phenology. Nature Ecology & Evolution 1:1876
52. Pardee, G., D. W. Inouye, and R. E. Irwin. 2017. Direct and indirect effects of episodic frost on plant growth and reproduction in subalpine wildflowers. Global Change Biology 24(2):848-857.
51. Robinson, Ayla, D. W. Inouye, J. E. Ogilvie, and E. H. Mooney. 2017. Multitrophic interactions mediate the effects of climate change on herbivore abundance. Oecologia 185:181-190.
50. Ogilvie, J. E., S. R. Griffin, Z. J. Gezon, B. D. Inouye, N. C. Underwood, D. W. Inouye, and R. E. Irwin. 2017. Interannual bumble bee abundance is driven by indirect climate effects on floral resource phenology. Ecology Letters 20: 1507-1515.
49. Rafferty, NE, and PD Nabity. 2017. A global test for phylogenetic signal in shifts in flowering time under climate change. Journal of Ecology 105(3):627-633.
48. Iler, A.M., D.W. Inouye, N.M. Schmidt, T.T. Høye. 2017. Detrending phenological time series improves climate-phenology analyses and reveals evidence of plasticity. Ecology 98(3):647-655.
47. de Keyzer, C. W., N. E. Rafferty, D. W. Inouye, and J. D. Thomson. 2016. Confounding effects of spatial variation on temporal shifts in phenology. Global Change Biology 23(5):1783-1791.
46. Compagnoni, A., AJ Bibian, BM Ochocki, HS Rogers,E Schultz, ME Sneck, BD Elderd, AM Iler, DW Inouye, H Jacquemyn and TEX Miller. 2016. The effect of demographic correlations on the stochastic population dynamics of perennial plants. Ecological Monographs 86: 480–494. DOI: 10.1002/ecm.1228
45. Petry, W. K., J. D. Soule, A. M. Iler, A. Chicas-Mosier, D. W. Inouye, T. E. X. Miller, K. A. Mooney. 2016. Sex-specific responses to climate change drive rapid shifts in population sex ratio. Science 353: 69-71.
44. Gezon, Z. J., D. W. Inouye, and R. E. Irwin. 2016. Phenological change: implications for pollination and plant fitness. Global Change Biology 22(5): 1779-1793.
43. Pyke, G. H., J. D. Thomson, D. W. Inouye and T. J. Miller. 2016. Effects of climate change on phenologies and distributions of bumble bees and the plants they visit. Ecosphere 7(3)
42. Gezon, Z. J., E. S. Wyman, J. S. Ascher, D. W. Inouye, and R. E. Irwin. 2015. The effect of repeated, lethal sampling on wild bee abundance and diversity. Methods in Ecology and Evolution 6(9):1044-1054.
41. CaraDonna, P. J. and D. W. Inouye. 2015. Phenological responses to climate change do not exhibit phylogenetic signal in a subalpine plant community. Ecology 96(2):355-361.
40. Wright, Karen W., K. L. Vanderbilt, D. W. Inouye, C. D. Bertelsen, and T. M. Crimmins. 2015. Turnover and reliability of flower communities in extreme environments: Insights from long-term phenology data sets. Journal of Arid Environments 115:27-34.
39. Che-Castaldo, J. and D. W. Inouye. 2015. Interspecific competition between a non-native metal-hyperaccumulating plant (Noccaea caerulescens, Brassicaceae) and a native congener across a soil-metal gradient. Australian Journal of Botany 63(2):141-151
38. Fagan, W. F., S. Bewick, S. Cantrell, C. Cosner, I. G. Varassin, and D. W. Inouye. 2014. Phenologically explicit models for studying plant-pollinator interactions under climate change. Theoretical Ecology 7:289-297.
37. CaraDonna, P. J., A. M. Iler, and D. W. Inouye. 2014. Shifts in flowering phenology reshape a subalpine plant community. Proc. Nat. Acad. Sci. (USA) 111(13): 4916-4921. [Recommended by Faculty of 1000]
36. Che-Castaldo, J. P., and D. W. Inouye. 2014. Field germination and survival of experimentally introduced metal hyperaccumulator Noccaea caerulescens (Brassicaceae) across a soil metal gradient. American Midland Naturalist 171(2): 229-245
35--. Inouye, D. W., and F.-E. Wielgolaski. 2013. Phenology of high-altitude climates. Pages 249-272 in: Phenology: An Integrative Environmental Science (M. D. Schwartz, ed.) Kluwer Academic Publishers.
34. Iler, A. M., D. W. Inouye, T. T. Høye, A. J. Miller-Rushing, L. A. Burkle, and E. Johnston. 2013. Maintenance of temporal synchrony between syrphid flies and their floral resources despite differential phenological responses to climate. Global Change Biology 19(8):2348–2359.
33. Mazer, S. J., S. E. Travers, B. I. Cook, T. J. Davies, K. Bolmgren, N. J. B. Kraft, N. Salamin, and D. W. Inouye. 2013. Flowering date of taxonomic families predicts phenological sensitivity to temperature: Implications for forecasting the effects of climate change on unstudied taxa. Amer. J. Bot. 100(7):1381-1397.
32. Iler, A. M., T. T. Høye, D. W. Inouye, and N. M. Schmidt. 2013. Nonlinear flowering responses to climate: Are species approaching their limits of phenological change? Philosophical Transactions of the Royal Society, themed issue 368: 20120489
31. Iler, A. M., T. T. Høye, D. W. Inouye, and N. M. Schmidt. 2013. Long-term trends mask variation in the direction and magnitude of short-term phenological shifts. Amer. J. Bot. 100(7): 1398-1406.
30. Iler, A. M., and D. W. Inouye. 2013. Effects of climate change on mast-flowering cues in a clonal montane herb, Veratrum tenuipetalum (Melanthiaceae). Amer. J. Bot. 100:1-7.
29. Pyke, G. H., D. W. Inouye, and J. D. Thomson. 2012. Local geographic distributions of bumble bees near Crested Butte, Colorado: Competition and community structure revisited. Environmental Entomology 41(6):1332-49
28. McKinney, A. M., P. J. CaraDonna, D. W. Inouye, b. barr, D. Bertelson, and N. M. Waser. 2012. Asynchronous changes in phenology of migrating Broad-tailed Hummingbirds and their early-season nectar resources. Ecology 93(9):1987-1993.
27. Anderson, J. T., D. W. Inouye, A. McKinney, and T. Mitchell-Olds. 2012. Phenotypic plasticity and adaptive evolution contribute to advancing flowering phenology in response to climate change. Philosophical Transactions of the Royal Society 279(1743): 3843-3852. [Rated “must read” by Faculty of 1000]
26. Diez, J. M., A. J. Miller-Rushing, S. J. Mazer, T. M. Crimmins, M. A. Crimmins, C. D. Bertelsen, and D. W. Inouye. 2012. Forecasting phenology: from species variability to community forecasts. Ecology Letters 15: 545-553.
25. Boggs, C. L., and D. W. Inouye. 2012. A single climate driver has direct and indirect effects on pollinator numbers. Ecology Letters 15(5):502-508. [Rated “must read” by Faculty of 1000]
24. Che-Castaldo, J. P., and D. W. Inouye. 2011. The effects of dataset length and mast seeding on the demography of Frasera speciosa, a long-lived monocarpic plant. Ecosphere 2011 2:11, art126, 18 p.
23. Inouye, D. W. 2011. Effects of frost on wildflowers: an unexpected consequence of climate change. EcoEd Digital Library http://ecoed.esa.org/ [collection of 22 photographs and graphs]
22. Pyke, G. H., D. W. Inouye, and J. D. Thomson. 2012. Local geographic distributions of bumble bees near Crested Butte, Colorado: Competition and community structure revisited. Environmental Entomology 41(6):1332-49.
21. Aldridge, G., D. W. Inouye, J. R. K. Forrest, W. A. Barr, and A. J. Miller-Rushing. 2011. Emergence of a mid-season period of low floral resources in a montane meadow ecosystem associated with climate change. Journal of Ecology. DOI: 10.1111/j.1365-2745.2011.01826.x
20. Lambert, A., A. J. Miller-Rushing, and D. W. Inouye. 2010. Changes in snowmelt date and summer precipitation affect the flowering phenology of Erythronium grandiflorum Pursh (glacier lily, Liliaceae). American Journal of Botany 97(9): 1431–1437.
19. Forrest, J., D. W. Inouye, and J. D. Thomson. 2010. Flowering phenology in subalpine communities: Does climate variation reshuffle species assemblages? Ecology 91(2):431-440.
18. Miller-Rushing, A. J., Toke T. Høye, D. W. Inouye, and E. Post. 2010. The effects of phenological mismatch on demography. Philosophical Transactions of the Royal Society B 365: 3177-3186.
17. White, M. A., de Beurs, K. M., Didan, K., D. W. Inouye, A. D. Richardson, O. P. Jensen, J. Magnuson, J. O’Keefe, G. Zhang, R. R. Nemani, W. J. D. van Leeuwen, J. F. Brown, A. de Wit, M. Schaepman, X. Lin, M. Dettinger, A. Bailey, J. Kimball, M. D. Schwartz, D. D. Baldocchi, and W. K. Lauenroth. 2009. Intercomparison, interpretation, and assessment of spring phenology in North America estimated from remote sensing for 1982 to 2006. Global Change Biology 15(10):2335-2359.
16. Miller-Rushing, A. J. and D. W. Inouye. 2009. Variation in the impact of climate change on flowering phenology and abundance: An examination of two pairs of closely related wildflower species. American Journal of Botany 96:1821-1829.
15. Post, E., and D. W. Inouye. 2008. Phenology: response, driver, and integrator. (Introduction to Special Feature). Ecology 89(2): 319-320.
14. Miller-Rushing, A. J., D. W. Inouye, and R. B. Primack. 2008. How well do first flowering dates measure plant responses to climate change? The effects of population size and sampling frequency. Journal of Ecology 96: 1289-1296.
13. Inouye, D. W. 2008. Consequences of climate change for phenology, frost damage, and floral abundance of sub-alpine wildflowers. Ecology 89(2): 353-362.
12. Lambrecht, S., M. E. Loik, D. W. Inouye, and J. Harte. 2007. Carbon costs of reproduction under experimental warming in a subalpine meadow. New Phytologist 173: 121-134.
11. Morales, M. A., G. J. Dodge, and D. W. Inouye. 2005. A phenological mid-domain effect in flowering diversity. Oecologia 142(1): 83-89.
10. Inouye, D. W., and F.-E. Wielgolaski. 2003. Phenology of high-altitude climates. Pages 195-214 in: Phenology: An Integrative Environmental Science (M. D. Schwartz, ed.) Kluwer Academic.
9. Saavedra, F., D. W. Inouye, M. V. Price and J. Harte. 2003. Changes in flowering and abundance of Delphinium nuttallianum (Ranunculaceae) in response to a subalpine climate warming experiment. Global Change Biology 9: 885-894.
8. Inouye, D. W., F. Saavedra, and W. Lee-Yang. 2003. Environmental influences on the phenology and abundance of flowering by Androsace septentrionalis L. (Primulaceae). American Journal of Botany 90(6):905-910.
7. Inouye, D. W., M. Morales, and G. Dodge. 2002. Variation in timing and abundance of flowering by Delphinium barbeyi Huth (Ranunculaceae): the roles of snowpack, frost, and La Niña, in the context of climate change. Oecologia 130: 543-550.
6. Inouye, D. W., W. A. Barr, K. B. Armitage, and B. D. Inouye. 2000. Climate change is affecting altitudinal migrants and hibernating species. Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences 97(4): 1630-1633.
5. Inouye, D. W. 2000. The ecological and evolutionary significance of frost in the context of climate change. Ecology Letters 3(5):457-463.
4. Inouye, D. W. and A. D. McGuire. 1991. Effects of snowpack on the timing and abundance of flowering in Delphinium nelsonii: implications for climate change. American Journal of Botany 78(7):997-1001.
3. Inouye, D. W., W. A. Calder and N. M. Waser. 1991. The effect of floral abundance on feeder censuses of hummingbird populations. Condor 93:279-285.
2. Inouye, D. W., and G. H. Pyke. 1988. Pollination biology in the Snowy Mts. of Australia, with comparisons with montane Colorado, U.S.A. Australian Journal of Ecology 13:191-210.
1. Inouye, D. W. 1988. Natural variation in plant and animal populations, and its implications for studies of recovering ecosystems. Pages 39-50 in Cairns, J., editor. Rehabilitating Damaged Ecosystems. CRC Press. Second edition 1995.