First Name: Nathan J.Last Name: SandersPublications: YearPublication 1996"Foraging behavior of the western wood-pewee in the Colorado Front Range" in CFO Journal 2000"The effects of interspecific interactions on resource use and behavior in a desert ant" in Oecologia 2001"Long-term dynamics of the distribution of the invasive Argentine ant, Linepithema humile, and native ant taxa in northern California" in Oecologia 2002"Species-area curves, homogenization and the loss of global diversity" in Evolutionary Ecology Research 2002"The effects of proximity and colony age on interspecific interference competition between the desert ants Pogonomyrmex barbatus and Aphaenogaster cockerelli" in American Midland Naturalist 2002"Elevational gradients in ant species richness: area, geometry, and Rapoport's rule" in Ecography 2002"Resources and the flexible allocation of work in the desert ant, Aphaenogaster cockerelli" in Insectes Sociaux 2003"Biological invaders in a greenhouse world: will elevated CO2 fuel plant invasions?" in Frontiers in Ecology and the Environment 2003"Patterns of ant species richness along elevational gradients in an arid ecosystem" in Global Ecology and Biogeography 2003"Community disassembly by an invasive species" in PNAS 2003"Resource-dependent interactions and the organization of desert ant communities" in Ecology 2004"Multitrophic effects of elevated atmospheric CO2 on understory plant and arthropod communities" in Environmental Entomology 2004"The interactive effects of climate, life history, and interspecific neighbours on mortality in a population of seed harvester ants" in Ecological Entomology 2004"Immediate effects of fire on the invasive Argentine ant, Linepithema humile" in Southwestern Naturalist 2005"The effects of fire, local environment and time on ant assemblages in fens and forests" in Diversity and Distributions 2005"Aphid-tending ants affect secondary users in leaf shelters and rates of herbivory on Salix hookeriana in a coastal dune habitat" in American Midland Naturalist 2006"The biogeography of prediction error: why does the introduced range of the fire ant over-predict its native range?" in Global Ecology and Biogeography 2006"When does diversity fit null model predictions? Scale and range size mediate the mid-domain effect" in Global Ecology and Biogeography 2007"Temperature, but not productivity or geometry, predicts elevational diversity gradients in ants across spatial grains" in Global Ecology and Biogeography 2007"Insects mediate the effects of propagule supply and resource availability on a plant invasion" in Ecology 2007"Assembly rules of ground-foraging ant assemblages are contingent on disturbance, habitat and spatial scale" in Journal of Biogeography 2007"The recovery of ant communities in regenerating temperate conifer forests" in Forest Ecology and Management 2008"Striking a balance between the literature load and walks in the woods" in Frontiers in Ecology and the Environment 2008"Data sets matter, but so do evolution and ecology" in Global Ecology and Biogeography 2008"Disparate effects of plant genotypic diversity on foliage and litter arthropod communities" in Oecologia 2009"Plant genetics shapes inquiline community structure across spatial scales" in Ecology Letters 2010"Species interactions and thermal constraints on ant community structure" in Oikos 2011"Influence of fire on a rare serpentine plant assemblage: A 5-year study of Darlingtonia fens" in American Journal of Botany 2012"Stochastic and deterministic drivers of spatial and temporal turnover in breeding bird communities" in Global Ecology and Biogeography 2016"The distribution and diversity of insular ants: do exotic species play by different rules?" in Global Ecology and Biogeography 2020"Salty, mild, and low plant biomass grasslands increase top-heaviness of invertebrate trophic pyramids" in Global Ecology and Biogeography 2021"The influence of aboveground and belowground species composition on spatial turnover in nutrient pools in alpine grasslands" in Global Ecology and Biogeography 2023"Nutrient use by tropical ant communities varies among three extensive elevational gradients: A cross-continental comparison" in Global Ecology and Biogeography