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Charles Canham

Levine, Carrie R., Raymond J. Winchcombe, Charles D. Canham, Lynn M. Christenson, and Margaret L. Ronsheim. 2011. “Effects of Deer Exclusion on Seed Banks and Sapling Regeneration in Northeast Forests”. Northeast. Nat.
Busby, P.E., and Charles D. Canham. 2011. “An Exotic Pest and Pathogen Disease Complex Reduces Aboveground Tree Biomass in Temperate Forests of Eastern North America”. Can. J. For. Res. 41: 401-11.
Comita, L.S., J. Thompson, Maria Uriarte, I. Jonckheere, Charles D. Canham, and J.K. Zimmerman. 2010. “Interactive Effects of Land Use History and Natural Disturbance on Seedling Dynamics in a Subtropical Forest”. Ecol. Appl. 20: 1270-84.
Martin, P. H., and Charles D. Canham. 2010. “Dispersal and Recruitment Limitation in Native Versus Exotic Tree Species: Life-History Strategies and Janzen-Connell Effects”. Oikos 119: 807-24. http://www.caryinstitute.org/reprints/Martin_2010_Oikos.pdf.
Katz, D. S. W., Gary M. Lovett, Charles D. Canham, and C. M. O’Reilly. 2010. “Legacies of Land Use History Diminish over 22 Years in a Forest in Southeastern New York”. J. Torrey Bot. Soc. 137: 236-51. http://www.caryinstitute.org/reprints/katz_lovett_2010_torrey.pdf.
Martin, P. H., Charles D. Canham, and Richard K. Kobe. 2010. “Divergence from the Growth-Survival Trade-off and Extreme High Growth Rates Drive Patterns of Exotic Tree Invasions in Closed-Canopy Forests”. J. Ecol. 98: 778-89.
Gravel, D., Charles D. Canham, M. Beaudet, and C. Messier. 2010. “Shade Tolerance, Canopy Gaps and Mechanisms of Coexistence of Forest Trees”. Oikos 119: 475-84.
Bigelow, S. W., and Charles D. Canham. 2010. “Evidence That Soil Aluminum Enforces Site Fidelity of Southern New England Forest Trees”. Rhodora 112: 1-21.
Canham, Charles D., J. Thompson, J.K. Zimmerman, and Maria Uriarte. 2010. “Variation in Susceptibility to Hurricane Damage As a Function of Storm Intensity in Puerto Rican Tree Species”. Biotropica 42: 87-94.
Canham, Charles D., and R.Q. Thomas. 2010. “Frequency, Not Relative Abundance, of Temperate Tree Species Varies Along Climate Gradients in Eastern North America”. Ecology 91: 3433-40.