On the meaning of competition and the mechanisms of competitive superiority. Functional Ecology 1:304-315. Posted December 14, 2017 in Bibliographies
Plant Strategies and the Dynamics and Structure of Plant Communities. Monographs in Population Biology, Princeton University Press. 360 pp. (Includes a 61 page chapter on Cedar Creek , and new theory relevant to Cedar Creek and cross-site comparisons.) Posted December 14, 2017 in Bibliographies
Competition, nutrient reduction, and the competitive neighborhood of a bunchgrass. Functional Ecology 3:215-219. Posted December 14, 2017 in Bibliographies
Discussion: Population dynamics and species interactions. Pages 89-100 in J. Roughgarden, R. M. May and S. A. Levin, Eds., Perspectives in Ecological Theory. Princeton University Press. Posted December 14, 2017 in Bibliographies
Ecological experimentation: strengths and conceptual problems. Pages 136-157 in G. E. Likens, Ed., Long-Term Studies in Ecology. Springer-Verlag, 1989. Posted December 14, 2017 in Bibliographies
Growth of old field herbs on a nitrogen gradient. Functional Ecology 3:425-438. Posted December 14, 2017 in Bibliographies
Constraints and tradeoffs: toward a predictive theory of competition and succession. Oikos 58:3-15. (The Per Brink Ecology Lecture). Posted December 14, 2017 in Bibliographies
Mechanisms of plant competition for nutrients: the elements of a predictive theory of competition. Pages 117-141 in J. Grace and D. Tilman, Eds., Perspectives on Plant Competition. Academic Press, New York. Posted December 14, 2017 in Bibliographies
Relative growth rates and plant allocation patterns. The American Naturalist 138:1269-1275. Posted December 14, 2017 in Bibliographies
The schism between theory and ardent empiricism: a reply to Shipley and Peters. The American Naturalist 138:1283-1286. Posted December 14, 2017 in Bibliographies