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Bowne, D.R., J.D. Peles, and G.W. Barrett. 1999. Effects of landscape spatial structure on movement patterns of the hispid cotton rat (Sigmodon hispidus). Landscape Ecology 14:53-65. [pdf reprint]
Cushman S.A., K.S. McKelvey, J. Hayden, M.K. Schwartz. 2006. Gene Flow in Complex Landscapes: Testing Multiple Hypotheses with Causal Modeling. American Naturalist 168:486.
Danielson, B.J., and M.W. Hubbard. 2000. The influence of corridors on the movement behavior of individual Peromyscus polionotus in experimental landscapes. Landscape Ecology 15:323-331. [pdf reprint]
Damschen, E.I., N.M. Haddad, J.L. Orrock, J.J. Tewksbury, and D.J. Levey. 2006. Corridors increase plant species richness at large scales. Science 313:1284-1286. [pdf reprint] [supplemental materials]
Fried, J.H., D.J. Levey, and J.A. Hogsette. 2005. Habitat corridors function as both drift fences and movement conduits for dispersing flies. Oecologia 143:645-651. [pdf reprint]
Haddad, N.M. 1999. Corridor use predicted from behaviors at habitat boundaries. The American Naturalist 153:215-227. [pdf reprint]
Haddad, N.M. 1999. Corridor and distance effects on interpatch movements: a landscape experiment with butterflies. Ecological Applications 9:612-622. [pdf reprint]
Haddad, N.M. and K. Baum. 1999. An experimental test of corridor effects on butterfly densities. Ecological Applications 9:623-633. [pdf reprint]
Haddad, N.M. 2000. Corridor length and patch colonization by a butterfly, Junonia coenia. Conservation Biology 14:738-745. [pdf reprint]
Haddad, N.M., D.R. Bowne, A. Cunningham, B. Danielson, D. Levey, S. Sargent, and T. Spira. 2003. Corridor use by diverse taxa. Ecology 84:609-615. [pdf reprint]
Haddad, N.M. and J.J. Tewksbury. 2005. Low quality habitat corridors as movement conduits for two butterfly species. Ecological Applications 15:250-257. [pdf reprint]
Haddad, N.M. and J.J. Tewksbury. Impacts of corridors on populations and communities. In K. Crooks and M. Sanjayan, eds. Connectivity Conservation, Cambridge University Press, Cambridge, UK. In press.
Hudgens, B.R. and N.M. Haddad. 2003. Predicting which species will benefit from corridors in fragmented landscapes from population growth models. The American Naturalist 161:808-820. [pdf reprint]
Lawler, J.J., D. White, R.P. Neilson, A.R. Blaustein. 2006. Predicting climate-induced range-shifts: model differences and model reliability. Global Change Biology 12:1568.
Levey, D.J., B.M. Bolker, J.J. Tewksbury, S. Sargent, and N.M. Haddad. 2005. Effects of landscape corridors on seed dispersal by birds. Science 309:146-148. [pdf reprint] [supplemental materials] [review article in Science]
Levey, D.J., B.M. Bolker, J.J. Tewksbury, S. Sargent, and N.M. Haddad. 2005. Landscape corridors: Possible dangers? (response). Science 310:779-783. [pdf reprint]
Levey, D.J. and S. Sargent. 2000. A simple method for tracking vertebrate-dispersed seeds. Ecology 81:267-274. [pdf reprint]
Mabry, K.E., and G.W. Barrett. 2002. Effects of corridors on home range sizes and interpatch movements of three small mammal species. Landscape Ecology 17:629-636. [pdf reprint]
Mabry, K.E., E.A. Dreelin, and G.W. Barrett. 2003. Influence of landscape elements on population densities and habitat use of three small-mammal species. Journal of Mammalogy 84:20-25. [pdf reprint]
Morris, W.F, D.F. Doak. 2005. How general are the determinants of the stochastic population growth rate across nearby sites? Ecological Monographs 75:119.
Orrock, J. L. 2005. Conservation corridors affect the fixation of novel alleles. Conservation Genetics 6:623-630. [pdf reprint]
Orrock, J.L. and E.I. Damschen. 2005. Corridors cause differential seed predation. Ecological Applications 15:793-798. [pdf reprint]
Orrock, John L. and B. J. Danielson. 2005. Patch shape, connectivity, and foraging by the oldfield mouse, Peromyscus polionotus. Journal of Mammalogy 86:569-575. [pdf reprint]
Orrock, J.L., B. J. Danielson, M. J. Burns, and D. J. Levey. 2003. Spatial ecology of predatory-prey interactions: corridors and patch shape influence seed predation. Ecology 84:2589-2599. [pdf reprint]
Orrock, J. L., D. J. Levey, B. J. Danielson, and E. I. Damschen. 2006. Seed predation, not seed dispersal, explains the landscape-level abundance of an early-successional plant. Journal of Ecology 94:838-845. [pdf reprint]
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Sisk, T.D., and N.M. Haddad. 2002. Incorporating the effects of habitat edges into landscape models: Effective area models for management. Pp. 208-240 in J. Liu and W.W. Taylor, Integrating landscape ecology into natural resource management, Cambridge University Press, Cambridge, UK.
Tewksbury, J.J., D.J. Levey, N.M. Haddad, S. Sargent, J.L. Orrock, A. Weldon, B.J. Danielson, J. Brinkerhoff, E.I. Damschen, and P. Townsend. 2002. Corridors affect plants, animals, and their interactions in fragmented landscapes. Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences 99:12923-12926. [pdf reprint]
Townsend, P. A. and D. J. Levey. 2005. An experimental test of whether habitat corridors affect pollen transfer. Ecology 86:466-475. [pdf reprint]
Weldon, A.J. 2006. How corridors reduce Indigo Bunting nest success. Conservation Biology 20:1300-1305. [pdf reprint]
Weldon, A.J. and N.M. Haddad. 2005. The effects of patch shape on Indigo Buntings: evidence for an ecological trap. Ecology 86:1422-1431. [pdf reprint]