H.E. James Hammond
Natural Resources Canada
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Featured researches published by H.E. James Hammond.
Canadian Entomologist | 2008
David W. Langor; H.E. James Hammond; John R. Spence; Joshua Jacobs; Tyler P. Cobb
Saproxylic insect assemblages inhabiting dead wood in Canadian forests are highly diverse and variable but quite poorly understood. Adequate assessment of these assemblages poses significant challenges with respect to sampling, taxonomy, and analysis. Their assessment is nonetheless critical to attaining the broad goals of sustainable forest management because such species are disproportionately threatened elsewhere by the reductions in dead wood generally associated with commercial exploitation of northern forests. The composition of the saproxylic fauna is influenced by many factors, including tree species, degree of decay, stand age, and cause of tree death. Wildfire and forest harvesting have differential impacts on saproxylic insect assemblages and on their recovery in postdisturbance stands. Exploration of saproxylic insect responses to variable retention harvesting and experimental burns is contributing to the development of prescriptions for conserving saproxylic insects in boreal forests. Understanding of processes that determine diversity patterns and responses of saproxylic insects would benefit from increased attention to natural history. Such work should aim to provide a habitat-classification system for dead wood to better identify habitats (and associated species) at risk as a result of forest management. This tool could also be used to improve strategies to better maintain saproxylic organisms and their central nutrient-cycling functions in managed forests.
ZooKeys | 2014
Jan Klimaszewski; Reginald P. Webster; David W. Langor; Caroline Bourdon; H.E. James Hammond; Greg R. Pohl; Benoit Godin
Abstract Four species of Gnathusa Fenyes (G. alfacaribou Klimaszewski & Langor, G. caribou Lohse, G. eva Fenyes, and G. tenuicornis Fenyes) occur in the Nearctic and in Canada. Three species of Ocyusa Kraatz (O. asperula Casey, O. californica Bernhauer, O. canadensis Lohse), and three species of Mniusa Mulsant and Ray (M. minutissima (Klimaszewski & Langor), M. yukonensis (Klimaszewski & Godin), and M. odelli Klimaszewski & Webster, sp. n.), are known from the Nearctic and all but O. californica occur in Canada. The recently described Gnathusa minutissima Klimaszewski and Langor and Ocyusa yukonensis Klimaszewski and Godin, are transferred here to the genus Mniusa Mulsant & Rey. New provincial and state records are reported for: G. eva (Alberta), G. tenuicornis (Alberta, Oregon, and New Brunswick), O. canadensis (New Brunswick and Newfoundland), M. minutissima (New Brunswick), and M. yukonensis (Nova Scotia, New Brunswick, Quebec, and British Columbia). The female of M. yukonensis was discovered and is illustrated for the first time. The genus Mniusa is reported for the first time from Canada and represents the first confirmed generic record for North America. Keys for identification of all Canadian species, images of body and genital structures, maps showing distribution mainly in Canada, and new bionomics data are provided.
ZooKeys | 2016
Jan Klimaszewski; David W. Langor; H.E. James Hammond; Caroline Bourdon
Abstract A new species, Anomognathus athabascensis Klimaszewski, Hammond & Langor, sp. n., and nine new provincial records including one new country record of aleocharine beetles are presented for the province of Alberta. Diagnostics, images of habitus and genital structures, distribution, natural history information and new locality data are provided for the newly recorded species. A checklist for all recorded aleocharines from Alberta is updated.
Canadian Journal of Forest Research | 2004
H.E. James Hammond; David W. Langor; John R. Spence
Canadian Journal of Forest Research | 2001
H.E. James Hammond; David W. Langor; John R. Spence
Canadian Journal of Forest Research | 2005
Jan Klimaszewski; David W. Langor; Timothy T. Work; Georges Pelletier; H.E. James Hammond
Archive | 1997
John R. Spence; David W. Langor; H.E. James Hammond; Gregory R. Pohl
Forest Ecology and Management | 2017
Anna Dabros; H.E. James Hammond; Jaime Pinzon; Brad Pinno; David W. Langor
Canadian Entomologist | 2003
Christopher M. Buddle; H.E. James Hammond
Forest Ecology and Management | 2017
H.E. James Hammond; David W. Langor; John R. Spence