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Dive into the research topics where Sarah E. Gilman is active.

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Featured researches published by Sarah E. Gilman.


Trends in Ecology and Evolution | 2010

A framework for community interactions under climate change.

Sarah E. Gilman; Mark C. Urban; Joshua J. Tewksbury; George W. Gilchrist; Robert D. Holt

Predicting the impacts of climate change on species is one of the biggest challenges that ecologists face. Predictions routinely focus on the direct effects of climate change on individual species, yet interactions between species can strongly influence how climate change affects organisms at every scale by altering their individual fitness, geographic ranges and the structure and dynamics of their community. Failure to incorporate these interactions limits the ability to predict responses of species to climate change. We propose a framework based on ideas from global-change biology, community ecology, and invasion biology that uses community modules to assess how species interactions shape responses to climate change.


Scientific Data | 2016

Long-term, high frequency in situ measurements of intertidal mussel bed temperatures using biomimetic sensors

Brian Helmuth; Francis Choi; Allison Matzelle; Jessica L Torossian; Scott L Morello; K. A. S. Mislan; Lauren Yamane; Denise Strickland; P. Lauren Szathmary; Sarah E. Gilman; Alyson Tockstein; Thomas J. Hilbish; Michael T. Burrows; Anne Marie Power; Elizabeth Gosling; Christopher D. G. Harley; Michael T. Nishizaki; Emily Carrington; Bruce A. Menge; Laura E. Petes; Melissa M. Foley; Angela Johnson; Megan Poole; Mae Noble; Erin Richmond; Matt Robart; Jonathan Robinson; Jerod Sapp; Jackie Sones; Bernardo R. Broitman

At a proximal level, the physiological impacts of global climate change on ectothermic organisms are manifest as changes in body temperatures. Especially for plants and animals exposed to direct solar radiation, body temperatures can be substantially different from air temperatures. We deployed biomimetic sensors that approximate the thermal characteristics of intertidal mussels at 71 sites worldwide, from 1998-present. Loggers recorded temperatures at 10–30 min intervals nearly continuously at multiple intertidal elevations. Comparisons against direct measurements of mussel tissue temperature indicated errors of ~2.0–2.5 °C, during daily fluctuations that often exceeded 15°–20 °C. Geographic patterns in thermal stress based on biomimetic logger measurements were generally far more complex than anticipated based only on ‘habitat-level’ measurements of air or sea surface temperature. This unique data set provides an opportunity to link physiological measurements with spatially- and temporally-explicit field observations of body temperature.


Journal of Animal Ecology | 2011

Heating up relations between cold fish: competition modifies responses to climate change

Mark C. Urban; Robert D. Holt; Sarah E. Gilman; Joshua J. Tewksbury

Most predictions about species responses to climate change ignore species interactions. Helland and colleagues (2011) test whether this assumption is valid by evaluating whether ice cover affects competition between brown trout [Salmo trutta (L.)] and Arctic charr [Salvelinus alpines (L.)]. They show that increasing ice cover correlates with lower trout biomass when Arctic charr co-occur, but not in charrs absence. In experiments, charr grew better in the cold, dark environments that typify ice-covered lakes. Decreasing ice cover with warmer winters could mean more trout and fewer charr. More generally, their results provide an excellent example, suggesting that species interactions can strongly modify responses to climate change.


Science | 1995

Climate-related, long-term faunal changes in a California rocky intertidal community

James P. Barry; Charles H. Baxter; Raphael Sagarin; Sarah E. Gilman


Ecological Monographs | 2006

MOSAIC PATTERNS OF THERMAL STRESS IN THE ROCKY INTERTIDAL ZONE: IMPLICATIONS FOR CLIMATE CHANGE

Brian Helmuth; Bernardo R. Broitman; Carol A. Blanchette; Sarah E. Gilman; Patricia M. Halpin; Christopher D. G. Harley; Michael O'Donnell; Gretchen E. Hofmann; Bruce A. Menge; Denise Strickland


Ecology Letters | 2011

Do species’ traits predict recent shifts at expanding range edges?

Amy L. Angert; Lisa G. Crozier; Leslie J. Rissler; Sarah E. Gilman; Josh J. Tewksbury; Amanda J. Chunco


The Journal of Experimental Biology | 2010

Organismal climatology: analyzing environmental variability at scales relevant to physiological stress

Brian Helmuth; Bernardo R. Broitman; Lauren Yamane; Sarah E. Gilman; Katharine J. Mach; K. A. S. Mislan; Mark W. Denny


Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences of the United States of America | 2006

Variation in the sensitivity of organismal body temperature to climate change over local and geographic scales

Sarah E. Gilman; David S. Wethey; Brian Helmuth


Journal of Biogeography | 2005

A test of Brown's principle in the intertidal limpet Collisella scabra (Gould, 1846)

Sarah E. Gilman


Marine Ecology Progress Series | 2009

Opposite responses by an intertidal predator to increasing aquatic and aerial temperatures

Lauren Yamane; Sarah E. Gilman

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Denise Strickland

University of South Carolina

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Lauren Yamane

University of South Carolina

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Hilary Hayford

University of Washington

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