2023
- Rudgers, J; Luketich, A; Bacigalupa, M; Baur, L E.; Collins, S; Hall, K; Hou, E; Litvak, M; Luo, Y; Miller, T.E.X.; Newsome, S; Pockman, W; Richardson, A; Rinehart, A; Villatoro-Castañeda, M; Wainwright, B; Watson, S; Yogi, P; Zhou, Y. Infrastructure to factorially manipulate the mean and variance of precipitation in the field. Ecosphere https://doi.org/10.1002/ecs2.4603
- Drees, T.H., Ochocki, B.M., Collins, S.L., and T.E.X. Miller. Demography and dispersal at a grass-shrub ecotone: a spatial integral projection model for woody plant encroachment. Ecological Monographs doi.org/10.1002/ecm.1574
- Fowler, J.C., Donald, M.L., Bronstein, J., and T.E.X. Miller. The geographic footprint of mutualism: how mutualists influence species' range limits. Ecological Monographs 93:e1558
- Donald, M., Galbraith, J.A., Erastova, D.A., Podolyan, A., Miller, T.E.X., and M. Dhami. Urbanization increases diversity in a nectar microbe metacommunity. Environmental Microbiology 24:5654-5665
- Donald, M.L. and T.E.X. Miller. Strong pairwise ant-plant mutualism has limited spillover effects on an ant community. Ecology and Evolution 12:e8524
- Miller, T.E.X. and A. Compagnoni. Two-sex demography, sexual niche differentiation, and the geographic range limits of Texas bluegrass (Poa arachnifera). American Naturalist 200:17-31
- Ellner, S.P., Adler, P.B., Childs, D., Hooker, G., Miller, T.E.X., Rees, M. A critical comparison of integral projection and matrix projection models for demographic analysis: Comment. Ecology 103:e3605
- Dong, T., Zhang, R., Liu, J., †Fowler, J.C., Miller, T.E.X., Xu, X. Warming alters sex-specific responses in leaf defense against insect herbivory in Populus cathayana. Environmental and Experimental Botany 104557
- Lynn, J, Miller, TEX, Rudgers, J. Mammalian herbivores restrict the altitudinal range limits of alpine plants. Ecology Letters 24:1930-1942
- Evers, S.M., Knight, T., Inouye, D.W., Miller, T.E.X., Salguero-Gomez, R., Iler, A., Compagnoni, A. Lagged and dormant-season climate better predict plant vital rates than climate during the growing season. Global Change Biology 27:1927-1941
- Donald, M.L., Bohner, T.F., Kolis, K., Shadow, A., Rudgers, J.R., and T.E.X. Miller. Context-dependent variability in the population prevalence and individual fitness effects of plant-fungal symbiosis. Journal of Ecology 109:847-859
- Liu, J., Zhang, R., Xu, X., Fowler, J.C., Miller, T.E.X., Dong, T. Effect of summer warming on growth, photosynthesis and water status in female and male Populus cathayana: implications for sex-specific drought and heat tolerances. Tree Physiology 40: 1178–1191
- Czachura, K. and T.E.X. Miller. Subtle dimensions of climate change have strong demographic effects on a cactus population in extinction debt. Journal of Ecology 108: 2557-2570
- Miller, T.E.X., Angert, A. L., Brown, C.D., Lee-Yaw, J.A., Lewis, M., Lutscher, F., Marculis, N.G., Melbourne, B.A., Shaw, A.K., Szűcs, M., Tabares, O., Usui, T., Weiss-Lehman, C., Williams, J.L. Eco-evolutionary dynamics of range expansion Ecology 101: e03139
- Gundel, P., Sun, P., Charlton, N., Young, C.A., Miller, T.E.X., Rudgers, J.A. Folivory increases vertical transmission of fungal endophytes that deter herbivores and alter plant tolerance of herbivory. Annals of Botany 125:981-991
- Compagnoni, A., Bibian, A.J., Ochocki, B.M., Levin, S., Zhu, K., and T.E.X. Miller. popler: An R package for extraction and synthesis of population time series from the long-term ecological research (LTER) network. Methods in Ecology and Evolution 11: 258-264
- Ochocki, B.M., Saltz, J.B., and ‡T.E.X. Miller. Demography-dispersal trait correlations modify the eco-evolutionary dynamics of range expansion. American Naturalist 195: 231-246
- Williams, J., Hufbauer, R., and T.E.X. Miller. How evolution modifies the variability of range expansion. Trends in Ecology and Evolution 34: 903-913
- Iler, A.M., Compagnoni, A.C., Inouye, D.W., Williams, J., CaraDonna, P.J., Anderson, A., and T.E.X. Miller. Reproductive losses due to climate change‐induced earlier flowering are not the primary threat to plant population viability in a perennial herb. Journal of Ecology 107: 1931-1943
- Sneck, M.E., Rudgers, J.A., Young, C.A., and T.E.X. Miller. Does host outcrossing disrupt compatibility with heritable symbionts? Oikos 128: 892-903
- Cavazos, B.R., Sneck, M., Bohner, T., †Donald, M.L., Shadow, A., Omacini, M., Rudgers, J.A., and T.E.X. Miller. Testing the roles of vertical transmission and drought stress in the prevalence of heritable fungal endophytes in annual grass populations. New Phytologist 219: 1075-1084
- Eberhart-Phillips, L.J., Küpper, C., Carmona-Isunza, M.C., Vincze, O., Zefania, S., Cruz-López, M., Kosztolányi, A., Miller, T.E.X., Barta, Z., Cuthill, I.C., Burke, T., Székely, T., Hoffman, J.I. and O. Krüger. 2018. Demographic causes of adult sex ratio variation and their consequences for parental cooperation. Nature Communications 9: 1651
- Compagnoni, A., Steigman, K., and T.E.X. Miller. Can’t live with them, can’t live without them? Balancing mating and competition in two-sex populations. Proceedings of the Royal Society Series B 284: 20171999
- Schultz, E.L., Eckberg, J.O., Berg, S.S., Louda, S.M., and T.E.X. Miller. 2017. Native insect herbivory overwhelms context-dependence to limit complex invasion dynamics of exotic weeds. Ecology Letters 20:1374-1384
- Eberhart-Phillips, L.J., C. Küpper, T.E.X. Miller, M. Cruz-López, K.H. Maher, N. dos Remedios, M.A. Stoffel, J.I. Hoffman, O. Krüger, and T. Székely. 2017. Sex-specific early survival drives adult sex ratio bias in snowy plovers and impacts mating system and population growth. Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences 114: E5474–E5481
- Sullivan, L., Li, B., Miller, T.E.X., Neubert, M. and A. Shaw. 2017. Density dependence in demography and dispersal generates fluctuating invasion speeds. Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences 114:5053-5058
- Sneck, M.E.S., Young, C.A.Y., Rudgers, J.A., Charlton, N. and T.E.X. Miller. 2017. Variation in the prevalence and transmission of heritable symbionts across host populations in heterogeneous environments. Microbial Ecology 74:640-653
- Ochocki, B.M. and T.E.X. Miller. 2017. Rapid evolution of dispersal ability makes biological invasions faster and more variable. Nature Communications 8:14315
- Wagner, N.K., Ochocki, B.M., Crawford, K., Compagnoni, A. and T.E.X. Miller. 2017. Genetic mixture of multiple source populations accelerates invasive range expansion. Journal of Animal Ecology 86:21-34
- Editors’ selection for “In Focus” feature by R. Hufbauer: Admixture is a driver rather than a passenger in experimental invasions. Journal of Animal Ecology 86:4-6
- Elderd, B.D. and T.E.X. Miller. 2016. Quantifying demographic uncertainty: Bayesian methods for Integral Projection Models. Ecological Monographs 86:125-144
- Bibian, A.J., Rudgers, J.A., and ‡.E.X. Miller. 2016. The role of host demographic storage in the ecological dynamics of vertically transmitted symbionts. American Naturalist 188:446-459.
- Petry, W.K., Soule, J.D., Iler, A.M., Chicas-Mosier, A, Inouye, D.W., Miller, T.E.X., Mooney, K.A. 2016. Sex-specific responses to climate change in plants alter population sex ratio and performance. Science 353:69-71
- Compagnoni, A., Bibian, A.J., Ochocki, B.M., Rogers, H.S., Schultz, E., Sneck, M.E., Elderd, B.D., Iler, A., Inouye, D., Jacquemyn, H. and T.E.X. Miller. 2016. The effect of demographic correlations on the stochastic population dynamics of perennial plants. Ecological Monographs 86:480-494
- Downey, M.H., Searle, R., Bellur, S., Geiger, A., Maitner, B., Ohm, J., Tuda, M., and T.E.X. Miller. 2015. A comparative approach to testing hypotheses for the evolution of sex-biased dispersal in bean beetles. Ecology and Evolution 5:4819–4828
- Chung, Y., T.E.X. Miller, and J.A. Rudgers. 2015. Fungal symbionts maintain a rare plant population but demographic advantage drives the dominance of a common host. Journal of Ecology 103:967-977
- Williams, J.L., Jacquemyn, H., Ochocki, B., Brys, R. and T.E.X. Miller. 2015. Life history evolution under climate change and its influence on the population dynamics of a long-lived plant. Journal of Ecology 103:798-808
- Ohm, J.R. and T.E.X Miller. 2014. Balancing anti-herbivore benefits and anti-pollinator costs of defensive mutualists. Ecology 95:2924-2935
- Miller, T.E.X. and J.A. Rudgers. 2014. Niche differentiation in the dynamics of host-symbiont interactions: symbiont prevalence as a coexistence problem. American Naturalist 183:506-518
- Miller, T.E.X. 2014. Plant size and reproductive state affect the quantity and quality of rewards to animal mutualists. Journal of Ecology 102:496-507
- Snyder, K.T., Freidenfelds, N., and T.E.X. Miller. 2014. Consequences of sex-selective harvesting and harvest refuges in experimental metapopulations. Oikos 123:309-314
- Miller, T.E.X. and B.D. Inouye. 2013. Sex and stochasticity affect range expansion of experimental invasions. Ecology Letters 16:354-361
- Yule, K.M., Miller, T.E.X. and J.A. Rudgers. 2013. Costs, benefits, and loss of vertically transmitted symbionts affect host population dynamics. Oikos 122:1512-1520
- Williams, J.L., Miller, T.E.X., and S.P. Ellner. 2012. Avoiding unintentional eviction from integral projection models. Ecology 93:2008-2014
- Miller, T.E.X., J.L. Williams, E. Jongejans, R. Brys, and H. Jacquemyn. 2012. Evolutionary demography of iteroparous plants: incorporating non-lethal costs of reproduction into integral projection models. Proceedings of the Royal Society Series B 279:2831-2840
- Rudgers, J.A., Miller, T.E.X., Ziegler, S.M., and K.D. Craven. 2012. There are many ways to be a mutualist: endophytic fungus reduces plant survival but increases population growth. Ecology 93:565-574
- Lee, C.T., Miller, T.E.X., and B.D. Inouye. Consumer effects on the vital rates of their resource can determine the outcome of competition between consumers. American Naturalist 178:452-463
- Miller, T.E.X. and B.D. Inouye. 2011. Confronting two-sex demographic models with data. Ecology 92: 2141-2151
- Miller, T.E.X. and V.H.W. Rudolf. 2011. Thinking inside the box: community-level consequences of stage-structured populations. Trends in Ecology and Evolution 26:457-466
- Miller, T.E.X., Shaw, A.K., Inouye, B.D., and M.A. Neubert. 2011. Sex-biased dispersal and the speed of two-sex invasions. American Naturalist 177:549-561 (Miller and Shaw contributed equally)
- Holland, J.N., Chamberlain, S.A., and T.E.X. Miller. 2011. Consequences of ants and extrafloral nectar for a pollinating seed-consuming mutualism: ant satiation, floral distraction, or plant defense? Oikos 120: 381-388
- Miller, T.E.X., J.C. Legaspi, and B. Legaspi. 2010. Experimental test of biotic resistance to an invasive herbivore provided by potential plant mutualists. Biological Invasions 12: 3563-3577
- Miller, T.E.X. and B. Tenhumberg. 2010. Contributions of demography and dispersal parameters to the spatial spread of a stage-structured insect invasion. Ecological Applications 20: 620-633
- Rominger, A.J., T.E.X. Miller, and S.L. Collins. 2009. Relative contributions of neutral and niche-based processes to the structure of a desert grassland grasshopper community. Oecologia 161:791-800
- Robbins, M. and T.E.X. Miller. 2009. Patterns of ant activity on Opuntia stricta (Cactaceae), a native host-plant of the invasive cactus moth, Cactoblastis cactorum (Lepidoptera: Pyralidae). Florida Entomologist 92: 391-393
- Miller, T.E.X., S.M. Louda, K.A. Rose, and J. Eckberg. 2009. Impacts of insect herbivory on cactus population dynamics: experimental demography across an environmental gradient. Ecological Monographs 79: 155-172
- Takahashi, M., S.M. Louda, T.E.X. Miller, and C.W. O’Brien. 2009. Occurrence of Trichosirocalus horridus (Coleoptera: Curculionidae) on native Cirsium altissimum versus exotic C. vulgare in North American tallgrass prairie. Environmental Entomology 38: 731-740
- Miller, T.E.X., B. Tenhumberg, and S.M. Louda. 2008. Herbivore-mediated ecological costs of reproduction shape the life history of an iteroparous plant. American Naturalist 171: 141-149
- Winner of the 2009 American Naturalist best student paper award
- Miller, T.E.X. 2008. Bottom-up, top-down, and within-trophic level pressures on a cactus-feeding insect. Ecological Entomology 33: 261-268
- Miller, T.E.X. 2007. Does having multiple partners weaken the benefits of facultative mutualism? A test with cacti and cactus-tending ants. Oikos 116: 500-512
- Miller, T.E.X. 2007. Demographic models reveal the shape of density dependence for a specialist insect herbivore on variable host-plants. Journal of Animal Ecology 76: 722-729
- Miller, T.E.X., A.J. Tyre, and S.M. Louda. 2006. Plant reproductive allocation predicts herbivore dynamics across spatial and temporal scales. American Naturalist 168: 608-616