Brad Butterfield

Brad Butterfield

Northern Arizona University

H-index: 31

North America-United States

About Brad Butterfield

Brad Butterfield, With an exceptional h-index of 31 and a recent h-index of 26 (since 2020), a distinguished researcher at Northern Arizona University, specializes in the field of Ecology, Evolution, Global Change Biology.

His recent articles reflect a diverse array of research interests and contributions to the field:

Divergent physiological responses of hydric and mesic riparian plant species to a Colorado River experimental flow

Modeling the impacts of Glen Canyon Dam operations on Colorado River resources

US Geological Survey Grand Canyon Monitoring and Research Center: Proceedings of the fiscal year 2023 annual reporting meeting to the Glen Canyon Dam Adaptive Management Program

Inundation Tolerance, rather than Drought Tolerance, predicts riparian plant distributions along a local hydrologic gradient

Assessing the accuracy of paired and random sampling for quantifying plant–plant interactions in natural communities

Do seeding and seedling planting result in similar restored plant communities?

Plant water‐use strategies predict restoration success across degraded drylands

Soil surface treatments and precipitation timing determine seedling development across southwestern US restoration sites

Brad Butterfield Information

University

Position

Associate Research Professor

Citations(all)

4956

Citations(since 2020)

3743

Cited By

2421

hIndex(all)

31

hIndex(since 2020)

26

i10Index(all)

53

i10Index(since 2020)

51

Email

University Profile Page

Google Scholar

Brad Butterfield Skills & Research Interests

Ecology

Evolution

Global Change Biology

Top articles of Brad Butterfield

Divergent physiological responses of hydric and mesic riparian plant species to a Colorado River experimental flow

Plant Ecology

2024/2

Modeling the impacts of Glen Canyon Dam operations on Colorado River resources

2024

US Geological Survey Grand Canyon Monitoring and Research Center: Proceedings of the fiscal year 2023 annual reporting meeting to the Glen Canyon Dam Adaptive Management Program

2024

Inundation Tolerance, rather than Drought Tolerance, predicts riparian plant distributions along a local hydrologic gradient

Wetlands

2024/1

Assessing the accuracy of paired and random sampling for quantifying plant–plant interactions in natural communities

Population Ecology

2024/1

Do seeding and seedling planting result in similar restored plant communities?

Applied Vegetation Science

2023/10

Plant water‐use strategies predict restoration success across degraded drylands

Journal of Applied Ecology

2023/6

Soil surface treatments and precipitation timing determine seedling development across southwestern US restoration sites

Ecological Applications

2023/6

Provenance, genotype, and flooding influence growth and resource acquisition characteristics in a clonal, riparian shrub

American Journal of Botany

2023/2

Assessment of riparian vegetation patterns and change downstream from Glen Canyon Dam from 2014 to 2019

2023

The hydroclimate niche: A tool for predicting and managing riparian plant community responses to streamflow seasonality

River Research and Applications

2023/1

Functional composition of plant communities mediates biomass effects on ecosystem service recovery across an experimental dryland restoration network

Functional Ecology

2022/9

Primary production responses to extreme changes in North American Monsoon precipitation vary by elevation and plant functional composition through time

Journal of Ecology

2022/9

Directional selection shifts trait distributions of planted species in dryland restoration

Journal of Ecology

2022/3

Does restoration of plant diversity trigger concomitant soil microbiome changes in dryland ecosystems?

Journal of Applied Ecology

2022/2

Protocol for installing and monitoring a RestoreNet restoration field trial network site

2022

Hydrologic and geomorphic effects on riparian plant species occurrence and encroachment: remote sensing of 360 km of the Colorado River in Grand Canyon

AGU Fall Meeting Abstracts

2021/12

Ontogenetic trait shifts: Seedlings display high trait variability during early stages of development

Functional Ecology

2021/11

Riverine complexity and life history inform restoration in riparian environments in the southwestern United States

Restoration Ecology

2021/9

See List of Professors in Brad Butterfield University(Northern Arizona University)

Co-Authors

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