diana tomback

diana tomback

University of Colorado Denver

H-index: 43

North America-United States

About diana tomback

diana tomback, With an exceptional h-index of 43 and a recent h-index of 20 (since 2020), a distinguished researcher at University of Colorado Denver, specializes in the field of Forest ecology, conservation biology, applied ecology, plant-animal interactions.

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

Differences in functional ecology of two western North American ‘five-needle’white pines in treeline communities

Recruitment at treeline in the Central Rocky Mountains shifts in favor of a drought-tolerant species as climate water deficit increases

Clark's nutcracker forest community visitation: Whitebark pine maintains a keystone seed disperser

Limitations to propagule dispersal will constrain postfire recovery of plants and fungi in western coniferous forests

Applying Convolutional Neural Network (CNN) Classification of WorldView-3 Satellite Imagery to Distinguish Vegetation Species at Treeline in Rocky Mountain National Park

Effective actions for managing resilient high elevation five-needle white pine forests in western North America at multiple scales under changing climates

Tamm review: Current and recommended management practices for the restoration of whitebark pine (Pinus albicaulis Engelm.), an imperiled high-elevation Western North American …

Why this special issue is focused on the high elevation five-needle white pines

diana tomback Information

University

Position

Professor of Integrative Biology

Citations(all)

6536

Citations(since 2020)

1510

Cited By

5696

hIndex(all)

43

hIndex(since 2020)

20

i10Index(all)

94

i10Index(since 2020)

45

Email

University Profile Page

University of Colorado Denver

Google Scholar

View Google Scholar Profile

diana tomback Skills & Research Interests

Forest ecology

conservation biology

applied ecology

plant-animal interactions

Top articles of diana tomback

Title

Journal

Author(s)

Publication Date

Differences in functional ecology of two western North American ‘five-needle’white pines in treeline communities

Diana Tomback

Laurel Sindewald

2024/3/7

Recruitment at treeline in the Central Rocky Mountains shifts in favor of a drought-tolerant species as climate water deficit increases

Laurel Sindewald

Diana Tomback

2024/3/7

Clark's nutcracker forest community visitation: Whitebark pine maintains a keystone seed disperser

Ecology and Evolution

Thomas H McLaren

Diana F Tomback

Nels Grevstad

Michael B Wunder

Walter Wehtje

...

2023/12

Limitations to propagule dispersal will constrain postfire recovery of plants and fungi in western coniferous forests

BioScience

Nathan S Gill

Monica G Turner

Carissa D Brown

Sydney I Glassman

Sandra L Haire

...

2022/4

Applying Convolutional Neural Network (CNN) Classification of WorldView-3 Satellite Imagery to Distinguish Vegetation Species at Treeline in Rocky Mountain National Park

AGU Fall Meeting Abstracts

Laurel Sindewald

Matthew Cross

Ted A Scambos

Ryan Lagerquist

Peter Anthamatten

...

2022/12

Effective actions for managing resilient high elevation five-needle white pine forests in western North America at multiple scales under changing climates

Robert E Keane

Anna W Schoettle

Diana F Tomback

2022/2/1

Tamm review: Current and recommended management practices for the restoration of whitebark pine (Pinus albicaulis Engelm.), an imperiled high-elevation Western North American …

Diana F Tomback

Robert E Keane

Anna W Schoettle

Richard A Sniezko

Melissa B Jenkins

...

2022/10/15

Why this special issue is focused on the high elevation five-needle white pines

Forest Ecology and Management. 521: 120425.

Robert E Keane II

2022

Integrating forest health conditions and species adaptive capacities to infer future trajectories of the high elevation five-needle white pines

Anna W Schoettle

Kelly S Burns

Shawn T McKinney

Jodie Krakowski

Kristen M Waring

...

2022/10/1

Field Spectroradiometer Methods for Remotely Identifying Treeline Vegetation Species: A Case Study Using Limber Pine in Rocky Mountain National Park

Laurel A Sindewald

Matthew D Cross

Ted Scambos

Diana F Tomback

Peter J Anthamatten

2022

The National Whitebark Pine Restoration Plan: Restoration model for the high elevation five-needle white pines

Diana F Tomback

Eric Sprague

2022/10/1

Soil moisture regime and canopy closure structure subalpine understory development during the first three decades following fire

Forest Ecology and Management

Andrew J Andrade

Diana F Tomback

Timothy R Seastedt

Sabine Mellmann-Brown

2021/3/1

Post‐fire conifer regeneration hinders digital estimation of understorey plant cover in subalpine forest vegetation

Applied Vegetation Science

Brandi E Wheeler

Andrew J Andrade

Elizabeth R Pansing

Diana F Tomback

2021/7

Climate‐altered fire regimes may increase extirpation risk in an upper subalpine conifer species of management concern

Ecosphere

Elizabeth R Pansing

Diana F Tomback

Michael B Wunder

2020/8

Community Structure and Functional Role of Limber Pine (Pinus flexilis) in Treeline Communities in Rocky Mountain National Park

Forests

Laurel A Sindewald

Diana F Tomback

Eric R Neumeyer

2020/8/1

Temporal and energetic drivers of seed resource use by Clark's nutcracker, keystone seed disperser of coniferous forests

Ecosphere

Tyler J Williams

Diana F Tomback

Nels Grevstad

Kristin Broms

2020/3

See List of Professors in diana tomback University(University of Colorado Denver)

Co-Authors

H-index: 86
William K Smith

William K Smith

Wake Forest University

H-index: 57
George P. Malanson

George P. Malanson

University of Iowa

H-index: 52
David Pollock

David Pollock

University of Colorado Denver

H-index: 47
Travis L. DeVault

Travis L. DeVault

University of Georgia

H-index: 36
Andrew G. Bunn

Andrew G. Bunn

Western Washington University

H-index: 30
Matthew D Johnson

Matthew D Johnson

Humboldt State University

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