Paul R. Martin

Paul R. Martin

Queens University

H-index: 33

Asia-Bangladesh

About Paul R. Martin

Paul R. Martin, With an exceptional h-index of 33 and a recent h-index of 21 (since 2020), a distinguished researcher at Queens University, specializes in the field of Evolutionary Ecology, Ornithology.

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

The competitive exclusion–tolerance rule explains habitat partitioning among co‐occurring species of burying beetles

Rare edges and abundant cores: range-wide variation in abundance in North American birds

Urban tolerance does not protect against population decline in North American birds

A test of the competitive ability–cold tolerance trade‐off hypothesis in seasonally breeding beetles

Behavioral dominance interactions between two species of burying beetles (Nicrophorus orbicollis and Nicrophorus pustulatus)

Variation in foraging strategies of New Zealand albatross species within a dominance hierarchy

Color as an interspecific badge of status: A comparative test

A case for the “Competitive exclusion–tolerance rule” as a general cause of species turnover along environmental gradients

Paul R. Martin Information

University

Position

Department of Biology

Citations(all)

9637

Citations(since 2020)

3705

Cited By

7546

hIndex(all)

33

hIndex(since 2020)

21

i10Index(all)

51

i10Index(since 2020)

32

Email

University Profile Page

Queens University

Google Scholar

View Google Scholar Profile

Paul R. Martin Skills & Research Interests

Evolutionary Ecology

Ornithology

Top articles of Paul R. Martin

Title

Journal

Author(s)

Publication Date

The competitive exclusion–tolerance rule explains habitat partitioning among co‐occurring species of burying beetles

Ecology

Kevin W Burke

Adam F Groulx

Paul R Martin

2024/1

Rare edges and abundant cores: range-wide variation in abundance in North American birds

Proceedings of the Royal Society B

Paul R Martin

Orin J Robinson

Frances Bonier

2024/1/31

Urban tolerance does not protect against population decline in North American birds

Biology Letters

Julianna A Petrenko

Paul R Martin

Rachel E Fanelli

Frances Bonier

2024/1/31

A test of the competitive ability–cold tolerance trade‐off hypothesis in seasonally breeding beetles

Ecological Entomology

Jillian D Wettlaufer

April Ye

Heath A MacMillan

Paul R Martin

2023/2

Behavioral dominance interactions between two species of burying beetles (Nicrophorus orbicollis and Nicrophorus pustulatus)

PeerJ

Yohanna D Vangenne

Brendan Sheppard

Paul R Martin

2023/11/23

Variation in foraging strategies of New Zealand albatross species within a dominance hierarchy

New Zealand Journal of Zoology

Eryn Basham

James V Briskie

Paul Martin

2023/10/2

Color as an interspecific badge of status: A comparative test

The American Naturalist

Haley L Kenyon

Paul R Martin

2023/10/1

A case for the “Competitive exclusion–tolerance rule” as a general cause of species turnover along environmental gradients

The American Naturalist

Paul R Martin

Cameron K Ghalambor

2023/7/1

Aggressive signaling among competing species of birds

Haley L Kenyon

Paul R Martin

2022/6/13

Estimates of species‐level tolerance of urban habitat in North American birds

Rachel E Fanelli

Paul R Martin

Orin J Robinson

Frances Bonier

2022/12

Among-species variation in hormone concentrations is associated with urban tolerance in birds

Proceedings of the Royal Society B

Emma CC Sinclair

Paul R Martin

Frances Bonier

2022/11/30

Experimental test of selection against hybridization as a driver of avian signal divergence

Journal of Evolutionary Biology

Haley L Kenyon

Paul R Martin

2022/8/1

An integrative perspective on the mechanistic basis of context-dependent species interactions

Alexander A Mauro

Alisha A Shah

Paul R Martin

Cameron K Ghalambor

2022/8

Body size variation in a guild of carrion beetles

Canadian Journal of Zoology

Allison E Collard

Jillian D Wettlaufer

Kevin W Burke

David V Beresford

Paul R Martin

2021

Plasticity versus evolutionary divergence: what causes habitat partitioning in urban-adapted birds?

The American Naturalist

Paul R Martin

Kevin W Burke

Frances Bonier

2021/1/1

Experimental tests of selection against heterospecific aggression as a driver of avian colour pattern divergence

Journal of Evolutionary Biology

Haley L Kenyon

Paul R Martin

2021/7/1

Behavioral dominance interactions between Nicrophorus orbicollis and N. tomentosus burying beetles (Coleoptera: Silphidae)

PeerJ

Scott D Schrempf

Kevin W Burke

Jillian D Wettlaufer

Paul R Martin

2021/2/23

Partitioning resources through the seasons: abundance and phenology of carrion beetles (Silphidae) in southeastern Ontario, Canada

Canadian Journal of Zoology

JD Wettlaufer

KW Burke

DV Beresford

PR Martin

2021

Dominance interactions among New Zealand albatrosses and petrels at ecotourist boats

Notornis

Paul R Martin

JAMES V Briskie

2021/1/1

A case of a Pustulated Carrion Beetle (Nicrophorus pustulatus, Coleoptera: Silphidae) burying live Tree Swallow (Tachycineta bicolor, Passeriformes: Hirundinidae) nestlings …

The Canadian Field-Naturalist

Kestrel VB DeMarco

Paul R Martin

2020/11/28

See List of Professors in Paul R. Martin University(Queens University)