Publications by Subject
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- Holland, J.N., S.A. Chamberlain, 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. pdf
- Horn, K.C. and J.N. Holland. 2010. Discrimination among floral resources by an obligately pollinating seed-eating moth: host-marking signals and pollination and florivory cues. Evolutionary Ecology Research 12: 119-129. pdf
- Holland, J.N., S.C. Chamberlain, and K. Horn. 2009. Optimal defence theory predicts investment in extrafloral nectar resources in an ant-plant mutualism. Journal of Ecology 97: 89-96. pdf
- Holland, J.N. and D.L. DeAngelis. 2006. Interspecific Population Regulation and the Stability of Mutualism: Fruit Abortion and Density-Dependent Mortality of Pollinating Seed-eating Insects. Oikos 113:563-571. pdf
- Holland, J.N., D.L. DeAngelis, and S.T. Schultz. 2004. Evolutionary stability of mutualism: interspecific population regulation as an evolutionarily stable strategy. Proceedings of the Royal Society of London B 271: 1807-1814. pdf
- Holland, J.N., J.L. Bronstein, and D.L. DeAngelis. 2004. Testing hypotheses for excess flower production and fruit-to-flower ratios in a pollinating seed-consuming mutualism. Oikos 105: 633-640. pdf
- Holland, J.N., A.L. Buchanan, and R. Loubeau. 2004. Oviposition choice and larval survival of an obligately pollinating granivorous moth. Evolutionary Ecology Research 6: 607-618. pdf
- Holland, J.N. 2003. Life cycle and growth of senita moths (Upiga virescens, Pyralidae): A Lepidopteran with less than four instars? Annals of the Entomological Society of America 96: 519-523. pdf
- Holland, J.N. and D.L. DeAngelis. 2002. Ecological and evolutionary conditions for fruit abortion to regulate pollinating seed-eaters and increase plant reproduction. Theoretical Population Biology 61: 251-263. pdf
- Holland, J.N. and T.H. Fleming. 1999. Mutualistic interactions between Upiga virescens (Pyralidae), a pollinating seed-consumer, and Lophocereus schottii (Cactaceae). Ecology 80: 2074-2084. pdf
- Fleming, T.H. and J.N. Holland. 1998. The evolution of obligate pollination mutualisms: senita cactus and senita moth. Oecologia 114: 368-375. pdf
- Holland, J.N. 2012. Population dynamics of mutualism. Nature Education Knowledge 3(6): 2. url
- Wang, Y., D.L. DeAngelis, and J.N. Holland. 2011. Uni-directional consumer-resource theory characterizing transitions of interaction outcomes. Ecological Complexity 8: 249-257.
- Holland, J.N., S.A. Chamberlain, 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. pdf
- Holland, J.N. and D.L. DeAngelis. 2010. A consumer-resource approach to the density-dependent population dynamics of mutualism. Ecology 91: 1286-1295. pdf
- Horn, K.C. and J.N. Holland. 2010. Discrimination among floral resources by an obligately pollinating seed-eating moth: host-marking signals and pollination and florivory cues. Evolutionary Ecology Research 12: 119-129. pdf
- Holland, J.N. and D.L. DeAngelis. 2009. Consumer-resource theory predicts dynamic transitions between outcomes of interspecific interactions. Ecology Letters 12: 1357-1366. pdf
- Holland, J.N., S.C. Chamberlain, and K. Horn. 2009. Optimal defence theory predicts investment in extrafloral nectar resources in an ant-plant mutualism. Journal of Ecology 97: 89-96. pdf
- Chamberlain, S.C. and J.N. Holland. 2009. Quantitative synthesis of context dependency in ant-plant protection mutualisms. Ecology 90: 2384-2392. pdf
- Chamberlain, S.A. and J.N. Holland. 2008. Density-mediated, context-dependent consumer-resource interactions between ants and extrafloral nectar plants. Ecology 89:1364-1374. pdf
- Holland, J.N. and D.L. DeAngelis. 2006. Interspecific Population Regulation and the Stability of Mutualism: Fruit Abortion and Density-Dependent Mortality of Pollinating Seed-eating Insects. Oikos 113:563-571. pdf
- DeAngelis, D.L. and Holland, J.N. 2006. Emergence of ratio-dependent and predator-dependent functional responses for pollination mutualism and seed-parasitism. Ecological Modelling 191: 551-556. pdf
- Holland, J.N., J.H. Ness, A.L. Boyle, and J.L. Bronstein. 2005. Mutualisms as consumer-resource interactions. pgs. 17-33. In: P. Barbosa and I. Castellanos (eds.), Ecology of Predator-Prey Interactions. Oxford University Press, New York. pdf
- Ness, J.H., J.L. Bronstein, A.N. Andersen, and J.N. Holland. 2004. Ant body size predicts the dispersal distance of ant-adapted seeds: implications for mutualism disruption by invasive ants. Ecology 85: 1244-1250. pdf
- Holland, J.N., D.L. DeAngelis, and S.T. Schultz. 2004. Evolutionary stability of mutualism: interspecific population regulation as an ESS. Proceedings of the Royal Society of London B 271: 1807-1814. pdf
- Holland, J.N. 2002. Benefits and costs of mutualism: Demographic consequences in a pollinating seed-consumer interaction. Proceedings of the Royal Society of London B 269: 1405-1412. pdf
- Holland, J.N., D.L. DeAngelis, and J.L. Bronstein. 2002. Population dynamics and mutualism: functional responses of benefits and costs. American Naturalist 159: 231-244. pdf
- Holland, J.N. and D.L. DeAngelis. 2002. Ecological and evolutionary conditions for fruit abortion to regulate pollinating seed-eaters and increase plant reproduction. Theoretical Population Biology 61: 251-263. pdf
- Holland, J.N. and D.L. DeAngelis. 2001. Population dynamics and the stability of obligate pollination mutualisms. Oecologia 126: 575-586. pdf
- Holland, J.N. and T.H. Fleming. 1999. Mutualistic interactions between Upiga virescens (Pyralidae), a pollinating seed-consumer, and Lophocereus schottii (Cactaceae). Ecology 80: 2074-2084. pdf
- Holland, J.N. and T.H. Fleming. 1999. Geographic and population variation in pollinating seed-consuming interactions between senita cacti (Lophocereus schottii) and senita moths (Upiga virescens). Oecologia 121: 405-410. pdf
- Wang, Y., D.L. DeAngelis, and J.N. Holland. 2011. Uni-directional consumer-resource theory characterizing transitions of interaction outcomes. Ecological Complexity 8: 249-257.
- Holland, J.N., S.A. Chamberlain, 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. pdf
- Holland, J.N. and D.L. DeAngelis. 2009. Consumer-resource theory predicts dynamic transitions between outcomes of interspecific interactions. Ecology Letters 12: 1357-1366. pdf
- Chamberlain, S.C. and J.N. Holland. 2009. Quantitative synthesis of context dependency in ant-plant protection mutualisms. Ecology 90: 2384-2392. pdf
- Chamberlain, S.A. and J.N. Holland. 2008. Density-mediated, context-dependent consumer-resource interactions between ants and extrafloral nectar plants. Ecology 89:1364-1374. pdf
- Rico-Gray, V., C. Díaz-Castelazo, A. Ramírez-Hernández, P.R. Guimarães Jr., and J.N. Holland. 2012. Abiotic factors shape temporal variation in the structure of mutualistic ant-plant networks. Arthropod-Plant Interactions 6:289-295. pdf
- Chamberlain, S.A., J.R. Kilpatrick, and J.N. Holland. 2010. 2010. Do extrafloral nectar resources, species abundances, and body sizes contribute to the structure of ant-plant mutualistic networks? Oecologia 164: 741-750. pdf
- Chamberlain, S.A. and J.N. Holland. 2009. Body size predicts degree in ant-plant mutualistic networks. Functional Ecology 23: 196-202. pdf
- Okuyama, T. and J.N. Holland. 2008. Network structural properties mediate the stability of mutualistic communities. Ecology Letters 11:208-216. pdf
- Holland, J.N., T. Okuyama, and D.L. DeAngelis. 2006. Comment on "Asymmetric Coevolutionary Networks Facilitate Biodiversity Maintenance." Science 313:1887. pdf
- Holland, J.N. 2005. Evolving theory of coevolution. Ecology 86: 3425-3426. pdf
- Holland, J.N. and T.H. Fleming. 2002. Co-pollinators and specialization in the pollinating seed-consumer mutualism between senita cacti and senita moths. Oecologia 133: 534-540. pdf
- Fleming, T.H., C.T. Sahley, J.N. Holland, J.D. Nason, and J.L. Hamrick. 2001. Sonoran Desert columnar cacti and the evolution of generalized pollination systems. Ecological Monographs 71: 511-530. pdf
- Holland, J.N. and T.H. Fleming. 1999. Geographic and population variation in pollinating seed-consuming interactions between senita cacti (Lophocereus schottii) and senita moths (Upiga virescens). Oecologia 121: 405-410. pdf
- McCluney, K.E., J. Belnap, S.L. Collins, A.L. González, E.M. Hagen, J.N. Holland, B.P. Kotler, F.T. Maestre, S.D. Smith, B.O. Wolf. 2012. Shifting consumer-resource interactions in response to altered water availability in dryland systems. Biological Reviews 87: 563-582. pdf
- Fleming, T.H., J.N. Holland, and F. Molina-Freaner. Pollination biology of Sonoran Desert succulents and their pollinators: evolution and coevolution at a biogeographic boundary. In: E. Ezcurra, S. Alvarez-Borrego, R. Lara and E. Wehncke (eds.), Environmental Status of Ecosystems of Northwestern Mexico. University of Arizona Press, Tucson (in press).
- Stahlschmidt, Z.R., D.F. DeNardo, J.N. Holland, B.P. Kotler, and M. Kruse-Peebles. 2011. Tolerance mechanisms in North American deserts: Biological and societal approaches to climate change. Journal of Arid Environments 75: 681-687. pdf
- Bandala, E.R., J. Durán, and J.N. Holland. 2011. Consequences of Global Climate Change for Water Quality and Community Sustainability along the U.S.-Mexico Trans-Border Region: Case Studies of Reynosa/McAllen and Laredo/Nuevo Laredo. Written under contract for the 2nd annual "The Puentes Consortium" of the "Mexico-U.S. Higher Education Leadership Forum," hosted by the James A. Baker III Institute of Public Policy, Rice University.
- Bandala, E.R. and J.N. Holland. 2010. Mexico-U.S. border and the environment: Implications for bi-national water relations. Written under contract for The Puentes Consortium of the Mexico-U.S. Higher Education Leadership Forum, a January 2010 conference hosted by the James A. Baker III Institute of Public Policy, Rice University.
- Holland, J.N. and T.H. Fleming. 2002. Co-pollinators and specialization in the pollinating seed-consumer mutualism between senita cacti and senita moths. Oecologia 133: 534-540. pdf
- Holland, J.N. 2002. Benefits and costs of mutualism: Demographic consequences in a pollinating seed-consumer interaction. Proceedings of the Royal Society of London B 269: 1405-1412. pdf
- Holland, J.N. 1995. Effects of above-ground herbivory on soil microbial biomass in conventional and no-tillage agroecosystems. Applied Soil Ecology 2: 275-279. pdf
- Hobson, C. and J.N. Holland. 1995. Post-hibernation movement and foraging habitat of a male Indiana bat, Myotis sodalis (Chiroptera: Vespertilionidae), in western Virginia. Brimleyana 23: 95-101. pdf
- Leffler, J., R. Powers, C. Hobson, R. Reynolds, G. Nussbaum, J. Holland, and K. Terwilliger. 1993. Bat Investigations. Annual Report. In: Virginia nongame and endangered wildlife investigations. Virginia Department of Game and Inland Fisheries. 99 pgs.
- Holland, J.N., S.A. Chamberlain, 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. pdf
- Horn, K.C. and J.N. Holland. 2010. Discrimination among floral resources by an obligately pollinating seed-eating moth: host-marking signals and pollination and florivory cues. Evolutionary Ecology Research 12: 119-129. pdf
- Holland, J.N., S.C. Chamberlain, and K. Horn. 2009. Optimal defence theory predicts investment in extrafloral nectar resources in an ant-plant mutualism. Journal of Ecology 97: 89-96. pdf
- Chamberlain, S.A. and J.N. Holland. 2008. Density-mediated, context-dependent consumer-resource interactions between ants and extrafloral nectar plants. Ecology 89:1364-1374. pdf
- Holland, J.N., A.L. Buchanan, and R. Loubeau. 2004. Oviposition choice and larval survival of an obligately pollinating granivorous moth. Evolutionary Ecology Research 6: 607-618. pdf
- Holland, J.N., W. Cheng, and D.A. Crossley, Jr. 1996. Herbivore-induced changes in plant carbon allocation: Assessment of below-ground C fluxes using carbon-14. Oecologia 107: 87-94. pdf
- Holland, J.N. 1995. Effects of above-ground herbivory on soil microbial biomass in conventional and no-tillage agroecosystems. Applied Soil Ecology 2: 275-279. pdf
- Holland, J.N., S.C. Chamberlain, A.M. Waguespack, and A.S. Kinyo. 2009. Effects of pollen load and donor diversity on variation in seed and fruit size in a columnar cactus, Pachycereus schottii (Cactaceae). International Journal of Plant Science 170: 467-475. pdf
- Holland, J.N. and S.A. Chamberlain. 2007. Ecological and evolutionary mechanisms resulting in low seed:ovule ratios: Need for a more pluralistic approach? Ecology 88:706-715. pdf
- Holland, J.N. and D.L. DeAngelis. 2006. Interspecific Population Regulation and the Stability of Mutualism: Fruit Abortion and Density-Dependent Mortality of Pollinating Seed-eating Insects. Oikos 113:563-571. pdf
- Holland, J.N., D.L. DeAngelis, and S.T. Schultz. 2004. Evolutionary stability of mutualism: interspecific population regulation as an ESS. Proceedings of the Royal Society of London B 271: 1807-1814. pdf
- Holland, J.N., J.L. Bronstein, and D.L. DeAngelis. 2004. Testing hypotheses for excess flower production and fruit-to-flower ratios in a pollinating seed-consuming mutualism. Oikos 105: 633-640. pdf
- Holland, J.N., R. Wyatt, J.L. Bronstein, and J.H. Ness. 2003. Relating the biology of flower-to-fruit survivorship to the ecology and evolution of fruit-to-flower ratios. Recent Research Developments in Plant Science 1:75-84. pdf
- Holland, J.N. and T.H. Fleming. 2002. Co-pollinators and specialization in the pollinating seed-consumer mutualism between senita cacti and senita moths. Oecologia 133: 534-540. pdf
- Fleming, T.H., C.T. Sahley, J.N. Holland, J.D. Nason, and J.L. Hamrick. 2001. Sonoran Desert columnar cacti and the evolution of generalized pollination systems. Ecological Monographs 71: 511-530. pdf
- Holland, J.N., S.A. Chamberlain, 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. pdf
- Holland, J.N. and D.L. DeAngelis. 2010. A consumer-resource approach to the density-dependent population dynamics of mutualism. Ecology 91: 1286-1295. pdf
- Chamberlain, S.A., J.R. Kilpatrick, and J.N. Holland. 2010. Do extrafloral nectar resources, species abundances, and body sizes contribute to the structure of ant-plant mutualistic networks? Oecologia 164: 741-750. pdf
- Holland, J.N., S.A. Chamberlain, and K.C. Horn. 2010. Temporal variation in extrafloral nectar secretion by reproductive tissues of the senita cactus, Pachycereus schottii (Cactaceae), in the Sonoran Desert of Mexico. Journal of Arid Environments 74: 712-714. pdf
- Chamberlain, S.C. and J.N. Holland. 2009. Quantitative synthesis of context dependency in ant-plant protection mutualisms. Ecology 90: 2384-2392. pdf
- Holland, J.N., S.C. Chamberlain, and K. Horn. 2009. Optimal defence theory predicts investment in extrafloral nectar resources in an ant-plant mutualism. Journal of Ecology 97: 89-96. pdf
- Chamberlain, S.A. and J.N. Holland. 2009. Body size predicts degree in ant-plant mutualistic networks. Functional Ecology 23: 196-202. pdf
- Chamberlain, S.A. and J.N. Holland. 2008. Density-mediated, context-dependent consumer-resource interactions between ants and extrafloral nectar plants. Ecology 89:1364-1374. pdf
- Holland, J.N., J.H. Ness, A.L. Boyle, and J.L. Bronstein. 2005. Mutualisms as consumer-resource interactions. pgs. 17-33. In: P. Barbosa and I. Castellanos (eds.), Ecology of Predator-Prey Interactions. Oxford University Press, New York. pdf
- Ness, J.H., J.L. Bronstein, A.N. Andersen, and J.N. Holland. 2004. Ant body size predicts the dispersal distance of ant-adapted seeds: implications for mutualism disruption by invasive ants. Ecology 85: 1244-1250. pdf
- Holland, J.N. 2003. Life cycle and growth of senita moths (Upiga virescens, Pyralidae): A Lepidopteran with less than four instars? Annals of the Entomological Society of America 96: 519-523. pdf
- Holland, J.N. and T.H. Fleming. 2002. Co-pollinators and specialization in the pollinating seed-consumer mutualism between senita cacti and senita moths. Oecologia 133: 534-540. pdf
- Holland, J.N. and T.H. Fleming. 1999. Geographic and population variation in pollinating seed-consuming interactions between senita cacti (Lophocereus schottii) and senita moths (Upiga virescens). Oecologia 121: 405-410. pdf
- Holland, J.N. and T.H. Fleming. 1999. Mutualistic interactions between Upiga virescens (Pyralidae), a pollinating seed-consumer, and Lophocereus schottii (Cactaceae). Ecology 80: 2074-2084. pdf
- Fleming, T.H. and J.N. Holland. 1998. The evolution of obligate pollination mutualisms: senita cactus and senita moth. Oecologia 114: 368-375. pdf
- Holland, J.N. 2012. Population dynamics of mutualism. Nature Education Knowledge 3(6): 2. url
- Holland, J.N. and J.L. Bronstein. 2008. Mutualism. In: S.E. Jorgensen and B.D. Fath (eds.), Population Dynamics, Vol 3 of Encyclopedia of Ecology. 5 vols. Elsevier, Oxford, pgs. 2485-2491. pdf