Contact Info: Director, School of Environmental Sciences, University of Guelph, Guelph, Ontario Canada N1G 2W1 email: jnewma01@uoguelph.ca
NOTE: Links to PDFs usually require institutional subscriptions.
Newman, J.A. 2006. Using the output from global circulation models to predict changes in
the distribution and abundance of cereal aphids in Canada: a
mechanistic modeling approach. Global Change Biology, 12:1634-1642, doi: 10.1111/j.1365-2486.2006.01192.x.
Hunt, M.G., S. Rasmussen, P. Newton, A.J. Parsons, J.A. Newman. 2005. Near-term impacts of elevated CO2, nitrogen and fungal endophyte-infection on Lolium perenne L.: growth, chemical composition and alkaloid production. Plant, Cell and Environment, 28:1345-1354.
Bell, T., J.A. Newman, B.W. Silverman, S.L. Turner & A.K. Lilley. 2005. The contribution of species richness and composition to bacterial services. Nature, 436:1157-1160.
Bell, T., D Ager, J-I Song, J.A. Newman, I.P Thompson, A.K. Lilley & C.J. van der Gast. 2005. Larger islands house more diverse bacterial communities. Science, 308:1884.
Parsons A.J., Rasmussen S., Xue H., Newman, J.A., Anderson C.B. and Cosgrove G.P. 2004. Some ‘high sugar grasses’ don’t like it hot. Proceedings of the New Zealand Grassland Association, vol 66, Ashburton 2004, p. 265-271.
Newman, J.A. 2004. Climate change and cereal aphids: the relative effects of increasing CO2 and temperature on aphid population dynamics. Global Change Biology, 10:5-15
Hoover, J.K. & J.A. Newman. 2004. Tritrophic interactions in the context of climate change: a model of grasses, aphids, and their parasitoids. Global Change Biology, 10:1197-1208.