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.
Ryan, G.D., S. Rasmussen & J.A. Newman. Climate change and tropic interactions. In: F. Baluška and V. Ninkovic (eds.) Plant Communications From an Ecological Perspective. Springer-Verlag, Berlin, Germany, pp. 179-214.
Bahlai, C.A., S. Sikkema, R.H. Hallett, J. Newman, and A.W. Schaafsma. Modeling distribution and abundance of soybean aphid in soybean fields using measurements from the surrounding landscape. Environmental Entomology 39(1): 50-56.
Rasmussen, S., A.J. Parsons, A. Poppy, H. Xue and J.A. Newman. 2008. Plant-endophyte-herbivore interactions: more than just alkaloids? Plant Signaling & Behavior, 3:974-977.
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.
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.
Newman, J.A., D.J. Gibson, A.J. Parsons, & J.H.M. Thornley. 2003. How predictable are aphid population responses to elevated CO2? Journal of Animal Ecology, 72:556-566.