PIE LTER Publications

Export 14 results:
Filters: Keyword is disturbance and Author is Polsky, C.  [Clear All Filters]
Journal Article
Polsky C., Grove J.M., Knudson C., Groffman P.M., Bettez N.D., Canvender-Bares J., Hall S.J., Heffernan J.B., Hobbie S.E., Larson K.L. et al..  2014.  Assessing the homogenization of urban land management with an application to US residential lawn care.. Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences. 111:4432-4437.
Harris E.M., Martin D.G., Polsky C., Denhardt L., Nehring A..  2012.  Beyond 'Lawn People': The role of emotions in suburban yard management practices. The Professional Geographer.
Steele M.K., Heffernan J.B., Bettez N.D., Cavender-Bares J., Groffman P.M., Grove J.M., Hall S., Hobbie S.E., Larson K., Morse J.L. et al..  2014.  Convergent Surface Water Distributions in U.S. Cities. Ecosystems.
Giner N.M., Polsky C., Pontius, Jr. R.G., Runfola D.M., S.J. R.  2014.  Creating spatially-explicit lawn maps without classifying remotely sensed imagery: The case of suburban Boston, Massachusetts, USA. Cities and the Environment. 7
Hill T., Polsky C..  2007.  Development and drought in suburbia: A mixed methods rapid assessment of vulnerability to drought in rainy Massachusetts. . Environmental Hazards: Human and Policy Dimensions. 7:291-301.
Runfola D.M., Polsky C., Nicolson C., Giner N.M., Pontius, Jr. R.G., Krahe J., Decatur A.  2013.  A growing concern? Examining the influence of lawn size on residential water use in suburban Boston, MA, USA Landscape and Urban Planning. 119:113-123.
Harris E.M., Polsky C., Larson K., Garvoille R., Martin D.G., Brumand J., Ogden L..  2012.  Heterogeneity in Residential Yard Care: Evidence from Boston, Miami, and Phoenix.. Human Ecology. 40:735-749.
Chowdhury R., Larson K., Grove M., Polsky C., Cook E., Onsted J., Ogden L.  2011.  A Multi-Scalar Approach to Theorizing Socio-Ecological Dynamics of Urban Residential Landscapes. Cities and the Environment . 4
Gober P., Larson K.L., Quay R., Polsky C., Chang H., Shandas V..  2013.  Why Land Planners and Water Managers Don't Talk to One Another and Why They Should!. Society and Natural Resources. 26:356-364.