selected publications
-
academic article
- Genomic resolution of cryptic species diversity in chipmunks. Evolution. 2022
- Diversification, Introgression, and Rampant Cytonuclear Discordance in Rocky Mountains Chipmunks (Sciuridae: Tamias). Systematic Biology. 2021
- No evidence for phylosymbiosis in western chipmunk species. FEMS Microbiology Ecology. 96. 2020
- Comparative Phylogenomic Assessment of Mitochondrial Introgression among Several Species of Chipmunks (Tamias). Genome Biology and Evolution. 9:7-19. 2017
- Phylogeny Estimation of the Radiation of Western North American Chipmunks (Tamias) in the Face of Introgression Using Reproductive Protein Genes. Systematic Biology. 61:44-62. 2012
- Introgression at differentially aged hybrid zones in red-tailed chipmunks. Genetica. 138:869-883. 2010
- Ancient hybridization and mitochondrial capture between two species of chipmunks. Molecular Ecology. 17:1313-1327. 2008
- Investigating the evolutionary history of the Pacific Northwest mesic forest ecosystem: Hypothesis testing within a comparative phylogeographic framework. Evolution. 59:1639-1652. 2005
- Phylogeography and introgressive hybridization: Chipmunks (genus Tamias) in the northern Rocky Mountains. Evolution. 57:1900-1916. 2003
- Extensive mtDNA variation within the yellow-pine chipmunk, Tamias amoenus (Rodentia : Sciuridae), and phylogeographic inferences for northwest North America. Molecular Phylogenetics and Evolution. 26:389-408. 2003