Ward, N. K., A. J. Lynch, E. A. Beever, J. Booker, K. L. Bouska, H. Embke, ... & J. L. Wilkening. 2023.
Reimagining large river management using the Resist–Accept–Direct (RAD) framework in the Upper Mississippi River. Ecological Processes 12(1): 1-20.
Wilkening, J. L., D. R. Magness, L. M. Thompson, & A. J. Lynch. 2023. A brave new world: Managing for
biodiversity conservation under ecosystem transformation. Land 12(8): 1556.
Beever, E. A., J. L. Wilkening, P. D. Billman, L. L. Thurman, K. A. Ernest, D. H. Wright, ... & K. C. Wilson.
2023. Geographic and taxonomic variation in adaptive capacity among mountain-dwelling small mammals: Implications for conservation status and actions. Biological Conservation 282: 109942.
Whipple, A.L., C. Ray, J. Varner, J. N. Kitchens, A.A. Hove, J. A. Castillo Vardaro, and J.L. Wilkening. 2022.
Stress-associated metabolites vary with both season and habitat across populations of a climate sentinel species. Arctic, Antarctic, and Alpine Research 54:603-623.
Bell, M.D., E. Felker-Quinn, L.H. Pardo, B.A. Schichtel, J.C. Vimont, and J.L. Wilkening. 2022. Secondary
Standards for NOx and SOx Can Help Protect Natural Resources on Federal Lands. EM: Air and Waste Management Association’s Magazine for Environmental Managers.
Thompson, L.M., J.M. Morton, D.R. Magness, J.L. Wilkening, R.A. Newman, E.A. Beever. 2022. Big
changes in mini-Alaska: RAD fosters a new way of responding to climate change on the Kenai peninsula. The Wildlife Professional 16(4):31-33.
Magness, D.R., J.L. Wilkening, J. Smetzer, K. Guilbeau, W. Miles. 2022. Climate change adaptation in action: The U.S. Fish and Wildlife Service can take action to resist, accept, and direct change. The Wildlife Professional 16(4):34-38.
Lynch, A. J., L. M. Thompson, E. A. Beever, A. Engman, J. A. Falke, S. T. Jackson………J.L. Wilkening. 2022.
Monitoring is vital for RAD. Frontiers in Ecology and the Environment 20:8-8.
Wilkening, J.L., M. Locher, C. Flanagan-Pritz, S, Nelson. J, Willacker, C. Eagles-Smith. 2022. Mercury
bioaccumulation on wildlife refuges: An assessment using dragonfly larvae as biosentinels. The Wildlife Professional 16(3):36-41.
Magness, D. R., E. Wagener, E. Yurcich, R. Mollnow, D. Granfors, and J.L. Wilkening. 2022. A Multi-Scale Blueprint for Building the Decision Context to Implement Climate Change Adaptation on National Wildlife Refuges in the United States. Earth 3:136-156.
Wilkening, J. L., D. R. Magness, A. Harrington, K. Johnson, S. Covington, and J.R. Hoffman. 2022. Incorporating Climate Uncertainty into Conservation Planning for Wildlife Managers. Earth 3:93-114.
Lynch, A. J., L. M. Thompson, J. M. Morton, E. A. Beever, M. Clifford, D. Limpinsell………J.L. Wilkening.
2022. RAD adaptive management for transforming ecosystems. BioScience 72:45-56.
Wilkening, J. L., S. Hoffman, and F. Sirchia. 2022. Examining the past, present and future of an
iconic Mojave Desert species, the Joshua tree. The Southwestern Naturalist 65:216-229.
Lynch, A. J., L. M. Thompson, E. A. Beever, A. Engman, J. A. Falke, S. T. Jackson………J.L. Wilkening. 2021. Managing for R-A-Dical Change: Resist, Accept, or Direct Ecosystem Transformation. Frontiers in Ecology and the Environment 19:461-469.
Whipple, A.L., C. Ray, M. Wasser, J. N. Kitchens, A.A. Hove, J. Varner, and J.L. Wilkening. 2021. Temporal
analysis of fecal glucocorticoid metabolites to explore variation within and among territories of a climate-sensitive small mammal. Conservation Physiology 9:p.coab024. (https://doi.org/10.1093/conphys/coab024).
Wilkening, J.L., L. Kobelt, and T.J. and Pereira. 2021. Climate Change Vulnerability Assessment of
Imperiled Plants in the Mojave Desert. In Endangered Plants. IntechOpen.
Thompson, L. M., A. J. Lynch, E. A. Beever, A. Engman, J. A. Falke, S. T. Jackson…..….J.L. Wilkening. 2021.
Responding to ecosystem transformation: resist, accept, or direct? Fisheries 46:8-21.
Smith, A. B., E. A. Beever, A. E Kessler, A. N. Johnston, C. Ray……..J. L. Wilkening, L. Yandow. 2019. Ecoregional context, genetic affinity and within-species variation in response to climate. Nature Climate Change 9:787-794.
Bhattacharyya, S., N. A. Mungi, T. Kawamichi, G. S. Rowat, B. S. Adhikari, and J. L. Wilkening. 2019.
Insights from past and present distribution of an alpine mammal to predict future climate change impacts in the Himalaya. Regional Environmental Change DOI: 10.1007/s10113-019-01556-x
Wilkening, J. L., M. S. Cole, and E. A. Beever. 2019. Evaluating community-level mechanisms of
plant-mediated effects on herbivore persistence and occupancy across an ecoregion. Ecosphere 10(6):e02764.
Wilkening, J.L. and K. Rautenstrauch. 2019. Can solar farms be wildlife friendly? A facility in the
southwest hopes to find the answer. The Wildlife Professional 13:46-50.
Wilkening, J. L., W. Pearson-Prestera, N. Mungi, and S. Bhattacharyya. 2019. Endangered species
management and climate change: when habitat conservation becomes a moving target. Wildlife Society Bulletin 43:11-20.
Sirchia, F., S. Hoffman, and J. Wilkening. 2018. Joshua tree Species Status Assessment. U.S. Fish and
Wildlife Service, Pacific Southwest Region, Sacramento, California. 114 pp.
Kohl, K.D., J. Varner, J. L. Wilkening and M. D. Dearing. 2017. Gut microbial communities of American
pikas (Ochotona princeps): Evidence for phylosymbiosis and adaptations to novel diets. Journal of Animal Ecology 87:323-330.
Wilkening, J. L. 2017. Searching for pikas in the Himalaya: Different cultures, common landscapes.
Chronicles of the Consortium for Integrated Climate Research in Western Mountains (CIRMOUNT) 11:60-67.
Burroughs, M., S. Cooper, C. Kallstrom, J. Sjoberg, and J. Wilkening, and C. Wise. 2017. Species Status
Assessment Report for 14 Springsnails in Nevada and Utah. U.S. Fish and Wildlife Service, Pacific Southwest Region, Sacramento, California. 309 pp.
Leenhouts, J., G. A. Bisbal, C. Griffin, F. O’Donnell, D. Rhode and J. Wilkening. 2017. Five-year external
reviews of the eight Department of Interior Climate Science Centers: Southwest Climate Science Center. American Fisheries Society, Bethesda, Maryland. 85 pp.
Waterhouse, M. D., B. Sjodin, C. Ray, L. Erb, J. L. Wilkening and M. A. Russello. 2017. Individual-based
analysis of hair corticosterone reveals factors influencing chronic stress in the American pika. Ecology and Evolution 7:4099-4108.
Wilkening, J. L. and C. Ray. 2016. Characterizing predictors of survival in the American pika (Ochotona princeps). Mammalogy 97:1366-1375.
Wilkening, J.L., C. Ray and J. Varner. 2016. When can we measure stress non-invasively? Post-deposition effects on a fecal stress metric confound a multi-regional assessment. Ecology and Evolution
(Cover article) 6(2):502-513.
Wilkening, J.L., C. Ray, N. Ramsay and K. Klingler. 2015. Alpine biodiversity and assisted migration: the
case of the American pika (Ochotona princeps). Biodiversity (Cover article) 16(4):224-236.
Wilkening, J.L. and C. Ray. 2015. Parks, pikas, and physiological stress: Implications for long term monitoring of an NPS climate sensitive sentinel species. Park Science 32(1):42-48.
Wilkening, J.L., C. Ray and J. Varner. 2015. Relating sub-surface ice features to physiological stress in a climate sensitive mammal, the American pika (Ochotona princeps). PLoS One 10(3):e0119327.
Wilkening, J.L., C. Ray and K.L. Sweazea. 2013. Stress hormone concentration in Rocky Mountain populations
of the American pika (Ochotona princeps) Conservation Physiology 1(1):cot027.
Beever, E. A. and J. L. Wilkening. 2011. Playing by new rules: altered climates are affecting some pikas
dramatically and rapidly. The Wildlife Professional 5: 38-41.
Beever, E.A., C.Ray, J.L. Wilkening, P.F. Brussard, and P.W. Mote. 2011. Contemporary climate change
alters the pace and drivers of extinction. Global Change Biology 17: 2054-2070.
Wilkening, J. L., C. Ray, E.A. Beever and P.F. Brussard. 2011. Modeling contemporary range retraction
in Great Basin pikas (Ochotona princeps) using data on micro climate and micro habitat. Quaternary International 235: 77-88.
Beever, E.A., C. Ray, P.W. Mote, and J.L. Wilkening. 2010. Testing alternative models of climate
mediated extirpations. Ecological Applications 20: 164-178.
Beever, E.A., J.L. Wilkening, D.E. McIvor, S.S. Weber, and P.F. Brussard. 2008. American Pikas (Ochotona
princeps) in Northwestern Nevada: a newly discovered population at a low-elevation site. Western North American Naturalist 68: 8-14.
Reimagining large river management using the Resist–Accept–Direct (RAD) framework in the Upper Mississippi River. Ecological Processes 12(1): 1-20.
Wilkening, J. L., D. R. Magness, L. M. Thompson, & A. J. Lynch. 2023. A brave new world: Managing for
biodiversity conservation under ecosystem transformation. Land 12(8): 1556.
Beever, E. A., J. L. Wilkening, P. D. Billman, L. L. Thurman, K. A. Ernest, D. H. Wright, ... & K. C. Wilson.
2023. Geographic and taxonomic variation in adaptive capacity among mountain-dwelling small mammals: Implications for conservation status and actions. Biological Conservation 282: 109942.
Whipple, A.L., C. Ray, J. Varner, J. N. Kitchens, A.A. Hove, J. A. Castillo Vardaro, and J.L. Wilkening. 2022.
Stress-associated metabolites vary with both season and habitat across populations of a climate sentinel species. Arctic, Antarctic, and Alpine Research 54:603-623.
Bell, M.D., E. Felker-Quinn, L.H. Pardo, B.A. Schichtel, J.C. Vimont, and J.L. Wilkening. 2022. Secondary
Standards for NOx and SOx Can Help Protect Natural Resources on Federal Lands. EM: Air and Waste Management Association’s Magazine for Environmental Managers.
Thompson, L.M., J.M. Morton, D.R. Magness, J.L. Wilkening, R.A. Newman, E.A. Beever. 2022. Big
changes in mini-Alaska: RAD fosters a new way of responding to climate change on the Kenai peninsula. The Wildlife Professional 16(4):31-33.
Magness, D.R., J.L. Wilkening, J. Smetzer, K. Guilbeau, W. Miles. 2022. Climate change adaptation in action: The U.S. Fish and Wildlife Service can take action to resist, accept, and direct change. The Wildlife Professional 16(4):34-38.
Lynch, A. J., L. M. Thompson, E. A. Beever, A. Engman, J. A. Falke, S. T. Jackson………J.L. Wilkening. 2022.
Monitoring is vital for RAD. Frontiers in Ecology and the Environment 20:8-8.
Wilkening, J.L., M. Locher, C. Flanagan-Pritz, S, Nelson. J, Willacker, C. Eagles-Smith. 2022. Mercury
bioaccumulation on wildlife refuges: An assessment using dragonfly larvae as biosentinels. The Wildlife Professional 16(3):36-41.
Magness, D. R., E. Wagener, E. Yurcich, R. Mollnow, D. Granfors, and J.L. Wilkening. 2022. A Multi-Scale Blueprint for Building the Decision Context to Implement Climate Change Adaptation on National Wildlife Refuges in the United States. Earth 3:136-156.
Wilkening, J. L., D. R. Magness, A. Harrington, K. Johnson, S. Covington, and J.R. Hoffman. 2022. Incorporating Climate Uncertainty into Conservation Planning for Wildlife Managers. Earth 3:93-114.
Lynch, A. J., L. M. Thompson, J. M. Morton, E. A. Beever, M. Clifford, D. Limpinsell………J.L. Wilkening.
2022. RAD adaptive management for transforming ecosystems. BioScience 72:45-56.
Wilkening, J. L., S. Hoffman, and F. Sirchia. 2022. Examining the past, present and future of an
iconic Mojave Desert species, the Joshua tree. The Southwestern Naturalist 65:216-229.
Lynch, A. J., L. M. Thompson, E. A. Beever, A. Engman, J. A. Falke, S. T. Jackson………J.L. Wilkening. 2021. Managing for R-A-Dical Change: Resist, Accept, or Direct Ecosystem Transformation. Frontiers in Ecology and the Environment 19:461-469.
Whipple, A.L., C. Ray, M. Wasser, J. N. Kitchens, A.A. Hove, J. Varner, and J.L. Wilkening. 2021. Temporal
analysis of fecal glucocorticoid metabolites to explore variation within and among territories of a climate-sensitive small mammal. Conservation Physiology 9:p.coab024. (https://doi.org/10.1093/conphys/coab024).
Wilkening, J.L., L. Kobelt, and T.J. and Pereira. 2021. Climate Change Vulnerability Assessment of
Imperiled Plants in the Mojave Desert. In Endangered Plants. IntechOpen.
Thompson, L. M., A. J. Lynch, E. A. Beever, A. Engman, J. A. Falke, S. T. Jackson…..….J.L. Wilkening. 2021.
Responding to ecosystem transformation: resist, accept, or direct? Fisheries 46:8-21.
Smith, A. B., E. A. Beever, A. E Kessler, A. N. Johnston, C. Ray……..J. L. Wilkening, L. Yandow. 2019. Ecoregional context, genetic affinity and within-species variation in response to climate. Nature Climate Change 9:787-794.
Bhattacharyya, S., N. A. Mungi, T. Kawamichi, G. S. Rowat, B. S. Adhikari, and J. L. Wilkening. 2019.
Insights from past and present distribution of an alpine mammal to predict future climate change impacts in the Himalaya. Regional Environmental Change DOI: 10.1007/s10113-019-01556-x
Wilkening, J. L., M. S. Cole, and E. A. Beever. 2019. Evaluating community-level mechanisms of
plant-mediated effects on herbivore persistence and occupancy across an ecoregion. Ecosphere 10(6):e02764.
Wilkening, J.L. and K. Rautenstrauch. 2019. Can solar farms be wildlife friendly? A facility in the
southwest hopes to find the answer. The Wildlife Professional 13:46-50.
Wilkening, J. L., W. Pearson-Prestera, N. Mungi, and S. Bhattacharyya. 2019. Endangered species
management and climate change: when habitat conservation becomes a moving target. Wildlife Society Bulletin 43:11-20.
Sirchia, F., S. Hoffman, and J. Wilkening. 2018. Joshua tree Species Status Assessment. U.S. Fish and
Wildlife Service, Pacific Southwest Region, Sacramento, California. 114 pp.
Kohl, K.D., J. Varner, J. L. Wilkening and M. D. Dearing. 2017. Gut microbial communities of American
pikas (Ochotona princeps): Evidence for phylosymbiosis and adaptations to novel diets. Journal of Animal Ecology 87:323-330.
Wilkening, J. L. 2017. Searching for pikas in the Himalaya: Different cultures, common landscapes.
Chronicles of the Consortium for Integrated Climate Research in Western Mountains (CIRMOUNT) 11:60-67.
Burroughs, M., S. Cooper, C. Kallstrom, J. Sjoberg, and J. Wilkening, and C. Wise. 2017. Species Status
Assessment Report for 14 Springsnails in Nevada and Utah. U.S. Fish and Wildlife Service, Pacific Southwest Region, Sacramento, California. 309 pp.
Leenhouts, J., G. A. Bisbal, C. Griffin, F. O’Donnell, D. Rhode and J. Wilkening. 2017. Five-year external
reviews of the eight Department of Interior Climate Science Centers: Southwest Climate Science Center. American Fisheries Society, Bethesda, Maryland. 85 pp.
Waterhouse, M. D., B. Sjodin, C. Ray, L. Erb, J. L. Wilkening and M. A. Russello. 2017. Individual-based
analysis of hair corticosterone reveals factors influencing chronic stress in the American pika. Ecology and Evolution 7:4099-4108.
Wilkening, J. L. and C. Ray. 2016. Characterizing predictors of survival in the American pika (Ochotona princeps). Mammalogy 97:1366-1375.
Wilkening, J.L., C. Ray and J. Varner. 2016. When can we measure stress non-invasively? Post-deposition effects on a fecal stress metric confound a multi-regional assessment. Ecology and Evolution
(Cover article) 6(2):502-513.
Wilkening, J.L., C. Ray, N. Ramsay and K. Klingler. 2015. Alpine biodiversity and assisted migration: the
case of the American pika (Ochotona princeps). Biodiversity (Cover article) 16(4):224-236.
Wilkening, J.L. and C. Ray. 2015. Parks, pikas, and physiological stress: Implications for long term monitoring of an NPS climate sensitive sentinel species. Park Science 32(1):42-48.
Wilkening, J.L., C. Ray and J. Varner. 2015. Relating sub-surface ice features to physiological stress in a climate sensitive mammal, the American pika (Ochotona princeps). PLoS One 10(3):e0119327.
Wilkening, J.L., C. Ray and K.L. Sweazea. 2013. Stress hormone concentration in Rocky Mountain populations
of the American pika (Ochotona princeps) Conservation Physiology 1(1):cot027.
Beever, E. A. and J. L. Wilkening. 2011. Playing by new rules: altered climates are affecting some pikas
dramatically and rapidly. The Wildlife Professional 5: 38-41.
Beever, E.A., C.Ray, J.L. Wilkening, P.F. Brussard, and P.W. Mote. 2011. Contemporary climate change
alters the pace and drivers of extinction. Global Change Biology 17: 2054-2070.
Wilkening, J. L., C. Ray, E.A. Beever and P.F. Brussard. 2011. Modeling contemporary range retraction
in Great Basin pikas (Ochotona princeps) using data on micro climate and micro habitat. Quaternary International 235: 77-88.
Beever, E.A., C. Ray, P.W. Mote, and J.L. Wilkening. 2010. Testing alternative models of climate
mediated extirpations. Ecological Applications 20: 164-178.
Beever, E.A., J.L. Wilkening, D.E. McIvor, S.S. Weber, and P.F. Brussard. 2008. American Pikas (Ochotona
princeps) in Northwestern Nevada: a newly discovered population at a low-elevation site. Western North American Naturalist 68: 8-14.