
UC Santa Barbara Geography / Academics / Publications
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Publications for Chris Still
Associate Professor
(2003). The contribution of C3 and C4 plants to the carbon cycle of a tallgrass prairie: An isotopic approach. Oecologia 136, 347-359.
(2003). The global distribution of C3 and C4 vegetation: carbon cycle implications. Global Biogeochemical Cycles 17(1), 1006
(2003). 18O composition of CO2 and H2O ecosystem pools and fluxes: Simulations and comparisons to measurements. Global Change Biology 9, 1567-1581.
(2003). The application and interpretation of Keeling plots in terrestrial carbon cycle research. Global Biogeochemical Cycles 17, 1022
(2004). In situ photosynthetic freezing tolerance for plants exposed to a global warming manipulation in the Rocky Mountains, Colorado, USA. New Phytologist, 162, 331-341.
(2004). Large-scale plant light-use efficiency inferred from the seasonal cycle of atmospheric CO2. Global Change Biology, 10(8), 1240-1252.
(2005). Simulation of ecosystem C18OO isotope fluxes in a tallgrass prairie: biological and physical controls. , In Stable Isotopes and Biosphere-Atmosphere Interactions Elsevier-Academic Press, Physiological Ecology Series.
(2005). Erratum: Large-scale plant light-use efficiency inferred from the seasonal cycle of atmospheric CO2. Global Change Biology 11(10), 1866-1866.
(2005). Fire emissions from C-3 and C-4 vegetation and their influence on interannual variability of atmospheric CO2 and delta(CO2)-C-13. Global Biogeochemical Cycles 19(2), GB2019.
(2005). Simulation of carbon isotope discrimination of the terrestrial biosphere. Global Biogeochemical Cycles 19(1), GB1017.
(2005). Triple oxygen isotope composition of tropospheric carbon dioxide as a tracer of terrestrial gross carbon fluxes. Geophysical Research Letters 32(2), L02802.
(2005). Coupling between land ecosystems and the atmospheric hydrologic cycle through biogenic aerosol pathways. Bulletin of the American Meteorological Society , 1738-1742.
(2006). Is carbon within the global terrestrial biosphere becoming more oxidized? Implications for trends in atmospheric O2. Global Change Biology 12(2), 260-271.
(2006). Widespread amphibian extinctions from epidemic disease driven by global warming. Nature 439, 161-167.
(2007). The relevance of phylogeny to studies of global change. Trends in Ecology and Evolution, 22(5), 243-249.
(2007). Evaluating patterns of fog water deposition and isotopic composition on the California Channel Islands. Water Resources Research 43, W04420,doi,10.1029/2006WR005124.,
(2007). Global warming and amphibian losses. Nature 447, E5-E6.
(2008). Climate, phylogeny, and the ecological distribution of C4 grasses. Ecology Letters 11, 266–276doi, 10.1111/j.1461-0248.2007.01144.,
(2008). Understanding the stable isotope composition of biosphere-atmosphere CO2 exchange, Eos, 89(10), 94-95.



