Holmquist Jeff

Dr. Holmquist Jeff
Research Scientist (Full)
Institute of the Environment and Sustainability
University of California, Los Angeles; White Mountain Research Center
3000 E Line St
Bishop, CA 93514
United States of America


Phone: +1 760 937 6317
E-mail: jholmquist(at)ucla.edu
URL Institution: https://www.wmrc.edu/
Personal URL: link


Key Publications of Holmquist Jeff (up to ten) :
Holmquist, JG, JM Schmidt-Gengenbach. In press. Arthropod Assemblages in a Montane Wetland Complex: Influences of Adjoining Lotic and Lentic Habitat and Temporal Variability. Wetlands

Slaton, M, J Holmquist, M. Meyer, R Andrews, J Beidl. In press. Traditional ecological knowledge used in forest restoration benefits natural and cultural resources: the intersection between Pandora moths, Jeffrey pine, people, and fire. Natural Areas Journal

Millar, CI, RD Westfall, A Evenden, JG Holmquist, J Schmidt-Gengenbach, RS Franklin, J Nachlinger, DL Delany. 2015. Potential climatic refugia in semi-arid, temperate mountains: Plant and arthropod assemblages associated with rock glaciers, talus slopes, and their forefield wetlands, Sierra Nevada, USA. Quaternary International 387:106–12.

Holmquist, JG, JM Schmidt-Gengenbach, EA Ballenger. 2014. Patch-scale effects of equine disturbance on arthropod assemblages and vegetation structure in subalpine wetlands. Environmental Management 53:1109–1118

Holmquist, JG, JM Schmidt-Gengenbach, and A Demetry. 2014. Efficacy of low and high complexity vegetation treatments for reestablishing terrestrial arthropod assemblages during montane wetland restoration. Restoration Ecology 22:649–656

Holmquist, JG, TJ Waddle. 2013. Predicted macroinvertebrate response to water diversion from a montane stream using two-dimensional hydrodynamic models and zero flow approximation. Ecological Indicators 28:115-124

Holmquist, JG, JM Schmidt-Gengenbach, MR Slaton. 2011. Influence of invasive palms on terrestrial arthropod assemblages in desert spring habitat. Biological Conservation 144: 518-525

Greathouse, EA, CM Pringle, WH McDowell, JG Holmquist. 2006. Indirect upstream effects of dams: consequences of migratory consumer extirpation in Puerto Rico. Ecological Applications 16: 339-352

Holmquist, JG. 1998. Permeability of patch boundaries to benthic invertebrates: influences of boundary contrast, light level, and faunal density and mobility. Oikos 81: 558-566

Holmquist, JG JM Schmidt-Gengenbach, BB Yoshioka. 1998. High dams and marine-freshwater linkages: effects on native and introduced fauna in the Caribbean. Conservation Biology 12: 621-630




Expertise of Holmquist Jeff:
Expertise CategorySpecific Expertise
Expert TypeExpert Type
Scientific / Fundamental Research
Applied Sciences / Technologies / Engineering
Research Interface / Management
Topic HydrosphereHydrosphere
Fresh Water Systems / Rivers / Lakes
Ocean
Topic BiosphereBiosphere
Plants
Animals
Biodiversity
Topic EcosystemsEcosystems
Terrestrial Ecosystems
Marine Ecosystems
Topic Economy/ResourceUseEconomy / Resource Use
Land Cover / Land Use / Landscape
Topic SustainabilitySustainability
Ecological Sustainability
Time FrameTime Frame
Recent / Today
Statistical FocusStatistical Focus
Extreme Events
Mean Change / Trends
Variability
Time ScaleTime Scale
Seasonal / Annual
Decadal / Centennial
MethodsMethod
Data Collection
Data Collection - Measurement
Data Analysis
Literature Study
Applied Research / Technology
Mountain Research InitiativeMRI Research area
Long-term monitoring and analysis of indicators of environmental change in mount
Process studies along altitudinal gradients and in associated headwater basins
Sustainable land use and natural resources management
MRI Regions (please tick your mountain regions of interest)
North America

Specialties of Holmquist Jeff:
My research addresses questions concerning plant-animal interactions, landscape structure as a determinant of faunal movement and assemblage character, and the effects of anthropogenic and natural disturbance on ecological function. Much of our team's work emphasizes invertebrates, although we utilize other taxa as questions dictate. We have used both experimental and observational approaches, and recent studies have extended across several scales, ranging from patch boundary dynamics at the microhabitat level to experimental manipulations of rivers. This work has taken us to alpine meadows and streams, montane ponds, tropical seagrass meadows, and desert springs and playas.

Last update: 12/6/19
Source of data: ProClim- Research InfoSystem (1993-2024)
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