MARGARET SWIFT
  • home
  • about
  • cv & pubs
  • research =
    • rare antelope population crash and non-recovery
    • how water access drives antelope movements
    • undergraduate work
  • communication =
    • free lesson plans & tutorials
    • 2022 gradx ted talk
    • 2023 savanna science
    • skype a scientist
    • science writing
  • decoloniality & dei =
    • decolonizing my science
    • my land acknowledgements
    • going beyond land acknowledgement
    • reading list
  • art =
    • short fiction
    • nature photography
    • portraits
  • blog

cv & publications


If you don't have access to any of these journals, please don't hesitate to email me for a PDF copy.
​ORCID: 
​0000-0001-7913-1879

2022

Schaffer-Smith, D.S., M. Swift, A. Killea, A. Gamber, R. Naidoo, J.J. Swenson. "Tracking a blue wave of ephemeral water across arid southern Africa." Environmental Research Letters 17 114063​. 2022. [hydroshare database]

Collins, C., S. Elmendorf, J.G. Smith, L. Shoemaker, M. Szojka, M. Swift, and K. Suding. "Global change re-structures alpine plant communities though interacting abiotic and biotic effects." Ecology Letters  25(8) 1813-1826. 2022.

2020

Clark, J. S., C. L. Scher, and M. Swift. "The emergent interactions that govern biodiversity change." Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences 117(29) 17074-17083. 2020.

Lab paper Contributions

​Clark, J.S., R. Andrus, ... M. Swift ..., R. Zlotin. Continent-wide tree fecundity driven by indirect climate effects. Nat Comms 12, 1242. 2021.
Journé, V., R. Andrus, ... M. Swift ..., J.S. Clark.  Globally, tree fecundity exceeds productivity gradients. Ecol Lett 25(6). 2022.
Qiu, T., M-C. Aravena, ... M. Swift ..., J.S. Clark.  Is there tree senescence? The fecundity evidence. PNAS 118(34) e2106130118. 2021.
Qiu, T., R. Andrus, ... M. Swift ..., J.S. Clark.  Limits to reproduction and seed size-number trade-offs that shape forest dominance and future recovery. Nat Comms 13, 2381 (2022).
Sharma, S., R. Andrus, ... M. Swift ..., J.S. Clark.  North American tree migration paced by climate in the West, lagging in the East. PNAS 119(3) e2116691118. 2022.
A bright blue morning sky is foregrounded by some Douglas-fir branches bearing last year's open cones.
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  • home
  • about
  • cv & pubs
  • research =
    • rare antelope population crash and non-recovery
    • how water access drives antelope movements
    • undergraduate work
  • communication =
    • free lesson plans & tutorials
    • 2022 gradx ted talk
    • 2023 savanna science
    • skype a scientist
    • science writing
  • decoloniality & dei =
    • decolonizing my science
    • my land acknowledgements
    • going beyond land acknowledgement
    • reading list
  • art =
    • short fiction
    • nature photography
    • portraits
  • blog