Olden, “ Global change, global trade, and the next wave of plant invasions”, Frontiers in Ecology and the Environment 10(1): 20-28, 2012īradley, B.A., D.M. Gomez-Dans, “ Introduced annual grass increases regional fire activity across the arid western USA (1980-2009)”, Global Change Biology, 19: 173-183, 2013īradley, B.A., D.M. Sorte “ Space to invade? Comparative range infilling and potential range of invasive and native plants”, Global Ecology & Biogeography 24(3):348-359, 2015īradley, B.A., “Remote detection of invasive plants, a review of spectral, textural and phenological approaches”, Biological Invasions 16(7):1411-1425, 2014īradley, B.A., “ Distribution models of invasive plants over-estimate potential impact”, Biological Invasions, 15(7): 1417-1429, 2013īalch, J.K., B.A. Bradley, “Plants’ native distributions do not reflect climatic tolerance”, Diversity & Distributions, 22: 615-624, 2016īradley, B.A., R.
“ Quantifying the human influence on fire ignition across the western US”, Ecological Applications, 26(8): 2388-2399, 2016īocsi, T., J.M. “ Out of the weeds? Reduced plant invasion risk with climate change in the continental United States” Biological Conservation, 203:306-312, 2016įusco, E.J., J.T. Smith, In Press, Frontiers in Ecology & Environmentīradley, B.A. Bradley, Remote Sensing of Environment, 220, 30-40, 2019 Bradley, “ Invasive grasses increase fire occurrence and frequency across U.S. Sorte, “ Disentangling the abundance-impact relationship for invasive species”, Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences, 116(20), 9919-9924, 2019įusco, E.J., J.T. Bradley, “ Biotic resistance to invasion is ubiquitous across ecosystems of the United States”, Ecology Letters, 23, 476-482, 2019īradley, B.A., B.B. Bradley, “Supporting proactive management in the context of climate change: Prioritizing range-shifting invasive plants based on impact”, Biological Invasions, 22, 2371-2383, 2020īeaury, E.M., J.T. Bradley “Incorporating climate change into invasive species management – insights from managers”, Biological Invasions, 22, 233-252, 2020 Introduction to Geographic Information Science (GIS)īA 2000 – Pomona College Selected Publicationsīeaury, E.M., E.J.
Her research has a strong focus on terrestrial plant invasions, with a goal of understanding how invasion risk varies spatially in the context of anthropogenic disturbance and climate change.
She is interested in how the geographical locations of species across landscapes and regions can inform ecological understanding of species distributions, invasion risk assessments, and conservation planning. Bethany Bradley is a Professor of Biogeography and Spatial Ecology in the Department of Environmental Conservation at UMass.