Jacquelin G. Holmquest Data-verified
Affiliation confirmed via AI analysis of OpenAlex, ORCID, and web sources.
Researcher
grad_student
Research Areas
Biography and Research Information
OverviewAI-generated summary
Jacquelin G. Holmquest's research investigates the impacts of recent climate change on butterfly populations across North America. Her work specifically examines how changing environmental conditions create distinct areas where butterfly populations are increasing, while others experience declines. This research highlights the complex and varied responses of species to climate shifts within a continental ecosystem. Holmquest has collaborated with researchers from Hendrix College and the University of Arkansas at Fayetteville on this topic.
Metrics
- h-index: 1
- Publications: 1
- Citations: 73
Selected Publications
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Recent climate change is creating hotspots of butterfly increase and decline across North America (2021)
Collaboration Network
Top Collaborators
- Recent climate change is creating hotspots of butterfly increase and decline across North America
- Recent climate change is creating hotspots of butterfly increase and decline across North America
- Recent climate change is creating hotspots of butterfly increase and decline across North America
- Recent climate change is creating hotspots of butterfly increase and decline across North America
- Recent climate change is creating hotspots of butterfly increase and decline across North America
- Recent climate change is creating hotspots of butterfly increase and decline across North America
- Recent climate change is creating hotspots of butterfly increase and decline across North America
- Recent climate change is creating hotspots of butterfly increase and decline across North America
- Recent climate change is creating hotspots of butterfly increase and decline across North America
- Recent climate change is creating hotspots of butterfly increase and decline across North America
- Recent climate change is creating hotspots of butterfly increase and decline across North America
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