Richard N. Mack
#154,811
Most Influential Person Now
Richard N. Mack's AcademicInfluence.com Rankings
Richard N. Mackbiology Degrees
Biology
#11863
World Rank
#15292
Historical Rank
Ecology
#721
World Rank
#785
Historical Rank

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Biology
Richard N. Mack's Degrees
- PhD Ecology University of California, Davis
- Masters Botany University of California, Davis
- Bachelors Botany University of California, Davis
Why Is Richard N. Mack Influential?
(Suggest an Edit or Addition)Richard N. Mack's Published Works
Number of citations in a given year to any of this author's works
Total number of citations to an author for the works they published in a given year. This highlights publication of the most important work(s) by the author
Published Works
- BIOTIC INVASIONS: CAUSES, EPIDEMIOLOGY, GLOBAL CONSEQUENCES, AND CONTROL (2000) (6245)
- Biological invasions: recommendations for U.S. policy and management. (2006) (888)
- Invasion of Bromus tectorum L. into Western North America: An ecological chronicle (1981) (810)
- Controlling the spread of plant invasions: The importance of nascent foci. (1988) (683)
- The Planned Introduction of Genetically Engineered Organisms: Ecological Considerations and Recommendations (1989) (625)
- Evolution in Steppe with Few Large, Hooved Mammals (1982) (498)
- Predicting the identity and fate of plant invaders: emergent and emerging approaches. (1996) (495)
- INTERFERENCE IN DUNE ANNUALS: SPATIAL PATTERN AND NEIGHBOURHOOD EFFECTS (1977) (380)
- Humans as Global Plant Dispersers: Getting More Than We Bargained For (2001) (349)
- The Demography of Bromus Tectorum: Variation in Time and Space (1983) (329)
- Plant migration and climate change (1997) (328)
- Ecological and socioeconomic impacts of invasive alien species in island ecosystems (2007) (320)
- Adding Biofuels to the Invasive Species Fire? (2006) (312)
- Ecology of invasive plants: state of the art. (2005) (303)
- Ecophysiology of Introduced Pennisetum Setaceum on Hawaii: The Role of Phenotypic Plasticity (1995) (235)
- The United States naturalized flora: Largely the product of deliberate introductions' (2002) (223)
- Tracing Plant Introduction and Spread: Genetic Evidence from Bromus tectorum (Cheatgrass) (2001) (214)
- Effects of Herbivory on Growth and Biomass Allocation in Native and Introduced Species of Lonicera (1994) (211)
- Genetic variation in Bromus tectorum (Poaceae): comparison between native and introduced populations (1993) (205)
- VARIATION IN DEMOGRAPHY OF JUVENILE TSUGA HETEROPHYLLA ACROSS THE SUBSTRATUM MOSAIC (1984) (204)
- Toward a Global Information System for Invasive Species (2000) (171)
- China's Booming Economy Is Sparking and Accelerating Biological Invasions (2008) (165)
- Alien Plant Invasion into the Intermountain West: A Case History (1986) (152)
- Cultivation Fosters Plant Naturalization by Reducing Environmental Stochasticity (2004) (151)
- Ecological genetics of Bromus tectorum (1991) (148)
- Can the concept of ecosystem services be practically applied to improve natural resource management decisions (2010) (144)
- Science Priorities for Reducing the Threat of Invasive Species to Sustainable Forestry (2005) (140)
- Potential distribution of the invasive tree Triadica sebifera (Euphorbiaceae) in the United States: evaluating climex predictions with field trials (2007) (137)
- The demography of Bromus tectorum: the role of microclimate, grazing and disease (1984) (137)
- Genetic Bottlenecks in Alien Plant Species INFLUENCE OF MATING SYSTEMS AND INTRODUCTION DYNAMICS 8 (2005) (136)
- Eradicating invasive plants: hard-won lessons for islands. (2003) (132)
- Vector science and integrated vector management in bioinvasion ecology: conceptual frameworks. (2005) (130)
- Phylogenetic Constraint, Absent Life Forms, and Preadapted Alien Plants: A Prescription for Biological Invasions (2003) (122)
- Genetic variation in Bromus tectorum (Poaceae) : population differentiation in its North american range (1991) (121)
- Plant naturalizations and invasions in the Eastern United States: 1634-1860. (2003) (120)
- Global plant dispersal, naturalization, and invasion: pathways, modes, and circumstances. (2003) (117)
- Invasive alien species: the nature of the problem. (2005) (100)
- The commercial seed trade: An early disperser of weeds in the United States (1991) (94)
- Biotic barriers to plant naturalization. (1996) (94)
- Screening bioenergy feedstock crops to mitigate invasion risk (2010) (82)
- Predicting the Identity of Plant Invaders: Future Contributions from Horticulture (2005) (76)
- Best practices for the prevention and management of invasive alien species. (2005) (73)
- Human dimensions of invasive alien species. (2005) (70)
- Ecological genetics of Bromus tectorum (1991) (67)
- Genetic variation in Bromus tectorum (Poaceae): introduction dynamics in North America. (1993) (65)
- Genetic variation in Bromus tectorum (Poaceae): differentiation in the eastern United States. (2002) (63)
- Late Quaternary Pollen Record from Big Meadow, Pend Oreille County, Washington (1978) (62)
- The population biology of Bromus tectorum in forests: distinguishing the opportunity for dispersal from environmental restriction (1990) (61)
- Granivory of invasive, naturalized, and native plants in communities differentially susceptible to invasion. (2014) (59)
- The effect of shading on photosynthesis, growth, and regrowth following defoliation for Bromus tectorum (1990) (59)
- Survivorship of Cerastium atrovirens at Aberffraw, Anglesey (1976) (58)
- Reexamination of Postglacial Vegetation History in Northern Idaho: Hager Pond, Bonner Co. (1978) (57)
- Introduction history and population genetics of the invasive grass Bromus tectorum (Poaceae) in Canada. (2007) (55)
- Evaluating the Credits and Debits of a Proposed Biofuel Species: Giant Reed (Arundo donax) (2008) (52)
- Holocene Vegetational History of the Kootenai River Valley, Montana (1983) (50)
- Holocene Vegetation History of the Okanogan Valley, Washington (1979) (49)
- The population biology of Bromus tectorum in forests: effect of disturbance, grazing, and litter on seedling establishment and reproduction (1990) (47)
- Late Quaternary Vegetation History at Waits Lake, Colville River Valley, Washington (1978) (46)
- Invasive plants as catalysts for the spread of human parasites (2011) (44)
- Fifty years of ‘Waging war on cheatgrass’: research advances, while meaningful control languishes (2010) (44)
- Comparison of allozyme variability in a native and an introduced species of Lonicera (1995) (43)
- Initial effects of ashfall from mount st. Helens on vegetation in eastern washington and adjacent idaho. (1981) (43)
- Late Quaternary pollen record from the Sanpoil River Valley, Washington (1978) (40)
- Root Interaction Between Bromus Tectorum and Poa Pratensis: A Three‐Dimensional Analysis (1982) (38)
- Ecological genetics of Bromus tectorum (1991) (38)
- Mount St. Helens Ash: Recreating Its Effects on the Steppe Environment and Ecophysiology (1986) (35)
- The circumstances and characteristics of spoil colonization within a local flora (1986) (35)
- Environmental constraints on the invasion of Triadica sebifera in the eastern United States: an experimental field assessment (2008) (33)
- Assessing invasive alien species across multiple spatial scales: working globally and locally (2007) (32)
- Allozyme diversity in the apomictic vine Bryonia alba (cucurbitaceae): potential consequences of multiple introductions (1995) (32)
- Understanding the processes of weed invasions: the influence of environmental stochasticity. (1995) (32)
- Legal and institutional frameworks for invasive alien species. (2005) (30)
- CONSPICUOUS ALGAL COLONIZATION OF THE ASH FROM MOUNT ST. HELENS 1 (1982) (29)
- Bromus tectorum (Poaceae) in midcontinental United States: Population genetic analysis of an ongoing invasion. (2008) (28)
- Modern Forest Pollen Spectra from Eastern Washington and Northern Idaho (1978) (26)
- The fate of alien conifers in long‐term plantings in the USA (2006) (25)
- Naturalization of plant populations: the role of cultivation and population size and density (2010) (24)
- Assessing biotic invasions in time and space: the second imperative. (2005) (23)
- Eradicating Plant Invaders: Combining Ecologically-Based Tactics and Broad-Sense Strategy (2009) (23)
- Death of steppe cryptogams under the ash from Mount St. Helens. (1987) (22)
- Clonal Diversity Within and Among Introduced Populations of the Apomictic Vine Bryonia alba (Cucurbitaceae) (2000) (21)
- Plant invasions: Early and continuing expressions of global change (1997) (20)
- Bracketing dates for two ash falls from Mount Mazama (1979) (19)
- Propagule Pressure and Introduction Pathways of Bromus tectorum (Cheatgrass; Poaceae) in the Central United States (2011) (19)
- Mineral Return via the Litter of Artemisia tridentata (1977) (19)
- Assessing competition among skewed distributions of plant biomass: an application of the jackknife (1984) (15)
- The ISSG Global Invasive Species Database and other aspects of an early warning system. (2005) (15)
- Open minded and open access: introducing NeoBiota, a new peer-reviewed journal of biological invasions (2011) (15)
- Ecology. Adding biofuels to the invasive species fire? (2006) (14)
- Facilitation and synergistic interactions between introduced aquatic species. (2005) (13)
- Invasion of Bromus tectorum (L.) into California and the American Southwest: rapid, multi-directional and genetically diverse (2014) (12)
- Weed Risk Assessments Are an Effective Component of Invasion Risk Management (2016) (12)
- Tsuga canadensis in Ohio: Synecological and phytogeographical relationships (1976) (10)
- Aseasonal leaf abscission in Populus induced by volcanic ash (1984) (9)
- Characterizing ecological risks of introductions and invasions. (2005) (9)
- Comparative responses of Achillea millefolium ecotypes to competition and soil type (1987) (9)
- First Comprehensive Botanical Survey of the Columbia Plateau, Washington: The Sandberg and Leiberg Expedition of 1893 (1988) (8)
- Mating System, Introduction and Genetic Diversity of Bromus tectorum in North America, the Most Notorious Product of Evolution Within Bromus Section Genea (2016) (8)
- Mapping Individual Plants with a Field‐Portable Digitizer (1979) (7)
- The Fagus grandifolia-Acer saccharum-Podophyllum peltatum Association in Northeastern Ohio (1977) (7)
- Shade tolerance of temperate Asian bamboos: a harbinger of their naturalization in Pacific Northwest coniferous forests? (2013) (7)
- CHARACTERISTICS OF INVADING PLANT SPECIES (2004) (7)
- Potential Role of Masting by Introduced Bamboos in Deer Mice (Peromyscus maniculatus) Population Irruptions Holds Public Health Consequences (2015) (6)
- U.S. action lowers barriers to invasive species (2020) (6)
- Competition between Bromus tectorum L. and Poa pratensis L.: the role of light (1983) (6)
- Eradication or control? Combating plants through a lump sum payment or on the instalment plan. (2004) (6)
- MODELLING TO PREDICT THE FATE OF INVADING PLANTS (2005) (3)
- Biotic Invasion : A Global Perspective and Ecology of Invasion : Patterns and Perspectives (2006) (3)
- Writing with Precision, Clarity, and Economy (1986) (3)
- Biotic constraints on the establishment and performance of native, naturalized, and invasive plants in Pacific Northwest (USA) steppe and forest (2017) (3)
- Natural barriers to plant naturalizations and invasions in the Sonoran Desert. (2002) (2)
- Shade tolerance of temperate Asian bamboos: a harbinger of their naturalization in Pacific Northwest coniferous forests? (2013) (1)
- Apparent Tolerance of Low Water Availability in Temperate Asian Bamboos1 (2018) (1)
- Genetic analysis of Bromus tectorum (Poaceae) in the Mediterranean region: biogeographical pattern of native populations (2020) (1)
- Genetic analysis of Bromus tectorum (Poaceae) in the Mediterranean region: biogeographical pattern of native populations (2020) (1)
- Soil-borne seed pathogens: contributors to the naturalization gauntlet in Pacific Northwest (USA) forest and steppe communities? (2018) (1)
- Trade routes for commerce in plants or pathways for invasive species? The dualism of international commerce. (2004) (1)
- STATES: POPULATION GENETIC ANALYSIS OF AN ONGOING INVASION 1 (2008) (1)
- Soil-borne seed pathogens: contributors to the naturalization gauntlet in Pacific Northwest (USA) forest and steppe communities? (2018) (0)
- Mount St. Helens ash: recreating its effects on the steppe environment and ecophysiology. [Artemisia tridentata; Lupinus sulphureus] (1986) (0)
- Erratum to: Invasion of Bromus tectorum (L.) into California and the American Southwest: rapid, multi-directional and genetically diverse (2014) (0)
- Two Books on Environmental Law (1972) (0)
- Eradicating plants : hard-won lessons (2002) (0)
- Biotic Immigrants: Biogeography of Mediterranean Invasions . R. H. Groves and F. di Castri, Eds. Cam· bridge University Press, New York, 1992. xvi, 485 pp., illus. $125. (1992) (0)
- Cheatgrass (2019) (0)
- Invasion of Bromus tectorum (L.) into California and the American Southwest: rapid, multi-directional and genetically diverse (2014) (0)
- CAWS Oration: sustained control of plant invaders requires our sustained public outreach. (2012) (0)
- Taking personal environmental action in a post‐truth world (2019) (0)
- Plant invasions in western North America: implications for temperate grasslands worldwide. (2008) (0)
- Erratum to: Invasion of Bromus tectorum (L.) into California and the American Southwest: rapid, multi-directional and genetically diverse (2014) (0)
- James A. Young and Charlie D. Clements: Cheatgrass. Fire and forage on the range (2010) (0)
- A New Text in General Ecology (1973) (0)
- Correction: Potential Role of Masting by Introduced Bamboos in Deer Mice (Peromyscus maniculatus) Population Irruptions Holds Public Health Consequences (2015) (0)
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What Schools Are Affiliated With Richard N. Mack?
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