From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
Tristram G. Seidler is an American
botanist,
ecologist and professor at
University of Massachusetts Amherst. His work includes studying sampling biases in
herbarium collections,
[3]
[4]
seed dispersal patterns,
[5]
[6] and curating plant and plant cell culture collections for use in research.
[7]
[8]
[9]
References
-
^ Raver, Anne (2008-04-24). "Humming Praises For the Wild Bee". The New York Times.
-
^
"UMass Amherst: Biology Department: Faculty: Tristram G. Seidler". www.bio.umass.edu. UMass Amherst. 16 October 2013.
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^ Daru, Barnabas H.; Park, Daniel S.; Primack, Richard B.; Willis, Charles G.; Barrington, David S.; Whitfeld, Timothy J. S.; Seidler, Tristram G.; Sweeney, Patrick W.; Foster, David R.; Ellison, Aaron M.; Davis, Charles C. (January 2018).
"Widespread sampling biases in herbaria revealed from large-scale digitization". New Phytologist. 217 (2): 939–955.
doi:
10.1111/nph.14855.
PMID
29083043.
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^ Reuell, Peter (2017-12-27).
"Study illuminates botanical bias". Phys.org. Retrieved 2018-10-10.
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^ Seidler, Tristram G;
Plotkin, Joshua B;
Nathan, Ran (17 October 2006).
"Seed Dispersal and Spatial Pattern in Tropical Trees". PLOS Biology. 4 (11): e344.
doi:
10.1371/journal.pbio.0040344.
PMC
1609130.
PMID
17048988.
-
^ "Rainforest tree placement is studied". UPI Newstrack. 2006-11-26.
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^ Seidler, Tristram; Brumback, William.
"New Facilities for Housing and Curation of Seed Bank of Rare and Endangered Plants of the Northeastern United States". Grantome.com. Grantome.
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^ Normanly, Jennifer; Ma, Li-Jun; Seidler, Tristram.
"CSBR: Living Stock Collections: A "Biological Gold Mine" of plant natural products and pathways for biochemical and evolutionary studies". Grantome.com. Grantome.
-
^ Lathrop, Janet (2016-12-14).
"UMass Amherst and Boston-based PCL, Inc. Offer New Tool for Biotech Research". Office of News & Media Relations UMass Amherst. Retrieved 2018-10-10.