Robert M. Pringle

Intraguild predation, thermoregulation, and microhabitat selection by snakes (2009)

Webb, Jonathan K., Pringle, Robert M., Shine, Richard

Intraguild (IG) predation, the killing and eating of potential competitors, can be a powerful force within faunal assemblages. If both the IG predator and its prey prefer similar microhabitats in...

Canopy Removal Restores Habitat Quality for an Endangered Snake in a Fire Suppressed Landscape (2005)

Jonathan K. Webb, Richard Shine, Robert M. Pringle

In the last two centuries, European fire suppression practices have produced increases in vegetation density and canopy cover in many landscapes. Potentially, increases in canopy cover could...

The Origins of the Nile Perch in Lake Victoria (2005)

ROBERT M. PRINGLE

The ways in which economic, social, and political forces lead to species introductions are an important, if overlooked, aspect of ecology and conservation. The nonnative Nile perch (Lates niloticus)...

How Do Nocturnal Snakes Select Diurnal Retreat Sites? (2004)

Jonathan K. Webb, Robert M. Pringle, Richard Shine

Theoretical and empirical studies of habitat selection suggest that reptiles should use “fixed” structural features (perch diameter, vegetation) or light intensity (sun and shade) to select...

Herbivore-initiated interaction cascades and their modulation by productivity in an African savanna

Pringle, Robert M., Young, Truman P., Rubenstein, Daniel I., McCauley, Douglas J.

Despite conceptual recognition that indirect effects initiated by large herbivores are likely to have profound impacts on ecological community structure and function, the existing literature on...

The northern Cheyenne Indians in the reservation period.

Pringle, Robert M.

Thesis (A.B., Honors)--Harvard University, 1958.

Where does biodiversity go from here? A grim business-as-usual forecast and a hopeful portfolio of partial solutions

Ehrlich, Paul R., Pringle, Robert M.

The threats to the future of biodiversity are many and well known. They include habitat conversion, environmental toxification, climate change, and direct exploitation of wildlife, among others....