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If you cannot access any publication of interest, please email Mallory for a pdf.

Publications

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2024

Williams D.R., Duncan D., Rice M.M., and Sanchez E.L. Fostering community discussions and building a toolkit for mental health and wellness in STEM. Journal of Microbiology and Biology Education. 0:e00089-24.

doi: https://doi.org/10.1128/jmbe.00089-24

2023

Cheng, S. J., K. M. Gaynor, A. C. Moore, K. Darragh, C. O. Estien, J. W. Hammond, C. Lawrence, K. L. Mills, M. D. Baiz, D. Ignace, L. Khadempour, M. A. McCary, M. M. Rice, S. J. Tumber-Dávila, and J. A. Smith. Championing inclusive terminology in ecology and evolution. Trends in Ecology & Evolution 38:381-384.

doi: https://doi.org/10.1016/j.tree.2022.12.011

2022

Arya, D.J., Muller, A., Cano, J., Hyun, F., Rice, M.M., Christman, D. Undergraduate service learning as a context for exploring the ‘Institutional Void’ of higher education. Pursuit of Liberation: Critical Service-Learning as Capacity Building for Historicized, Humanizing, and Embodied Action: Vol. 17. Advances in Service-Learning Research. Information Age Publishing.

2021

Ovid, D., Rice, M.M., Luna, J.V.*, Tabayoyong, K.*, Lajevardi, P., and K.D. Tanner.  Investigating Student Perceptions of Instructor Talk: Alignment with Researchers’ Categorizations and Analysis of Remembered Language. CBE-Life Sciences Education 

doi: https://doi.org/10.1187/cbe.21-06-0153

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Muller, A., Christman, D., Rice, M.M., Soto-Apolinar, F.*, Hirsch, S., and D. Arya. Undergraduate motivations for participating in afterschool programs: a case study of the STEMinist Program. After School Matters

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Rice, M.M., Baldwin, D.G.*, Fischer, J.N.*., Fuchs, C., and D.E. Burkepile. Complex interactions with nutrients and sediment alter the effects of predation on a reef-building coral. Marine Ecology

doi: https://doi.org/10.1111/maec.12670

2020

Rice, M.M., Maher, R.L, Correa, A.M.S., Burkepile, D.E., Moeller, H.V., Lemoine, N.P., Shantz, A.A., and N.J. Silbiger. Macroborer presence on corals increases with nutrient input and promotes parrotfish bioerosion. Coral Reefs

doi: 10.1007/s00338-020-01904-y

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Donovan, M.K., Adam, T.C., Shantz, A.A., Speare, K.E., Munsterman, K.S., Rice, M.M., Schmitt, R.J., Holbrook, S.J., and D.E. Burkepile. Nitrogen pollution interacts with heat stress to increase coral bleaching across the seascape. Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences

doi: 10.1073/pnas.1915395117

2019

Rice, M.M., Ezzat, L. and D.E. Burkepile. Corallivory in the Anthropocene: Interactive effects of anthropogenic stressors and corallivory on coral reefs. Frontiers in Marine Science, Coral Reef Research Special Addition – Coral Reefs in the Anthropocene

doi: 10.3389/fmars.2018.00525

 

Rice, M.M. and Maher, R.L., Thurber, R.V., and D.E. Burkepile. Different nitrogen sources speed recovery from corallivory and uniquely alter the microbiome of a reef-building coral. PeerJ

doi: 10.7717/peerj.8056

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Maher, R.L., McMinds, R., Rice, M.M., Burkepile, D.E., and Thurber, R.V. Multiple stressors interact primarily through antagonism to drive ecological, functional, and phylogenetic microbiome changes. Scientific Reports

doi: 10.1038/s41598-019-43274-8

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Burkepile, D.E., Shantz, A., Adam, T., Munsterman, K., Speare, K., Ladd, M., Rice, M.M., McIlroy, S., Brooks, A., Schmitt, R., and S. Holbrook. Nitrogen source drives differential impacts of nutrients on coral bleaching prevalence, duration, and mortality. Ecosystems

doi: 10.1007/s10021-019-00433-2

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