Professor
Room 203, Animal Industries Bldg.
2126 TAMU
College Station, TX 77843-2126
Phone: (979) 458-1899
Fax: (979) 845-6430
Email: bwilcox@tamu.edu
Recent Publications
Bazan, R. A., Wilcox, B.P., Munster, C. and Gary, M. 2012. Removing woody vegetation has little effect on conduit flow recharge. Ecohydrology. doi: 10.1002/eco. 1277.
Belnap, J., Wilcox, B. P., Van Scoyoc, M. V. and Phillips, S. L. 2012. Successional stage of biological soil crusts: an accurate indicator of ecohydrological condition. Ecohydrol.. doi: 10.1002/eco.1281.
Wilcox, B.P., Sorice, M.G., Angerer, J. and Wright, C.L. 2012. Historical Changes in Stocking Densities on Texas Rangelands. Rangeland Ecology & Management: May 2012, Vol. 65, No. 3, pp. 313-317.
Sorice, M.G., U.P. Kreuter, Wilcox, B.P., Fox, W.E. 2012. Classifying owners of drylands: implications for ecosystem services. Journal of Arid Environments 80:56-64.
Wilcox, B.P., M.S. Seyfried, D.D. Breshears, J.J. McDonnell. 2012. Ecohydrologic connections and complexities in drylands: new perspectives for understanding transformative landscape change. Ecohydrology 5:143-144.
Turnbull, L., B.P. Wilcox, J. Belnap, S. Ravi, P. D’Odorico, D. Childers, W. Gwenzi, G. Okin, J. Wainwright, K. Caylor and T. Sankey. 2012. Understanding the role of ecohydrological feedbacks in ecosystem-state change in dryland ecosystems. Ecohydrology 5:174-183.
Wilcox, B.P., L. Turnbull, M.H. Young, J.Williams, S. Ravi, M.S. Seyfried, D.R. Bowling, R.L. Scott, M.J. Germino, T. Caldwell, and John Wainwright.2012. Invasion of shrublands by exotic grasses: ecohydrological consequences in cold vs. warm deserts. Ecohydrology 5:160-173.
Wilcox, B.P. M.G. Sorice, and M.H Young. 2011. Dryland ecohydrology in the Anthropocene–taking stock of human-ecological interactions. Geography Compass 5/3:112-127.
