2023 Volf, M., J.V. Leong, P. de Lima Ferreira, T. Holicová, P. Kozel, P. Matos-Maraví, E. Hörandl, N.D. Wagner, N. Luntamo, J.-P. Salminen, S.T. Segar, and B.E. Sedio. Differential macroevolutionary trends support various aspects of chemical diversity in lowland and highland willow species. Ecology Letters. 10.1111/ele.14273
Mezzomo, P., A. Weinhold, K. Aurová, L.R. Jorge, P. Kozel, J. Michálek, N. Nováková, C.L. Seifert, T. Volfová, M. Enström, J.-P. Salminen, B.E. Sedio, and M. Volf. Leaf volatile and nonvolatile metabolites show different levels of specificity in response to herbivory. Ecology and Evolution 13(5): e10123.
Salgado, A.L., A.E. Glassmire, R. Díaz, M.J. Stout, B.E. Sedio, J. Čuda, P. Pyšek, L.A. Meyerson, and J.T. Cronin. Metabolomic evenness underlies intraspecific differences among lineages of the wetland grass Phragmites australis. Journal of Chemical Ecology. 10.1007/s10886-023-01425-2
Morrison, C.M., A.C. Rhodes, E.A. Bowman, R.M. Plowes, B.E. Sedio, and L.E. Gilbert. Adding insult to injury: Light competition and novel weapons interact to facilitate Guinea grass invasion. Ecosphere 14(3): e4438. doi:10.1002/ecs2.4438
2022 Barker, W., L.S. Comita, S.J. Wright, O.L. Phillips, B.E. Sedio, and S.A. Batterman. Widespread herbivory cost constrains tropical nitrogen-fixing tree species. Nature 612: 483-487.
Kozel, P., J.V. Leong, I. Malenovsky, J. Šumpich, J. Macek, J. Michálek, B.E. Sedio, and M. Volf. Specialized chemistry affects insect abundance but not overall community similarity in three rare shrub willows: Salix myrtilloides, S. repens, and S. rosmarinifolia. European Journal of Entomology 119:368-378. doi:10.14411/eje.2022.038
Volf, M., T. Volfová, E. Hörandl, N. Wagner, N. Luntamo, J.-P. Salminen, and B.E. Sedio. Abiotic stress rather than biotic interactions drives contrasting trends in chemical richness and variation in alpine willows. Functional Ecology doi:10.1111/1365-2435.14169
Wang, X., S. Sun, B.E. Sedio, S. Glomglieng, Y. He, M. Cao, K. Cao, J. Yang, X. Li, J. Zhang, and J. Yang. Niche differentiation along multiple functional-trait dimensions contributes to high local diversity of Euphorbiaceae in a tropical tree assemblage. Journal of Ecology doi:10.1111/1365-2745.13984
2021 Sedio, B.E., M.J. Spasojevic, J.A. Myers, S.J. Wright, M.D. Person, et al. Chemical similarity of co-occurring trees decreases with precipitation and temperature in North American forests. Frontiers in Ecology and Evolution 9:679638.doi:10.3389/fevo.2021.679638
2020 Sedio, B.E., J.L. Devaney, J. Pullen, G.G. Parker, S.J. Wright, and J.D. Parker. Chemical novelty facilitates herbivore resistance and biological invasions in some introduced plant species. Ecology and Evolution 10:1-23. doi:10.1002/ece3.6575
Christian, N., B.E. Sedio, X. Florez, L.A. Ramirez-Camejo, E.I. Rojas, L.C. Mejía, S. Palmedo, A. Rose, J.W. Schroeder, and E.A. Herre. Frontiers in community assembly and function of endophytic fungi using Psychotria spp. and Theobroma cacao as model systems. American Journal of Botany 107(2):1-10. doi:10.1002/ajb2.1436
2019 Sedio, B.E., A. Durant A., J.C. Rojas Echeverri, C. Debyser, C.A. Boya P., and S.J. Wright. A comparison of inducible, ontogenetic, and interspecific sources of variation in the foliar metabolome in tropical trees. PeerJ 7:37536. doi:10.7717/peerj.7536
Sedio, B.E. Recent advances in understanding the role of secondary metabolites in species-rich multitrophic networks. Current Opinion in Insect Science 32, 124-130. doi:10.1016/j.cois.2019.01.008
2018 Sedio, B. E., J. D. Parker, S. M. McMahon, and S. J. Wright. Comparative foliar metabolomics of a tropical and a temperate forest community. Ecology. doi:10.1002/ecy.2533
Sedio, B. E., C. A. Boya P., and J. C. Rojas Echeverri. A protocol for high-throughput, untargeted forest community metabolomics using mass spectrometry molecular networks. Applications in Plant Sciences. doi: 10.1002/aps3.1033.
2017 Sedio, B. E. Recent breakthroughs in metabolomics promise to reveal the cryptic chemical traits that mediate plant community composition, character evolution, and lineage diversification. New Phytologist. doi: 10.1111/nph.14438.
Sedio, B. E., J. C. Rojas Echeverri, C. Boya P., and S. J. Wright. Sources of variation in foliar secondary chemistry in a tropical forest tree community. Ecology. doi:10.1002/ecy.1689.
2016 Wang M., J. Carver, V. V. Phelan, L. M. Sanchez, N. Garg, ... B. E. Sedio, ... P. C. Dorrestein, and N. Bandeira (116 authors). Sharing and community curation of mass spectrometry data with Global Natural Products Social Molecular Networking. Nature Biotechnology34 (8): 828-837. doi: 10.1038/nbt.3597.
2015 Sheehan, M. J., C. A. Botero, T. A. Hendry, B. E. Sedio, J. M. Jandt, S. Weiner, A. L. Togh, and E. A. Tibbetts. Different axes of environmental variation explain the presence versus extent of cooperative nest founding of associations of Polistes paper wasps. Ecology Letters18: 1057-1067.
2013 Sedio, B. E., J. R. Paul, C. M. Taylor, and C. W. Dick. Fine-scale niche structure of Neotropical forests reflects a legacy of the Great American Biotic Interchange. Nature Communications4:1-8. doi: 10.1038/ncomms3317.
Sedio, B. E., and A. M. Ostling. How specialised must natural enemies be to facilitate coexistence among plants? Ecology Letters16: 995-1003.
2012 Sedio, B.E., S. J. Wright, and C. W. Dick. Trait evolution and the coexistence of a species swarm in the tropical forest understory. Journal of Ecology100: 1183-1193.