List of works by John R. Demboski

Ancient hybridization and mitochondrial capture between two species of chipmunks.

scientific article

Cytochrome b phylogeny of North American hares and jackrabbits (Lepus, lagomorpha) and the effects of saturation in outgroup taxa.

scientific article published in March 1999

Divergence with gene flow within the recent chipmunk radiation (Tamias)

scientific article

Diversification, Introgression, and Rampant Cytonuclear Discordance in Rocky Mountains Chipmunks (Sciuridae: Tamias)

scientific article published on 07 January 2021

Integrative species delimitation of the widespread North American jumping mice (Zapodinae).

scientific article

Introgression at differentially aged hybrid zones in red-tailed chipmunks.

scientific article published on 11 July 2010

Natural selection shaped the rise and fall of passenger pigeon genomic diversity.

scientific article

No evidence for phylosymbiosis in western chipmunk species

scientific article published on 15 November 2019

Speciation of North American pygmy shrews (Eulipotyphla: Soricidae) supports spatial but not temporal congruence of diversification among boreal species

scientific journal article

Summary of the Snowmastodon Project Special Volume A high-elevation, multi-proxy biotic and environmental record of MIS 6–4 from the Ziegler Reservoir fossil site, Snowmass Village, Colorado, USA

scholarly article by Ian Matthew Miller et al published November 2014 in Quaternary Research

Sympatric Parasites Have Similar Host-Associated, but Asynchronous, Patterns of Diversification

scientific article published on 11 July 2018

Temporal and spatial mosaics: deep host association and shallow geographic drivers shape genetic structure in a widespread pinworm, Rauschtineria eutamii.

scientific article

The evolution of white-tailed jackrabbit camouflage in response to past and future seasonal climates

scientific article published on 23 March 2023

Transformational Principles for NEON Sampling of Mammalian Parasites and Pathogens: A Response to Springer and Colleagues