Freeman, D.C.; McArthur, E.D.; Miglia, K.J.; Nilson, M.J.; Brown, M.L. 2007. Sex and the lonely Atriplex. Western North American Naturalist. 67(1): 137-141.
Cane, J.H.; Griswold, T.G.; Parker, F.D. 2007. Substrates and materials used for nesting by North American Osmia bees (Hymenoptera: Apiformes: Megachilidae). Annals of the Entomological Society of America. 100(3): 350-358.
Cane, J.H. 2008. Pollinating bees crucial to farming wildflower seed for U.S. habitat restoration. In: James, R.R.; Pitts-Singer, T. Bees in Agricultural Ecosystems. UK: Oxford University. Press. p. 48-64.
Cane, J.H. 2008. Breeding biologies, seed production and species-rich bee guilds of Cleome lutea and C. serrulata (Cleomaceae). Plant Species Biology. 23:152-158.
Kramer, A.T.; Fant, J.B.; Ashley, M.V. 2011. Influences of landscape and pollinators on population genetic structure: Examples from three Penstemon (Plantaginaceae) species in the Great Basin. American Journal of Botany. 98(1): 109-121.
Watrous, K.; Cane, J.H. 2011. Breeding biology of the threadstalk milkvetch, Astragalus filipes (Fabaceae), with a review of the genus. American Midland Naturalist. 165(2): 225-240.
Cane, J.H.; Neff, J.L. 2011. Predicted fates of ground-nesting bees in soil heated by wildfire: Thermal tolerances of life stages and a survey of nesting depths. Biological Conservation. 144: 2631-2636.
Cane, J.H. 2011. Specialist Osmia bees forage indiscriminately among hybridizing Balsamorhiza floral hosts. Oecologia. 167(1): 107-116.
Cane, J.H. 2011. Meeting wild bees’ needs on rangelands. Rangelands. 33(3): 27-32.
Swoboda, K.A.; Cane, J.H. 2012. Breeding biology and incremental benefits of outcrossing for the restoration wildflower, Hedysarum boreale Nutt. (Fabaceae). Plant Species Biology. 27: 138-146.
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