Simon P. Tye Source Confirmed

Affiliation confirmed via AI analysis of OpenAlex, ORCID, and web sources.

Researcher

University of Arkansas at Fayetteville

faculty

8 h-index 18 pubs 149 cited

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Biography and Research Information

OverviewAI-generated summary

Simon P. Tye's research focuses on ecological dynamics and evolutionary processes. His work investigates how environmental changes, such as climate warming, influence ecological events, including mass mortality in fish populations and subsequent impacts on food web structures. Tye also studies the interactions between life cycle fitness components and their role in competitor coexistence, as well as the frequency-dependent selection across diverse life forms. His publications explore themes such as immune function in prey species and the evolutionary history of diatoms revealed through phylogenomics. Tye collaborates with researchers at the University of Arkansas at Fayetteville, including Adam M. Siepielski, with whom he has co-authored ten publications. His scholarly output includes 18 publications with 149 citations and an h-index of 8, indicating recent and ongoing research activity.

Metrics

  • h-index: 8
  • Publications: 18
  • Citations: 149

Selected Publications

  • Phylogenomics reveals the slow-burning fuse of diatom evolution (2025) DOI
  • Meta‐analytical evidence for frequency‐dependent selection across the tree of life (2024) DOI
  • Predator mass mortality events restructure food webs through trophic decoupling (2024) DOI
  • Predator mass mortality events restructure freshwater food webs via trophic decoupling (2023) DOI
  • Interactions between fitness components across the life cycle constrain competitor coexistence (2023) DOI
  • Climate warming amplifies the frequency of fish mass mortality events across north temperate lakes (2022) DOI
  • A common measure of prey immune function is not constrained by the cascading effects of predators (2021) DOI
  • Insect Species Coexistence and Conservation Amidst Global Change (2021) DOI

Collaborators

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