In Press
81: Boyles, J.G., V. Brack, Jr., and L.P. McGuire. In Press. Balancing costs and benefits of managing hibernacula of cavernicolous bats. Mammal Review.
2022
80. Brack, V., Jr., J.G. Boyles, and T. Cable. 2022. Warm blooded mammals: an enduring misconception. American Biology Teacher. 84:529-534.
79. Meteyer, C.U., J.Y. Dutheil, M.K. Keel, J.G. Boyles, and E.H. Stukenbrock. 2022. Plant pathogens provide potential clues to the origin of bat white-nose syndrome Pseudogymnoascus destructans. Virulence. 13:1020-1031.
78. Frick, W.F., E.M. Johnson, T.L. Cheng, J.S. Lankton, R.W. Warne, J. Dallas, K.L. Parise, J.T. Foster, J.G. Boyles, L.P. McGuire. 2022. Experimental inoculation trial to determine the effects of temperature and humidity on the fungal pathogen that causes white-nose syndrome in hibernating bats. Scientific Reports. 12: 971
77. Boyles, J.G., E.M. Johnson, N.W. Fuller, K.A. Silas, L. Hou, W.F. Frick, and L.P. McGuire. 2022. Behavioural microclimate selection and physiological responses to environmental conditions in a hibernating bat. Canadian Journal of Zoology. 100:233-238.
2021
76. McGuire, L.P., E.M. Johnson, W.F. Frick, and J.G. Boyles. 2021. Temperature alone is insufficient to understand hibernation energetics. Journal of Experimental Biology. 224:jeb23977.
75. Levesque, D.L., J. Nowack, and J.G. Boyles. 2021. Body temperature frequency distributions: a tool for assessing thermal performance in endotherms? Frontiers in Physiology. 12:760797.
74. Morales, O., N. Walker, R.W. Warne, and J.G. Boyles. 2021. Heterothermy as a mechanism to offset energetic costs of environmental and homeostatic perturbations. Scientific Reports. 11:19038.
73. Levesque, D.L., J.G. Boyles, C.J. Downs, and A.M. Breit. 2021. High body temperature is an unlikely cause of high viral tolerance in bats. Journal of Wildlife Diseases. 57:238-241.
72. McGuire, L.P., J.G. Boyles, R.M. Brigham. 2021. Lack of foraging site fidelity between years by Common Nighthawks (Chordeiles minor). American Midland Naturalist. 185:139-144.
71. Johnson, J.S., A. Blomberg, J.G. Boyles, T. Lilley. 2021. The winter worries of bats: past and present perspectives on winter habitat and management of cave hibernating bats. In: 50 Years of Bat Research, Foundations and New Frontiers. Springer Press. Pg. 209-223.
70. Clerc, J. R.M. Brigham, J.G. Boyles, and L.P. McGuire. 2021. A NASBR history of the advances in bat biology provided by radiotelemetry. In: 50 Years of Bat Research, Foundations and New Frontiers. Springer Press. Pg. 241-253.
2020
69. Boyles, J.G., J.S. Johnson, A. Blomberg, and T.M. Lilley. 2020. Optimal hibernation theory. Mammal Review. 50: 91-100.
68. Boyles, J.G., J. Swart, N.C. Bennett, W. Ferguson, J.R. Speakman, and D.M. Scantlebury. 2020. Energetics suggest cause for even further conservation concern for Temminck’s ground pangolin. Animal Conservation. 23:245-249.
2019
67. Boyles, J.G., D.L. Levesque, J. Nowack, M.S. Wojciechowski, C. Stawski, A. Fuller, B. Smit, and G.J. Tattersall. 2019. An oversimplification of physiological principles leads to flawed macroecological analyses. Ecology and Evolution. 9:12020-12025.
66. Boyles, J.G. 2019. A brief introduction to methods for describing body temperature in endotherms. Physiological and Biochemical Zoology.92: 365-372.
65. Baloun, D.E., Q.M.R. Webber, L.P. McGuire, J.G. Boyles, A. Shrivastav, and C.K.R. Willis. 2019. Testing the “fasting-while-foraging” hypothesis: effects of recent feeding on plasma metabolite concentrations in bats. Physiological and Biochemical Zoology. 92:373-380.
64. Bailey, L.A., R.M. R. Brigham, S.J. Bohn, J.G. Boyles, and B. Smit. 2019. An experimental test of the allotonic frequency hypothesis to isolate the effects of light pollution on bat prey selection. Oecologia. 190: 367-374.
63. Warne, R.W., S.G. Baer, and J.G. Boyles. 2019. Community physiological ecology. Trends in Ecology and Evolution. 34: 510-518.
62. Cravens, Z.M. and J.G. Boyles. 2019. Illuminating the physiological implications of artificial light on an insectivorous bat community. Oecologia. 189:69-77.
2018
61. Koen, E.L., C.L. Minnaar, C.L. Roever, and J.G. Boyles. 2018. Emerging threat of the 21st century lightscape to global biodiversity . Global Change Biology. 24: 2315-2324.
60. Wetzler, G.C.* and J.G. Boyles. 2018. The energetics of mosquito feeding by insectivorous bats. Canadian Journal of Zoology. 96: 373-377. *Undergraduate Student
59. Cravens, Z.M., V.A. Brown, T.J. Divoll, and J.G. Boyles. 2018. Illuminating prey selection in an insectivorous bat community exposed to artificial light at night. Journal of Applied Ecology. 55:705-713.
58. Krauel, J.J., L.P. McGuire, and J.G. Boyles. 2018. Testing traditional assumptions about regional migration in bats. Mammal Research. 63:115-123.
2017
57. Kirschman, L.J., M.D. McCue, J.G. Boyles, and R.W. Warne. 2017. Exogenous stress hormones alter energetic and nutrient costs of development and metamorphosis. Journal of Experimental Biology. 220: 3391-3397.
56. Boyles, J.G. 2017. Benefits of knowing the costs of disturbance to hibernating bats. Wildlife Society Bulletin. 41:388-392.
55. Boyles, J.G., N.C. Bennett, O.B. Mohammed, and A.N. Alagaili. 2017. Torpor patterns in desert hedgehogs (Paraechinus aethiopicus) represent another new point along a thermoregulatory continuum. Physiological and Biochemical Zoology. 90:445-452.
54. Boyles, J.G., E. Boyles, R.K. Dunlap, S.A. Johnson, and V. Brack, Jr. 2017. Long-term microclimate measurements add further evidence there is no “optimal” temperature for bat hibernation. Mammalian Biology. 86:9-16.
53. Alagaili, A.N., N. C. Bennett, O.B. Mohammed, I.S. Zalmout, and J.G. Boyles. 2017. Body temperature patterns of a small endotherm in an extreme desert environment. Journal of Arid Environments. 137:16-20.
2016
52. Boyles, J.G., L.P. McGuire, E. Boyles, J.P. Reimer, C.A.C. Brooks, R.W. Rutherford, T.A. Rutherford, J.O. Whitaker, Jr., G.F. McCracken. 2016. Physiological and behavioral adaptations in bats living at high latitudes. Physiology & Behavior. 165:322-327.
2015
51. Maine, J.J. and J.G. Boyles. 2015. Bats initiate vital agroecological interactions in corn. Proceedings of the National Academy of Science. 112:12438-12443.
50. Maine, J.J. and J.G. Boyles. 2015. Land cover influences dietary specialization of insectivorous bats globally. Mammal Research. 60:343-351.
49. Carey, C.S. and J.G. Boyles. 2015. Interruption of passive gas exchange is not a likely mechanism of WNS-associated death in bats. Journal of Experimental Biology. 218:1986-1989.
48. Neiles, B., C.S. Carey, A. Araujo, D. Burkhart, L.J. Kirschman, B. LaBumbard, S. LaGrange, J.J. Maine, A.M. Rombenso, M.N. Wood, and J.G. Boyles. 2015. Writing your way into high impact factor journals. ESA Bulletin. 96:312-316.
47. Minnaar, C., J.G. Boyles, I.A. Minnaar, C.L. Sole, and A.E. McKechnie. 2015. Stacking the odds: light pollution may shift the balance in an ancient predator-prey arms race. Journal of Applied Ecology. 52:522-531.
2014
46. Boyles, J.G. and V. Brack, Jr. 2014. Energetics alone is insufficient for conservation recommendations of hibernating bats. Bat Research News. 55:1-3.
2013
45. Boyles, J.G.*, A.B. Thompson*, A.E. McKechnie, E. Malan, M.M. Humphries, and V. Careau. 2013. A global heterothermic continuum in mammals. Global Ecology and Biogeography. 22:1029-1039. *Contributed equally
44. Boyles, J.G. and R. W. Warne. 2013. A novel framework for predicting use of facultative heterothermy by endotherms. Journal of Theoretical Biology. 336:242-245.
43. Cryan, P.M., C.U. Meteyer, J.G. Boyles, and D.S. Blehert. 2013. White-nose Syndrome in bats: illuminating the darkness. BMC Biology. 11:47.
42. Boyles, J.G., C.L. Sole, P.M. Cryan, and G.F. McCracken. 2013. On Estimating the Economic Value of Insectivorous Bats: Prospects and Priorities for biologists. Chapter 24 In: Bat Evolution, Ecology, and Conservation. R.A. Adams and S.C. Pedersen, eds. Springer Science Press. New York.
2012
41. Verant, M.L.*, Boyles, J.G.*, W. Waldrep, Jr., G. Wibbelt, and D.S. Blehert. 2012. Temperature-dependent growth of Geomyces destructans, the fungus that causes bat White-Nose Syndrome. PLoS ONE. 7:e46280. *Contributed equally
40. Boyles, J.G., B. Smit, C.L. Sole, and A.E. McKechnie. 2012. Body temperature patterns in two syntopic elephant shrew species during winter. Comparative Biochemistry and Physiology, Part A. 161:89-94.
39. Boyles, J.G., B. Smit, and A.E. McKechnie. 2012. Variation in body temperature is related to ambient temperature but not heat loss in two small endotherms with different thermoregulatory patterns. Journal of Zoology. 287:224-232.
38. Boyles, J.G., L. Verburgt, A.E. McKechnie, and N.C. Bennett. 2012. Heterothermy in two mole-rat species subjected to interacting thermoregulatory challenges. Journal of Experimental Zoology, Part A. 317:73-82.
37. Halsall, A.L., J.G. Boyles, and J.O. Whitaker, Jr. 2012. Body temperature patterns of big brown bats during winter in a building hibernaculum. Journal of Mammalogy. 93:497-503.
2011
36. Boyles, J.G., F.P.M. Cryan, G.F. McCracken, and T.H. Kunz. 2011. Economic importance of bats in agriculture. Science. 332:41-42.
35. Boyles, J.G., F.P.M. Cryan, G.F. McCracken, and T.H. Kunz. 2011. Concerns about extrapolating right off the bat-A response. Science. 333:287-288.
34. Lorch, J.M., A.E. Ballman, M.J. Behr, J.G. Boyles, J.T.H. Coleman, P.M. Cryan, A.C. Hicks, C.U. Meteyer, D. Redell, D.M. Reeder, and D.S. Blehert. 2011. Experimental infection of bats with Geomyces destructans causes white-nose syndrome. Nature 480:376-378.
33. Boyles, J.G., B. Smit, and A.E. McKechnie. 2011. A new comparative metric to estimate heterothermy in endotherms. Physiological and Biochemical Zoology. 84:115-123.
32. Boyles, J.G., F. Seebacher, B. Smit, and A.E. McKechnie. 2011. Adaptive thermoregulation in endotherms may alter responses to climate change. Integrative and Comparative Biology. 51:676-690.
31. Streicher, S., J.G. Boyles, M.K. Oosthuizen, and N.C. Bennett. 2011. Body temperature patterns in free-ranging subterranean Damaraland mole-rats Fukomys damarensis. PLoS ONE. 6:e26346.
30. Boyles, J.G., B. Smit, and A.E. McKechnie. 2011. Does use of the torpor cut-off method to analyze variation in body temperature cause more problems than it solves? Journal of Thermal Biology. 36:373-379.
29. Aubrey, D.P., J.G. Boyles, L.S. Krysinsky, and R.O. Teskey. 2011. Spatial and temporal patterns of xylem sap pH derived from stems and twigs of Populus deltoides L. Environmental and Experimental Botany. 71:376-381.
28. Smit, B., J.G. Boyles, R.M. Brigham, and A.E. McKechnie. 2011. Torpor in dark times: patterns of heterothermy are associated with the lunar cycle in a nocturnal bird. Journal of Biological Rhythms. 26:241-248.
27. Storm, J.J. and J.G. Boyles 2011. Body temperature and body mass of hibernating little brown bats Myotis lucifugus in hibernacula affected by White-nose Syndrome. Acta Theriologica. 56:123-127.
26. Willis, C.K.R., A.K. Menzies, J.G. Boyles, and M.S. Wojciechowski. 2011. Evaporative water loss is a plausible explanation for mortality of bats from white-nose syndrome. Integrative and Comparative Biology. 51:364-373.
2010
25. Boyles, J.G. and C. K. R. Willis. 2010. Could localized warm areas inside cold caves reduce mortality of hibernating bats affected white-nose syndrome? Frontiers in Ecology and the Environment. 8:92-98.
24. Boyles, J.G. and A.E. McKechnie. 2010. Energy conservation in hibernating endotherms: why "suboptimal" temperatures are optimal. Ecological Modelling. 221:1644-1647.
23. Cryan, F.P.M., C.U. Meteyer, J.G. Boyles, and D.S. Blehert. Wing pathology of white-nose syndrome in bats suggests life-threatening disruption of physiology. BMC Biology 8:135.
22. Timpone, J.C., Boyles, J.G., K.L. Murray, D.P. Aubrey, and L.W. Robbins. 2010. Overlap in roosting habits of the Indiana bat (Myotis sodalis) and northern bat (Myotis septentrionalis). American Midland Naturalist. 163:115-123.
21. Angilletta, M.J., Jr., B.S. Cooper, M. Schuler, and J.G. Boyles. 2010. The evolution of thermal physiology in endotherms. Frontiers in Bioscience. E2:861-881.
20. Willis, C.K.R., R.M.R. Barclay, J.G. Boyles, R.M. Brigham, V. Brack, Jr., D.L. Waldien, and J. Reichard. 2010. Bats are not birds and other problems with Sovacool's (2009) analysis of animal fatalities due to electricity generation. Energy Policy. 38:2067-2069.
2009
19. Willis, C.K.R., J.W. Jameson, P.A. Faure, J.G. Boyles, V. Brack, Jr., and T.H. Cervone. 2009. Thermocron iButton and iBBat temperature dataloggers emit ultrasound. Journal of Comparative Physiology B. 179:867-874.
18. Boyles, J.G., and V. Brack, Jr. 2009. Modeling survival rates of hibernating mammals with individual-based models of energy expenditure. Journal of Mammalogy. 90:9-16.
17. Boyles, J.G., D.P. Aubrey, C.R. Hickman, K.L. Murray, J.C. Timpone, and C.H. Ops. 2009. Variation in physiological response of red imported fire ants (Solenopsis invicta) to small-scale thermal heterogeneity. Journal of Thermal Biology. 34:81-84.
16. Gikas, N.S., J.G. Boyles, A.A. Zurcher, B.L. Walters, and J.O. Whitaker, Jr. 2009. The first records of the eastern small-footed bat (Myotis leibii) in Indiana. Proceedings of the Indiana Academy of Science. 119:203-204.
2008
15. Boyles, J.G., J.J. Storm, and V. Brack, Jr. 2008. Thermal benefits of clustering during hibernation: a field test of competing hypotheses on Myotis sodalis. Functional Ecology 22:632-636.
14. Boyles, J.G., D.A. Aubrey, B.S. Cooper, J.G. Cox, D.R. Coyle, R.J. Fisher, J.D. Hoffman, and J.J. Storm. 2008. Statistical confusion among graduate students: sickness or symptom? Journal of Wildlife Management 72:1869-1872.
2007
13. Boyles, J.G., M.B. Dunbar, J.J. Storm, and V. Brack, Jr. 2007. Energy availability influences microclimate selection of hibernating bats. Journal of Experimental Biology 210:4345-4350.
12. Boyles, J.G. 2007. Describing roosts used by forest bats: the importance of microclimate. Acta Chiropterologica 9:297-303.
11. Boyles, J.G., B.L. Walters, J.O. Whitaker, Jr., and J.B. Cope. 2007. A reanalysis of apparent survival rates of Indiana myotis (Myotis sodalis). Acta Chiropterologica 9:127-132.
10. Boyles, J.G. and J.J. Storm. 2007. The perils of picky eating: dietary breadth is related to extinction risk in insectivorous bats. PLoS One 2:e672.
9. Boyles, J.G. and J.J. Storm. 2007. Avoidance of predator chemical cues by bats: an experimental assessment. Behaviour 144:1019-1032.
8. Boyles, J.G. and G.S. Bakken. 2007. Seasonal changes and wind dependence of thermal conductance in dorsal fur from two small mammal species (Peromyscus leucopus and Microtus pennsylvanicus). Journal of Thermal Biology. 32:383-387.
2006
7. Boyles, J.G. and D.A. Aubrey. 2006. Managing forests with prescribed fire: implications for a cavity-dwelling bat species. Forest Ecology and Management 222:108-115.
6. Boyles, J.G., M.B. Dunbar, and J.O. Whitaker, Jr. 2006. Activity following arousal in winter in North American vespertilionid bats. Mammal Review 36:267-280.
5. Boyles, J.G. and L.W. Robbins. 2006. Characteristics of summer and winter roost trees used by evening bats (Nycticeius humeralis) in Missouri. American Midland Naturalist 155:210-220. 4. Timpone, J.C., J.G. Boyles, and L.W. Robbins. 2006. Possible niche-overlap in roosting sites between evening bats (Nycticeius humeralis) and big brown bats (Eptesicus fuscus). Northeastern Naturalist 13:597-602.
2005
3. Boyles, J.G., B.M. Mormann, and L.W. Robbins. 2005. Use of an underground winter roost by a male evening bat (Nycticeius humeralis). Southeastern Naturalist 4: 375-377.
2. Davis, C.R. and J.G. Boyles. 2005. First record of an adult male evening bat from Kansas. Prairie Naturalist 37:125-126.
2003
1. Boyles, J.G., J.C. Timpone, and L.W. Robbins. 2003. Late winter observations of red bats, Lasiurus borealis, and evening bats, Nycticeius humeralis, in Missouri. Bat Research News 44:59-61.
81: Boyles, J.G., V. Brack, Jr., and L.P. McGuire. In Press. Balancing costs and benefits of managing hibernacula of cavernicolous bats. Mammal Review.
2022
80. Brack, V., Jr., J.G. Boyles, and T. Cable. 2022. Warm blooded mammals: an enduring misconception. American Biology Teacher. 84:529-534.
79. Meteyer, C.U., J.Y. Dutheil, M.K. Keel, J.G. Boyles, and E.H. Stukenbrock. 2022. Plant pathogens provide potential clues to the origin of bat white-nose syndrome Pseudogymnoascus destructans. Virulence. 13:1020-1031.
78. Frick, W.F., E.M. Johnson, T.L. Cheng, J.S. Lankton, R.W. Warne, J. Dallas, K.L. Parise, J.T. Foster, J.G. Boyles, L.P. McGuire. 2022. Experimental inoculation trial to determine the effects of temperature and humidity on the fungal pathogen that causes white-nose syndrome in hibernating bats. Scientific Reports. 12: 971
77. Boyles, J.G., E.M. Johnson, N.W. Fuller, K.A. Silas, L. Hou, W.F. Frick, and L.P. McGuire. 2022. Behavioural microclimate selection and physiological responses to environmental conditions in a hibernating bat. Canadian Journal of Zoology. 100:233-238.
2021
76. McGuire, L.P., E.M. Johnson, W.F. Frick, and J.G. Boyles. 2021. Temperature alone is insufficient to understand hibernation energetics. Journal of Experimental Biology. 224:jeb23977.
75. Levesque, D.L., J. Nowack, and J.G. Boyles. 2021. Body temperature frequency distributions: a tool for assessing thermal performance in endotherms? Frontiers in Physiology. 12:760797.
74. Morales, O., N. Walker, R.W. Warne, and J.G. Boyles. 2021. Heterothermy as a mechanism to offset energetic costs of environmental and homeostatic perturbations. Scientific Reports. 11:19038.
73. Levesque, D.L., J.G. Boyles, C.J. Downs, and A.M. Breit. 2021. High body temperature is an unlikely cause of high viral tolerance in bats. Journal of Wildlife Diseases. 57:238-241.
72. McGuire, L.P., J.G. Boyles, R.M. Brigham. 2021. Lack of foraging site fidelity between years by Common Nighthawks (Chordeiles minor). American Midland Naturalist. 185:139-144.
71. Johnson, J.S., A. Blomberg, J.G. Boyles, T. Lilley. 2021. The winter worries of bats: past and present perspectives on winter habitat and management of cave hibernating bats. In: 50 Years of Bat Research, Foundations and New Frontiers. Springer Press. Pg. 209-223.
70. Clerc, J. R.M. Brigham, J.G. Boyles, and L.P. McGuire. 2021. A NASBR history of the advances in bat biology provided by radiotelemetry. In: 50 Years of Bat Research, Foundations and New Frontiers. Springer Press. Pg. 241-253.
2020
69. Boyles, J.G., J.S. Johnson, A. Blomberg, and T.M. Lilley. 2020. Optimal hibernation theory. Mammal Review. 50: 91-100.
68. Boyles, J.G., J. Swart, N.C. Bennett, W. Ferguson, J.R. Speakman, and D.M. Scantlebury. 2020. Energetics suggest cause for even further conservation concern for Temminck’s ground pangolin. Animal Conservation. 23:245-249.
2019
67. Boyles, J.G., D.L. Levesque, J. Nowack, M.S. Wojciechowski, C. Stawski, A. Fuller, B. Smit, and G.J. Tattersall. 2019. An oversimplification of physiological principles leads to flawed macroecological analyses. Ecology and Evolution. 9:12020-12025.
66. Boyles, J.G. 2019. A brief introduction to methods for describing body temperature in endotherms. Physiological and Biochemical Zoology.92: 365-372.
65. Baloun, D.E., Q.M.R. Webber, L.P. McGuire, J.G. Boyles, A. Shrivastav, and C.K.R. Willis. 2019. Testing the “fasting-while-foraging” hypothesis: effects of recent feeding on plasma metabolite concentrations in bats. Physiological and Biochemical Zoology. 92:373-380.
64. Bailey, L.A., R.M. R. Brigham, S.J. Bohn, J.G. Boyles, and B. Smit. 2019. An experimental test of the allotonic frequency hypothesis to isolate the effects of light pollution on bat prey selection. Oecologia. 190: 367-374.
63. Warne, R.W., S.G. Baer, and J.G. Boyles. 2019. Community physiological ecology. Trends in Ecology and Evolution. 34: 510-518.
62. Cravens, Z.M. and J.G. Boyles. 2019. Illuminating the physiological implications of artificial light on an insectivorous bat community. Oecologia. 189:69-77.
2018
61. Koen, E.L., C.L. Minnaar, C.L. Roever, and J.G. Boyles. 2018. Emerging threat of the 21st century lightscape to global biodiversity . Global Change Biology. 24: 2315-2324.
60. Wetzler, G.C.* and J.G. Boyles. 2018. The energetics of mosquito feeding by insectivorous bats. Canadian Journal of Zoology. 96: 373-377. *Undergraduate Student
59. Cravens, Z.M., V.A. Brown, T.J. Divoll, and J.G. Boyles. 2018. Illuminating prey selection in an insectivorous bat community exposed to artificial light at night. Journal of Applied Ecology. 55:705-713.
58. Krauel, J.J., L.P. McGuire, and J.G. Boyles. 2018. Testing traditional assumptions about regional migration in bats. Mammal Research. 63:115-123.
2017
57. Kirschman, L.J., M.D. McCue, J.G. Boyles, and R.W. Warne. 2017. Exogenous stress hormones alter energetic and nutrient costs of development and metamorphosis. Journal of Experimental Biology. 220: 3391-3397.
56. Boyles, J.G. 2017. Benefits of knowing the costs of disturbance to hibernating bats. Wildlife Society Bulletin. 41:388-392.
55. Boyles, J.G., N.C. Bennett, O.B. Mohammed, and A.N. Alagaili. 2017. Torpor patterns in desert hedgehogs (Paraechinus aethiopicus) represent another new point along a thermoregulatory continuum. Physiological and Biochemical Zoology. 90:445-452.
54. Boyles, J.G., E. Boyles, R.K. Dunlap, S.A. Johnson, and V. Brack, Jr. 2017. Long-term microclimate measurements add further evidence there is no “optimal” temperature for bat hibernation. Mammalian Biology. 86:9-16.
53. Alagaili, A.N., N. C. Bennett, O.B. Mohammed, I.S. Zalmout, and J.G. Boyles. 2017. Body temperature patterns of a small endotherm in an extreme desert environment. Journal of Arid Environments. 137:16-20.
2016
52. Boyles, J.G., L.P. McGuire, E. Boyles, J.P. Reimer, C.A.C. Brooks, R.W. Rutherford, T.A. Rutherford, J.O. Whitaker, Jr., G.F. McCracken. 2016. Physiological and behavioral adaptations in bats living at high latitudes. Physiology & Behavior. 165:322-327.
2015
51. Maine, J.J. and J.G. Boyles. 2015. Bats initiate vital agroecological interactions in corn. Proceedings of the National Academy of Science. 112:12438-12443.
50. Maine, J.J. and J.G. Boyles. 2015. Land cover influences dietary specialization of insectivorous bats globally. Mammal Research. 60:343-351.
49. Carey, C.S. and J.G. Boyles. 2015. Interruption of passive gas exchange is not a likely mechanism of WNS-associated death in bats. Journal of Experimental Biology. 218:1986-1989.
48. Neiles, B., C.S. Carey, A. Araujo, D. Burkhart, L.J. Kirschman, B. LaBumbard, S. LaGrange, J.J. Maine, A.M. Rombenso, M.N. Wood, and J.G. Boyles. 2015. Writing your way into high impact factor journals. ESA Bulletin. 96:312-316.
47. Minnaar, C., J.G. Boyles, I.A. Minnaar, C.L. Sole, and A.E. McKechnie. 2015. Stacking the odds: light pollution may shift the balance in an ancient predator-prey arms race. Journal of Applied Ecology. 52:522-531.
2014
46. Boyles, J.G. and V. Brack, Jr. 2014. Energetics alone is insufficient for conservation recommendations of hibernating bats. Bat Research News. 55:1-3.
2013
45. Boyles, J.G.*, A.B. Thompson*, A.E. McKechnie, E. Malan, M.M. Humphries, and V. Careau. 2013. A global heterothermic continuum in mammals. Global Ecology and Biogeography. 22:1029-1039. *Contributed equally
44. Boyles, J.G. and R. W. Warne. 2013. A novel framework for predicting use of facultative heterothermy by endotherms. Journal of Theoretical Biology. 336:242-245.
43. Cryan, P.M., C.U. Meteyer, J.G. Boyles, and D.S. Blehert. 2013. White-nose Syndrome in bats: illuminating the darkness. BMC Biology. 11:47.
42. Boyles, J.G., C.L. Sole, P.M. Cryan, and G.F. McCracken. 2013. On Estimating the Economic Value of Insectivorous Bats: Prospects and Priorities for biologists. Chapter 24 In: Bat Evolution, Ecology, and Conservation. R.A. Adams and S.C. Pedersen, eds. Springer Science Press. New York.
2012
41. Verant, M.L.*, Boyles, J.G.*, W. Waldrep, Jr., G. Wibbelt, and D.S. Blehert. 2012. Temperature-dependent growth of Geomyces destructans, the fungus that causes bat White-Nose Syndrome. PLoS ONE. 7:e46280. *Contributed equally
40. Boyles, J.G., B. Smit, C.L. Sole, and A.E. McKechnie. 2012. Body temperature patterns in two syntopic elephant shrew species during winter. Comparative Biochemistry and Physiology, Part A. 161:89-94.
39. Boyles, J.G., B. Smit, and A.E. McKechnie. 2012. Variation in body temperature is related to ambient temperature but not heat loss in two small endotherms with different thermoregulatory patterns. Journal of Zoology. 287:224-232.
38. Boyles, J.G., L. Verburgt, A.E. McKechnie, and N.C. Bennett. 2012. Heterothermy in two mole-rat species subjected to interacting thermoregulatory challenges. Journal of Experimental Zoology, Part A. 317:73-82.
37. Halsall, A.L., J.G. Boyles, and J.O. Whitaker, Jr. 2012. Body temperature patterns of big brown bats during winter in a building hibernaculum. Journal of Mammalogy. 93:497-503.
2011
36. Boyles, J.G., F.P.M. Cryan, G.F. McCracken, and T.H. Kunz. 2011. Economic importance of bats in agriculture. Science. 332:41-42.
35. Boyles, J.G., F.P.M. Cryan, G.F. McCracken, and T.H. Kunz. 2011. Concerns about extrapolating right off the bat-A response. Science. 333:287-288.
34. Lorch, J.M., A.E. Ballman, M.J. Behr, J.G. Boyles, J.T.H. Coleman, P.M. Cryan, A.C. Hicks, C.U. Meteyer, D. Redell, D.M. Reeder, and D.S. Blehert. 2011. Experimental infection of bats with Geomyces destructans causes white-nose syndrome. Nature 480:376-378.
33. Boyles, J.G., B. Smit, and A.E. McKechnie. 2011. A new comparative metric to estimate heterothermy in endotherms. Physiological and Biochemical Zoology. 84:115-123.
32. Boyles, J.G., F. Seebacher, B. Smit, and A.E. McKechnie. 2011. Adaptive thermoregulation in endotherms may alter responses to climate change. Integrative and Comparative Biology. 51:676-690.
31. Streicher, S., J.G. Boyles, M.K. Oosthuizen, and N.C. Bennett. 2011. Body temperature patterns in free-ranging subterranean Damaraland mole-rats Fukomys damarensis. PLoS ONE. 6:e26346.
30. Boyles, J.G., B. Smit, and A.E. McKechnie. 2011. Does use of the torpor cut-off method to analyze variation in body temperature cause more problems than it solves? Journal of Thermal Biology. 36:373-379.
29. Aubrey, D.P., J.G. Boyles, L.S. Krysinsky, and R.O. Teskey. 2011. Spatial and temporal patterns of xylem sap pH derived from stems and twigs of Populus deltoides L. Environmental and Experimental Botany. 71:376-381.
28. Smit, B., J.G. Boyles, R.M. Brigham, and A.E. McKechnie. 2011. Torpor in dark times: patterns of heterothermy are associated with the lunar cycle in a nocturnal bird. Journal of Biological Rhythms. 26:241-248.
27. Storm, J.J. and J.G. Boyles 2011. Body temperature and body mass of hibernating little brown bats Myotis lucifugus in hibernacula affected by White-nose Syndrome. Acta Theriologica. 56:123-127.
26. Willis, C.K.R., A.K. Menzies, J.G. Boyles, and M.S. Wojciechowski. 2011. Evaporative water loss is a plausible explanation for mortality of bats from white-nose syndrome. Integrative and Comparative Biology. 51:364-373.
2010
25. Boyles, J.G. and C. K. R. Willis. 2010. Could localized warm areas inside cold caves reduce mortality of hibernating bats affected white-nose syndrome? Frontiers in Ecology and the Environment. 8:92-98.
24. Boyles, J.G. and A.E. McKechnie. 2010. Energy conservation in hibernating endotherms: why "suboptimal" temperatures are optimal. Ecological Modelling. 221:1644-1647.
23. Cryan, F.P.M., C.U. Meteyer, J.G. Boyles, and D.S. Blehert. Wing pathology of white-nose syndrome in bats suggests life-threatening disruption of physiology. BMC Biology 8:135.
22. Timpone, J.C., Boyles, J.G., K.L. Murray, D.P. Aubrey, and L.W. Robbins. 2010. Overlap in roosting habits of the Indiana bat (Myotis sodalis) and northern bat (Myotis septentrionalis). American Midland Naturalist. 163:115-123.
21. Angilletta, M.J., Jr., B.S. Cooper, M. Schuler, and J.G. Boyles. 2010. The evolution of thermal physiology in endotherms. Frontiers in Bioscience. E2:861-881.
20. Willis, C.K.R., R.M.R. Barclay, J.G. Boyles, R.M. Brigham, V. Brack, Jr., D.L. Waldien, and J. Reichard. 2010. Bats are not birds and other problems with Sovacool's (2009) analysis of animal fatalities due to electricity generation. Energy Policy. 38:2067-2069.
2009
19. Willis, C.K.R., J.W. Jameson, P.A. Faure, J.G. Boyles, V. Brack, Jr., and T.H. Cervone. 2009. Thermocron iButton and iBBat temperature dataloggers emit ultrasound. Journal of Comparative Physiology B. 179:867-874.
18. Boyles, J.G., and V. Brack, Jr. 2009. Modeling survival rates of hibernating mammals with individual-based models of energy expenditure. Journal of Mammalogy. 90:9-16.
17. Boyles, J.G., D.P. Aubrey, C.R. Hickman, K.L. Murray, J.C. Timpone, and C.H. Ops. 2009. Variation in physiological response of red imported fire ants (Solenopsis invicta) to small-scale thermal heterogeneity. Journal of Thermal Biology. 34:81-84.
16. Gikas, N.S., J.G. Boyles, A.A. Zurcher, B.L. Walters, and J.O. Whitaker, Jr. 2009. The first records of the eastern small-footed bat (Myotis leibii) in Indiana. Proceedings of the Indiana Academy of Science. 119:203-204.
2008
15. Boyles, J.G., J.J. Storm, and V. Brack, Jr. 2008. Thermal benefits of clustering during hibernation: a field test of competing hypotheses on Myotis sodalis. Functional Ecology 22:632-636.
14. Boyles, J.G., D.A. Aubrey, B.S. Cooper, J.G. Cox, D.R. Coyle, R.J. Fisher, J.D. Hoffman, and J.J. Storm. 2008. Statistical confusion among graduate students: sickness or symptom? Journal of Wildlife Management 72:1869-1872.
2007
13. Boyles, J.G., M.B. Dunbar, J.J. Storm, and V. Brack, Jr. 2007. Energy availability influences microclimate selection of hibernating bats. Journal of Experimental Biology 210:4345-4350.
12. Boyles, J.G. 2007. Describing roosts used by forest bats: the importance of microclimate. Acta Chiropterologica 9:297-303.
11. Boyles, J.G., B.L. Walters, J.O. Whitaker, Jr., and J.B. Cope. 2007. A reanalysis of apparent survival rates of Indiana myotis (Myotis sodalis). Acta Chiropterologica 9:127-132.
10. Boyles, J.G. and J.J. Storm. 2007. The perils of picky eating: dietary breadth is related to extinction risk in insectivorous bats. PLoS One 2:e672.
9. Boyles, J.G. and J.J. Storm. 2007. Avoidance of predator chemical cues by bats: an experimental assessment. Behaviour 144:1019-1032.
8. Boyles, J.G. and G.S. Bakken. 2007. Seasonal changes and wind dependence of thermal conductance in dorsal fur from two small mammal species (Peromyscus leucopus and Microtus pennsylvanicus). Journal of Thermal Biology. 32:383-387.
2006
7. Boyles, J.G. and D.A. Aubrey. 2006. Managing forests with prescribed fire: implications for a cavity-dwelling bat species. Forest Ecology and Management 222:108-115.
6. Boyles, J.G., M.B. Dunbar, and J.O. Whitaker, Jr. 2006. Activity following arousal in winter in North American vespertilionid bats. Mammal Review 36:267-280.
5. Boyles, J.G. and L.W. Robbins. 2006. Characteristics of summer and winter roost trees used by evening bats (Nycticeius humeralis) in Missouri. American Midland Naturalist 155:210-220. 4. Timpone, J.C., J.G. Boyles, and L.W. Robbins. 2006. Possible niche-overlap in roosting sites between evening bats (Nycticeius humeralis) and big brown bats (Eptesicus fuscus). Northeastern Naturalist 13:597-602.
2005
3. Boyles, J.G., B.M. Mormann, and L.W. Robbins. 2005. Use of an underground winter roost by a male evening bat (Nycticeius humeralis). Southeastern Naturalist 4: 375-377.
2. Davis, C.R. and J.G. Boyles. 2005. First record of an adult male evening bat from Kansas. Prairie Naturalist 37:125-126.
2003
1. Boyles, J.G., J.C. Timpone, and L.W. Robbins. 2003. Late winter observations of red bats, Lasiurus borealis, and evening bats, Nycticeius humeralis, in Missouri. Bat Research News 44:59-61.