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Explore WARC's science publications.

Filter Total Items: 3377

Ecological response to global climatic change

Climate change and ecological change go hand in hand. Because we value our ecological environment, any change has the potential to be a problem. Geographers have been drawn to this challenge, and have been successful in addressing it, because the primary ecological response to climate changes in the past — the waxing and waning of the great ice sheets over the past 2 million years – was the changi
Authors
G.P. Malanson, D.R. Butler, S. J. Walsh

Overview: Cross-habitat flux of nutrients and detritus

Ecologists have long known that all ecosystems receive considerable quantities of materials from outside their boundaries (e.g., Elton 1927), and quantifying the magnitude of such fluxes has long been a central tenet of ecosystem ecology (e.g., Odum 1971). Thus, one might think that the consequences of such fluxes for food webs would be well understood. However, food webs have traditionally been v
Authors
M.J. Vanni, D.L. DeAngelis, D.E. Schindler, G.R. Huxel

Herpetofaunal inventories of the National Parks of South Florida and the Caribbean: Volume I. Everglades National Park

Amphibian declines and extinctions have been documented around the world, often in protected natural areas. Concern for this alarming trend has prompted the U.S. Geological Survey and the National Park Service to document all species of amphibians that occur within U.S. National Parks and to search for any signs that amphibians may be declining. This study, an inventory of amphibian species in Eve
Authors
Kenneth G. Rice, J. Hardin Waddle, Marquette E. Crockett, Brian M. Jeffery, H. Frankin Percival

Nutrient controls on biocomplexity of mangrove ecosystems

Mangrove forests are important coastal ecosystems that provide a variety of ecological and societal services. These intertidal, tree-dominated communities along tropical coastlines are often described as “simple systems,” compared to other tropical forests with larger numbers of plant species and multiple understory strata; however, mangrove ecosystems have complex trophic structures, and organism
Authors
Karen L. McKee

Back to the basics: Kansas City, Missouri

No abstract available.
Authors
Lawrence R. Handley, C.M. Lockwood, Nathan Handley

Acute salt marsh dieback in the Mississippi River deltaic plain: A drought-induced phenomenon?

Aims Extensive dieback of salt marsh dominated by the perennial grass Spartina alterniflora occurred throughout the Mississippi River deltaic plain during 2000. More than 100,000 ha were affected, with 43,000 ha severely damaged. The aim of this work was to determine if sudden dieback could have been caused by a coincident drought and to assess the significance of this event with respect to long-t
Authors
K.L. McKee, I.A. Mendelssohn, M.D. Materne

Exploring behavior of an unusual megaherbivore: A spatially explicit foraging model of the hippopotamus

Herbivore foraging theories have been developed for and tested on herbivores across a range of sizes. Due to logistical constraints, however, little research has focused on foraging behavior of megaherbivores. Here we present a research approach that explores megaherbivore foraging behavior, and assesses the applicability of foraging theories developed on smaller herbivores to megafauna. With simu
Authors
R.L. Lewison, J. Carter

Assessing iron dynamics in the release from a stratified reservoir

Field and laboratory studies were conducted to describe the fate of total, dissolved, and ferrous (Fe2+) iron in the release from a stratified reservoir with an anoxic hypolimnion. Concentrations of total iron in the tailwater indicated a first order removal process during a low flow release (0.6 m3 sec−1), yet negligible loss was observed during a period of increased discharge (2.8 m3 sec−1). Dis
Authors
S.L. Ashby, S.P. Faulkner, R.P. Gambrell, B.A. Smith

Marine fishes new to continental United States waters, North Carolina, and the Gulf of Mexico

Along the southeastern coast of the United States, hardground systems support a high diversity of sub-tropical and tropical fishes. Many of these hardgrounds occur in deep (ca. ??? 50 m) waters and their fauna is still poorly described; however, with concentrated sampling in these deeper areas, new records of fishes continue to emerge. In the northeastern Gulf of Mexico and off North Carolina, we
Authors
A.M. Quattrini, Steve W. Ross, K. J. Sulak, Ann Marie Necaise, T.L. Casazza, G.D. Dennis

The effect of nutrient enrichment on growth, photosynthesis and hydraulic conductance of dwarf mangroves in Panamá

1. Dwarf stands of the mangrove Rhizophora mangle L. are extensive in the Caribbean. We fertilized dwarf trees in Almirante Bay, Bocas del Toro Province, north-eastern Panama with nitrogen (N) and phosphorus (P) to determine (1) if growth limitations are due to nutrient deficiency; and (2) what morphological and/or physiological factors underlie nutrient limitations to growth. 2. Shoot growth was
Authors
C. E. Lovelock, Ilka C. Feller, K.L. McKee, B.M.J. Engelbrecht, M.C. Ball

Preparing for climate change: The potential consequences of climate variability and change

Over the past decades, scientific research has greatly advanced the knowledge and understanding of global environmental change. Research supported by the U. S. Global Change Research Programme (USGCRP) and research and assessment results by international organizations such as the Intergovernmental Panel on Climate Change (IPCC), the World Climate Research Program (WCRP), and the International Geos
Authors
Zhu Ning, R. E. Turner, T.W. Doyle, Kamran Abdollahi, Alma Thornton, Enrique Reyes, D. Justic, E. Swenson, Wael Khairy, Kam-Biu Liu