Richard Day
Richard Day is a Geographer at the USGS Wetland and Aquatic Research Center.
Science and Products
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Predicting coastal retreat in the Florida Big Bend region of the Gulf Coast under climate change induced sea-level rise
Many wildlife preserves and refuges in coastal areas of our nation are slowly being inundated by rising sea-level. Land elevation and tidal flooding are key factors controlling the extent and zonation of coastal habitats. Warming of our global environment threatens to speed the rate of sea-level rise and perhaps further amplify the detrimental effects of tropical storms, droughts, and lightning fi
Authors
Thomas W. Doyle, Richard H. Day, Janelda M. Biagas
History and ecology of mangroves in the Dry Tortugas
Dry Tortugas National Park, which includes Bush, Long, Loggerhead, Garden, and Bird Keys, is a cluster of islands and coral reefs approximately 112.9 km (70 miles) west of Key West, Florida (fig. 1). These islands were explored in 1513 by Ponce de León, who named them for the abundance of sea turtles, “tortugas,” and the lack of fresh water in the area. Historically, the Tortugas shoals have been
Authors
T.W. Doyle, T.C. Michot, Richard H. Day, C.J. Wells
Recent colonization of mangroves and nesting frigatebirds at Dry Tortugas
No abstract available.
Authors
Thomas Doyle, Thomas C. Michot, Richard H. Day, Christopher J. Wells
A 7 year record of above-ground net primary production in a southeastern Mexican mangrove forest
Spatial and temporal variations in net above-ground primary production (NPP) and litter turnover rate were studied, from 1987 to 1993, in a mangrove forest bordering Laguna de Terminos, Mexico. NPP, the sum of total litter fall and wood production, was measured over the entire study period in three zones in a basin forest: zone I, where Rhizophora mangle (red mangrove) occurs but Avicennia germina
Authors
J.W. Day, Carlos Coronado-Molina, F. R. Vera-Herrera, R. Twilley, V. H. Rivera-Monroy, V. H. Alvarez-Guillen, Richard H. Day, William Conner
Science and Products
Filter Total Items: 20
No Result Found
Filter Total Items: 53
Predicting coastal retreat in the Florida Big Bend region of the Gulf Coast under climate change induced sea-level rise
Many wildlife preserves and refuges in coastal areas of our nation are slowly being inundated by rising sea-level. Land elevation and tidal flooding are key factors controlling the extent and zonation of coastal habitats. Warming of our global environment threatens to speed the rate of sea-level rise and perhaps further amplify the detrimental effects of tropical storms, droughts, and lightning fi
Authors
Thomas W. Doyle, Richard H. Day, Janelda M. Biagas
History and ecology of mangroves in the Dry Tortugas
Dry Tortugas National Park, which includes Bush, Long, Loggerhead, Garden, and Bird Keys, is a cluster of islands and coral reefs approximately 112.9 km (70 miles) west of Key West, Florida (fig. 1). These islands were explored in 1513 by Ponce de León, who named them for the abundance of sea turtles, “tortugas,” and the lack of fresh water in the area. Historically, the Tortugas shoals have been
Authors
T.W. Doyle, T.C. Michot, Richard H. Day, C.J. Wells
Recent colonization of mangroves and nesting frigatebirds at Dry Tortugas
No abstract available.
Authors
Thomas Doyle, Thomas C. Michot, Richard H. Day, Christopher J. Wells
A 7 year record of above-ground net primary production in a southeastern Mexican mangrove forest
Spatial and temporal variations in net above-ground primary production (NPP) and litter turnover rate were studied, from 1987 to 1993, in a mangrove forest bordering Laguna de Terminos, Mexico. NPP, the sum of total litter fall and wood production, was measured over the entire study period in three zones in a basin forest: zone I, where Rhizophora mangle (red mangrove) occurs but Avicennia germina
Authors
J.W. Day, Carlos Coronado-Molina, F. R. Vera-Herrera, R. Twilley, V. H. Rivera-Monroy, V. H. Alvarez-Guillen, Richard H. Day, William Conner