Christopher Bernhardt, Ph.D.
Chris Bernhardt is the Center Director of the USGS Florence Bascom Geoscience Center.
Education and Certifications
University of Pennsylvania, Ph.D. (2009)
University of Akron, M.S. (2000)
Baldwin Wallace College, B.S. (1998)
Science and Products
Filter Total Items: 31
Wetland vegetation in Manzala lagoon, Nile Delta coast, Egypt: Rapid responses of pollen to altered nile hydrology and land use
The pollen record in a sediment core from Manzala lagoon on the Nile delta coastal margin of Egypt, deposited from ca. AD 1860 to 1990, indicates rapid coastal wetland vegetation responses to two primary periods of human activity. These are associated with artificially altered Nile hydrologic regimes in proximal areas and distal sectors located to ∼1200 km south of Manzala. Freshwater...
Authors
C.E. Bernhardt, J.-D. Stanley, B. P. Horton
Native Americans, regional drought and tree Island evolution in the Florida Everglades
This study uses palynologic data to determine the effects of regional climate variability and human activity on the formation and development of tree islands during the last ~4000 years. Although prolonged periods of aridity have been invoked as one mechanism for their formation, Native American land use has also been hypothesized as a driver of tree island development. Using pollen...
Authors
Christopher E. Bernhardt
Alexandria's Eastern Harbor, Egypt: Pollen, microscopic charcoal, and the transition from natural to human-modified basin
Pollen and microscopic charcoal examined in Holocene sediment core samples record major environmental modifications affecting Alexandria's Eastern Harbor through time. We assess whether such changes on Egypt's coastal margin were influenced primarily by natural, or natural plus human, or primarily human factors. We focus on (1) the times when pollen assemblages and microscopic charcoal...
Authors
J.-D. Stanley, C.E. Bernhardt
Marl prairie vegetation response to 20th century hydrologic change
We conducted geochronologic and pollen analyses from sediment cores collected in solution holes within marl prairies of Big Cypress National Preserve to reconstruct vegetation patterns of the last few centuries and evaluate the stability and longevity of marl prairies within the greater Everglades ecosystem. Based on radiocarbon dating and pollen biostratigraphy, these cores contain...
Authors
Christopher E. Bernhardt, Debra A. Willard
Response of Everglades tree islands to environmental change
Tree islands are centers of biodiversity within the Florida Everglades, USA, but the factors controlling their distribution, formation, and development are poorly understood. We use pollen assemblages from tree islands throughout the greater Everglades ecosystem to reconstruct the timing of tree island formation, patterns of development, and response to specific climatic and...
Authors
Debra A. Willard, Christopher E. Bernhardt, Charles W Holmes, Bryan D. Landacre, Marci E. Marot
Ecosystem history of southern and central Biscayne Bay: Summary report on sediment core analyses - year two
The Comprehensive Everglades Restoration Plan (CERP) lists restoration of the timing, quantity, and quality of the natural flow of freshwater as one its primary goals. Before restoration can occur, however, the baseline conditions of the environment prior to significant human alteration must be established and the range of variation within the natural system must be determined. In...
Authors
G. Lynn Wingard, Thomas M. Cronin, Charles W Holmes, Debra A. Willard, Gary S. Dwyer, Scott E. Ishman, William H. Orem, Christopher P. Williams, Jessica Albietz, Christopher E. Bernhardt, Carlos A. Budet, Bryan D. Landacre, Terry Lerch, Marci E. Marot, Ruth E. Ortiz
Atlas of pollen and spores of the Florida Everglades
An illustrated, descriptive atlas of pollen and spores from wetland plants of the Florida Everglades was compiled to facilitate identification of dispersed palynomorphs in sediments. The atlas includes 121 wetland species characteristic of eleven plant associations of the Florida Everglades including sloughs, sawgrass marshes, tree islands, wet prairies, cypress domes, mangrove forests...
Authors
Debra A. Willard, Christopher E. Bernhardt, Lisa M. Weimer, S. R. Cooper, Daniel Gomez Gamez, Jennifer Jensen
Science and Products
Filter Total Items: 31
Wetland vegetation in Manzala lagoon, Nile Delta coast, Egypt: Rapid responses of pollen to altered nile hydrology and land use
The pollen record in a sediment core from Manzala lagoon on the Nile delta coastal margin of Egypt, deposited from ca. AD 1860 to 1990, indicates rapid coastal wetland vegetation responses to two primary periods of human activity. These are associated with artificially altered Nile hydrologic regimes in proximal areas and distal sectors located to ∼1200 km south of Manzala. Freshwater...
Authors
C.E. Bernhardt, J.-D. Stanley, B. P. Horton
Native Americans, regional drought and tree Island evolution in the Florida Everglades
This study uses palynologic data to determine the effects of regional climate variability and human activity on the formation and development of tree islands during the last ~4000 years. Although prolonged periods of aridity have been invoked as one mechanism for their formation, Native American land use has also been hypothesized as a driver of tree island development. Using pollen...
Authors
Christopher E. Bernhardt
Alexandria's Eastern Harbor, Egypt: Pollen, microscopic charcoal, and the transition from natural to human-modified basin
Pollen and microscopic charcoal examined in Holocene sediment core samples record major environmental modifications affecting Alexandria's Eastern Harbor through time. We assess whether such changes on Egypt's coastal margin were influenced primarily by natural, or natural plus human, or primarily human factors. We focus on (1) the times when pollen assemblages and microscopic charcoal...
Authors
J.-D. Stanley, C.E. Bernhardt
Marl prairie vegetation response to 20th century hydrologic change
We conducted geochronologic and pollen analyses from sediment cores collected in solution holes within marl prairies of Big Cypress National Preserve to reconstruct vegetation patterns of the last few centuries and evaluate the stability and longevity of marl prairies within the greater Everglades ecosystem. Based on radiocarbon dating and pollen biostratigraphy, these cores contain...
Authors
Christopher E. Bernhardt, Debra A. Willard
Response of Everglades tree islands to environmental change
Tree islands are centers of biodiversity within the Florida Everglades, USA, but the factors controlling their distribution, formation, and development are poorly understood. We use pollen assemblages from tree islands throughout the greater Everglades ecosystem to reconstruct the timing of tree island formation, patterns of development, and response to specific climatic and...
Authors
Debra A. Willard, Christopher E. Bernhardt, Charles W Holmes, Bryan D. Landacre, Marci E. Marot
Ecosystem history of southern and central Biscayne Bay: Summary report on sediment core analyses - year two
The Comprehensive Everglades Restoration Plan (CERP) lists restoration of the timing, quantity, and quality of the natural flow of freshwater as one its primary goals. Before restoration can occur, however, the baseline conditions of the environment prior to significant human alteration must be established and the range of variation within the natural system must be determined. In...
Authors
G. Lynn Wingard, Thomas M. Cronin, Charles W Holmes, Debra A. Willard, Gary S. Dwyer, Scott E. Ishman, William H. Orem, Christopher P. Williams, Jessica Albietz, Christopher E. Bernhardt, Carlos A. Budet, Bryan D. Landacre, Terry Lerch, Marci E. Marot, Ruth E. Ortiz
Atlas of pollen and spores of the Florida Everglades
An illustrated, descriptive atlas of pollen and spores from wetland plants of the Florida Everglades was compiled to facilitate identification of dispersed palynomorphs in sediments. The atlas includes 121 wetland species characteristic of eleven plant associations of the Florida Everglades including sloughs, sawgrass marshes, tree islands, wet prairies, cypress domes, mangrove forests...
Authors
Debra A. Willard, Christopher E. Bernhardt, Lisa M. Weimer, S. R. Cooper, Daniel Gomez Gamez, Jennifer Jensen