PIE LTER Publications

Export 63 results:
Filters: Keyword is primary production  [Clear All Filters]
2009
Buchsbaum R.N., Deegan L.A., Horowitz J., Garritt R.H., Ludlam J.P., Shull D.H.  2009.  Effects of regular salt marsh haying on marsh plants, algae, invertebrates and birds at Plum Island Sound, Massachusetts. Wetlands Ecology and Management. 17:469-487.
Charles H., Dukes J.S..  2009.  Effects of warming and altered precipitation on plant and nutrient dynamics of a New England salt marsh. Ecological Applications. 19:1758-1773.
Mudd S.M., Howell S., Morris J.T..  2009.  Impact of the dynamic feedback between sedimentation, sea level rise, and biomass production on near surface marsh stratigraphy and carbon accumulation. Estuarine, Coastal and Shelf Science. 82:377-389.
Kirwan M.L., Guntenspergen G.R., Morris J.T..  2009.  Latitudinal trends in Spartina alterniflora productivity and the response of coastal marshes to global change. Global Change Biology.
Kiehn W.M, Morris J.T..  2009.  Relationships Between Spartina alterniflora and Littoraria irrorata in a South Carolina Salt Marsh. Wetlands. 29:818-825.
Drake D.C., Peterson B.J., Galván K.A., Deegan L.A., Fleeger J.W., Hopkinson C., Johnson J.M., Koop-Jakobsen K., Lemay L.E., Miller E.E. et al..  2009.  Salt marsh ecosystem biogeochemical responses to nutrient enrichment: A paired 15N tracer study.. Ecology. 90:2535-2546.
Mozdzer T.J..  2009.  Variation in the availability and utilization of dissolved organic nitrogen by the smooth cordgrass, Spartina alterniflora. PhD.:179.
Johnson D.S., Fleeger J.W..  2009.  Weak response of saltmarsh infauna to ecosystem-wide nutrient enrichment and fish predator reduction: A four-year study. Journal of Experimental Marine Biology and Ecology. 373:35-44.

Pages