PIE LTER Publications
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Salt marsh persistence is threatened by predicted sea-level rise. Estuarine and Coastal Shelf Science. 181:93-99.
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2016. Salt marsh sediment bacteria: their distribution and response to external nutrient inputs. The ISME Journal. 3:924-934.
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2009. Saltmarsh plant responses to eutrophication. Ecological Applications.
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2016. Seasonal use of a New England estuary by foraging contingents of migratory striped bass. Transactions of the American Fisheries Society. 139:257-269.
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2010. Spartina alterniflora biomass allocation and temperature: implications for salt marsh persistence with sea-level rise. Estuaries and Coasts.
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2016. Stable isotope monitoring of benthic-pelagic coupling with salt marsh fish. Marine Ecology Progress Series. 369:193-204.
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2008. Susceptibility of salt marshes to nutrient enrichment and predator removal. Ecological Applications. 17:S-42-S63.
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2007. Top-down and bottom-up control of infauna varies across the saltmarsh landscape. Journal of Experimental Marine Biology and Ecology. 357:20-34.
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2008. .
2006. Use of non-natal estuaries by migratory striped bass (Morone saxatilis) in summer. Fishery Bulletin. 107:329-337.
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2009. What happens in an estuary doesn’t stay there: patterns of biotic connectivity resulting from long term ecological research. . Oceanography. 26:168-179.
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2013. What makes mummichogs grow? The relationship between growth rates and gut contents of Fundulus heteroclitus held in enclosures along a salinity gradient in a New England salt marsh. New England Estuarine Research Society (NEERS).
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2004.