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Explore WARC's science publications.

Filter Total Items: 3350

Use of a latitudinal gradient in bald cypress (Taxodium distichum) production to examine physiological controls of biotic boundaries and potential responses to environment change

Aim: Predictions of vegetation change with global warming require models that accurately reflect physiological processes underlying growth limitations and species distributions. However, information about environmental controls on physiology and consequent effects on species boundaries and ecosystem functions such as production is limited, especially for forested wetlands that are potentially impo
Authors
B.A. Middleton, K.L. McKee

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

Important observations and parameters for a salt water intrusion model

Sensitivity analysis with a density-dependent ground water flow simulator can provide insight and understanding of salt water intrusion calibration problems far beyond what is possible through intuitive analysis alone. Five simple experimental simulations presented here demonstrate this point. Results show that dispersivity is a very important parameter for reproducing a steady-state distribution
Authors
W.B. Shoemaker

Population structure and inbreeding vary with successional stage in created Spartina alterniflora marshes

Recruitment patterns in clonal plant populations are predicted to vary with seed dispersal capability and disturbance regime, such that species with small, widely dispersed seeds will become increasingly dominated by vegetative recruitment on disturbed areas following early colonization. Subsequent mortality due to competitive or stochastic effects is then predicted to cause a gradual decline in b
Authors
S.E. Travis, C.E. Proffitt, K. Ritland

The habitats exploited and the species trapped in a Caribbean island trap fishery

We visually observed fish traps in situ to identify the habitats exploited by the U.S. Virgin Islands fishery and to document species composition and abundance in traps by habitat. Fishers set more traps in algal plains than in any other habitat around St. John. Coral reefs, traditionally targeted by fishers, accounted for only 16% of traps. Traps in algal plain contained the highest number of fis
Authors
V.H. Garrison, C.S. Rogers, J. Beets, A. M. Friedlander

Influence of salinity, competition and food supply on the growth of Gobiosoma robustum and Microgobius gulosus from Florida Bay, U. S. A.

The code Gobiosoma robustum and clown Microgobius gulosus gobies were grown in the laboratory over 27 days at two salinities (5 and 35), two food levels [low (a fixed proportion of initial mass) and high (saturation)] and both with and without the presence of the other species. Both species exhibited greatest growth at the high food level and the low (5) salinity. Neither species was affected by t
Authors
P. J. Schofield

Under water and out of sight: Invasive fishes in the United States - Implications for national parks

Introduced for sport fishing, as biological controls or other purposes, and as a result of illegal activity, nonnative fishes occupy national park waters where approximately 118 species now compete with native aquatic organisms.
Authors
W.R. Courtenay, P.L. Fuller

Temporal dynamics of leafy spurge (Euphorbia esula) and two species of flea beetles (Aphthona spp.) used as biological control agents

The goal of this study was to evaluate the biological control program of leafy spurge (Euphorbia esula) in a large natural area, Theodore Roosevelt National Park, western North Dakota, USA. Aphthona lacertosa and Aphthona nigriscutis have been released at more than 1800 points in the 18,600-ha South Unit of the park beginning in 1989; most releases have occurred since 1994. We established permanen
Authors
D. L. Larson, J.B. Grace

Standing crop and aboveground biomass partitioning of a dwarf mangrove forest in Taylor River Slough, Florida

The structure and standing crop biomass of a dwarf mangrove forest, located in the salinity transition zone ofTaylor River Slough in the Everglades National Park, were studied. Although the four mangrove species reported for Florida occurred at the study site, dwarf Rhizophora mangle trees dominated the forest. The structural characteristics of the mangrove forest were relatively simple: tree heig
Authors
C. Coronado-Molina, J.W. Day, E. Reyes, B.C. Perez

Mechanisms for dominance in an early successional old field by the invasive non-native Lespedeza cuneata (Dum. Cours.) G. Don

Researchers studying invasive plants often concentrate their efforts on predictive models thought to allow invasive plants to dominate native landscapes. However, if an invasive is already well established then experimental research is necessary to provide the information necessary to effectively manage the species. Prescribing appropriate management strategies without prior experimental research
Authors
A.L. Brandon, D.J. Gibson, B.A. Middleton