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Publications

Explore WARC's science publications.

Filter Total Items: 3510

Establishing a beachhead: A stochastic population model with an Allee effect applied to species invasion Establishing a beachhead: A stochastic population model with an Allee effect applied to species invasion

We formulated a spatially explicit stochastic population model with an Allee effect in order to explore how invasive species may become established. In our model, we varied the degree of migration between local populations and used an Allee effect with variable birth and death rates. Because of the stochastic component, population sizes below the Allee effect threshold may still have a...
Authors
A. S. Ackleh, L.J.S. Allen, J. Carter

Responses of prairie arthropod communities to fire and fertilizer: Balancing plant and arthropod conservation Responses of prairie arthropod communities to fire and fertilizer: Balancing plant and arthropod conservation

Fire is an important tool for limiting woody plant invasions into prairies, but using fire management to maintain grassland plant communities may inadvertently reduce arthropod diversity. To test this, we established twenty-four 100 m2 plots in a tallgrass prairie in Galveston County, Texas, in spring 2000. Plots were assigned a fire (no burn, one time burn [2000], two time burn [2000...
Authors
M.K. Hartley, W.E. Rogers, E. Siemann, J. Grace

Current and Future Science Plans for Restoring a Resilient Coast Current and Future Science Plans for Restoring a Resilient Coast

The overarching goal of U.S. Geological Survey (USGS) Gulf Coast science in the aftermath of the 2005 hurricane season will be to provide the scientific information, knowledge, and tools required to ensure that decisions about coastal land resource use, management practices, and future development in the coastal zone and adjacent watersheds promote restoration, increase coastal...

Analysis of the Interstate 10 Twin Bridge’s collapse during Hurricane Katrina: Chapter 3D in Science and the storms-the USGS response to the hurricanes of 2005 Analysis of the Interstate 10 Twin Bridge’s collapse during Hurricane Katrina: Chapter 3D in Science and the storms-the USGS response to the hurricanes of 2005

The Interstate 10 Twin Span Bridge over Lake Pontchartrain north of New Orleans, La., was rendered completely unusable by Hurricane Katrina. The cause of the collapse of the bridges generated great interest among hydrologists and structural engineers as well as among the general public. What made this case study even more important was the fact that two nearby bridges sustained the...
Authors
Genda Chen, Emitt C. Witt, David Hoffman, Ronaldo Luna, Adam Sevi

Landscape change and relative elevation sub-models Landscape change and relative elevation sub-models

No abstract available
Authors
Gregory D. Steyer, Brady Couvillion, Hongqing Wang, William J. Sleavin, John M. Rybczyk, Nadine Trahan, Holly Beck, Craig J. Fischenich, Ronald G. Boustany, Yvonne C. Allen

Mapping and vessel-based capabilities Mapping and vessel-based capabilities

U.S. Geological Survey (USGS) scientists from the Florida Integrated Science Center (FISC) conduct scientific investigations of submerged coastal and marine resources using new and existing technologies. Each contributing technique, method, or product adds to our understanding of coastal and marine resources and provides information for resource-management decisionmaking. In support of...
Authors
Ellen A. Raabe, Lisa L. Robbins

Large-scale causes of variation in the serpentine vegetation of California Large-scale causes of variation in the serpentine vegetation of California

Serpentine vegetation in California ranges from forest to shrubland and grassland, harbors many rare and endemic species, and is only moderately altered by invasive exotic species at the present time. To better understand the factors regulating the distribution of common/representative species, endemic/rare species, and the threat of exotics in this important flora, we analyzed broad...
Authors
J.B. Grace, H.D. Safford, S. Harrison

Competition between hardwood hammocks and mangroves Competition between hardwood hammocks and mangroves

The boundaries between mangroves and freshwater hammocks in coastal ecotones of South Florida are sharp. Further, previous studies indicate that there is a discontinuity in plant predawn water potentials, with woody plants either showing predawn water potentials reflecting exposure to saline water or exposure to freshwater. This abrupt concurrent change in community type and plant water...
Authors
L.D.S.L. Sternberg, S.Y. Teh, S.M.L. Ewe, F. Miralles-Wilhelm, D.L. DeAngelis

Estuarine response in northeastern Florida Bay to major hurricanes in 2005 Estuarine response in northeastern Florida Bay to major hurricanes in 2005

Hurricanes and tropical storms are critical components of the south Florida hydrologic cycle. These storms cause dramatic and often rapid changes in water level of, salinity of, and discharge into northeastern Florida Bay as well as into adjacent marine estuaries. During 2005, two major hurricanes (Katrina and Wilma) crossed the southern estuaries of the Everglades and had substantial...
Authors
Jeff Woods, Mark Zucker

Environmental and plant community determinants of species loss following nitrogen enrichment Environmental and plant community determinants of species loss following nitrogen enrichment

Global energy use and food production have increased nitrogen inputs to ecosystems worldwide, impacting plant community diversity, composition, and function. Previous studies show considerable variation across terrestrial herbaceous ecosystems in the magnitude of species loss following nitrogen (N) enrichment. What controls this variation remains unknown. We present results from 23 N...
Authors
C.M. Clark, E.E. Cleland, S.L. Collins, J.E. Fargione, L. Gough, K.L. Gross, S.C. Pennings, K.N. Suding, J.B. Grace

Sediment deposition from Hurricane Rita on Hackberry Beach chenier in southwestern Louisiana Sediment deposition from Hurricane Rita on Hackberry Beach chenier in southwestern Louisiana

Hurricane Rita significantly impacted the chenier forests of southwestern Louisiana, an important habitat for Neotropical migratory birds. Sediment deposition was measured along transects at Hackberry Beach chenier, and Rita's effects on chenier structure and morphology were determined.
Authors
Stephen Faulkner, Wylie Barrow, Thomas Doyle, Michael Baldwin, Thomas Michot, Christopher Wells, Clint Jeske
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