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Conference Papers

Browse almost 5,000 conference papers authored by our scientists and refine search by topic, location, year, and advanced search.

Filter Total Items: 5518

Contaminants in the Gulf of Maine-What's here and should we worry? Contaminants in the Gulf of Maine-What's here and should we worry?

The Gulf of Maine is a dynamic environment that has highly variable bottom type and localized depositional and transport processes. It is used and impacted by the people around it who hope to use the marine system for many purposes such as fishing, recreation, housing, sewage and dumped disposal, shipping, recreation, and preservation. In order to identify "pollution", which is defined...
Authors
Marilyn R. Buchholtz ten Brink, Frank T. Manheim, Michael H. Bothner

Southern region: Forest research reort Southern region: Forest research reort

No abstract available.
Authors
Virginia Burkett, Scott Beasley, Peter Roussopoulos, James P. Barnett

Small watershed studies: Analytical approaches for understanding ecosystem response to environmental change Small watershed studies: Analytical approaches for understanding ecosystem response to environmental change

Biogeochemical studies in small watersheds provide an analytical approach to understand how ecosystems respond to natural climatic variations and human-induced environmental change. Small watersheds, usually less than 5 km2, are small enough to permit characterization and understanding of ecosystem processes within relatively simple, homogeneous biological and physical settings; yet they...
Authors
Thomas G. Huntington, R. P. Hooper, Peter S. Murdoch

Initial comparison of bird communities of three southern forested wetlands Initial comparison of bird communities of three southern forested wetlands

No abstract available.
Authors
P.B. Hamel, Wylie C. Barrow, Richard A. Fischer, Michael P. Guilfoyle, Terry J. Spengler, James S. Wakely

Concordance of seabird population parameters: Analytical methods and interpretation Concordance of seabird population parameters: Analytical methods and interpretation

In an ecological context, concordance may be defined as the tendency for paired values of some parameter, such as the annual productivity of bird species, to show similar directions and magnitudes of deviation from the mean. Where concordance among populations is high, there is an implied similarity of the ecological factors affecting performance. Conversely, if populations behave...
Authors
Scott A. Hatch
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