Jill S Baron, PhD (Former Employee)
Science and Products
Filter Total Items: 214
Loch Vale Watershed Project quality assurance report, 1995-1998 Loch Vale Watershed Project quality assurance report, 1995-1998
The Loch Vale Watershed (LVWS) project was initiated in 1980 by the National Park Service with funding from the Aquatic Effects Research Program of the National Acid Precipitation Assessment Program. Initial research objectives were to understand the processes that would either mitigate or accelerate the effects of pollution on soil and surface water chemistry, and to build a record in...
Authors
E.J. Allstott, Michael A. Bashkin, Jill Baron
Potential impacts on Colorado Rocky Mountain weather due to land use changes on the adjacent Great Plains Potential impacts on Colorado Rocky Mountain weather due to land use changes on the adjacent Great Plains
Evidence from both meteorological stations and vegetational successional studies suggests that summer temperatures are decreasing in the mountain-plain system in northeast Colorado, particularly since the early 1980s. These trends are coincident with large changes in regional land cover. Trends in global, Northern Hemisphere and continental surface temperatures over the same period are
Authors
T.N. Chase, R.A. Pielke, T.G.F. Kittel, Jill Baron, T.J. Stohlgren
Simulations of snow distribution and hydrology in a mountain basin Simulations of snow distribution and hydrology in a mountain basin
We applied a version of the Regional Hydro-Ecologic Simulation System (RHESSys) that implements snow redistribution, elevation partitioning, and wind-driven sublimation to Loch Vale Watershed (LVWS), an alpine-subalpine Rocky Mountain catchment where snow accumulation and ablation dominate the hydrologic cycle. We compared simulated discharge to measured discharge and the simulated snow
Authors
Melannie D. Hartman, Jill Baron, Richard B. Lammers, Donald W. Cline, Larry E. Band, Glen E. Liston, Christina L. Tague
Effects of landcover, water redistribution, and temperature on ecosystem processes in the South Plate Basin Effects of landcover, water redistribution, and temperature on ecosystem processes in the South Plate Basin
Over one-third of the land area in the South Platte Basin of Colorado, Nebraska, and Wyoming, has been converted to croplands. Irrigated cropland now comprises 8% of the basin, while dry croplands make up 31%. We used the RHESSys model to compare the changes in plant productivity and vegetation-related hydrological processes that occurred as a result of either land cover alteration or...
Authors
Jill Baron, M.D. Hartman, Timothy G.F. Kittel, L.E. Band, D. S. Ojima, R.B. Lammers
Nitrogen excess in North American ecosystems: Predisposing factors, ecosystem responses, and management strategies Nitrogen excess in North American ecosystems: Predisposing factors, ecosystem responses, and management strategies
Most forests in North America remain nitrogen limited, although recent studies have identified forested areas that exhibit symptoms of N excess, analogous to overfertilization of arable land. Nitrogen excess in watersheds is detrimental because of disruptions in plant/soil nutrient relations, increased soil acidification and aluminum mobility, increased emissions of nitrogenous...
Authors
Mark E. Fenn, M. A. Poth, J. D. Aber, Jill Baron, Bernard T. Bormann, Dale W. Johnson, A. Dennis Lemly, Steven G. McNulty, D.F. Ryan, Robert Stottlemyer
Coupled atmosphere-terrestrial ecosystem-hydrology models for environmental modeling Coupled atmosphere-terrestrial ecosystem-hydrology models for environmental modeling
No abstract available.
Authors
R. L. Walko, L.E. Band, Jill Baron, Timothy G.F. Kittel, R. Lammers, T. J. Lee, R.A. Pielke, C. Taylor, C. Tague, C.J. Tremback, P.L. Vidale
Filter Total Items: 23
Science and Products
Filter Total Items: 214
Loch Vale Watershed Project quality assurance report, 1995-1998 Loch Vale Watershed Project quality assurance report, 1995-1998
The Loch Vale Watershed (LVWS) project was initiated in 1980 by the National Park Service with funding from the Aquatic Effects Research Program of the National Acid Precipitation Assessment Program. Initial research objectives were to understand the processes that would either mitigate or accelerate the effects of pollution on soil and surface water chemistry, and to build a record in...
Authors
E.J. Allstott, Michael A. Bashkin, Jill Baron
Potential impacts on Colorado Rocky Mountain weather due to land use changes on the adjacent Great Plains Potential impacts on Colorado Rocky Mountain weather due to land use changes on the adjacent Great Plains
Evidence from both meteorological stations and vegetational successional studies suggests that summer temperatures are decreasing in the mountain-plain system in northeast Colorado, particularly since the early 1980s. These trends are coincident with large changes in regional land cover. Trends in global, Northern Hemisphere and continental surface temperatures over the same period are
Authors
T.N. Chase, R.A. Pielke, T.G.F. Kittel, Jill Baron, T.J. Stohlgren
Simulations of snow distribution and hydrology in a mountain basin Simulations of snow distribution and hydrology in a mountain basin
We applied a version of the Regional Hydro-Ecologic Simulation System (RHESSys) that implements snow redistribution, elevation partitioning, and wind-driven sublimation to Loch Vale Watershed (LVWS), an alpine-subalpine Rocky Mountain catchment where snow accumulation and ablation dominate the hydrologic cycle. We compared simulated discharge to measured discharge and the simulated snow
Authors
Melannie D. Hartman, Jill Baron, Richard B. Lammers, Donald W. Cline, Larry E. Band, Glen E. Liston, Christina L. Tague
Effects of landcover, water redistribution, and temperature on ecosystem processes in the South Plate Basin Effects of landcover, water redistribution, and temperature on ecosystem processes in the South Plate Basin
Over one-third of the land area in the South Platte Basin of Colorado, Nebraska, and Wyoming, has been converted to croplands. Irrigated cropland now comprises 8% of the basin, while dry croplands make up 31%. We used the RHESSys model to compare the changes in plant productivity and vegetation-related hydrological processes that occurred as a result of either land cover alteration or...
Authors
Jill Baron, M.D. Hartman, Timothy G.F. Kittel, L.E. Band, D. S. Ojima, R.B. Lammers
Nitrogen excess in North American ecosystems: Predisposing factors, ecosystem responses, and management strategies Nitrogen excess in North American ecosystems: Predisposing factors, ecosystem responses, and management strategies
Most forests in North America remain nitrogen limited, although recent studies have identified forested areas that exhibit symptoms of N excess, analogous to overfertilization of arable land. Nitrogen excess in watersheds is detrimental because of disruptions in plant/soil nutrient relations, increased soil acidification and aluminum mobility, increased emissions of nitrogenous...
Authors
Mark E. Fenn, M. A. Poth, J. D. Aber, Jill Baron, Bernard T. Bormann, Dale W. Johnson, A. Dennis Lemly, Steven G. McNulty, D.F. Ryan, Robert Stottlemyer
Coupled atmosphere-terrestrial ecosystem-hydrology models for environmental modeling Coupled atmosphere-terrestrial ecosystem-hydrology models for environmental modeling
No abstract available.
Authors
R. L. Walko, L.E. Band, Jill Baron, Timothy G.F. Kittel, R. Lammers, T. J. Lee, R.A. Pielke, C. Taylor, C. Tague, C.J. Tremback, P.L. Vidale
Filter Total Items: 23
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