Nutrient Fluxes
Riparian Nitrogen Dynamics in Tropical Forest Groundwaters: A Challenge to Our Understanding of Near-Stream Ecosystem Function
Poster Number: 402 Presenter/Primary Author: Richard Brereton Riparian zones are widely understood to control the flux of water, nutrients, and carbon from terrestrial to aquatic ecosystems.
Microstegium vimineum is associated with changes in nitrogen availability and fluxes across a broad landscape
Poster Number: 397 Presenter/Primary Author: Tara Ursell
Examining the mechanistic basis of summer nitrate peaks: a coupled biogeochemical and hydrological approach
Poster Number: 389 Presenter/Primary Author: Jonathan Duncan Contrary to behavior predicted by the nitrogen saturation hypothesis, Pond Branch (the Baltimore Ecosystem Study forested reference watershed) exhibits peak nitrogen export during the growing seaso
Greenhouse gas emissions from a constructed wetland system in Phoenix, AZ
Poster Number: 365 Presenter/Primary Author: Jorge Ramos Wetlands support ecological functions that result in valuable services to society, including the purification of water through processes such as denitrification, plant uptake, and soil retention.
Physical and biogeochemical patterns in a saltmarsh/river system (Duplin River, GA)
Poster Number: 300 Presenter/Primary Author: Charles Schutte Salt marshes are among the most productive habitats on Earth, and constitute a critical interface between the land and the sea.