VCR
Gracilaria vermiculophylla in the Virginia coastal bays: Effects of a non-native macroalga on nitrogen dynamics, trophic cascades, and public health
Poster Number: 119 Presenter/Primary Author: Dana Gulbransen Gracilaria vermiculophylla is a cryptic, invasive red macroalga that is native to Southeast Asia and has invaded many temperate estuaries in North America and Europe.
Seasonal metabolic rates in restored eelgrass meadows measured with the eddy correlation technique
Poster Number: 97 Presenter/Primary Author: Jennie Rheuban Seagrass meadows provide numerous ecosystem services such as increasing water quality, providing habitats for organisms, and sequestering organic matter.
Assessing the importance of seagrass habitat restoration to “blue carbon” sequestration in the shallow coastal zone
Poster Number: 82 Presenter/Primary Author: Jill Greiner Seagrass meadows are highly productive habitats and provide many important ecosystem services to the coastal zone, including carbon and nutrient sequestration. Organic carbon accumulates in s
Ecological Reflections at the Virginia Coast Reserve LTER
Poster Number: 72 Presenter/Primary Author: Arthur Schwarzschild Every major university and college has a school or department of Arts and Sciences, yet there are rarely any tangible connections or significant communications between these two disciplines.
Drivers, dynamics and consequences of non-linear change in coastal barrier systems
Poster Number: 69 Presenter/Primary Author: Karen McGlathery The Virginia Coast Reserve (VCR) is a heterogeneous landscape comprising mainland watersheds, tidal marshes, mudflats, shallow coastal bays, and barrier islands.