Pages that link to "Item:Q49498"
From geokb
The following pages link to Camille LaFosse Stagg, Ph.D. (Q49498):
Displayed 50 items.
- Submergence Vulnerability Index development and application to Coastwide Reference Monitoring System Sites and Coastal Wetlands Planning, Protection and Restoration Act projects (Q60877) (← links)
- The role of the upper tidal estuary in wetland blue carbon storage and flux (Q144910) (← links)
- Early growth interactions between a mangrove and an herbaceous salt marsh species are not affected by elevated CO2 or drought (Q144965) (← links)
- Vegetation cover, tidal amplitude and land area predict short-term marsh vulnerability in Coastal Louisiana (Q145291) (← links)
- Resource competition model predicts zonation and increasing nutrient use efficiency along a wetland salinity gradient (Q145389) (← links)
- Long-term carbon sinks in marsh soils of coastal Louisiana are at risk to wetland loss (Q146324) (← links)
- Ecosystem development after mangrove wetland creation: plant-soil change across a 20-year chronosequence (Q147478) (← links)
- Restoring Ecological Function to a Submerged Salt Marsh (Q148627) (← links)
- Characterization of vegetated and ponded wetlands with implications towards coastal wetland marsh collapse (Q150707) (← links)
- Understanding impacts of sea-level rise and land management on critical coastal marsh habitat (Q150855) (← links)
- Processes contributing to resilience of coastal wetlands to sea-level rise (Q151481) (← links)
- A landscape-scale assessment of above- and belowground primary production in coastal wetlands: Implications for climate change-induced community shifts (Q152571) (← links)
- Determining the spatial variability of wetland soil bulk density, organic matter, and the conversion factor between organic matter and organic carbon across coastal Louisiana, U.S.A. (Q152860) (← links)
- Marine ecoregion and <i>Deepwater Horizon</i> oil spill affect recruitment and population structure of a salt marsh snail (Q152912) (← links)
- Carbon fluxes and potential soil accumulation within Greater Everglades cypress and pine forested wetlands (Q156329) (← links)
- Modeling the impacts of hydrology and management on carbon balance at the Great Dismal Swamp, Virginia and North Carolina, USA (Q156330) (← links)
- The importance of wetland carbon dynamics to society: Insight from the Second State of the Carbon Cycle Science Report (Q156331) (← links)
- Summary of wetland carbon and environmental management: Path forward (Q156332) (← links)
- Carbon flux, storage, and wildlife co-benefits in a restoring estuary (Q156333) (← links)
- Potential for carbon and nitrogen sequestration by restoring tidal connectivity and enhancing soil surface elevations in denuded and degraded south Florida mangrove ecosystems (Q156334) (← links)
- Preface to book: Wetland carbon and environmental management (Q156335) (← links)
- Rapid peat development beneath created, maturing mangrove forests: Ecosystem changes across a 25-year chronosequence (Q156469) (← links)
- Modeling impacts of drought-induced salinity intrusion on carbon dynamics in tidal freshwater forested wetlands (Q156520) (← links)
- Climatic controls on the global distribution, abundance, and species richness of mangrove forests (Q156729) (← links)
- Linear and nonlinear effects of temperature and precipitation on ecosystem properties in tidal saline wetlands (Q156870) (← links)
- Causal mechanisms of soil organic matter decomposition: Deconstructing salinity and flooding impacts in coastal wetlands (Q157336) (← links)
- Understanding Impacts of Sea-Level Rise and Land Management on Critical Coastal Marsh Habitat (Q160237) (← links)
- Developing a Decision Support Tool to Inform Louisiana’s Climate Change Adaptation Strategy (Q160937) (← links)
- Carbon Storage and Fluxes on Department of Defense Installations (Q226775) (← links)
- Quantifying Restoration Impacts of Wetland Ecosystem Health and Carbon Export (Q226776) (← links)
- Developing a Decision Support Tool to Assess Carbon Sequestration on Natural Resource Conservation Service’s Wetland Reserve Easements in Kentucky and Tennessee (Q226786) (← links)
- Barriers and Opportunities for Landward Migration of Coastal Wetlands along Texas' Upper and Middle Coast (Q227107) (← links)
- The Response of Coastal Wetlands to Sea-level Rise: Understanding how Macroscale Drivers Influence Local Processes and Feedbacks (Q227868) (← links)
- Impacts of coastal and watershed changes on upper estuaries: causes and implications of wetland ecosystem transitions along the US Atlantic and Gulf Coasts (Q227919) (← links)
- Creating a System-Wide Assessment and Monitoring Program (SWAMP) for Coastal Louisiana (Q227980) (← links)
- Sediment accretion in tidal freshwater forests and oligohaline marshes of the Waccamaw and Savannah Rivers, USA (Q236365) (← links)
- Freshwater availability and coastal wetland foundation species: ecological transitions along a rainfall gradient (Q236501) (← links)
- Beyond just sea-level rise: Considering macroclimatic drivers within coastal wetland vulnerability assessments to climate change (Q237974) (← links)
- Tidal saline wetland regeneration of sentinel vegetation types in the Northern Gulf of Mexico: An overview (Q238190) (← links)
- Macroclimatic change expected to transform coastal wetland ecosystems this century (Q238913) (← links)
- Created mangrove wetlands store belowground carbon and surface elevation change enables them to adjust to sea-level rise (Q239129) (← links)
- Relationships between salinity and short-term soil carbon accumulation rates form marsh types across a landscape in the Mississippi River Delta (Q240340) (← links)
- Scaling responses of leaf nutrient stoichiometry to the lakeshore flooding duration gradient across different organizational levels (Q253308) (← links)
- Climate and plant controls on soil organic matter in coastal wetlands (Q254115) (← links)
- Preparing for future changes: Louisiana's Coast (Q254643) (← links)
- Flooding alters plant-mediated carbon cycling independently of elevated atmospheric CO2 concentrations (Q255541) (← links)
- Ecological resilience indicators for salt marsh ecosystems (Q258118) (← links)
- Elevated temperature and nutrients lead to increased N2O emissions from salt marsh soils from cold and warm climates (Q263289) (← links)
- Belowground productivity varies by assessment technique, vegetation type, and nutrient availability in tidal freshwater forested wetlands transitioning to marsh (Q276675) (← links)
- Restoration affects sexual reproductive capacity in a salt marsh (Q277221) (← links)