Search
“Sustained effects of atmospheric [CO2] and nitrogen availability on forest soil CO2 efflux.”
20: 1146-1160. http://coweeta.uga.edu/publications/10864.pdf.
2014.
“Reproductive Allometry in Three Species of Dusky Salamanders”
3 (3): 419-427. doi:10.1643/CE-13-165. http://coweeta.uga.edu/publications/10905.pdf.
2014.
“Introduction to the regional assessments: Climate change, wildfire, and forest ecosystem services in the USA”
327: 265-268. doi:10.1016/j.foreco.2014.06.007. http://coweeta.uga.edu/publications/10901.pdf.
2014.
“Modeling individual tree growth by fusing diameter tape and increment core data”
25 (8): 610-620. doi:10.1002/env.2324. http://coweeta.uga.edu/publications/10921.pdf.
2014.
“A model to predict stream water temperature across the conterminous USA”
doi:10.1002/hyp.10357. http://coweeta.uga.edu/publications/10918.pdf.
2014.
“Microbe-driven turnover offsets mineral-mediated storage of soil carbon under elevated CO2.”
4: 1099-1102. doi:Doi: 10.1038/NCLIMATE2436. http://coweeta.uga.edu/publications/10917.pdf.
2014.
“Short-term stream water temperature observations permit rapid assessment of potential climate change impacts.”
doi:10.1002/hyp.10358. http://coweeta.uga.edu/publications/10919.pdf.
2014.
“Riparian disturbance restricts in-stream movement of salamanders”
59: 2354-2364. doi:10.1111/fwb.12439. http://coweeta.uga.edu/publications/10892.pdf.
2014.
“Competition-interaction landscapes for the joint response of forests to climate change”
20 (6): . doi:10.1111/gcb.12425. http://coweeta.uga.edu/publications/10888.pdf.
2014.
“Effects of landscape composition and configuration on migrating songbirds: inference from an individual-based model”
24 (1): 169-180. http://coweeta.uga.edu/publications/10821.pdf.
2014.
“Changing forest water yields in response to climate warming: results from long-term experimental watershed sites across North America”
20: 3191-3208. doi:10.1111/gcb.12615. http://coweeta.uga.edu/publications/10897.pdf.
2014.
“Probabilistic and Spatially Variable Niches Inferred from Demography”
102 (2): 544-554. doi:10.1111/1365-2745.12215. http://coweeta.uga.edu/publications/10868.pdf.
2014.
“You are not always what we think you eat: selective assimilation across multiple whole-stream isotopic tracer studies”
95 (10): 2757-2767. http://coweeta.uga.edu/publications/10877.pdf.
2014.
“The Lotic Intersite Nitrogen Experiments: an example of successful ecological research collaboration”
33 (3): 700-710. http://coweeta.uga.edu/publications/10876.pdf.
2014.
“Herbaceous species composition and richness of mesophytic cove forests in the southern Appalachians: synthesis and knowledge gaps”
141 (1): 39-71. doi:10.3159/TORREY-D-13-00054.1. http://coweeta.uga.edu/publications/10903.pdf.
2014.
“Local-scale biotic interactions embedded in macroscale climate drivers suggest Eltonian noise hypothesis distribution patterns for an invasive grass”
17: 1447-1454. doi:doi: 10.1111/ele.12352. http://coweeta.uga.edu/publications/10878.pdf.
2014.
“Combined global change effects on ecosystem processes in nine U.S. topographically complex areas.”
doi:10.1007/s10533-014-9950-9.. http://coweeta.uga.edu/publications/10831.pdf.
2014.
“Divergent phenological response to hydroclimate variability in forested mountain watersheds”
20: 2580-2595. doi:Doi: 10.1111/gcb.12556. http://coweeta.uga.edu/publications/10865.pdf.
2014.
2014.
2014.