Stuart Findlay
Roman, C., N.A. Jaworski, F. Short, Stuart E. G. Findlay, and S. Warren. 2000. “Estuaries of the Northeastern United States: Habitat and Land Use Signatures”. Estuaries 23: 743-64.
Strayer, David L., Nina F. Caraco, Jonathan J. Cole, Stuart E. G. Findlay, and Michael L. Pace. 1999. “Transformation of Freshwater Ecosystems by Bivalves: A Case Study of Zebra Mussels in the Hudson River”. BioScience 49: 19-27. http://sgnis.org/publicat/papers/b2_1.pdf.
Findlay, Stuart E. G., and Robert L. Sinsabaugh. 1999. “Unravelling the Sources and Bioavailability of Dissolved Organic Matter in Lotic Aquatic Ecosystems”. Mar. Freshwat. Res. 50: 781-90.
Wehr, J. D., J. Petersen, and Stuart E. G. Findlay. 1999. “Influence of Three Contrasting Detrital Carbon Sources on Planktonic Bacterial Metabolism in a Mesotrophic Lake”. Microb. Ecol. 37: 23-35.
Otto, S., Peter M. Groffman, Stuart E. G. Findlay, and A. Arreola. 1999. “Invasive Plant Species and Microbial Processes in a Tidal Freshwater Marsh”. J. Environ. Qual. 28: 1252-57.
Berkowitz, Alan R., Stuart E. G. Findlay, and Steward T. A. Pickett. 1999. “Undergraduate Research Reports -- 1996 and 1997”. Occasional Publication of the Institute of Ecosystem Studies.
Findlay, Stuart E. G., Michael L. Pace, and David T. Fischer. 1998. “Response of Heterotrophic Planktonic Bacteria to the Zebra Mussel Invasion of the Tidal Freshwater Hudson River”. Microb. Ecol. 36: 131-40.
Templer, Pamela H., Stuart E. G. Findlay, and C. Wigand. 1998. “Sediment Chemistry Associated With Native and Non-Native Emergent Macrophytes of a Hudson River Marsh Ecosystem”. Wetlands 18: 70-78.
Findlay, Stuart E. G., Robert L. Sinsabaugh, David T. Fischer, and P. Franchini. 1998. “Sources of Dissolved Organic Carbon Supporting Planktonic Bacterial Production in the Tidal Freshwater Hudson River”. Ecosystems 1: 227-39.
Hopkinson, C.S., I. Buffam, J.E. Hobbie, J. Vallino, R. Hodson, M.A. Moran, J. Covert, et al. 1998. “Terrestrial Inputs of Organic Matter to Coastal Ecosystems: An Intercomparison of Chemical Characteristics and Bioavailability”. Biogeochemistry 43: 211-34.