Research Publications
Lawrence, G. B., M.B. David, W.C. Shortle, Scott W. Bailey, and Gary M. Lovett. 1999. “Mechanisms of Base-Cation Depletion by Acid Deposition in Forest Soils of the Northeastern U.S”. S. B. Horsley and R. P. Long (eds.). Sugar Maple Ecology and Health: Proceedings of an International Symposium. Gen. Tech. Report NE-261. U.S. Dept. of Agriculture, Forest Service, Northeastern Research Station, Radnor, PA.
Kelly, Victoria R. 1999. “Environmental Monitoring Program: 1988-1998 Summary Report Part I: Meteorology”. Occasional Publication of the Institute of Ecosystem Studies. Millbrook, NY: Institute of Ecosystem Studies.
Kelly, Victoria R. 1999. “Environmental Monitoring Program: 1984-1998 Summary Report Part II: Precipitation Chemistry (1984-1998); Stream Water Chemistry (1985-1998); Aerosol Chemistry, Total Suspended Particulates, SO2, HNO3 (1988-1998)”. Occasional Publication of the Institute of Ecosystem Studies. Millbrook, NY: Institute of Ecosystem Studies.
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.
Manson, R. H., Jr. 1999. “Plant-Herbivore Interactions Along Forest Edges: Clarifying the Role of Herbivory by Small Mammals in Tree Invasion Dynamics in Old-Fields”. New Brunswick, New Jersey, Rutgers The State University of New Jersey.
Gregg, J. W. 1999. “The Effect of Urban Compared to Rural Environments on Plant Growth in the Vicinity of New York City: The Net Response and the Relative Importance of the Different Pollutants”. Ithaca, New York, Cornell University.
Stelzer, R. S. 1999. “Ecological Stoichiometry in Streams: Linkages Among Nutrients, Periphyton, and Grazers”. Notre Dame, Indiana, University of Notre Dame.
Successes, Limitations, and Frontiers in Ecosystem Science. 1998. Springer-Verlag New York, Inc.
Butler, Tom, and Gene E. Likens. 1998. “Weekly and Daily Precipitation Chemistry Network Comparisons in the Eastern U.S.: NADP NTN Vs. MAP3S AIRMon”. Atmospheric Environment 32: 3749-65.
Frank, D. A., and Peter M. Groffman. 1998. “Ungulate Vs. Landscape Control of Soil C and N Processes in Grasslands of Yellowstone National Park”. Ecology 79: 2229-41.
Hall, Robert O., and J.L. Meyer. 1998. “The Trophic Significance of Bacteria in a Detritus-Based Stream Food Web”. Ecology 79: 1995-2012.
Pace, Michael L., Jonathan J. Cole, and Stephen R. Carpenter. 1998. “Trophic Cascades and Compensation: Differential Responses of Microzooplankton in Whole Lake Experiments”. Ecology 79: 138-52.
Ostfeld, Richard S., Clive G. Jones, M.P. Richard, E.M. Schauber, and J.O. Wolff. 1998. “Tick Population Trends and Forest Type [Response to Ginsberg Et al.]”. Science 281: 350-51.
Hall, Robert O., B.J. Peterson, and J.L. Meyer. 1998. “Testing a Nitrogen-Cycling Model of a Forest Stream by Using a Nitrogen-15 Tracer Addition”. Ecosystems 1: 283-98.
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.
Holmer, M., H.S. Jensen, K. K. Christensen, C. Wigand, and F.Ö. Andersen. 1998. “Sulfate Reduction in Lake Sediments Inhabited by the Isoetid Macrophytes Littorella Uniflora and Isoetes Lacustris”. Aquat. Bot. 60: 307-24.
Pace, Michael L., and Peter M. Groffman. 1998. “Successes, Limitations and Frontiers in Ecosystem Science: Reflections on the Seventh Cary Conference”. Ecosystems 1: 137-42. http://www.caryinstitute.org/reprints/Pace_Groffman_Ecosystems_1998.pdf.
Arnone, J. A., III, and Patrick J. Bohlen. 1998. “Stimulated N2O Flux from Intact Grassland Monoliths After Two Growing Seasons under Elevated Atmospheric CO2”. Oecologia 116: 331-35.
Zhang, Y., Myron J. Mitchell, M. J. Christ, Gene E. Likens, and Roy Krouse. 1998. “Stable Sulfur Isotopic Biogeochemistry of the Hubbard Brook Experimental Forest, New Hampshire”. Biogeochemistry 41: 259-75.
Wright, Elaine F., K.D. Coates, Charles D. Canham, and P. Bartemucci. 1998. “Species Variability in Growth Response to Light across Climatic Regions in Northwestern British Columbia”. Can. J. For. Res. 28: 871-86. http://www.caryinstitute.org/reprints/Wright_et_al_1998_Can_J_For_Res_28_871-886.pdf.
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.
Likens, Gene E., Kathleen C. Weathers, Tom Butler, and Donald C. Buso. 1998. “Solving the Acid Rain Problem”. Science 282: 1991-92.
Baker, M. B., Moshe Shachak, and S. Brand. 1998. “Settling Behavior of the Desert Isopod, Hemilepistus Reaumuri, in Response to Variation in Soil Moisture and Other Environmental Cues”. Isr. J. Zool 44: 345-54.
Jax, K., Clive G. Jones, and Steward T. A. Pickett. 1998. “The Self-Identity of Ecological Units”. Oikos 82: 253-64.
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.
Post, D.M., J.P. Taylor, J.F. Kitchell, M.H. Olson, D.E. Schindler, and B.R. Herwig. 1998. “The Role of Migratory Waterfowl As Nutrient Vectors in Managed Wetlands”. Conserv. Biol. 12: 910-20.
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.
Huszar, Vera L. M., and Nina F. Caraco. 1998. “The Relationship Between Phytoplankton Composition and Physical Chemical Variables: A Comparison of Taxonomic and Morphological Approaches in Six Temperate Lakes”. Freshwater Biol. 40: 679-96.
Driscoll, Charles T., Gene E. Likens, and M.R. Church. 1998. “Recovery of Surface Waters in the Northeastern U. S. From Decreases in Atmospheric Deposition of Sulfur”. Water Air Soil Pollut. 105: 319-29.
Schmidt, Kenneth, and C.J. Whelan. 1998. “Predator-Mediated Interactions Between Guilds of Nesting Songbirds: Experimental and Observational Evidence”. Am. Nat. 152: 393-402.
Brandwine, S., and Moshe Shachak. 1998. “Population Response of Hemilepistus Reaumuri to Soil Moisture and Patchiness”. Isr. J. Zool 44: 359-78.
Bukaveckas, P. A., and William H. Shaw. 1998. “Phytoplankton Responses to Nutrient and Grazer Manipulations Among Northeastern Lakes of Varying PH”. Can. J. Fish. Aquat. Sci. 55: 958-66.
Jacinthe, P.A., Peter M. Groffman, Arthur J. Gold, and A.R. Mosier. 1998. “Patchiness in Microbial Nitrogen Transformations in Groundwater in a Riparian Forest”. J. Environ. Qual. 27: 156-64.
Gold, Arthur J., P.A. Jacinthe, Peter M. Groffman, and R.H. Puffer. 1998. “Patchiness in Groundwater Nitrate Removal in a Riparian Forest”. J. Environ. Qual. 27: 146-55.
Sippel, SJ, Stephen K. Hamilton, J.M. Melack, and EMM Novo. 1998. “Passive Microwave Observations of Inundation Area and the Area Stage Relation in the Amazon River Floodplain”. International Journal of Remote Sensing 19 (16): 3055-74. doi:10.1080/014311698214181.
Carpenter, Stephen R., Nina F. Caraco, D.L. Correll, Robert W. Howarth, A.N. Sharpley, and V.H. Smith. 1998. “Nonpoint Pollution of Surface Waters With Phosphorus and Nitrogen”. Issues Ecol. 3: 1-12.
Finzi, A.C., and Charles D. Canham. 1998. “Non-Additive Effects of Litter Mixtures on Net N Mineralization in a Southern New England Forest”. For. Ecol. Manage 105: 129-36. http://www.caryinstitute.org/reprints/Finzi_and_Canham_1998_For_Ecol_Mgmt_105_129-136.pdf.
Groffman, Peter M., Arthur J. Gold, and P.A. Jacinthe. 1998. “Nitrous Oxide Production in Riparian Zones and Groundwater”. Nutrient Cycling in Agroecosystems 52: 179-86.
Pérez, Cecilia A., L. O. Hedin, and Juan J. Armesto. 1998. “Nitrogen Mineralization in Two Unpolluted, Old-Growth Forests of Contrasting Structure and Biodiversity”. Ecosystems 1: 361-73.
Zaady, Eli, Peter M. Groffman, and Moshe Shachak. 1998. “Nitrogen Fixation in Macro- and Microphytic Patches in the Negev Desert”. Soil Biol. Biochem. 30: 449-54.