Stroud Center scientists have authored or co-authored more than two dozen scientific papers this year, exhibiting the range of our science from Yellowstone Lake to Costa Rica and from earthworm invasions to the effects of bison grazing.
Stroud Center staff names in bold.
- Albertson, L. K., and M. D. Daniels. Invasive crayfish influence fine sediment accumulation, gravel movement, and macroinvertebrate communities in streams. Freshwater Science. In press.
- Eldridge, W. H., B. W. Sweeney, and J. M. Law. Fish growth, physiological stress, and tissue condition in response to rate or temperature change during cool or warm diel thermal cycles. Canadian Journal of Fisheries and Aquatic Science.
- Caldas M.M., M.R. Sanderson, M. Mather, M. D. Daniels, J. S. Bergtold, J. Aistrup, J. L. Heier Stamm, D. Haukos, K. Douglas-Mankin, A. Y. Sheshukov, and D. Lopez-Carr. Opinion: Endogenizing culture in sustainability science research and policy. Proceedings of the National Academy of Science of the United States of America.
- Costigan, K. H., M. D. Daniels, W. K. Dodds. Fundamental spatial and temporal disconnections in the hydrology of an intermittent prairie headwater network. Journal of Hydrology.
- Dodds, W. K., K. Gido, M. R. Whiles, M. D. Daniels, and B. P. Grudzinski. The Stream Biome Gradient Concept: Factors controlling lotic systems across broad biogeographic scales. Freshwater Science.
- Fencl J. S., M.E. Mather, K. H. Costigan, M. D. Daniels. How big of an effect do small dams have? Using geomorphological footprints to quantify spatial impact of low-head dams and identify patterns of across-dam variation. PLoS ONE.
- Grudzinski, B. P., M. D. Daniels, K. Anibas, and D. Spencer. Bison and cattle grazing management, bare ground coverage, and links to suspended sediment concentrations in grassland streams. Journal of the American Water Resources Association.
- Inskeep, W. P., Z. J. Jay, R. E. Macur, S. Clingenpeel, A. Tenney, D. Lovalvo, J. P. Beam, M. A. Kozubal, W. C. Shanks, L. A. Morgan, J. Kan, Y. Gorby, S. Yooseph, and K. Nealson. Geomicrobiology of sublacustrine thermal vents in Yellowstone Lake: geochemical controls on microbial community structure and function. Frontiers in Microbiology.
- Jiménez-Rodríguez, C. D., J. C. Calvo-Alvarado, and J. K. Jackson. Performance of two hydrological models in predicting daily flow under a climate change scenario for mountainous catchments in northwestern Costa Rica. Mountain Research and Development.
- Karwan, D. L., C.M. Siegert, D.F. Levia, J. Pizzuto, J. Marquard, R. Aalto, and A.K. Aufdenkampe. Beryllium-7 wet deposition variation with storm height, synoptic classification, and tree canopy state in the mid-Atlantic USA.Hydrological Processes.
- Lyttle, A., K. Yoo, C. Hale, A. K. Aufdenkampe, S. D. Sebestyen, K. Resner, A. Blum. Impact of exotic earthworms on organic carbon sorption on mineral surfaces and soil carbon inventories in a northern hardwood forest.Ecosystems.
- McAllister, S. M., J. M. Barnett, J. W. Heiss, A. J. Findlay, D. J. MacDonald, C. L. Dow, G. W. Luther III, H. A. Michael, and C. S.Chan. Dynamic hydrologic and biogeochemical processes drive microbially enhanced iron and sulfur cycling within the intertidal mixing zone of a beach aquifer. Limnology and Oceanography.
- Mosher, J. J., L. A. Kaplan, D. C. Podgorski, A. M. McKenna, and A. G. Marshall. Longitudinal shifts in dissolved organic matter chemogeography and chemodiversity within headwater streams: A river continuum reprise.Biogeochemistry.
- Resner, K., K. Yoo, S. D. Sebestyen, A. Aufdenkampe, C. Hale, A. Lyttle, and A. Blum. Invasive earthworms deplete key soil inorganic nutrients (Ca, Mg, K, and P) in a northern hardwood forest. Ecosystems.
- Rosier, C. L., J. T. Van Stan II, L. D. Moore, J. O. S. Schrom, T. Wu, J. S. Reichard, and J. Kan. Forest canopy structural controls over throughfall affect soil microbial community structure in an epiphyte-laden maritime oak stand.Ecohydrology.
- Rüegg, J., W. K. Dodds, M. D. Daniels, K. R. Sheehan, C. L. Baker, W. B. Bowden, K. J. Farrell, M. B. Flinn, T. K. Harms, J. B. Jones, L. E. Koenig, J. S. Kominoski, W. H. McDowell, S. P. Parker, A. D. Rosemond, M. T. Trentman, M. Whiles, W. M. Wollheim. Baseflow physical characteristics differ at multiple spatial scales in stream networks across diverse biomes. Landscape Ecology.
- Ruffing, C. M., K. A. Dwire, and M. D. Daniels. Carbon pools in stream-riparian corridors: legacy of disturbance along mountain streams of southeastern Wyoming. Earth Surface Processes and Landforms.
- Ruffing, C. M., M. D. Daniels, K. A. Dwire. Disturbance legacies of historic tie-drives persistently alter geomorphology and large wood characteristics in headwater streams, southeast Wyoming. Geomorphology.
- Stone, M. M., J. Kan, and A. F. Plante. Parent material and vegetation influence bacterial community structure and nitrogen functional genes along deep tropical soil profiles at the Luquillo Critical Zone Observatory. Soil Biology & Biochemistry.
- Struewing, K. A., J. M. Lazorchak, P. C. Weaver, B. R. Johnson, D. H. Funk, and D. B. Buchwalter. Part 2: Sensitivity comparisons of the mayfly Centroptilum triangulifer to Ceriodaphnia dubia and Daphnia magna using standard reference toxicants; NaCl, KCl and CuSO4. Chemosphere.
- Wang, J., L. Borecki, X. Zhang, D. Wang, J. Kan, and J. Sun. A snapshot on spatial and vertical distribution of bacterial communities in the Eastern Indian Ocean. Acta Oceanologica Sinica. In press.
- Zhang, X., J. Kan, J. Wang, H. Gu, J. Hu, Y. Zhao, and J. Sun. First record of a large-scale bloom-causing speciesNannothloropsis granulata (Monodopsidaceae, Eustigmatophyceae) in China Sea Waters. Ecotoxicology.
- Wiegner, T. N., L. A. Kaplan, S. E. Ziegler, and R. H. Findlay. Consumption of terrestrial dissolved organic carbon by stream microorganisms. Aquatic Microbial Ecology
- Wilson, M. J., M. E. McTammany, M. D. Bilger, S. P. Reese, and B. R. Hayes. Combining data from multiple agencies to assess benthic macroinvertebrate communities in a large gravel-bed river. Freshwater Science.
- Yoo, K., B. Fisher, J. Ji, A. Aufdenkampe, J. Klaminder. The geochemical transformation of soils by agriculture and its dependence on soil erosion: An application of the geochemical mass balance approach. Science of The Total Environment.