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Research History and Opportunities Changing forest water yields in response to climate warming: A general predictive model for estimating monthly ecosystem evapotranspiration Quantifying structural and physiological controls on variation in canopy transpiration among planted pine and hardwood species in the southern Appalachians Inferring the contribution of advection to total ecosystem scalar fluxes over a tall forest in complex terrain.
Hot spots and hot moments in riparian zones: Potential for improved water quality management Sources, transformations, and hydrological processes that control stream nitrate and dissolved organic matter concentrations during snowmelt in an upland forest. Forest ecohydrological processes in a changing environment.
Climate Change - Northern Research Station - USDA Forest Service
Impact of Imidacloprid for control of Hemlock Woolly Adelgid on nearby aquatic macroinvertebrate asseblages. Forest ecohydrological research in the 21st century: The contribution of the Coweeta Hydrologic Laboratory to developing and understanding of long-term changes in managed and unmanaged forests. Effect of time lags, spread rates, and damage persistence A highly aggregated geographical distribution of forest pest invasions in the USA Exploiting Allee effects for managing biological invasions Depletion of heterogeneous source species pools predicts future invasion rates Biological invasions in forest ecosystems.
- Recent Project Findings.
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Description General circulation models GCMs predict dramatic future changes in climate for the northeastern and north central United States under doubled carbon dioxide CO 2 levels Hansen et al. Such climate changes clearly may affect the growth and species composition of our northern forests directly in ways discussed in previous chapters.
- Effects of climate change on forest insect and disease outbreaks | Treesearch.
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In contrast with the discussions in previous chapters, this chapter steps up one trophic level to consider the effects of climate change on the populations of microorganisms, fungi, and insects that feed in and on forest trees. Publication Notes Check the Northern Research Station web site to request a printed copy of this publication.
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Forest Ecosystem Response to Environmental Change: Regional Collaboration and Database Development
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Citation Williams, David W.