%0 Journal Article
%T Variation in Densities of the Salt Marsh Katydid Orchelimum fidicinium over Space and Time
%D 2021
%V Early Access
%P 12
%B Estuaries and Coasts
%9 Article
%! Variation in Densities of the Salt Marsh Katydid Orchelimum fidicinium over Space and Time
%Z ISI Document Delivery No.: SE9YN; Times Cited: 0; Cited Reference Count: 48; Adams, Tianjiao Vu, Huy D. Pennings, Steven C.; National Science Foundation through the Georgia Coastal Ecosystems Long-Term Ecological Research program [OCE-9982133, OCE-0620959, OCE-1237140, OCE-1832178]; This material is based upon work supported by the National Science Foundation through the Georgia Coastal Ecosystems Long-Term Ecological Research program under grant numbers OCE-9982133, OCE-0620959, OCE-1237140, and OCE-1832178. We thank everyone who helped collect grasshopper density data, and especially J. Shalack for assistance in the field. This is contribution number 1094 from the University of Georgia Marine Institute.; 0; 1; Springer; New york; 1559-2731
%M UGAMI.1126
%A Adams, T.
%A Vu, H.D.
%A Pennings, S.C.
%K acrididae, communities, disturbance, Environmental Sciences Ecology, fire, grasshopper assemblages, Orchelimum, Orthoptera, population, Population dynamics, Prokelisia, Salt marsh, Spartina, vegetation
%0 Journal Article
%T Elevation drives gradients in surface soil temperature within salt marshes
%D 2019
%V 46
%P 5313-5322
%B Geophysical Research Letters
%9 Article
%Z published
%M UGAMI.1113
%R 10.1029/2019GL082374
%U https://agupubs.onlinelibrary.wiley.com/doi/10.1029/2019GL082374
%A Alber, Merryl
%A O'Connell, Jessica
%K salt marsh, LTER, Landsat, temperature, elevation, Spartina alterniflora
%0 Journal Article
%T Sources and characteristics of fulvic and humic acids from a salt marsh estuary
%D 1989
%V 81/82
%P 353-361
%B Science of the Total Environment
%9 Article
%! Sources and characteristics of fulvic and humic acids from a salt marsh estuary
%Z 620
%M UGAMI.633
%A Alberts, J.J.
%A Filip, Z.
%K acids, characteristics, estuary, fulvic, humic, marsh, salt, Sources
%0 Book Section
%T Effect of organic solvent pre-extraction of source substrates on elemental composition, Fourier Transform Infrared spectra and copper binding in estuarine humic and fulvic acids
%D 1994
%P 781-790
%I Elsevier Science B.V.
%B Humic Substances in the Global Environmental and Implications on Human Health
%9 Article
%! Effect of organic solvent pre-extraction of source substrates on elemental composition, Fourier Transform Infrared spectra and copper binding in estuarine humic and fulvic acids
%Z 712
%M UGAMI.772
%A Alberts, J.J.
%A Filip, Z
%E Senesi, N.
%E Miano, T.M.
%K acids, binding, composition, copper, elemental, estuarine, Fourier, fulvic, humic, Infrared, organic, pre-extraction, solvent, source, spectra, substrates, Transform
%0 Journal Article
%T Humic substances in rivers and estuaries of Georgia, USA
%D 1994
%V 1
%P 143-162
%B Trends in Chemical Geology
%9 Article
%! Humic substances in rivers and estuaries of Georgia, USA
%Z 751
%M UGAMI.767
%A Alberts, J.J.
%A Filip, Z.
%K estuaries, Georgia, Humic, rivers, substances, USA
%0 Journal Article
%T Metal binding in estuarine humic and fulvic acids: FTIR analysis of humic acid-metal complexes.
%D 1998
%V 19
%P 923-931
%B Environmental Technology
%9 Article
%! Metal binding in estuarine humic and fulvic acids: FTIR analysis of humic acid-metal complexes.
%Z 813
%M UGAMI.843
%A Alberts, J.J.
%A Filip, Z.
%K estuary, FTIR, humic substances, metals
%0 Journal Article
%T Formation of particulate organic carbon (POC) from dissolved organic carbon (DOC) in salt marsh estuaries of the Southeastern United States
%D 1996
%V 47
%P 401-409
%B Archiv fur Hydrobiologie Special Issues Advances in Limnology
%9 Article
%! Formation of particulate organic carbon (POC) from dissolved organic carbon (DOC) in salt marsh estuaries of the Southeastern United States
%Z 750
%M UGAMI.766
%A Alberts, James J.
%A Griffin, Cheryl
%K carbon, dissolved, DOC, estuaries, Formation, marsh, organic, particulate, POC, salt, Southeastern, States, United
%0 Journal Article
%T Characterization of natural organic matter from eight Norwegian surface waters: The effect of ash on molecular size distributions and CHN content
%D 1999
%V 25
%N 2/3
%P 237-244
%B Environment International
%9 Article
%! Characterization of natural organic matter from eight Norwegian surface waters: The effect of ash on molecular size distributions and CHN content
%Z 820
%M UGAMI.840
%A Alberts, J.J.
%A Takacs, M.
%K ash, Characterization, CHN, content, distributions, matter, molecular, natural, Norwegian, organic, size, surface, waters
%0 Journal Article
%T Importance of humic substances for carbon and nitrogen transport into southeastern United States estuaries
%D 1999
%V 30
%P 385-395
%B Organic Geochemistry
%9 Article
%! Importance of humic substances for carbon and nitrogen transport into southeastern United States estuaries
%Z 803
%M UGAMI.822
%A Alberts, J.J.
%A Takacs, M.
%K dissolved organic carbon, dissolved organic nitrogen, Georgia salt marshes, marsh estuaries, South Carolina salt marshes
%0 Journal Article
%T Comparison of the natural fluorescence distribution among size fractions of terrestrial fulvic and humic acids and aquatic natural organic matter
%D 2004
%V 35
%N 10
%P 1141-1149
%B Organic Geochemistry
%9 Article
%! Comparison of the natural fluorescence distribution among size fractions of terrestrial fulvic and humic acids and aquatic natural organic matter
%Z 923
%M UGAMI.956
%A Alberts, J.J.
%A Takacs, M.
%K acids, aquatic, Comparison, distribution, fluorescence, fractions, fulvic, humic, matter, natural, organic, size, terrestrial
%0 Journal Article
%T Total luminescence spectra of IHSS standard and reference fulvic acids, humic acids and natural organic matter: Comparison of aquatic and terrestrial source terms
%D 2004
%V 35
%N 3
%P 243-256
%B Organic Geochemistry
%9 Article
%! Total luminescence spectra of IHSS standard and reference fulvic acids, humic acids and natural organic matter: Comparison of aquatic and terrestrial source terms
%Z 912
%M UGAMI.945
%A Alberts, J.J.
%A Takacs, M.
%K acids, aquatic, Comparison, fulvic, humic, IHSS, luminescence, matter, natural, organic, reference, source, spectra, standard, terms, terrestrial, Total
%0 Book Section
%T Effect of lime additions to lake water on natural organic matter (NOM) in Lake Terjevann, SE NorwayL: FTIR and fluorescence spectral changes
%D 1998
%P 123-131
%I Royal Society of Chemistry
%C Cambridge, UK
%B Humic Substances: Structures, Properties and Uses
%9 Article
%! Effect of lime additions to lake water on natural organic matter (NOM) in Lake Terjevann, SE NorwayL: FTIR and fluorescence spectral changes
%Z 819
%M UGAMI.839
%A Alberts, James J.
%A Andersen, Dag O.
%A Takacs, Monika
%E Davies, Geoffrey
%E Ghabbour, Elham A.
%K additions, changes, fluorescence, FTIR, lake, lime, matter, natural, NOM, NorwayL, organic, SE, spectral, Terjevann, water
%0 Journal Article
%T Dissolved carbohydrate distribution and dynamics in two southeastern United States reservoirs
%D 1988
%V 45
%P 325-332
%B Canadian Journal of Fisheries and Aquatic Sciences
%9 Article
%! Dissolved carbohydrate distribution and dynamics in two southeastern United States reservoirs
%Z 592
%M UGAMI.605
%A Alberts, J.J.
%A Bowling, J.W.
%A Emmons, M.
%K carbohydrate, Dissolved, distribution, dynamics, reservoirs, southeastern, States, United
%0 Journal Article
%T Seasonal dynamics of physical and chemical properties of a warm monomictic reservoir
%D 1988
%V 23
%P 176-180
%B Verhandlungen Internationale Vereinigung Limnololgie
%9 Article
%! Seasonal dynamics of physical and chemical properties of a warm monomictic reservoir
%Z 593
%M UGAMI.606
%A Alberts, J.J.
%A Bowling, J.W.
%A Schindler, J.E.
%A Kyle, D.E.
%K chemical, dynamics, monomictic, physical, properties, reservoir, Seasonal, warm
%0 Journal Article
%T Characterization of organic matter in rivers of the southeastern United States
%D 1990
%V 24
%P 260-262
%B Verhandlungen Internationale Vereinigung Limnologie
%9 Article
%! Characterization of organic matter in rivers of the southeastern United States
%Z 638
%M UGAMI.651
%A Alberts, J.J.
%A Ertell, J.R.
%A Case, L.
%K Characterization, matter, organic, rivers, southeastern, States, United
%0 Journal Article
%T Fulvic and humic acids isolated from groundwater: compositional characteristics and cation binding
%D 1992
%V 11
%P 317-330
%B Journal Contaminant Hydrology
%9 Article
%! Fulvic and humic acids isolated from groundwater: compositional characteristics and cation binding
%Z 707
%M UGAMI.723
%A Alberts, J.J.
%A Filip, Z.
%A Hertkorn, N.
%K acids, binding, cation, characteristics, compositional, Fulvic, groundwater, humic, isolated
%0 Conference Proceedings
%T Interaction of light with estuarine fulvic and humic acids
%D 1997
%P 539-544
%I The Polish Society of Humic Substances
%C Wroclaw, Poland
%B Proceedings of the 8th Meeting of the International Humic Substances Society
%S The Role of Humic Substances in the Ecosystems and in Environmental Protection
%8 September 9-14, 1996
%7 8th Meeting
%9 Presentation
%! Interaction of light with estuarine fulvic and humic acids
%Z 788
%M UGAMI.806
%A Alberts, J.J.
%A Filip, Zdenek
%A Hertkron, Norbert
%E Drozd, J.
%E Gonet, S.S.
%E Senesi, N.
%E Weber, J.
%K acids, estuarine, fulvic, humic, Interaction, light
%0 Journal Article
%T Interaction of estuarine organic matter with copper and benzo(a)pyrene
%D 1989
%V 28
%P 77-87
%B Marine Chemistry
%9 Article
%! Interaction of estuarine organic matter with copper and benzo(a)pyrene
%Z 630
%M UGAMI.643
%A Alberts, J.J.
%A Filip, Z.
%A Leversee, G.J.
%K benzo, copper, estuarine, Interaction, matter, organic, pyrene
%0 Journal Article
%T CuO-oxidation products, acid hydrolyzable monosaccharides and amino acids of the humic substances occurring in a salt marsh estuary
%D 1992
%V 18
%P 171-180
%B Organic Geochemistry
%9 Article
%! CuO-oxidation products, acid hydrolyzable monosaccharides and amino acids of the humic substances occurring in a salt marsh estuary
%Z 686
%M UGAMI.702
%A Alberts, J.J.
%A Filip, Z.
%A Price, M.T.
%A Hedges, J.I.
%A Jacobsen, T.R.
%K acid, acids, amino, CuO-oxidation, estuary, humic, hydrolyzable, marsh, monosaccharides, occurring, products, salt, substances
%0 Journal Article
%T Elemental composition, stable carbon isotope ratios and spectrophotometric properties of humic substances occurring in a salt marsh estuary
%D 1988
%V 12
%P 455-467
%B Organic Geochemistry
%9 Article
%! Elemental composition, stable carbon isotope ratios and spectrophotometric properties of humic substances occurring in a salt marsh estuary
%Z 605
%M UGAMI.618
%A Alberts, J.J.
%A Filip, Z.
%A Price, M.T.
%A Williams, D.J.
%A Williams, M.C.
%K carbon, composition, Elemental, estuary, humic, isotope, marsh, occurring, properties, ratios, salt, spectrophotometric, stable, substances
%0 Journal Article
%T The distribution of plutonium, americium and curium isotopes in pond and stream sediment of the Savannah River plant, South Carolina, USA
%D 1986
%V 3
%P 249-271
%B Journal of Environmental Radioactivity
%9 Article
%! The distribution of plutonium, americium and curium isotopes in pond and stream sediment of the Savannah River plant, South Carolina, USA
%Z 566
%M UGAMI.579
%A Alberts, J.J.
%A Halverson, J.E.
%A Orlandini, K.A.
%K americium, Carolina, curium, distribution, isotopes, plant, plutonium, pond, River, Savannah, sediment, South, stream, USA
%0 Journal Article
%T Carbon-13 nuclear magnetic resonance analysis, lignin content and carbohydrate composition of humic substances from salt marsh estuaries
%D 1991
%V 33
%P 195-203
%B Lecture Notes in Earth Science
%9 Article
%! Carbon-13 nuclear magnetic resonance analysis, lignin content and carbohydrate composition of humic substances from salt marsh estuaries
%Z 639
%M UGAMI.652
%A Alberts, J.J.
%A Hatcher, P.G.
%A Price, M.T.
%A Filip, Z.
%K analysis, carbohydrate, Carbon-13, composition, content, estuaries, humic, lignin, magnetic, marsh, nuclear, resonance, salt, substances
%0 Conference Proceedings
%T Translocation and physiological state of controlling mechanisms for Al, As, Cu, Mn, and Sn in salt marsh cordgrass
%D 1987
%P 396-398
%C New Orleans
%B Proceedings of International Conference on Heavy Metals in the Environment, Sept. 15-18, 1987, New Orleans, La.
%9 Presentation
%! Translocation and physiological state of controlling mechanisms for Al, As, Cu, Mn, and Sn in salt marsh cordgrass
%Z 587
%M UGAMI.600
%A Alberts, J.J.
%A Newell, S.Y.
%A Price, M.T.
%K controlling, cordgrass, Cu, marsh, mechanisms, Mn, physiological, salt, Sn, state, Translocation
%0 Journal Article
%T 239, 240Pu, 241Am and 232Th in lakes: The effects of seasonal anoxia
%D 1986
%V 4
%P 167-176
%B Journal of Environmental Radioactivity
%9 Article
%! 239, 240Pu, 241Am and 232Th in lakes: The effects of seasonal anoxia
%Z 556
%M UGAMI.569
%A Alberts, J.J.
%A Pinder, J.E.
%A Bowling, J.W.
%A Nelson, D.M.
%A Orlandini, K.A.
%K 232Th, 240Pu, 241Am, anoxia, effects, lakes, seasonal
%0 Book Section
%T The effects of pH, solid phase, particle concentration and equilibration time on the partition coefficient of curium on natural sediments
%D 1986
%P 72-82
%I Elsevier Applied Sci. Pubs.
%C London
%B Application of Distribution Coefficients to Radiological Assessment Models
%9 Article
%! The effects of pH, solid phase, particle concentration and equilibration time on the partition coefficient of curium on natural sediments
%Z 545
%M UGAMI.557
%A Alberts, J.J.
%A Pinder, J.E.
%A Wurtz, E.
%A Lesner, S.
%E Sibley, T.H.
%E Myttenaere, C.
%K coefficient, concentration, curium, effects, equilibration, natural, particle, partition, pH, phase, sediments, solid, time
%0 Journal Article
%T Metal concentrations in tissues of Spartina alterniflora (Loisel.) and sediments of Georgia salt marshes
%D 1990
%V 30
%P 47-58
%B Estuarine, Coastal and Shelf Science
%9 Article
%! Metal concentrations in tissues of Spartina alterniflora (Loisel.) and sediments of Georgia salt marshes
%Z 637
%M UGAMI.650
%A Alberts, J.J.
%A Price, M.T.
%A Kania, M.
%K alterniflora, concentrations, Georgia, Loisel, marshes, Metal, salt, sediments, Spartina, tissues
%0 Journal Article
%T Lignin oxidation product and carbohydrate composition of plant tissues from the South-eastern United States
%D 1991
%V 33
%P 213-222
%B Estuarine, Coastal and Shelf Science
%9 Article
%! Lignin oxidation product and carbohydrate composition of plant tissues from the South-eastern United States
%Z 674
%M UGAMI.690
%A Alberts, J.J.
%A Price, M.T.
%A Lewis, S.
%K carbohydrate, composition, Lignin, oxidation, plant, product, South-eastern, States, tissues, United
%0 Conference Proceedings
%T Spectroscopic analysis of natural organic matter (NOM) in aquatic systems
%D 2000
%P 34-43
%I EMBRAPA
%C San Carlos, Brazil
%B Proceedings'' 98, 2nd National Symposium on Agricultural Instrumentation (II SIAGRO)
%S Anais do II Siagro (Simposio Nacional de Instrumentacao Agropecuaria)
%9 Presentation
%! Spectroscopic analysis of natural organic matter (NOM) in aquatic systems
%Z 833
%M UGAMI.853
%A Alberts, J.J.
%A Takacs, M.
%A Andersen, D.O.
%E Cruvinel, P.E.
%E Colnago, L.A.
%E Torre-Neto, A.
%K analysis, aquatic, matter, natural, NOM, organic, Spectroscopic, systems
%0 Journal Article
%T Total luminescence spectral characteristics of natural organic matter (NOM) size fractions as defined by ultrafiltration and high performance size exclusion chromatography (HPSEC)
%D 2002
%V 33
%P 817-828
%B Organic Geochemistry
%9 Article
%! Total luminescence spectral characteristics of natural organic matter (NOM) size fractions as defined by ultrafiltration and high performance size exclusion chromatography (HPSEC)
%Z 876
%M UGAMI.899
%A Alberts, J.J.
%A Takacs, M.
%A Egeberg, Per Kr.
%K characteristics, chromatography, defined, exclusion, fractions, high, HPSEC, luminescence, matter, natural, NOM, organic, performance, size, spectral, Total, ultrafiltration
%0 Journal Article
%T Influence of IHSS standard and reference materials on copper and mercury toxicity to Vibrio fischeri
%D 2000
%V 28
%N 7
%P 428-435
%B Acta Hydrochimica et Hydrobiologica
%9 Article
%! Influence of IHSS standard and reference materials on copper and mercury toxicity to Vibrio fischeri
%Z 858
%M UGAMI.880
%A Alberts, J.J.
%A Takacs, M.
%A Pattanayek, M.
%K fulvic acid, humic acid, humic substances, microtox, standard
%0 Book Section
%T Natural organic matter from a Norwegian Lake: Possible structural changes resulting from lake acidification
%D 2000
%P 261-275
%I Royal Society of Chemistry
%C Cambridge, UK
%B Humic Substances: Versatile Components of Plants, Soil and Water
%S Proceedings of the 4th Humic Substances Seminar , March 22-24, 2000, Northeastern University, Boston, Massachusetts
%9 Article
%! Natural organic matter from a Norwegian Lake: Possible structural changes resulting from lake acidification
%Z 855
%M UGAMI.878
%A Alberts, J.J.
%A Takacs, M.
%A Pattanayek, M.
%E Ghabbour, E.A.
%E Davies, G.
%K acidification, changes, lake, matter, Natural, Norwegian, organic, Possible, resulting, structural
%0 Journal Article
%T Ultraviolet-visible and fluorescence spectral evidence of natural organic matter (NOM) changes along an estuarine salinity gradient
%D 2004
%V 27
%N 2
%P 296-310
%B Estuaries
%9 Article
%! Ultraviolet-visible and fluorescence spectral evidence of natural organic matter (NOM) changes along an estuarine salinity gradient
%Z 902
%M UGAMI.935
%A Alberts, J.J.
%A Takacs, M.
%A Schalles, J.
%K basic characterization, blackwater river, carbon, fulvic-acid, humic substances, optical-properties, salt-marsh, Southeastern United States, spectroscopy, waters
%0 Book Section
%T Apparent size distribution and spectral properties of natural organic matter isolated from six rivers in Southeastern Georgia, USA
%D 2001
%P 179-190
%I Royal Chemical Society
%C Cambridge, England
%B Humic Substances: Structures, Models and Functions
%9 Article
%! Apparent size distribution and spectral properties of natural organic matter isolated from six rivers in Southeastern Georgia, USA
%Z 880
%M UGAMI.909
%A Alberts, J.J.
%A Takacs, M.
%A McElvaine, M.
%A Judge, K.
%E Ghabbour, E.A.
%E Davies, G.
%K Apparent, distribution, Georgia, isolated, matter, natural, organic, properties, rivers, size, Southeastern, spectral, USA
%0 Journal Article
%T The distributions of 239, 240Pu, 241Am, and 137Cs among chemically-defined components of sediments, settling particulates and net plankton of Lake Michigan
%D 1989
%V 9
%P 89-103
%B Journal of Environmental Radioactivity
%9 Article
%! The distributions of 239, 240Pu, 241Am, and 137Cs among chemically-defined components of sediments, settling particulates and net plankton of Lake Michigan
%Z 610
%M UGAMI.623
%A Alberts, J.J.
%A Wahlgren, M.A.
%A Orlandini, K.A.
%A Durbahn, C.A.
%K 137Cs, 240Pu, 241Am, chemically-defined, components, distributions, Lake, Michigan, net, particulates, plankton, sediments, settling
%0 Journal Article
%T The effect of pH and contact time on the concentration of As(III) and As(V) in coal ash systems
%D 1988
%V 9
%P 63-70
%B Environmental Technology Letters
%9 Article
%! The effect of pH and contact time on the concentration of As(III) and As(V) in coal ash systems
%Z 589
%M UGAMI.602
%A Alberts, J.J.
%A Weber, M.F.
%A Evans, D.W.
%K ash, coal, concentration, contact, pH, systems, time
%0 Journal Article
%T Grazing of ciliated protozoa on free and particle-attached bacteria
%D 1987
%V 38
%P 125-129
%B Marine Ecology-Progress Series
%9 Article
%! Grazing of ciliated protozoa on free and particle-attached bacteria
%Z 580
%M UGAMI.593
%A Albright, L.J.
%A Sherr, E.B.
%A Sherr, B.F.
%A Fallon, R.D.
%K bacteria, ciliated, free, Grazing, particle-attached, protozoa
%0 Journal Article
%T A NEW ALLOGROMIID FORAMINIFER NIVEUS FLEXILIS NOV GEN., NOV SP., FROM COASTAL GEORGIA, USA: FINE STRUCTURE AND GAMETOGENESIS
%D 2009
%V 39
%N 2
%P 73-86
%B Journal of Foraminiferal Research
%8 Apr
%9 Article
%! A NEW ALLOGROMIID FORAMINIFER NIVEUS FLEXILIS NOV GEN., NOV SP., FROM COASTAL GEORGIA, USA: FINE STRUCTURE AND GAMETOGENESIS
%Z 972
%M UGAMI.1000
%A Altin, D.Z.
%A Habura, A.
%A Goldstein, S.T.
%K AGGLUTINATED FORAMINIFER, ASTRAMMINA-RARA, CERCOZOA, EUKARYOTES, FLAGELLAR ROOT SYSTEMS, FRESH-WATER FORAMINIFERANS, GREEN-ALGAE, LIFE-CYCLE, Paleontology, PHYLOGENY, ULTRASTRUCTURE
%0 Journal Article
%T PSAMMOPHAGA SAPELA N. SP., A NEW MONOTHALAMOUS FORAMINIFERAN FROM COASTAL GEORGIA, USA: FINE STRUCTURE, GAMETOGENESIS, AND PHYLOGENETIC PLACEMENT
%D 2013
%V 43
%N 2
%P 113-126
%B Journal of Foraminiferal Research
%8 Apr
%9 Article
%! PSAMMOPHAGA SAPELA N. SP., A NEW MONOTHALAMOUS FORAMINIFERAN FROM COASTAL GEORGIA, USA: FINE STRUCTURE, GAMETOGENESIS, AND PHYLOGENETIC PLACEMENT
%Z #995 ISI Document Delivery No.: 127MU Times Cited: 0 Cited Reference Count: 73 Altin-Ballero, Deniz Z. Habura, Andrea Goldstein, Susan T. National Science Foundation [DEB0445181, OCE0850505]; Loeblich and Tappan Award (Cushman Foundation for Foraminiferal Research); Lerner-Gray Award (American Museum of Natural History); Rodney M. Feldmann Award (Paleontological Society); Student Research Award (Geological Society of America); Levy Award for Marine Geology; UGA Geology Department; Friends the of University of Georgia Marine Institute Award We thank Mark Farmer for utilization of equipment and laboratory space for the molecular portion of this project; Sam Bowser for assistance; Elizabeth Richardson, Mary Ard, and John Shields for their advise on electron microscopic techniques; Jan Pawlowski for sharing his Clade E alignment; and Paul Schroeder for identifying the minerals ingested by P. sapela using XRD. The thoughtful recommendations of S. S. Bowser, J. Pawlowski, and one anonymous reviewer significantly improved this manuscript. This research was funded in part by National Science Foundation grants DEB0445181 to S. S. Bowser and S. T. Goldstein, and OCE0850505 to STG; and by graduate research awards to D. Z. Altin-Ballero, including the Loeblich and Tappan Award (Cushman Foundation for Foraminiferal Research), Lerner-Gray Award (American Museum of Natural History), Rodney M. Feldmann Award (Paleontological Society), Student Research Award (Geological Society of America), Levy Award for Marine Geology, Watts-Wheeler Grants-In-Aid (UGA Geology Department), and the Friends the of University of Georgia Marine Institute Award. This is contribution number 995 of the University of Georgia Marine Institute, Sapelo Island, Georgia. 0 CUSHMAN FOUNDATION FORAMINIFERAL RES CAMBRIDGE J FORAMIN RES
%M UGAMI.1029
%A Altin-Ballero, D.Z.
%A Habura, A.
%A Goldstein, S.T.
%K AGGLUTINATED FORAMINIFER, ALLOGROMIID FORAMINIFERA, ANTARCTICA, ASTRAMMINA-RARA, CERCOZOA, FRESH-WATER FORAMINIFERANS, GROMIA, MOLECULAR EVIDENCE, NOV GEN., Paleontology, RHIZARIA
%0 Journal Article
%T MOLECULAR RESPONSE TO CHALLENGING ENVIRONMENTAL CONDITIONS IN SPARTINA ALTERNIFLORA: AN INTEGRATED APPROACH
%D 2015
%9 Article
%! MOLECULAR RESPONSE TO CHALLENGING ENVIRONMENTAL CONDITIONS IN SPARTINA ALTERNIFLORA: AN INTEGRATED APPROACH
%Z #1043
%M UGAMI.1073
%A Alvarez, Mariano
%A Foust, Christy M.
%A Robertson, Marta
%A Ainouche, Malika
%A Ferreira De Carvalho, Julie
%A Meals, Christina
%A Preite, Veronicia
%A Salmon, Armel
%A Shayter, Ashey
%A Schrey, Aaron
%A Verhoeven, Koen J.F.
%A Richards, Christina L.
%K epigenetics, gene expression, native salt marsh, oil spill
%0 Journal Article
%T Nature of natural organic matter (NOM) in acidified and limed surface waters
%D 1999
%V 34
%N 1
%P 266-278
%B Water Research
%9 Article
%! Nature of natural organic matter (NOM) in acidified and limed surface waters
%Z 812
%M UGAMI.831
%A Andersen, D.O.
%A Alberts, J.J.
%A Takacs, M.
%K acidification, characterization, liming, natural organic matter, NOM, water
%0 Journal Article
%T Lumisomes: the cellular sight of bioluminescence in coelenterates
%D 1973
%V 248
%P 2937-2943
%B Journal of Biological Chemistry
%9 Article
%! Lumisomes: the cellular sight of bioluminescence in coelenterates
%Z 236*
%M UGAMI.246
%A Anderson, J.M.
%A Cormier, M.J.
%K bioluminescence, cellular, coelenterates, Lumisomes, sight
%0 Journal Article
%T Transductive coupling in bioluminescence: Effects of monovalent cations and ionophores on the calcium-triggered luminescence of Renilla lumisomes
%D 1976
%V 68
%P 1234-1241
%B Biochemical and Biophysical Reseaech Communications
%9 Article
%! Transductive coupling in bioluminescence: Effects of monovalent cations and ionophores on the calcium-triggered luminescence of Renilla lumisomes
%Z 11-297
%M UGAMI.309
%A Anderson, J.M.
%A Cormier, M.J.
%K bioluminescence, calcium-triggered, cations, coupling, Effects, ionophores, luminescence, lumisomes, monovalent, Renilla, Transductive
%0 Journal Article
%T Mechanism of calcium induction of Renilla bioluminescence involvement of a calcium-triggered luciferin binding protein
%D 1974
%V 13
%P 1195-1199
%B Biochemistry
%9 Article
%! Mechanism of calcium induction of Renilla bioluminescence involvement of a calcium-triggered luciferin binding protein
%Z 10-278
%M UGAMI.289
%A Anderson, J.M.
%A Charbonneau, H.
%A Cormier, M.J.
%K binding, bioluminescence, calcium, calcium-triggered, induction, involvement, luciferin, Mechanism, protein, Renilla
%0 Book Section
%T Construction of instrumentation for bioluminescence and chemiluminescence assays
%D 1978
%V 57
%P 529-540
%I Academic Press, Inc.
%C New York
%B Methods in Enzymology
%9 Article
%! Construction of instrumentation for bioluminescence and chemiluminescence assays
%Z 14-368
%M UGAMI.380
%A Anderson, J.M.
%A Faini, G.J.
%A Wampler, J.E.
%E DeLuca, M.A.
%K assays, bioluminescence, chemiluminescence, Construction, instrumentation
%0 Book Section
%T A bioluminescence assay for PAP (3'',5''-diphosphoadenosine) and PAPS (3''- phosphoadenylyl sulfate)
%D 1978
%P 244-257
%I Academic Press, Inc.
%C New York
%B Methods in Enzymology, Vol. 57
%9 Article
%! A bioluminescence assay for PAP (3'',5''-diphosphoadenosine) and PAPS (3''- phosphoadenylyl sulfate)
%Z 14-367
%M UGAMI.379
%A Anderson, J.M.
%A Hori, K.
%A Cormier, M.J.
%E DeLuca, M.A.
%K 5''-diphosphoadenosine, assay, bioluminescence, PAP, PAPS, phosphoadenylyl, sulfate
%0 Journal Article
%T Seasonal patterns of CO2 and water vapor exchange of three salt marsh succulents
%D 1979
%V 43
%P 249-260
%B Oecologia
%9 Article
%! Seasonal patterns of CO2 and water vapor exchange of three salt marsh succulents
%Z 14-391
%M UGAMI.403
%A Antlfinger, A.E.
%A Dunn, E.L.
%K CO2, exchange, marsh, patterns, salt, Seasonal, succulents, vapor, water
%0 Journal Article
%T Water use and salt balance in three salt marsh succulents
%D 1983
%V 70
%P 561-567
%B American Journal of Botany
%9 Article
%! Water use and salt balance in three salt marsh succulents
%Z 17-486
%M UGAMI.498
%A Antlfinger, A.E.
%A Dunn, E.L.
%K balance, marsh, salt, succulents, Water
%0 Journal Article
%T Seismic refraction study of shallow part of continental shelf off Georgia coast
%D 1965
%V 49
%P 601-604
%B Bulletin of the American Association of Petroleum Geologists
%9 Article
%! Seismic refraction study of shallow part of continental shelf off Georgia coast
%Z 5-86
%M UGAMI.97
%A Antoine, J.W.
%A Henry, V.J.Jr.
%K coast, continental, Georgia, part, refraction, Seismic, shallow, shelf, study
%0 Journal Article
%T Effects of fungal mycelia and enzymatically degraded leaves on feeding and performance of caddisfly (Trichoptera) larvae
%D 1988
%V 7
%P 205-211
%B Journal of the North American Benthological Society
%9 Article
%! Effects of fungal mycelia and enzymatically degraded leaves on feeding and performance of caddisfly (Trichoptera) larvae
%Z 612
%M UGAMI.625
%A Arsuffi, T.L.
%A Suberkropp, K.
%K caddisfly, degraded, Effects, enzymatically, feeding, fungal, larvae, leaves, mycelia, performance, Trichoptera
%0 Journal Article
%T Selective feeding by shredders on leaf-colonizing stream fungi: comparison of macroinvertebrate taxa
%D 1989
%V 79
%P 30-37
%B Oecologia
%9 Article
%! Selective feeding by shredders on leaf-colonizing stream fungi: comparison of macroinvertebrate taxa
%Z 602
%M UGAMI.615
%A Arsuffi, T.L.
%A Suberkropp, K.
%K comparison, feeding, fungi, leaf-colonizing, macroinvertebrate, Selective, shredders, stream, taxa
%0 Journal Article
%T Isolation of 2,6-dibromophenol from the marine hemichordate, Balanoglossus biminiensis
%D 1967
%V 155
%P 1558-1559
%B Science
%9 Article
%! Isolation of 2,6-dibromophenol from the marine hemichordate, Balanoglossus biminiensis
%Z 6-124
%M UGAMI.135
%A Ashworth, R.B.
%A Cormier, M.J.
%K 6-dibromophenol, Balanoglossus, biminiensis, hemichordate, Isolation, marine
%0 Journal Article
%T Release of dimethylsulfide from dimethylsulfoniopropionate by plant-associated salt marsh fungi
%D 1998
%V 64
%N 4
%P 1484-1489
%B Applied and Environmental Microbiology
%9 Article
%! Release of dimethylsulfide from dimethylsulfoniopropionate by plant-associated salt marsh fungi
%Z 773
%M UGAMI.790
%A Bacic, M.K.
%A Newell, S.Y.
%A Yoch, D.C.
%K dimethylsulfide, dimethylsulfoniopropionate, fungi, marsh, plant-associated, Release, salt
%0 Journal Article
%T Digestive enzymes in the salt marsh periwinkle Littorina irrorata (Gastropoda)
%D 1989
%V 80
%P 39-43
%B Oecologia
%9 Article
%! Digestive enzymes in the salt marsh periwinkle Littorina irrorata (Gastropoda)
%Z 614
%M UGAMI.627
%A Baerlocher, F.
%A Arsuffi, T.L.
%A Newell, S.Y.
%K Digestive, enzymes, Gastropoda, irrorata, Littorina, marsh, periwinkle, salt
%0 Journal Article
%T Digestion of Spartina alterniflora material with and without fungal constituents by the periwinkle Littorina irrorata (Mollusca: Gastropoda)
%D 1989
%V 130
%P 45-53
%B Journal Experimental Marine Biology and Ecology
%9 Article
%! Digestion of Spartina alterniflora material with and without fungal constituents by the periwinkle Littorina irrorata (Mollusca: Gastropoda)
%Z 635
%M UGAMI.648
%A Baerlocher, F.
%A Newell, S.Y.
%A Arsuffi, T.
%K alterniflora, constituents, Digestion, fungal, Gastropoda, irrorata, Littorina, material, Mollusca, periwinkle, Spartina, without
%0 Journal Article
%T Blockage by acetylene of nitrous oxide reduction in Pseudomonas perfectomarinus
%D 1976
%V 31
%P 504-508
%B Applied and Environmental Microbiology
%9 Article
%! Blockage by acetylene of nitrous oxide reduction in Pseudomonas perfectomarinus
%Z 12-314
%M UGAMI.326
%A Balderston, W.L.
%A Sherr, B.
%A Payne, W.J.
%K acetylene, Blockage, nitrous, oxide, perfectomarinus, Pseudomonas, reduction
%0 Journal Article
%T The extraction and measurement of adenosine triphosphate from marine sediments
%D 1976
%V 21
%P 473-480
%B Limnology and Oceanography
%9 Article
%! The extraction and measurement of adenosine triphosphate from marine sediments
%Z 11-289
%M UGAMI.301
%A Bancroft, K.
%A Paul, E.A.
%A Wiebe, W.
%K adenosine, extraction, marine, measurement, sediments, triphosphate
%0 Book Section
%T Spatial Variability in Sedimentation, Carbon Sequestration, and Nutrient Accumulation in an Alluvial Floodplain Forest
%D 2015
%P 41-55
%I Springer International Publishing
%B The Role of Natural and Constructed Wetlands in Nutrient Cycling and Retention on the Landscape
%9 Article
%! Spatial Variability in Sedimentation, Carbon Sequestration, and Nutrient Accumulation in an Alluvial Floodplain Forest
%Z #1037
%M UGAMI.1068
%U http://dx.doi.org/10.1007/978-3-319-08177-9_4
%A Bannister, Jacob M.
%A Herbert, Ellen R.
%A Craft, Christopher B.
%E Vymazal, Jan
%K Alluvial floodplain forest, Carbon sequestration, Soil accretion, Wetland soils
%0 Journal Article
%T Growth of the saltmarsh periwinkle Littoraria irrorata on fungal and cordgrass diets
%D 1994
%V 118
%P 109-114
%B Marine Biology
%9 Article
%! Growth of the saltmarsh periwinkle Littoraria irrorata on fungal and cordgrass diets
%Z 728
%M UGAMI.745
%A Barlocher, F.
%A Newell, S.Y.
%K cordgrass, diets, fungal, Growth, irrorata, Littoraria, periwinkle, saltmarsh
%0 Journal Article
%T Phenolics and Proteins affecting Palatability of Spartina Leaves to the Gastropod Littoraria irrorata
%D 1994
%V 15
%P 65-75
%B Marine Ecology
%9 Article
%! Phenolics and Proteins affecting Palatability of Spartina Leaves to the Gastropod Littoraria irrorata
%Z 737
%M UGAMI.753
%A Barlocher, F.
%A Newell, S.Y.
%K affecting, Gastropod, irrorata, Leaves, Littoraria, Palatability, Phenolics, Proteins, Spartina
%0 Journal Article
%T Classification of low marsh habitat in a Georgia salt marsh
%D 1979
%V 37
%P 139-154
%B Georgia Journal of Science
%9 Article
%! Classification of low marsh habitat in a Georgia salt marsh
%Z 14-374
%M UGAMI.386
%A Basan, P.B.
%K Classification, Georgia, habitat, low, marsh, salt
%0 Book Section
%T Actual-palaeontology and neoichnology of salt marshes near Sapelo Island, Georgia
%D 1977
%P 41-70
%I Geological Journal, Special Issue 9
%B Trace Fossils II
%9 Article
%! Actual-palaeontology and neoichnology of salt marshes near Sapelo Island, Georgia
%Z 12-326
%M UGAMI.338
%A Basan, P.B.
%A Frey, R.W.
%E Crimes, T.P.
%E Harper, J.C.
%K Actual-palaeontology, Georgia, Island, marshes, near, neoichnology, salt, Sapelo
%0 Journal Article
%T Size reduction with deliccation of modern internal molds of the mussel Geukensia demissa
%D 1982
%V 56
%P 970-972
%B Journal of Paleontology
%9 Article
%! Size reduction with deliccation of modern internal molds of the mussel Geukensia demissa
%Z 16-444
%M UGAMI.456
%A Basan, P.B.
%A Frey, R.W.
%K deliccation, demissa, Geukensia, internal, modern, molds, mussel, reduction, Size
%0 Book Section
%T Sedimentology and trace fossils
%D 1978
%P 13-47
%I SEOM Short Course No. 5
%B Trace Fossil Concept
%9 Article
%! Sedimentology and trace fossils
%Z 352*
%M UGAMI.364
%A Basan, P.B.
%A Chamberlain, C.K.
%A Frey, R.W.
%A Howard, J.D.
%A Seilacher, A.
%A Warme, J.E.
%E Basan, P.B.
%K fossils, Sedimentology, trace
%0 Journal Article
%T Flood pulse dynamics of an unregulated river floodplain in the southeastern U.S. coastal plain
%D 2000
%V 81
%N 10
%P 2730-2741
%B Ecology
%9 Article
%! Flood pulse dynamics of an unregulated river floodplain in the southeastern U.S. coastal plain
%Z 839
%M UGAMI.859
%A Benke, A.C.
%A Chaubey, I.
%A Ward, G.M.
%A Dunn, E.L.
%K discharge, flood pulse, floodplain, hydrologic model, hydrology, inundation, land-water interactions, long-term research, river swamp, unregulated river, wetland
%0 Journal Article
%T Diagenesis of belowground biomass of Spartina alterniflora in salt-marsh sediments
%D 1991
%V 36
%P 1358-1374
%B Limnology and Oceanography
%9 Article
%! Diagenesis of belowground biomass of Spartina alterniflora in salt-marsh sediments
%Z 717
%M UGAMI.733
%A Benner, R.
%A Fogel, M.L.
%A Sprague, E.K.
%K alterniflora, belowground, biomass, Diagenesis, salt-marsh, sediments, Spartina
%0 Journal Article
%T Depletion of 13C in lignin and its implications for stable carbon isotope studies
%D 1987
%V 329
%P 708-710
%B Nature
%9 Article
%! Depletion of 13C in lignin and its implications for stable carbon isotope studies
%Z 594
%M UGAMI.607
%A Benner, R.
%A Fogel, M.L.
%A Sprague, E.K.
%A Hodson, R.E.
%K 13C, carbon, Depletion, implications, isotope, lignin, stable, studies
%0 Journal Article
%T Anaerobic biodegradation of the lignin and polysaccharide components of lignocellulose and synthetic lignin by sediment microflora
%D 1984
%V 47
%P 998-1004
%B Applied and Environmental Microbiology
%9 Article
%! Anaerobic biodegradation of the lignin and polysaccharide components of lignocellulose and synthetic lignin by sediment microflora
%Z 17-505
%M UGAMI.517
%A Benner, R.
%A Maccubbin, A.E.
%A Hodson, R.E.
%K Anaerobic, biodegradation, components, lignin, lignocellulose, microflora, polysaccharide, sediment, synthetic
%0 Journal Article
%T Preparation, characterization, and microbial degradation of specifically radiolabeled (14C) lignocelluloses from marine and freshwater macrophytes
%D 1984
%V 47
%P 381-389
%B Applied and Environmental Microbiology
%9 Article
%! Preparation, characterization, and microbial degradation of specifically radiolabeled (14C) lignocelluloses from marine and freshwater macrophytes
%Z 17-502
%M UGAMI.514
%A Benner, R.
%A Maccubbin, A.E.
%A Hodson, R.E.
%K 14C, characterization, degradation, freshwater, lignocelluloses, macrophytes, marine, microbial, Preparation, radiolabeled, specifically
%0 Journal Article
%T Temporal relationship between the deposition and microbial degradation of lignocellulosic detritus in a Georgia salt marsh and the Okefenokee Swamp
%D 1986
%V 12
%P 291-298
%B Microbial Ecology
%9 Article
%! Temporal relationship between the deposition and microbial degradation of lignocellulosic detritus in a Georgia salt marsh and the Okefenokee Swamp
%Z 550
%M UGAMI.563
%A Benner, R.
%A Maccubbin, A.E.
%A Hodson, R.E.
%K degradation, deposition, detritus, Georgia, lignocellulosic, marsh, microbial, Okefenokee, relationship, salt, Swamp, Temporal
%0 Journal Article
%T Effects of pH and plant source on lignocellulose biodegradation rates in two wetland ecosystems, the Okefenokee Swamp and a Georgia salt marsh
%D 1985
%V 30
%P 489-499
%B Limnology and Oceanography
%9 Article
%! Effects of pH and plant source on lignocellulose biodegradation rates in two wetland ecosystems, the Okefenokee Swamp and a Georgia salt marsh
%Z 18-527
%M UGAMI.539
%A Benner, R.
%A Moran, M.A.
%A Hodson, R.E.
%K biodegradation, ecosystems, Effects, Georgia, lignocellulose, marsh, Okefenokee, pH, plant, rates, salt, source, Swamp, wetland
%0 Journal Article
%T Biogeochemical cycling of lignocellulosic carbon in marine and freshwater ecosystems: relative contributions of procaryotes and eucaryotes
%D 1986
%V 31
%P 89-100
%B Limnology and Oceanography
%9 Article
%! Biogeochemical cycling of lignocellulosic carbon in marine and freshwater ecosystems: relative contributions of procaryotes and eucaryotes
%Z 536
%M UGAMI.548
%A Benner, R.
%A Moran, M.A.
%A Hodson, R.E.
%K Biogeochemical, carbon, contributions, cycling, ecosystems, eucaryotes, freshwater, lignocellulosic, marine, procaryotes, relative
%0 Journal Article
%T Relative contributions of bacteria and fungi to rates of degradation of lignocellulosic detritus in salt-marsh sediments
%D 1984
%V 48
%P 36-40
%B Applied and Environmental Microbiology
%9 Article
%! Relative contributions of bacteria and fungi to rates of degradation of lignocellulosic detritus in salt-marsh sediments
%Z 18-513
%M UGAMI.525
%A Benner, R.
%A Newell, S.Y.
%A Maccubbin, A.E.
%A Hodson, R.E.
%K bacteria, contributions, degradation, detritus, fungi, lignocellulosic, rates, Relative, salt-marsh, sediments
%0 Book Section
%T Synopsis of discussion session on the bioavailability of organic contaminants
%D 1994
%P 63-71
%I Lewis Publishers, CRC Press, Inc.
%C Boca Raton, Florida
%B Bioavailability : Physical, Chemical, and Biological Interactions
%S SETAC Special Publications Series
%7 Proceedings of the Thirteenth Pellston Workshop Pellston, Michigan, August 17-22, 1992
%9 Article
%! Synopsis of discussion session on the bioavailability of organic contaminants
%Z 736
%M UGAMI.752
%A Benson, William H.
%A Alberts, James J.
%A Allen, Herbert E.
%A Hunt, Carlton D.
%A Newman, Michael C.
%E Hamelink, Jerry L.
%E Landrum, Peter F.
%E Bergman, Harold L.
%E Benson, William H.
%K Bioavailability, inorganic contaminants
%0 Journal Article
%T Contribution to lignocellulose degradation and DOC formation from a salt marsh macrophyte by the ascomycete Phaeosphaeria spartinicola
%D 1992
%V 86
%P 341-348
%B FEMS Microbiol Ecology
%9 Article
%! Contribution to lignocellulose degradation and DOC formation from a salt marsh macrophyte by the ascomycete Phaeosphaeria spartinicola
%Z 693
%M UGAMI.709
%A Bergbauer, M.
%A Newell, S.Y.
%K ascomycete, Contribution, degradation, DOC, formation, lignocellulose, macrophyte, marsh, Phaeosphaeria, salt, spartinicola
%0 Book Section
%T Effects of organic substrate additions on size partitioning of heterotrophic activity in estuarine and nearshore bacteria
%D 1983
%P 367-375
%I Balaban Int. Sci. Serv. Rehovot,
%C Philadelphia
%B Developments in Ecology and Environmental Quality
%9 Article
%! Effects of organic substrate additions on size partitioning of heterotrophic activity in estuarine and nearshore bacteria
%Z 17-482
%M UGAMI.494
%A Berman, T.
%A J., Wiebe.W.
%A Hanson, R.B.
%E Shuval, H.
%K activity, additions, bacteria, Effects, estuarine, heterotrophic, nearshore, organic, partitioning, size, substrate
%0 Journal Article
%T Phosphorous uptake by microplankton in estuarine and coastal shelf water near Sapelo Island, Georgia, U.S.A.
%D 1983
%V 6
%P 160-166
%B Estuaries
%9 Article
%! Phosphorous uptake by microplankton in estuarine and coastal shelf water near Sapelo Island, Georgia, U.S.A.
%Z 15-427
%M UGAMI.439
%A Berman, T.B.
%K coastal, estuarine, Georgia, Island, microplankton, near, Phosphorous, Sapelo, shelf, uptake, water
%0 Journal Article
%T Distribution of atmospheric sulphur species over various wetland regions in the southeastern U.S.A.
%D 1993
%V 27a
%P 211-221
%B Atmospheric Environment
%9 Article
%! Distribution of atmospheric sulphur species over various wetland regions in the southeastern U.S.A.
%Z 715
%M UGAMI.731
%A Berresheim, H.
%K atmospheric, Distribution, over, regions, southeastern, species, sulphur, various, wetland
%0 Book Section
%T Spatial variation in process and pattern in salt marsh plant communities in eastern North America
%D 2000
%P 39-57
%I Academic Publishers
%C Dordrecht, The Netherlands
%B Concepts and Controversies in Tidal Marsh Ecology
%9 Article
%! Spatial variation in process and pattern in salt marsh plant communities in eastern North America
%Z 798
%M UGAMI.816
%A Bertness, M.D.
%A Pennings, S.C.
%E Weinstein, M.P.
%E Kreeger, D.A.
%K America, communities, eastern, marsh, North, pattern, plant, process, salt, Spatial, variation
%0 Journal Article
%T The role of nitrogen in chromophoric and fluorescent dissolved organic matter formation
%D 2007
%V 103
%P 46-60
%B Marine Chemistry
%9 Article
%! The role of nitrogen in chromophoric and fluorescent dissolved organic matter formation
%Z 941
%M UGAMI.974
%A Biers, E.J.
%A Zepp, R.G.
%A Moran, M.A.
%K CDOM, dissoved organic matter, EEM, microbial activity, nitrogen, photchemical reactions
%0 Journal Article
%T Blue Crab (Callinectes sapidus Rathbun, 1896) Settlement at Three Georgia (USA) Estuarine Sites
%D 2010
%V 33
%N 3
%P 688-698
%B Estuaries and Coasts
%8 May
%9 Article
%! Blue Crab (Callinectes sapidus Rathbun, 1896) Settlement at Three Georgia (USA) Estuarine Sites
%Z #992 ISI Document Delivery No.: 606HI Times Cited: 1 Cited Reference Count: 45 Bishop, T. Dale Miller, Harlan L., III Walker, Randal L. Hurley, Dorset H. Menken, Theron Tilburg, Charles E. Sapelo Island National Estuarine Research Reserve; GCE-LTER [NSF OCE-998213] The authors wish to thank the Sapelo Island National Estuarine Research Reserve for its financial and logistical support of this study. The GCE-LTER program in partnership with the Sapelo Island National Estuarine Research Reserve is thanked for the water temperature and salinity data. Also, partial funding for Bishop was provided by the GCE-LTER (NSF OCE-998213). This is contribution number 27 of the Marine Science Center at the University of New England. This is contribution number 992 of the University of Georgia Marine Institute. 1 SPRINGER NEW YORK ESTUAR COAST
%M UGAMI.1027
%A Bishop, T.D.
%A Miller, H.L.
%A Walker, R.L.
%A Hurley, D.H.
%A Menken, T.
%A Tilburg, C.E.
%K ARTIFICIAL COLLECTORS, Blue crab, BRACHYURAN MEGALOPAE, Callinectes sapidus, CHESAPEAKE BAY, CONTINENTAL-SHELF, DELAWARE BAY, Environmental Sciences, Estuary, LARVAL TRANSPORT, Marine & Freshwater Biology, Mathematical model, Megalopae, Postlarvae, RECRUITMENT, Salinity, Settlement, SOUTH-CAROLINA, Winds, YORK-RIVER, YOUNG JUVENILES
%0 Journal Article
%T Nitrogen-fixing communities in an intertidal ecosystem
%D 1978
%V 24
%P 932-938
%B Canadian Journal of Microbiology
%9 Article
%! Nitrogen-fixing communities in an intertidal ecosystem
%Z 14-395
%M UGAMI.407
%A Bohlool, B.B.
%A Wiebe, W.J.
%K communities, ecosystem, intertidal, Nitrogen-fixing
%0 Journal Article
%T Seascape ecology of coastal biogenic habitats: advances, gaps, and challenges
%D 2011
%V 427
%P 191-217
%B Marine Ecology Progress Series
%9 Article
%! Seascape ecology of coastal biogenic habitats: advances, gaps, and challenges
%Z #1007 ISI Document Delivery No.: 749SM Times Cited: 36 Cited Reference Count: 224 Bostrom, Christoffer Pittman, Simon J. Simenstad, Charles Kneib, Ronald T. Abo Akademi University Endowment; National Science Foundation; NOAA Biogeography Branch The Research Institute of the Abo Akademi University Endowment is acknowledged for providing financial support to C. B. to attend the seascape ecology session at the Coastal and Estuarine Research Federation annual conference in November 2009 in Portland, OR, USA. S.J.P. acknowledges the support of the NOAA Biogeography Branch and NOAA Coral Reef Conservation Program; R. T. K. acknowledges the University of Georgia President''s Venture Fund for providing travel support, and C. S. acknowledges the support of the National Science Foundation. 36 INTER-RESEARCH OLDENDORF LUHE MAR ECOL PROG SER
%M UGAMI.1041
%A Bostrom, C.
%A Pittman, S.J.
%A Simenstad, C.
%A Kneib, R.T.
%K BLUE-CRAB SURVIVAL, Connectivity, CRITICAL, Ecology, Edge effects, EELGRASS ZOSTERA-MARINA, Fragmentation, GULF-OF-MEXICO, INFAUNAL, INTERTIDAL SALT-MARSHES, JERSEY ENGLISH-CHANNEL, Landscape ecology, MACROINVERTEBRATE ASSEMBLAGES, Marine & Freshwater Biology, Oceanography, Patch, PATCH SIZE, REEF FISH COMMUNITIES, Scale, SEAGRASS LANDSCAPE STRUCTURE, Seascape, size, Thresholds, TRANSITION ZONES
%0 Journal Article
%T Effects of sulfide on the growth of three salt marsh halophytes of the southeastern United States
%D 1989
%V 76
%P 1707-1713
%B American Journal of Botany
%9 Article
%! Effects of sulfide on the growth of three salt marsh halophytes of the southeastern United States
%Z 636
%M UGAMI.649
%A Bradley, P.
%A Dunn, E.L.
%K Effects, growth, halophytes, marsh, salt, southeastern, States, sulfide, United
%0 Journal Article
%T Effects of Sea-Level Rise and Anthropogenic Development on Priority Bird Species Habitats in Coastal Georgia, USA
%D 2012
%V 49
%N 2
%P 473-482
%B Environmental Management
%8 Feb
%9 Article
%! Effects of Sea-Level Rise and Anthropogenic Development on Priority Bird Species Habitats in Coastal Georgia, USA
%Z #1001 ISI Document Delivery No.: 905UG Times Cited: 3 Cited Reference Count: 40 Brittain, Ross A. Craft, Christopher B. National Oceanic and Atmospheric Administration (NOAA); National Estuarine Research Reserve System (NERRS); Sapelo Island National Estuarine Research Reserve (SINERR); U.S. Environmental Protection Agency (STAR) [RD 83222001-0]; National Science Foundation [OCE-9982133] We thank the National Oceanic and Atmospheric Administration (NOAA) and their National Estuarine Research Reserve System (NERRS) for a Graduate Research Fellowship for Sapelo Island National Estuarine Research Reserve (SINERR) that paid for the research on Sapelo Island; The U.S. Environmental Protection Agency (STAR grant RD 83222001-0) and the National Science Foundation through the Georgia Coastal Ecosystems Long Term Ecological Research Program (grant #OCE-9982133), for funding research in the tidal forest and SLAMM model simulations; The Georgia Department of Natural Resources, Wildlife Resource Division; Buddy Sullivan, SINERR Reserve Director; Dorset Hurley, SINERR Research Director; Aimee Gaddis, SINERR GIS technician; Fred Hay, Georgia DNR, Coastal Resources Division; Jon Garbisch, University of Georgia Marine Institute; Rich Thurau and Craig Wayson. Contribution number 1001 of the University of Georgia Marine Institute. 3 SPRINGER NEW YORK ENVIRON MANAGE
%M UGAMI.1035
%A Brittain, R.A.
%A Craft, C.B.
%K Birds, Coast, Conservation planning, Environmental Sciences, GIS model, Land-use change, Sea-level rise, Urban development
%0 Journal Article
%T AVIAN COMMUNITIES OF THE ALTAMAHA RIVER ESTUARY IN GEORGIA, USA
%D 2010
%V 122
%N 3
%P 532-544
%B Wilson Journal of Ornithology
%8 Sep
%9 Article
%! AVIAN COMMUNITIES OF THE ALTAMAHA RIVER ESTUARY IN GEORGIA, USA
%Z #1002 ISI Document Delivery No.: 653RT Times Cited: 2 Cited Reference Count: 45 Brittain, Ross A. Meretsky, Vicky J. Craft, Chris B. National Oceanic and Atmospheric Administration (NOAA); National Estuarine Research Reserve System (NERRS); U.S. Environmental Protection Agency We thank the National Oceanic and Atmospheric Administration (NOAA) and the National Estuarine Research Reserve System (NERRS) for funding this research through a Graduate Research Fellowship; the U.S. Environmental Protection Agency for providing funds for research in the Clayhole Swamp; the Georgia Department of Natural Resources, Wildlife Resource Division, that manages the Sapelo Island NERR; and Buddy Sullivan, Dorset Hurley, Aimee Gaddis, Fred Hay, and Jon Garbisch. 2 WILSON ORNITHOLOGICAL SOC WACO WILSON J ORNITHOL
%M UGAMI.1036
%A Brittain, R.A.
%A Meretsky, V.J.
%A Craft, C.B.
%K ASSEMBLAGES, BIRD COMMUNITIES, FORESTS, GRASSLANDS, HABITAT, LANDSCAPE, Ornithology
%0 Journal Article
%T Habitat Use by Coastal Birds Inferred from Stable Carbon and Nitrogen Isotopes
%D 2012
%V 35
%N 2
%P 633-645
%B Estuaries and Coasts
%8 Mar
%9 Article
%! Habitat Use by Coastal Birds Inferred from Stable Carbon and Nitrogen Isotopes
%Z #1000 ISI Document Delivery No.: 898WA Times Cited: 5 Cited Reference Count: 50 Brittain, Ross A. Schimmelmann, Arndt Parkhurst, David F. Craft, Christopher B. National Oceanic and Atmospheric Administration their National Estuarine Research Reserve System; Sapelo Island National Estuarine Research Reserve (SINERR); National Science Foundation [OCE-9982133]; U.S. Environmental Protection Agency [RD 83222001-0] We are grateful to the National Oceanic and Atmospheric Administration and their National Estuarine Research Reserve System who funded this research through a Graduate Research Fellowship for Sapelo Island National Estuarine Research Reserve (SINERR) and from the National Science Foundation through the Georgia Coastal Ecosystems Long-Term Ecological Research Program (grant no. OCE-9982133). This research was also supported by grant RD 83222001-0 from the U.S. Environmental Protection Agency''s Science to Achieve Results (STAR) program. The Georgia Department of Natural Resources, Wildlife Resource Division, deserved credit for managing SINERR. Specifically, we would like to thank Buddy Sullivan, Dorset Hurley, Aimee Gaddis, Fred Hay, Daniel Saucedo, John Shelby, and Jon Garbisch for helping with field work and logistics; Peter Sauer for help with stable isotope analyses; Andrew Parnell and Richard Inger for help in running SIAR. We also thank Richard Inger and Authier Matthieu for their editorial comments on a previous version of this manuscript. This is contribution number 1000 of the University of Georgia Marine Institute. 5 SPRINGER NEW YORK ESTUAR COAST
%M UGAMI.1034
%A Brittain, R.A.
%A Schimmelmann, A.
%A Parkhurst, D.F.
%A Craft, C.B.
%K Carbon-13, COMMUNITY-WIDE MEASURES, ECOLOGY, Environmental Sciences, Food web, LANDSCAPE, Marine & Freshwater Biology, MARSH FOOD WEBS, Nitrogen-15, PAINTED BUNTINGS, PATTERNS, RATIOS PROVIDE, Saltmarsh, SEABIRD, SIAR, SPARTINA-ALTERNIFLORA, Stable isotopes, STRUCTURE, TROPHIC
%0 Journal Article
%T Key aromatic-ring-cleaving enzyme, Protocatechuate 3,4-Dioxygenase, in the ecologically important marine Roseobacter lineage
%D 2000
%V 66
%N 11
%P 4662-4672
%B Applied and Environmental Microbiology
%9 Article
%! Key aromatic-ring-cleaving enzyme, Protocatechuate 3,4-Dioxygenase, in the ecologically important marine Roseobacter lineage
%Z 865
%M UGAMI.888
%A Buchan, A.
%A Collier, L.S.
%A Neidle, E.L.
%A Moran, M.A.
%K 4-Dioxygenase, aromatic-ring-cleaving, ecologically, enzyme, important, Key, lineage, marine, Protocatechuate, Roseobacter
%0 Journal Article
%T Dynamics of bacterial and fungal communities on decaying salt marsh grass
%D 2003
%V 69
%N 11
%P 6676-6687
%B Applied and Environmental Microbiology
%9 Article
%! Dynamics of bacterial and fungal communities on decaying salt marsh grass
%Z 922
%M UGAMI.955
%A Buchan, A.
%A Newell, S.Y.
%A Butler, M.
%A Biers, E.J.
%A Hollibaugh, J.T.
%A Moran, M.A.
%K bacterial, communities, decaying, Dynamics, fungal, grass, marsh, salt
%0 Journal Article
%T Analysis of internal transcribed spacer (ITS) regions of rRNA genes in fungal communities of a southeastern U.S. salt marsh
%D 2002
%V 43
%N 3
%P 329-340
%B Microbial Ecology
%9 Article
%! Analysis of internal transcribed spacer (ITS) regions of rRNA genes in fungal communities of a southeastern U.S. salt marsh
%Z 890
%M UGAMI.917
%A Buchan, A.
%A Newell, S.Y.
%A Moreta, J.I.L.
%A Moran, M.A.
%K Analysis, communities, fungal, genes, internal, marsh, regions, rRNA, salt, southeastern, spacer, transcribed
%0 Journal Article
%T Diet choice in an omnivorous salt-marsh crab: different food types, body size, and habitat complexity
%D 2003
%V 292
%P 103-116
%B Journal of Experimental Marine Biology and Ecology
%9 Article
%! Diet choice in an omnivorous salt-marsh crab: different food types, body size, and habitat complexity
%Z 919
%M UGAMI.952
%A Buck, T.L.
%A Breed, G.A.
%A Pennings, S.C.
%A Chase, M.E.
%A Zimmer, M.
%A Carefoot, T.H.
%K Armases, Body size, Crabs, Diet breadth, Gastropods, Isopods, Omnivory, Predation, Salt marsh
%0 Journal Article
%T Studies on the nutritive value of Spartina grass growing in the marsh areas of coastal Georgia
%D 1956
%V 83
%P 327-334
%B Bulletin of the Torrey Botanical Club
%9 Article
%! Studies on the nutritive value of Spartina grass growing in the marsh areas of coastal Georgia
%Z 1-3
%M UGAMI.4
%A Burkholder, P.R.
%K areas, coastal, Georgia, grass, growing, marsh, nutritive, Spartina, Studies, value
%0 Journal Article
%T Decomposition of marsh grass by aerobic marine bacteria
%D 1957
%V 84
%P 366-383
%B Bulletin of the Torrey Botanical Club
%9 Article
%! Decomposition of marsh grass by aerobic marine bacteria
%Z 1-7A
%M UGAMI.9
%A Burkholder, P.R.
%A Bornside, G.H.
%K aerobic, bacteria, Decomposition, grass, marine, marsh
%0 Journal Article
%T Microbiological assay of vitamin B12 in marine solids
%D 1956
%V 123
%N 3207
%P 1071-1073
%B Science
%9 Article
%! Microbiological assay of vitamin B12 in marine solids
%Z 7D
%M UGAMI.872
%U http://science.sciencemag.org/content/123/3207/1071.2.long
%A Burkholder, P.R.
%A Burkholder, L.M.
%K assay, B12, marine, Microbiological, solids, vitamin
%0 Journal Article
%T Vitamin B12 in suspended solids and marsh muds collected along the coast of Georgia
%D 1956
%V 1
%P 202-208
%B Limnology and Oceanography
%9 Article
%! Vitamin B12 in suspended solids and marsh muds collected along the coast of Georgia
%Z 1-4
%M UGAMI.5
%A Burkholder, P.R.
%A Burkholder, L.M.
%K B12, coast, collected, Georgia, marsh, muds, solids, suspended, Vitamin
%0 Journal Article
%T Historical Changes in the Vegetated Area of Salt Marshes
%D 2020
%V 44
%N 1
%P 162-177
%B Estuaries and Coasts
%8 Jan
%9 Article
%! Historical Changes in the Vegetated Area of Salt Marshes
%Z ISI Document Delivery No.: PI4WO; Times Cited: 4; Cited Reference Count: 58; Burns, Christine J. Alber, Merryl Alexander, Clark R.; Alexander, Clark/0000-0002-3904-1091; NSFNational Science Foundation (NSF) [NSF14-26308, OCE18-32178, DEB 1832221, OCE 1637630]; We thank Mike Robinson, John Porter, Anne Giblin, Matt Kirwan, John Porter, and Hap Garritt for providing the imagery and access to the DEM data used in this study, and Marguerite Madden, Chuck Hopkinson, and two anonymous reviewers for comments on the manuscript. We acknowledge the support of the NSF-funded Coastal SEES (NSF14-26308), the Georgia Coastal Ecosystems LTER (OCE18-32178), VCR (DEB 1832221), and PIE (OCE 1637630). The authors declare that they have no conflict of interest. This is contribution number 1086 of the University of Georgia Marine Institute.; 4; 3; 8; Springer; New york; 1559-2731
%M UGAMI.1118
%A Burns, C.J.
%A Alber, M.
%A Alexander, C.R.
%K bay, collapse, Environmental Sciences Ecology, erosion, Image analysis, LTER, Marine Freshwater Biology, Marsh migration, migration, Ponding, resilience, Salt marsh, sea-level rise, upland
%0 Journal Article
%T Two new kidney flukes of the genus Renicola, Cohn, 1904, from the clapper rail, Rallus longirostris sub. spp.
%D 1970
%V 56
%P 493-497
%B Journal of Parasitology
%9 Article
%! Two new kidney flukes of the genus Renicola, Cohn, 1904, from the clapper rail, Rallus longirostris sub. spp.
%Z 8-199
%M UGAMI.209
%A Byrd, E.E.
%A Heard, R.W.III
%K clapper, Cohn, flukes, genus, kidney, longirostris, new, rail, Rallus, Renicola, sub
%0 Journal Article
%T Chemistry, fluxes, and sources of carbon dioxide in the estuarine waters of the Satilla and Altamaha Rivers, Georgia
%D 1998
%V 43
%N 4
%P 657-668
%B Limnology and Oceanography
%9 Article
%! Chemistry, fluxes, and sources of carbon dioxide in the estuarine waters of the Satilla and Altamaha Rivers, Georgia
%Z 848
%M UGAMI.866
%A Cai, Wei-Jun
%A Wang, Y.
%K Altamaha, carbon, Chemistry, dioxide, estuarine, fluxes, Georgia, Rivers, Satilla, sources, waters
%0 Journal Article
%T Oxygen and carbon dioxide mass balance for the estuarine-intertidal marsh complex of five rivers in the southeastern U.S.
%D 1999
%V 44
%N 3
%P 639-649
%B Limnology and Oceanography
%9 Article
%! Oxygen and carbon dioxide mass balance for the estuarine-intertidal marsh complex of five rivers in the southeastern U.S.
%Z 849
%M UGAMI.867
%A Cai, Wei-Jun
%A Pomeroy, L.R.
%A Moran, M.A.
%A Wang, Y.
%K balance, carbon, complex, dioxide, estuarine-intertidal, marsh, mass, Oxygen, rivers, southeastern
%0 Journal Article
%T Acid-based properties of dissolved organic matter in the estuarine waters of Georgia, USA
%D 1998
%V 62
%N 3
%P 473-483
%B Geochimica et Cosmochimica Acta
%9 Article
%! Acid-based properties of dissolved organic matter in the estuarine waters of Georgia, USA
%Z 847
%M UGAMI.865
%A Cai, Wei-Jun
%A Wang, Y.
%A Hodson, R.E.
%K Acid-based, dissolved, estuarine, Georgia, matter, organic, properties, USA, waters
%0 Journal Article
%T Impact of a parasitic plant on the zonation of two salt marsh perennials
%D 1998
%V 114
%P 100-105
%B Oecologia
%9 Article
%! Impact of a parasitic plant on the zonation of two salt marsh perennials
%Z 801
%M UGAMI.820
%A Callaway, R.M.
%A Pennings, S.C.
%K communitites, competition, consumers, indirect effects, parasitic plants
%0 Journal Article
%T Facilitation may buffer competitive effects: Indirect and diffuse interactions among salt marsh plants
%D 2000
%V 156
%N 4
%P 416-424
%B American Naturalist
%9 Article
%! Facilitation may buffer competitive effects: Indirect and diffuse interactions among salt marsh plants
%Z 841
%M UGAMI.861
%A Callaway, R.M.
%A Pennings, S.C.
%K competition, diffuse interactions, facilitation, indirect interactions, positive interactions, salt marsh
%0 Journal Article
%T Phenotypic plasticity and interactions among plants
%D 2003
%V 84
%N 5
%P 1115-1128
%B Ecology
%9 Article
%! Phenotypic plasticity and interactions among plants
%Z 830
%M UGAMI.851
%A Callaway, R.M.
%A Pennings, S.C.
%A Richards, C.L.
%K allelopathy, chemical defense, clonal morphology, competition, facilitation, herbivory, induced resistance, phenotypic plasticity, plant interactions, roots
%0 Journal Article
%T Epiphyte host preferences and host traits: mechanisms for species-specific interactions
%D 2002
%V 132
%N 2
%P 221-230
%B Oecologia
%9 Article
%! Epiphyte host preferences and host traits: mechanisms for species-specific interactions
%Z 898
%M UGAMI.927
%A Callaway, R.M.
%A Reinhart, K.O.
%A Moore, G.W.
%A Moore, D.J.
%A Pennings, S.C.
%K biological diversity, community theory, facilitation, positive interactions
%0 Journal Article
%T Effects of epiphytic lichens on host preference of the vascular epiphyte Tillandsia usneoides
%D 2001
%V 94
%P 433-441
%B Oikos
%9 Article
%! Effects of epiphytic lichens on host preference of the vascular epiphyte Tillandsia usneoides
%Z 879
%M UGAMI.908
%A Callaway, R.M.
%A Reinhart, K.O.
%A Tucker, S.C.
%A Pennings, S.C.
%K Effects, epiphyte, epiphytic, host, lichens, preference, Tillandsia, usneoides, vascular
%0 Journal Article
%T A new species of Lachnum on Spartina alterniflora
%D 1996
%V 57
%P 479-485
%B Mycotaxon
%9 Article
%! A new species of Lachnum on Spartina alterniflora
%Z 939
%M UGAMI.972
%A Cantrell, S.A.
%A Hanlin, R.T.
%A Newell, S.Y.
%K Ascomycotina, discomycetes, Hyaloscyphacae, Leotiales
%0 Journal Article
%T Distribution of mycosporine-like amino acids in the sea hare Aplysia dactylomela: effect of diet on amounts and types sequestered over time in tissues and spawn
%D 2000
%V 126
%P 91-104
%B Comparative Biochemistry and Physiology, Part C
%9 Article
%! Distribution of mycosporine-like amino acids in the sea hare Aplysia dactylomela: effect of diet on amounts and types sequestered over time in tissues and spawn
%Z 827
%M UGAMI.848
%A Carefoot, T.H.
%A Karentz, D.
%A Pennings, S.C.
%A Young, C.L.
%K Aplysia dactylomela, MAA accumulation, Mycosporine-like amino acids, Sea hare, UV protection
%0 Journal Article
%T Origins, structure, and trophic significance of amorphous seston in a blackwater river
%D 1994
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%B Freshwater Biology
%9 Article
%! Origins, structure, and trophic significance of amorphous seston in a blackwater river
%Z 671
%M UGAMI.687
%A Carlough, L.
%K amorphous, blackwater, Origins, river, seston, significance, structure, trophic
%0 Journal Article
%T Bacterivory by sestonic protists in a southeastern blackwater river
%D 1991
%V 36
%P 873-883
%B Limnology and Oceanography
%9 Article
%! Bacterivory by sestonic protists in a southeastern blackwater river
%Z 670
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%A Carlough, L.
%A Meyer, J.L.
%K Bacterivory, blackwater, protists, river, sestonic, southeastern
%0 Journal Article
%T Rates of protozoan bacterivory in three habitats of a southeastern blackwater river
%D 1990
%V 9
%P 45-53
%B Journal of the North American Benthological Society
%9 Article
%! Rates of protozoan bacterivory in three habitats of a southeastern blackwater river
%Z 648
%M UGAMI.662
%A Carlough, L.A.
%A Meyer, J.L.
%K bacterivory, blackwater, habitats, protozoan, Rates, river, southeastern
%0 Journal Article
%T Prey selection by five species of vespertilionid bats on Sapelo Island, Georgia
%D 1998
%V 25
%P 158-170
%B Brimleyana
%9 Article
%! Prey selection by five species of vespertilionid bats on Sapelo Island, Georgia
%Z 872
%M UGAMI.895
%A Carter, T.C.
%A Menzel, M.A.
%A Krishon, D.M.
%A Laerm, J.
%K bats, Georgia, Island, Prey, Sapelo, selection, species, vespertilionid
%0 Journal Article
%T The effects of fertilization on nitrogen distribution in a Spartina alterniflora salt marsh
%D 1979
%V 8
%P 327-337
%B Estuarine and Coastal Marine Science
%9 Article
%! The effects of fertilization on nitrogen distribution in a Spartina alterniflora salt marsh
%Z 13-362
%M UGAMI.374
%A Chalmers, A.G.
%K alterniflora, distribution, effects, fertilization, marsh, nitrogen, salt, Spartina
%0 Book Section
%T Soil dynamics and productivity of Spartina alterniflora
%D 1982
%P 231-242
%I Academic Press
%C New York
%B Estuarine Comparisons
%9 Article
%! Soil dynamics and productivity of Spartina alterniflora
%Z 16-449
%M UGAMI.461
%A Chalmers, A.G.
%E Kennedy, V.S.
%K alterniflora, dynamics, productivity, Soil, Spartina
%0 Journal Article
%T Experimental manipulations of drainage in a Georgia salt marsh: Lessons learned
%D 1988
%V 1988
%P 1-4
%B Oceans
%9 Article
%! Experimental manipulations of drainage in a Georgia salt marsh: Lessons learned
%Z 621
%M UGAMI.634
%A Chalmers, A.G.
%K drainage, Experimental, Georgia, learned, Lessons, manipulations, marsh, salt
%0 Government Document
%T The Ecology of Sapelo Island National Estuarine Research Reserve
%D 1997
%Z #1012
%M UGAMI.1045
%U http://www.sapelonerr.org/wp-content/uploads/2013/08/Ecology-of-the-Sapelo-Island-National-Estuarine-Research-Reserve.pdf
%A Chalmers, A.G.
%E Resources/NOAA, Georgia Department of Natural
%K Ecology, Estuarine, Island, National, Research, Reserve, Sapelo
%0 Journal Article
%T Residual effects of scientific manipulation: a salt marsh revisited
%D 1982
%V 40
%P 85-90
%B Georgia Journal of Science
%9 Article
%! Residual effects of scientific manipulation: a salt marsh revisited
%Z 16-461
%M UGAMI.473
%A Chalmers, A.G.
%A Christian, R.R.
%K effects, manipulation, marsh, Residual, revisited, salt, scientific
%0 Journal Article
%T Capacity of a Spartina salt marsh to assimilate nitrogen from secondarily treated sewage
%D 1976
%V 88 p.
%B Environmental Resources Center Tech. Report ERC 0776, Ga. Inst. Technology, Atlanta, Ga.
%9 Article
%! Capacity of a Spartina salt marsh to assimilate nitrogen from secondarily treated sewage
%Z 316*
%M UGAMI.328
%A Chalmers, A.G.
%A Haines, E.B.
%A Sherr, B.F.
%K assimilate, Capacity, marsh, nitrogen, salt, secondarily, sewage, Spartina, treated
%0 Journal Article
%T Carbon balance in a salt marsh: interactions of diffusive export, tidal deposition and rainfall-caused erosion
%D 1985
%V 21
%P 757-771
%B Estuarine, Coastal and Shelf Science
%9 Article
%! Carbon balance in a salt marsh: interactions of diffusive export, tidal deposition and rainfall-caused erosion
%Z 18-520
%M UGAMI.532
%A Chalmers, A.G.
%A Wiegert, R.G.
%A Wolf, P.L.
%K balance, Carbon, deposition, diffusive, erosion, export, interactions, marsh, rainfall-caused, salt, tidal
%0 Journal Article
%T The macroscopic marine algae of Sapelo Island and other sites on the Georgia coast
%D 1971
%V 29
%P 77-89
%B Bulletin of the Georgia Academy of Science
%9 Article
%! The macroscopic marine algae of Sapelo Island and other sites on the Georgia coast
%Z 8-211
%M UGAMI.221
%A Chapman, R.L.
%K algae, coast, Georgia, Island, macroscopic, marine, other, Sapelo, sites
%0 Journal Article
%T An addition to the macroscopic marine algal flora of Georgia:the genus Cladophora
%D 1973
%V 31
%P 147-150
%B Bulletin of the Georgia Academy of Science
%9 Article
%! An addition to the macroscopic marine algal flora of Georgia:the genus Cladophora
%Z 10-265
%M UGAMI.275
%A Chapman, R.L.
%K addition, algal, Cladophora, flora, genus, Georgia, macroscopic, marine
%0 Journal Article
%T Ca2+-induced bioluminescence in Renilla reniformis. Purification and characterization of a calcium-triggered luciferin-binding protein
%D 1979
%V 254
%P 769-780
%B Journal of Biological Chemistry
%9 Article
%! Ca2+-induced bioluminescence in Renilla reniformis. Purification and characterization of a calcium-triggered luciferin-binding protein
%Z 14-376
%M UGAMI.388
%A Charbonneau, H.
%A Cormier, M.J.
%K bioluminescence, Ca2+-induced, calcium-triggered, characterization, luciferin-binding, protein, Purification, reniformis, Renilla
%0 Journal Article
%T Biogenic effects on development of magnetic fabrics in coastal Georgia sediments
%D 1986
%V 56
%P 160-172
%B Journal of Sedimentary Petrology
%9 Article
%! Biogenic effects on development of magnetic fabrics in coastal Georgia sediments
%Z 538
%M UGAMI.550
%A Chernow, R.M.
%A Frey, R.W.
%A Ellwood, B.B.
%K Biogenic, coastal, development, effects, fabrics, Georgia, magnetic, sediments
%0 Journal Article
%T Distribution of microbial adenosine triphosphate in salt marsh sediments at Sapelo Island, Georgia
%D 1975
%V 119-
%P 89-97
%B Soil Science
%9 Article
%! Distribution of microbial adenosine triphosphate in salt marsh sediments at Sapelo Island, Georgia
%Z 11-287
%M UGAMI.299
%A Christian, R.
%A Bancroft, K.
%A Wiebe, W.J.
%K adenosine, Distribution, Georgia, Island, marsh, microbial, salt, Sapelo, sediments, triphosphate
%0 Book Section
%T Experimental trends in sediment microbial heterotrophy: Radioisotopic techniques and analysis
%D 1976
%P 67-87
%I University of South Carolina Press
%C Columbia, S. C.
%B Ecology of Marine Benthos
%9 Article
%! Experimental trends in sediment microbial heterotrophy: Radioisotopic techniques and analysis
%Z 11-296
%M UGAMI.308
%A Christian, R.R.
%A Hall, J.R.
%E Coull, B.
%K analysis, Experimental, heterotrophy, microbial, Radioisotopic, sediment, techniques, trends
%0 Journal Article
%T Synergism between research and simulation models of estuarine microbial food webs
%D 1991
%V 22
%P 111-125
%B Microbial Ecology
%9 Article
%! Synergism between research and simulation models of estuarine microbial food webs
%Z 655
%M UGAMI.670
%A Christian, R.R.
%A Wetzel, R.L.
%K estuarine, food, microbial, models, research, simulation, Synergism, webs
%0 Journal Article
%T Anaerobic microbial community metabolism in Spartina alterniflora soils
%D 1978
%V 23
%P 328-336
%B Limnology and Oceanography
%9 Article
%! Anaerobic microbial community metabolism in Spartina alterniflora soils
%Z 13-353
%M UGAMI.365
%A Christian, R.R.
%A Wiebe, W.J.
%K alterniflora, Anaerobic, community, metabolism, microbial, soils, Spartina
%0 Book Section
%T Three experimental regimes in the study of sediment microbial ecology
%D 1978
%P 148-155
%I American Society for Testing and Materials
%B Methodology for Biomass Determinations and Microbial Activities in Sediments
%9 Article
%! Three experimental regimes in the study of sediment microbial ecology
%Z 14-386
%M UGAMI.398
%A Christian, R.R.
%A Wiebe, W.J.
%E Litchfield, C.D.
%E Seyfried, P.L.
%K ecology, experimental, microbial, regimes, sediment, study
%0 Journal Article
%T Resistance of the microbial community within salt marsh soils in selected perturbations
%D 1978
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%B Ecology
%9 Article
%! Resistance of the microbial community within salt marsh soils in selected perturbations
%Z 14-370
%M UGAMI.382
%A Christian, R.R.
%A Bancroft, K.
%A Wiebe, W.J.
%K community, marsh, microbial, perturbations, Resistance, salt, selected, soils
%0 Journal Article
%T Relationships of soil, plant, and microbial characteristics in silt-clay and tall-form Spartina alterniflora
%D 1983
%V 6
%P 43-49
%B Estuaries
%9 Article
%! Relationships of soil, plant, and microbial characteristics in silt-clay and tall-form Spartina alterniflora
%Z 15-426
%M UGAMI.438
%A Christian, R.R.
%A Hansen, J.A.
%A Hodson, R.E.
%A Wiebe, W.J.
%K alterniflora, characteristics, microbial, plant, Relationships, silt-clay, soil, Spartina, tall-form
%0 Journal Article
%T Comparison of methods for measurement of bacterial growth rates in mixed batch cultures
%D 1982
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%P 1160-1165
%B Applied and Environmental Microbiology
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%! Comparison of methods for measurement of bacterial growth rates in mixed batch cultures
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%M UGAMI.463
%A Christian, R.R.
%A Hanson, R.B.
%A Newell, S.Y.
%K bacterial, batch, Comparison, cultures, growth, measurement, methods, mixed, rates
%0 Conference Proceedings
%T Microbial utilization and transformation of riverine humic substances
%D 1997
%P 561-566
%I The Polish Society of Humic Substances
%C Wroclaw, Poland
%B Proceedings of the 8th Meeting of the Internatinal Humic Substances Society.
%S The Role of Humic Substances in the Ecosystems and in Environmental Protection
%8 September 9-14, 1996
%7 8th Meeting
%9 Presentation
%! Microbial utilization and transformation of riverine humic substances
%Z 792
%M UGAMI.810
%A Claus, Harald
%A Filip, Zdenek K.
%A Alberts, James J.
%E Drozd, J.
%E Gonet, S.S.
%E Senesi, N.
%E Weber, J.
%K humic, Microbial, riverine, substances, transformation, utilization
%0 Journal Article
%T Adenosine-5''-triphosphate requirement for luminescence in cell-free extract of Renilla reniformis
%D 1959
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%B Journal of the American Chemical Society
%9 Article
%! Adenosine-5''-triphosphate requirement for luminescence in cell-free extract of Renilla reniformis
%Z 2-18A
%M UGAMI.23
%A Cormier, M.J.
%K Adenosine-5''-triphosphate, cell-free, extract, luminescence, reniformis, Renilla, requirement
%0 Journal Article
%T Studies on the bioluminescence of Renilla reniformis. I. Requirements for luminescence in extracts and characteristics of the system
%D 1960
%V 42
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%B Biochimica et Biophysica Acta
%9 Article
%! Studies on the bioluminescence of Renilla reniformis. I. Requirements for luminescence in extracts and characteristics of the system
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%M UGAMI.24
%A Cormier, M.J.
%K bioluminescence, characteristics, extracts, luminescence, reniformis, Renilla, Requirements, Studies, system
%0 Book Section
%T Biochemistry of Renilla reniformis luminescence
%D 1961
%P 274-293
%I Johns Hopkins University Press
%C Baltimore, MD
%B Light and Life
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%A Cormier, M.J.
%E McElory, S.D.
%E Glass, B.
%K Biochemistry, luminescence, reniformis, Renilla
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%T Studies on the bioluminescence of Renilla reniformis. II. Requirement of 3'', 5''-diphosphoadenosine in the luminescent reaction
%D 1962
%V 237
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%B Journal of Biological Chemistry
%9 Article
%! Studies on the bioluminescence of Renilla reniformis. II. Requirement of 3'', 5''-diphosphoadenosine in the luminescent reaction
%Z 39
%M UGAMI.47
%A Cormier, M.J.
%K 5''-diphosphoadenosine, bioluminescence, luminescent, reaction, reniformis, Renilla, Requirement, Studies
%0 Book Section
%T Applications of Renilla bioluminescence: An introduction
%D 1978
%P 237-244
%I Academic Press, Inc.
%C New York
%B Methods in Enzymology, Vol. 57
%9 Article
%! Applications of Renilla bioluminescence: An introduction
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%A Cormier, M.J.
%E DeLuca, M.A.
%K Applications, bioluminescence, introduction, Renilla
%0 Journal Article
%T Studies on the bioluminescence of Balanoglossus biminiensis extracts. I. Requirements for hydrogen peroxide and characteristics of the system
%D 1963
%V 238
%P 785-789
%B Journal of Biological Chemistry
%9 Article
%! Studies on the bioluminescence of Balanoglossus biminiensis extracts. I. Requirements for hydrogen peroxide and characteristics of the system
%Z 4-47
%M UGAMI.57
%A Cormier, M.J.
%A Dure, L.S.
%K Balanoglossus, biminiensis, bioluminescence, characteristics, extracts, hydrogen, peroxide, Requirements, Studies, system
%0 Journal Article
%T Studies on the bioluminescence of Renilla reniformis. III. Some biochemical comparisons of the system to other Renilla species and determinations of the spectral energy distributions, (BBA3755)
%D 1962
%V 64
%P 340-344
%B Biochimica et Biophysica Acta (BBA3755)
%9 Article
%! Studies on the bioluminescence of Renilla reniformis. III. Some biochemical comparisons of the system to other Renilla species and determinations of the spectral energy distributions, (BBA3755)
%Z 3-44
%M UGAMI.53
%A Cormier, M.J.
%A Eckroade, C.B.
%K BBA3755, biochemical, bioluminescence, comparisons, determinations, distributions, energy, other, reniformis, Renilla, Some, species, spectral, Studies, system
%0 Journal Article
%T Studies on the bioluminescence of Renilla reniformis. IV. Non-enzymatic activation of Renilla luciferin
%D 1964
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%B Biochimica et Biophysica Acta
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%! Studies on the bioluminescence of Renilla reniformis. IV. Non-enzymatic activation of Renilla luciferin
%Z 70*
%M UGAMI.81
%A Cormier, M.J.
%A Hori, K.
%K activation, bioluminescence, luciferin, Non-enzymatic, reniformis, Renilla, Studies
%0 Journal Article
%T An investigation of the mechanism of the luminescent peroxidation of luminol by stopped flow techniques
%D 1968
%V 243
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%B Journal of Biological Chemistry
%9 Article
%! An investigation of the mechanism of the luminescent peroxidation of luminol by stopped flow techniques
%Z 7-157
%M UGAMI.168
%A Cormier, M.J.
%A Prichard, P.M.
%K flow, investigation, luminescent, luminol, mechanism, peroxidation, stopped, techniques
%0 Journal Article
%T Studies on the bioluminescence of Renilla reniformis. VII. Conversion of luciferin into luciferyl sulfate by luciferin sulfokinase
%D 1970
%V 9
%P 1184-1189
%B Biochemistry
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%! Studies on the bioluminescence of Renilla reniformis. VII. Conversion of luciferin into luciferyl sulfate by luciferin sulfokinase
%Z 8-191
%M UGAMI.202
%A Cormier, M.J.
%A Hori, K.
%A Karkhanis, Y.D.
%K bioluminescence, Conversion, luciferin, luciferyl, reniformis, Renilla, Studies, sulfate, sulfokinase
%0 Journal Article
%T Evidence for similar biochemical requirements for bioluminescence among the coelenterates
%D 1973
%V 81
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%B Journal of Cell Physiology
%9 Article
%! Evidence for similar biochemical requirements for bioluminescence among the coelenterates
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%A Cormier, M.J.
%A Hori, K.
%A Karkhanis, Y.D.
%A Anderson, J.M.
%A Wampler, J.E.
%A Morin, J.G.
%A Hastings, J.W.
%K biochemical, bioluminescence, coelenterates, Evidence, requirements, similar
%0 Journal Article
%T Bioluminescence: Recent advances
%D 1975
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%B Annual Review of Biological Chemistry
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%A Cormier, M.J.
%A Lee, J.
%A Wampler, J.E.
%K advances, Bioluminescence, Recent
%0 Journal Article
%T Intertidal distribution, population dynamics and production of the amphipod Uhlorechestia spartinophila in a Georgia, USA, salt marsh
%D 1995
%V 121
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%B Marine Biology
%9 Article
%! Intertidal distribution, population dynamics and production of the amphipod Uhlorechestia spartinophila in a Georgia, USA, salt marsh
%Z 752
%M UGAMI.768
%A Covi, M.P.
%A Kneib, R.T.
%K amphipod, distribution, dynamics, Georgia, Intertidal, marsh, population, production, salt, spartinophila, Uhlorechestia, USA
%0 Journal Article
%T Behavior variation in national populations of two species of fiddler crabs (Uca) and some preliminary observations on directed modification
%D 1970
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%P 24-31
%B Journal of Bilogical Phychology
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%M UGAMI.215
%A Coward, S.J.
%A Gerhardt, C.M.
%A Crockett, D.T.
%K Behavior, crabs, directed, fiddler, modification, national, observations, populations, preliminary, some, species, Uca, variation
%0 Journal Article
%T Forecasting the effects of accelerated sea-level rise on tidal marsh ecosystem services
%D 2009
%V 7
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%B Frontiers in Ecology and the Environment
%9 Article
%! Forecasting the effects of accelerated sea-level rise on tidal marsh ecosystem services
%Z 964
%M UGAMI.1019
%A Craft, C.
%A Clough, J.
%A Ehman, J.
%A Joye, S.
%A Park, R.
%A Pennings, S.C.
%A Guo, H.
%A Machmuller, M.
%K accelerated, ecosystem, effects, Forecasting, marsh, rise, sea-level, services, tidal
%0 Journal Article
%T Soil organic carbon, nitrogen, and phosphorus as indicators of recovery in restored Spartina marshes
%D 2001
%V 19
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%P 87-91
%B Ecological Restoration
%9 Article
%! Soil organic carbon, nitrogen, and phosphorus as indicators of recovery in restored Spartina marshes
%Z 884
%M UGAMI.913
%A Craft, C.B.
%K carbon, indicators, marshes, nitrogen, organic, phosphorus, recovery, restored, Soil, Spartina
%0 Journal Article
%T Freshwater input structures soil properties, vertical accretion, and nutrient accumulation of Georgia and U.S. tidal marshes
%D 2007
%V 52
%N 3
%P 1220-1230
%B Limnology and Oceanography
%9 Article
%! Freshwater input structures soil properties, vertical accretion, and nutrient accumulation of Georgia and U.S. tidal marshes
%Z 889
%M UGAMI.903
%A Craft, C.B.
%K accretion, accumulation, Freshwater, Georgia, input, marshes, nutrient, properties, soil, structures, tidal, vertical
%0 Journal Article
%T Tidal freshwater forest accretion does not keep pace with sea level rise
%D 2012
%V 18
%N 12
%P 3615-3623
%B Global Change Biology
%8 Dec
%9 Article
%! Tidal freshwater forest accretion does not keep pace with sea level rise
%Z #1019 ISI Document Delivery No.: 030IK Times Cited: 5 Cited Reference Count: 44 Craft, Christopher B. sasmito, sigit/E-8715-2013 sasmito, sigit/0000-0001-5864-8596 U.S. Department of Energy [TUL-563-07/08]; National Science Foundation [OCE-9982133] I thank Ross Brittain, Mihee Jun, John Marton, Nate Knowles, and Anya Hopple for help with sample collection and laboratory analyses. Thanks to Scott Neubauer and two anonymous reviewers for providing thorough and constructive reviews of an earlier draft of the manuscript. This research was supported by the U.S. Department of Energy through grant TUL-563-07/08 and the National Science Foundation grant OCE-9982133 to the Georgia Coastal Ecosystems Long Term Ecological Research Program. This is contribution number 1019 from the University of Georgia Marine Institute. 5 WILEY-BLACKWELL HOBOKEN GLOBAL CHANGE BIOL
%M UGAMI.1052
%A Craft, C.B.
%K ACCUMULATION, Biodiversity Conservation, carbon sequestration, Ecology, Environmental Sciences, GEORGIA, MARSHES, N&P accumulation, NITROGEN, PHOSPHORUS, rise, RIVER, SALINITY, saltwater intrusion, sea level, SEDIMENTS, soil accretion, tidal freshwater forests, USA, WETLAND FORESTS
%0 Journal Article
%T From the headwaters to the sea: The role of riparian, alluvial, and tidal wetlands to filter nutrients and ameliorate eutrophication
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%V 1
%P 133-141
%B River
%9 Article
%Z published
%M UGAMI.1137
%R 10.1002/rvr2.20
%U https://onlinelibrary.wiley.com/doi/full/10.1002/rvr2.20
%A Craft, Christopher B.
%A Li, Shanze
%A Xie, Tian
%K wetlands, tidal, nutrients, eutrophication, riparian, alluvial, coastal, UGAMI Publication
%0 Journal Article
%T Abstracts of research reports from The University of Georgia Marine Institute student intern program, 1996-1998
%D 1999
%V 57
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%B Georgia Journal of Science
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%A Crow, K.D.
%A Flanders, J.R.
%A Gallagher, L.J.
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%A Eastwood, A.L.
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%A Dukas, C.C.
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%K Abstracts, Georgia, Institute, intern, Marine, program, reports, research, student, University
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%T A revision of the nearctic species of the Tachydromiine fly genus Stilpon Loew (Diptera: Empidoidea)
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%A Dahlberg, M.D.
%K anomalum, Campostoma, chrosomus, Coosa, hybrids, minnows, Natural, Notropis, River, system
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%T Fat cycles and condition factors of two species of menhaden, Brevoortia (Clupeidae), and natural hybrids from the Indian River of Florida
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%V 82
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%A Dahlberg, M.D.
%K Brevoortia, Clupeidae, condition, cycles, factors, Fat, Florida, hybrids, Indian, menhaden, natural, River, species
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%T Incidence of the isopod Olencira praegustator and copepod Lernaeenicus radiatus, in three species and hybrid menhaden (Brevoortia) from the Florida coasts, with five new host records
%D 1969
%V 98
%P 111-115
%B Transactions of the American Fisheries Society
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%Z 7-155
%M UGAMI.166
%A Dahlberg, M.D.
%K Brevoortia, coasts, copepod, Florida, host, hybrid, Incidence, isopod, Lernaeenicus, menhaden, new, Olencira, praegustator, radiatus, records, species
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%T A completely reversed blackcheek tonguefish, Symphurus plagiusa, from Duplin River, Georgia
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%B Chesapeake Science
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%A Dahlberg, M.D.
%K blackcheek, completely, Duplin, Georgia, plagiusa, reversed, River, Symphurus, tonguefish
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%T Atlantic and Gulf of Mexico menhadens, genus Brevoortia (Pisces:Clupeidae).
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%B Bulletin of the Florida State Museum
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%A Dahlberg, M.D.
%K Atlantic, Brevoortia, Clupeidae, genus, Gulf, menhadens, Mexico, Pisces
%0 Journal Article
%T Frequencies of abnormalities in Georgia estuarine fishes
%D 1970
%V 99
%P 95-97
%B Transactions of the American Fisheries Society
%9 Article
%! Frequencies of abnormalities in Georgia estuarine fishes
%Z 7-184
%M UGAMI.195
%A Dahlberg, M.D.
%K abnormalities, estuarine, fishes, Frequencies, Georgia
%0 Journal Article
%T Annual cycles of species occurrence, abundance, and diversity in Georgia estuarine fish populations
%D 1970
%V 83
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%B American Midland Naturalist
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%! Annual cycles of species occurrence, abundance, and diversity in Georgia estuarine fish populations
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%A Dahlberg, M.D.
%A Odum, E.P.
%K abundance, Annual, cycles, diversity, estuarine, fish, Georgia, occurrence, populations, species
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%T Freshwater fishes of Georgia
%D 1971
%V 29
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%B Bulletin of the Georgia Academy of Science
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%K fishes, Freshwater, Georgia
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%T Mortality of estuarine animals due to cold on the Georgia coast
%D 1970
%V 51
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%B Ecology
%9 Article
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%A Dahlberg, M.D.
%A Smith, F.G.
%K animals, coast, cold, due, estuarine, Georgia, Mortality
%0 Journal Article
%T Estimation of the primary productivity of Spartina alterniflora using a canopy model.
%D 1996
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%9 Article
%! Estimation of the primary productivity of Spartina alterniflora using a canopy model.
%Z 785
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%A Dai, Ting
%A Wiegert, R.G.
%K alterniflora, canopy, Estimation, model, primary, productivity, Spartina
%0 Journal Article
%T Ramet population dynamics and net aerial primary productivity of Spartina Alterniflora
%D 1996
%V 77
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%B Ecology
%9 Article
%! Ramet population dynamics and net aerial primary productivity of Spartina Alterniflora
%Z 776
%M UGAMI.794
%A Dai, Ting
%A Wiegert, Richard G.
%K growth forms, leaf life-span, nitrogen fertilization, nondestructive method, primary production, ramet life-span, ramet population dynamics, salt marsh, Spartina alterniflora
%0 Journal Article
%T A field study of photosynthetic capacity and its response to nitrogen fertilization in Spartina alterniflora.
%D 1997
%V 45
%P 273-283
%B Estuarine, Coastal and Shelf Science
%9 Article
%! A field study of photosynthetic capacity and its response to nitrogen fertilization in Spartina alterniflora.
%Z 786
%M UGAMI.804
%A Dai, T.
%A Wiegert, R.G.
%K alterniflora, capacity, fertilization, field, nitrogen, photosynthetic, response, Spartina, study
%0 Journal Article
%T Transcriptional activity differentiates families of Marine Group II Euryarchaeota in the coastal ocean
%D 2021
%B ISME Communications
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%! Transcriptional activity differentiates families of Marine Group II Euryarchaeota in the coastal ocean
%Z published
%M UGAMI.1121
%A Damashek, J.
%A Okotie-Oyekan, A.O.
%A Gifford, S.M.
%A Vorobev, A.
%A Moran, M.A.
%A Hollibaugh, J.T.
%K activity, coastal, differentiates, Euryarchaeota, families, Group, Marine, ocean, Transcriptional
%0 Journal Article
%T Microbial oxidation of nitrogen supplied as ammonium, urea, polyamines and selected amino acids in water samples from the South Atlantic Bight
%D 2018
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%B Limnology and Oceanography
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%! Microbial oxidation of nitrogen supplied as ammonium, urea, polyamines and selected amino acids in water samples from the South Atlantic Bight
%Z published
%M UGAMI.1102
%A Damashek, Julian
%A Tolar, Bradley B.
%A Liu, Qian
%A Okotie-Oyekan, Aimee
%A Wallsgrove, Natalie J.
%A Popp, Brian N.
%A Hollibaugh, James T.
%K acids, amino, ammonium, Atlantic, Bight, Microbial, nitrogen, oxidation, polyamines, samples, selected, South, supplied, urea, water
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%T An upper miocene fauna dredged from tidal channels of coastal Georgia
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%B Journal of Paleontology
%9 Article
%! An upper miocene fauna dredged from tidal channels of coastal Georgia
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%A Hoyt, J.H.
%K channels, coastal, dredged, fauna, Georgia, miocene, tidal, upper
%0 Journal Article
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%D 1981
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%B Journal of Phycology
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%! Factors limiting edaphic algal biomass and productivity in a Georgia salt marsh
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%A Darley, M.W.
%A Montague, C.L.
%A Plumley, F.G.
%A Sage, W.W.
%A Psalidas, A.T.
%K algal, biomass, edaphic, Factors, Georgia, limiting, marsh, productivity, salt
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%T A 14C method for measuring epibenthic microalgal productivity in air
%D 1976
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%B Journal Experimental Marine Biology and Ecology
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%! A 14C method for measuring epibenthic microalgal productivity in air
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%A Darley, W.M.
%A Dunn, E.L.
%A Holmes, K.S.
%A Larew, H.G.III
%K 14C, air, epibenthic, measuring, method, microalgal, productivity
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%T Utilization of dissolved organic carbon by natural populations of epibenthic salt marsh diatoms
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%! Utilization of dissolved organic carbon by natural populations of epibenthic salt marsh diatoms
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%M UGAMI.373
%A Darley, W.M.
%A Ohlman, C.T.
%A Wimpee, B.B.
%K carbon, diatoms, dissolved, epibenthic, marsh, natural, organic, populations, salt, Utilization
%0 Book Section
%T An analysis of environmental factors regulating community metabolism and fisheries production in a Louisiana estuary
%D 1982
%P 121-136
%I Academic Press
%C New York
%B Estuarine Comparisons
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%! An analysis of environmental factors regulating community metabolism and fisheries production in a Louisiana estuary
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%M UGAMI.468
%A Day, J.W.
%A Hopkinson, C.S.
%A Conner, W.
%E Kennedy, V.S.
%K analysis, community, environmental, estuary, factors, fisheries, Louisiana, metabolism, production, regulating
%0 Book Section
%T Modelling approaches to understanding and management of freshwater swamp forests in Louisiana (U.S.A.)
%D 1981
%P 73-105
%I Centre of International Projects GKNT
%C Moscow
%B Ecosystems Dynamics in Freshwater Wetlands and Shallow Water Bodies
%9 Article
%! Modelling approaches to understanding and management of freshwater swamp forests in Louisiana (U.S.A.)
%Z 15-432
%M UGAMI.444
%A Day, J.W.
%A Hopkinson, C.S.
%A Sklar, F.
%A Kemp, G.
%A Conner, W.
%E Logofet, D.O.
%E Luckyanou, N.K.
%K approaches, forests, freshwater, Louisiana, management, Modelling, swamp, understanding
%0 Journal Article
%T Contribution a l''etude des Microphallidae. Travassos, 1920 (Trematoda). XIX. Description de Maritrema prosthometra n. sp. et de Longiductotrema nov. gen. parasites d''Oiseaux Ralliformes d''Amerique du Nord
%D 1969
%V 44
%P 577-584
%B Annales de Parasitologie Humaine et comparee
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%! Contribution a l''etude des Microphallidae. Travassos, 1920 (Trematoda). XIX. Description de Maritrema prosthometra n. sp. et de Longiductotrema nov. gen. parasites d''Oiseaux Ralliformes d''Amerique du Nord
%Z 204*
%M UGAMI.214
%A Deblock, S.
%A Heard, R.W.III
%K Contribution, d''Amerique, d''Oiseaux, Description, du, gen, l''etude, Longiductotrema, Maritrema, Microphallidae, Nord, nov, parasites, prosthometra, Ralliformes, sp, Travassos, Trematoda, XIX
%0 Journal Article
%T Origin and character of washover fans on the Georgia coast, U.S.A.
%D 1977
%V 27
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%B Transactions-Gulf Coast Association of Geological Societies
%9 Article
%! Origin and character of washover fans on the Georgia coast, U.S.A.
%Z 13-336
%M UGAMI.348
%A Deery, J.R.
%A Howard, J.D.
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%A Hori, K.
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%K bioluminescence, carbon, dioxide, during, Mechanism, oxidative, production, reniformis, Renilla
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%T History of shoreline changes determined by archaeological dating: Georgia coast, U.S.A.
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%! History of shoreline changes determined by archaeological dating: Georgia coast, U.S.A.
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%M UGAMI.349
%A DePratter, C.B.
%A Howard, J.D.
%K archaeological, changes, coast, dating, determined, Georgia, History, shoreline
%0 Journal Article
%T Comparative Phylogeography of North American Atlantic Salt Marsh Communities
%D 2010
%V 33
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%Z #997 ISI Document Delivery No.: 606ZP Times Cited: 11 Cited Reference Count: 98 Diaz-Ferguson, Edgardo Robinson, John D. Silliman, Brian Wares, John P. University of Georgia Research Foundation; National Science Foundation [DEB-054822]; National Geographic Society Committee for Research and Exploration [8351-07]; Mellon Foundation The authors want to thank M. Cozad., S. Pankey., S. Pennings., D. Bishop., T. Bell., C. Zakas, and K. Dyer for technical and intellectual assistance during this research. C. Embach aided tremendously with technical editing and composition. We also thank G. Moyer at USFW Fish Technology Center for logistical support provided to E. Diaz-Ferguson. Two anonymous reviewers greatly improved the manuscript through their helpful comments. We also thank the University of Georgia Research Foundation (Wares), the National Science Foundation (DEB-054822, Wares and Silliman), the National Geographic Society Committee for Research and Exploration (Grant #8351-07, Wares), and also SEAGEP-Young Investigator Grant from the Mellon Foundation (Silliman) for funding this research work. 11 SPRINGER NEW YORK ESTUAR COAST
%M UGAMI.1031
%A Diaz-Ferguson, E.
%A Robinson, J.D.
%A Silliman, B.
%A Wares, J.P.
%K BALANUS-GLANDULA, Crassostrea virginica, Environmental Sciences, GENETIC-STRUCTURE, Geukensia demissa, GEUKENSIA-DEMISSA, Ilyanassa obsoleta, LARVAL DISPERSAL, LATITUDINAL VARIATION, Littoraria irrorata, Marine & Freshwater Biology, MITOCHONDRIAL-DNA, OYSTER CRASSOSTREA-VIRGINICA, Phylogeography, POPULATION-STRUCTURE, Salt marsh, SHAD ALOSA-SAPIDISSIMA, SPARTINA-ALTERNIFLORA, Uca pugilator, Uca pugnax
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%T Origins of, and mechanisms for, mollusk shell accumulations on Georgia beaches
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%B Senckenbergiana Maritima
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%! Origins of, and mechanisms for, mollusk shell accumulations on Georgia beaches
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%A Frey, R.W.
%A Howard, J.D.
%K accumulations, beaches, Georgia, mechanisms, mollusk, Origins, shell
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%T Mica: Its use in determining self-depositional regimes
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%0 Journal Article
%T Site fidelity and movement patterns of wild subadult red drum, Sciaenops ocellatus (Linnaeus), within a salt marsh-dominated estuarine landscape
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%Z 950
%M UGAMI.981
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%T Larval selection of substrate by the Bryozoa Discoporella and Cupuladria
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%A Cormier, M.J.
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%A Henry, V.J.Jr
%A Hoyt, J.H.
%A Bradley, E.
%K Atlantic, Continental, Description, Shelf, system, television, underwater
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%K Effects, herbicides, marsh, salt, Spartina
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%A Davis, D.E.
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%T Substrate characteristics within a Holocene salt marsh, Sapelo Island, Georgia
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%A Frey, R.W.
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%T Determination of hydrophobicity of NOM by RP-HPLC, and the effect of pH and ionic strength
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%T HPSEC as a preparative fractionation technique for studies of natural organic matter (NOM)
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%A Alberts, J.J.
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%T Transformation of riverine organic mattter in estuaries
%D 1991
%P 309-313
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%C Athens, GA
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%A Cressa, C.
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%A Lake, P.S.
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%K adaptive management, ecosystem restoration, landscape ecology, risk analysis, wetlands
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%T Predator/Prey-Interactions Promote Decomposition of Low-Quality Detritus
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%Z #1017 ISI Document Delivery No.: 024CK Times Cited: 3 Cited Reference Count: 64 Ewers, Christine Beiersdorf, Anika Wieski, Kazimierz Pennings, Steven C. Zimmer, Martin Pennings, Steven/A-8326-2013 Pennings, Steven/0000-0003-4757-7125 Christian-Albrechts Universitat zu Kiel; U.S. National Science Foundation [OCE06-20959] Experiments described herein comply with the current laws of the U.S.A. and were conducted in conformity with the "Guiding principles in the care and use of animals" approved by the Council of the American Physiological Society. AB and CE were financially supported through grants from the Christian-Albrechts Universitat zu Kiel. Franziska Seer, Gregor Putze and Yury Zablotski provided invaluable assistance at all stages of the field work. We thank the U.S. National Science Foundation (OCE06-20959) for financial support. This is contribution number 1017 of the University of Georgia Marine Institute. This work is a contribution of the Georgia Coastal Ecosystems LTER program. 3 SPRINGER DORDRECHT WETLANDS
%M UGAMI.1050
%A Ewers, C.
%A Beiersdorf, A.
%A Wieski, K.
%A Pennings, S.C.
%A Zimmer, M.
%K COMMUNITIES, Decomposition processes, Ecology, Environmental Sciences, FOOD, FUNGAL BIOMASS, INTRAGUILD PREDATION, ISOPODA, Omnivory, Predator/prey-interaction, QUALITY, RELATIVE IMPORTANCE, SALT-MARSH LITTER, Saltmarsh, Spatial subsidy, TROPHIC LEVELS, TROPICAL HEADWATER STREAM
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%A Filip, Z.
%A Alberts, J.J.
%A Chesire, M.V.
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%A Newman, R.H.
%A Alberts, J.J.
%K associated, Carbon-13, characterization, environments, humic, magnetic, marsh, nuclear, resonance, salt, substances
%0 Journal Article
%T Electrophoretic evidence of the structural similarity of different salt marsh related humic substances
%D 1995
%V 26
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%B Scientia Agriculturae Bohemica
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%! Electrophoretic evidence of the structural similarity of different salt marsh related humic substances
%Z 770
%M UGAMI.788
%A Filip, Z.
%A Trubetskoj, O.A.
%A Alberts, J.J.
%K humic substances, PAG electrophoresis
%0 Conference Proceedings
%T Electrophoretic comparison of humic substances derived from natural and anthropogenic environments
%D 1997
%P 115-119
%C Wroclaw, Poland
%B Proceedings of the 8th Meeting of the International Humic Substances Society.
%S The Role of Humic Substances in the Ecosystems and in Environmental Protection
%8 September 9-14, 1996
%7 8th Meeting
%9 Presentation
%! Electrophoretic comparison of humic substances derived from natural and anthropogenic environments
%Z 789
%M UGAMI.807
%A Filip, Zdenek K.
%A Trubetskoj, Oleg A.
%A Alberts, James J.
%K anthropogenic, comparison, derived, Electrophoretic, environments, humic, natural, substances
%0 Journal Article
%T Protistan bacterivory and benthic microbial biomass in an interridal creek mudflat
%D 2008
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%A First, M.R.
%A Hollibaugh, J.T.
%K Ciliates · Meiofauna · Benthic food web
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%T The model high molecular weight DOC compound, dextran, is ingested by the benthic ciliate Uronema marinum but does not supplement ciliate growth
%D 2009
%V 57
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%B Aquatic Microbial Ecology
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%! The model high molecular weight DOC compound, dextran, is ingested by the benthic ciliate Uronema marinum but does not supplement ciliate growth
%Z 961
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%A First, M.R.
%A Hollibaugh, J.T.
%K Pinocytosis
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%T Diel depth distributions of microbenthos in tidal creek sediments: high resolution mapping in fluorescently labeled embedded cores
%D 2010
%V 655
%P 149–158
%B Hydrobiologia
%9 Article
%! Diel depth distributions of microbenthos in tidal creek sediments: high resolution mapping in fluorescently labeled embedded cores
%Z 957
%M UGAMI.988
%A First, M.R.
%A Hollibaugh, J.T.
%K marsh Microzoobenthos Microphytobenthos, Migrations Ciliates Meiofauna Embedded cores, Tidal creeks Sapelo Island Salt
%0 Journal Article
%T Environmental factors shaping microbial community structure in salt marsh sediments
%D 2010
%V 399
%P 15-26
%B Marine Ecology Progress Series
%9 Article
%! Environmental factors shaping microbial community structure in salt marsh sediments
%Z 967
%M UGAMI.995
%A First, M.R.
%A Hollibaugh, J.T.
%K Bacteria, Biomass, Marine, marsh, Microzoobenthos, Protists, Salt, sediments
%0 Journal Article
%T Spatial pattern of localized disturbance along a southeastern salt marsh tidal creek
%D 2000
%V 23
%N 4
%P 565-571
%B Estuaries
%9 Article
%! Spatial pattern of localized disturbance along a southeastern salt marsh tidal creek
%Z 863
%M UGAMI.886
%A Fischer, J.M.
%A Reed-Andersen, T.
%A Klug, J.L.
%A Chalmers, A.G.
%K creek, disturbance, localized, marsh, pattern, salt, southeastern, Spatial, tidal
%0 Journal Article
%T Evidence for ammonia as a natural cue for recruitment of oyster larvae to oyster beds in a Georgia salt marsh
%D 1992
%V 182
%P 401-408
%B Biological Bulletin
%9 Article
%! Evidence for ammonia as a natural cue for recruitment of oyster larvae to oyster beds in a Georgia salt marsh
%Z 711
%M UGAMI.727
%A Fitt, W.K.
%A Coon, S.L.
%K ammonia, beds, cue, Evidence, Georgia, larvae, marsh, natural, oyster, recruitment, salt
%0 Journal Article
%T Tagging juvenile blue crabs, Callinectes sapidus, with microwire tags: retention, survival, and growth through multiple molts.
%D 1991
%V 11
%P 229-235
%B Journal Crustacean Biology
%9 Article
%! Tagging juvenile blue crabs, Callinectes sapidus, with microwire tags: retention, survival, and growth through multiple molts.
%Z 672
%M UGAMI.688
%A Fitz, H.C.
%A Wiegert, R.G.
%K blue, Callinectes, crabs, growth, juvenile, microwire, molts, multiple, retention, sapidus, survival, Tagging, tags
%0 Journal Article
%T Utilization of the intertidal zone of a salt marsh by the blue crab, Callinectes sapidus: density, return frequency, and feeding habits
%D 1991
%V 76
%P 249-260
%B Marine Ecology-Progress Series
%9 Article
%! Utilization of the intertidal zone of a salt marsh by the blue crab, Callinectes sapidus: density, return frequency, and feeding habits
%Z 682
%M UGAMI.698
%A Fitz, H.C.
%A Wiegert, R.G.
%K blue, Callinectes, crab, density, feeding, frequency, habits, intertidal, marsh, return, salt, sapidus, Utilization, zone
%0 Journal Article
%T Local population dynamics of estuarine blue crabs: abundance, recruitment and loss
%D 1992
%V 87
%P 23-40
%B Marine Ecology-Progress Series
%9 Article
%! Local population dynamics of estuarine blue crabs: abundance, recruitment and loss
%Z 713
%M UGAMI.729
%A Fitz, H.C.
%A Wiegert, R.G.
%K abundance, blue, crabs, dynamics, estuarine, Local, loss, population, recruitment
%0 Journal Article
%T Spines and Natural History of Three Cenchrus Species
%D 2004
%V 153
%P 80-86
%B American Midland Naturalist
%9 Article
%! Spines and Natural History of Three Cenchrus Species
%Z 940
%M UGAMI.973
%A Forbes, A.E.
%K Cenchrus, History, Natural, Species, Spines
%0 Conference Proceedings
%T The estuarine environment: Location of mean high water--Its engineering, economic and ecological potential
%D 1973
%P 938-978
%B Proceedings of the American Society of Photogrammetry Fall Convention, Lake Buena Vista, Florida, October 2-5, 1973
%9 Presentation
%! The estuarine environment: Location of mean high water--Its engineering, economic and ecological potential
%Z 10-276
%M UGAMI.287
%A Fornes, A.O.
%A Reimold, R.J.
%K ecological, economic, engineering, environment, estuarine, high, Location, mean, potential, water
%0 Journal Article
%T Genetic and epigenetic differences associated with environmental gradients in replicate populations of two salt marsh perennials
%D 2016
%B Molecular Ecology
%9 Article
%! Genetic and epigenetic differences associated with environmental gradients in replicate populations of two salt marsh perennials
%Z 1044
%M UGAMI.1074
%A Foust, C.M.
%A Preite, V.
%A Schrey, A.W.
%A Alvarez, M.
%A Robertson, M.H.
%A Verhoeven, K.J.F.
%A Richards, C.L.
%K DNA methylation, environmental gradient, MS-AFLP, partial Mantel
%0 Journal Article
%T A new species of Cyathura (Isopoda, Anthuridae) from coastal waters off Georgia, U.S.A.
%D 1965
%V 8
%P 206-212
%B Crustaceana
%9 Article
%! A new species of Cyathura (Isopoda, Anthuridae) from coastal waters off Georgia, U.S.A.
%Z 4-62
%M UGAMI.73
%A Frankenberg, D.
%K Anthuridae, coastal, Cyathura, Georgia, Isopoda, new, species, waters
%0 Journal Article
%T An anomalous position for the appendix masculina of an anthurid isopod
%D 1965
%V 8
%P 111-112
%B Crustaceana
%9 Article
%! An anomalous position for the appendix masculina of an anthurid isopod
%Z 4-67
%M UGAMI.78
%A Frankenberg, D.
%K anomalous, anthurid, appendix, isopod, masculina, position
%0 Journal Article
%T Southern limit of Nassarius trivittatus
%D 1966
%V 79
%P 89-90
%B Nautilus
%9 Article
%! Southern limit of Nassarius trivittatus
%Z 5-91
%M UGAMI.102
%A Frankenberg, D.
%K limit, Nassarius, Southern, trivittatus
%0 Journal Article
%T Seasonal aggregation in Amphioxus
%D 1968
%V 18
%P 877-878
%B BioScience
%9 Article
%! Seasonal aggregation in Amphioxus
%Z 7-159
%M UGAMI.170
%A Frankenberg, D.
%K aggregation, Amphioxus, Seasonal
%0 Journal Article
%T Dynamics of benthic communities off Georgia, U.S.A.
%D 1971
%V 7
%P 49-55
%B Thalassia Jugoslavica, Special Volume
%9 Article
%! Dynamics of benthic communities off Georgia, U.S.A.
%Z 9-225
%M UGAMI.235
%A Frankenberg, D.
%K benthic, communities, Dynamics, Georgia
%0 Journal Article
%T Oxygen in a tidal river: low tide concentration correlates linearly with location
%D 1976
%V 4
%P 455-460
%B Estuarine and Coastal Marine Science
%9 Article
%! Oxygen in a tidal river: low tide concentration correlates linearly with location
%Z 12-315
%M UGAMI.327
%A Frankenberg, D.
%K concentration, correlates, linearly, location, low, Oxygen, river, tidal, tide
%0 Journal Article
%T A comparison of the physiology and ecology of the estuarine isopod Cyathura polita in Massachusetts and Georgia
%D 1963
%V 125
%P 81-95
%B Biological Bulletin
%9 Article
%! A comparison of the physiology and ecology of the estuarine isopod Cyathura polita in Massachusetts and Georgia
%Z 4-54
%M UGAMI.64
%A Frankenberg, D
%A Burbanck, W.D.
%K comparison, Cyathura, ecology, estuarine, Georgia, isopod, Massachusetts, physiology, polita
%0 Journal Article
%T Acid treatment of organic materials and the removal of calcium carbonate
%D 1970
%V 40
%P 1046-1048
%B Journal of Sedimentary Petrology
%9 Article
%! Acid treatment of organic materials and the removal of calcium carbonate
%Z 200*
%M UGAMI.210
%A Frankenberg, D.
%A Giles, R.T.
%K Acid, calcium, carbonate, materials, organic, removal, treatment
%0 Journal Article
%T A new species of asellote marine isopod, Munna (Uromunna) reynoldsi (Crustacea: Isopoda)
%D 1966
%V 16
%P 200-208
%B Bulletin of Marine Science
%9 Article
%! A new species of asellote marine isopod, Munna (Uromunna) reynoldsi (Crustacea: Isopoda)
%Z 5-97
%M UGAMI.108
%A Frankenberg, D.
%A Menzies, R.J.
%K asellote, Crustacea, isopod, Isopoda, marine, Munna, new, reynoldsi, species, Uromunna
%0 Journal Article
%T Coprophagy in marine animals
%D 1967
%V 12
%P 443-450
%B Limnology and Oceanography
%9 Article
%! Coprophagy in marine animals
%Z 6-139
%M UGAMI.150
%A Frankenberg, D.
%A Smith, K.L.Jr.
%K animals, Coprophagy, marine
%0 Journal Article
%T Oxygen demand and oxygen depletion capacity of sediments from Wassaw Sound, Georgia
%D 1968
%V 26
%P 160-171
%B Bulletin of the Georgia Academy of Science
%9 Article
%! Oxygen demand and oxygen depletion capacity of sediments from Wassaw Sound, Georgia
%Z 7-161
%M UGAMI.172
%A Frankenberg, D.
%A Westerfield, C.
%K capacity, demand, depletion, Georgia, oxygen, sediments, Sound, Wassaw
%0 Journal Article
%T The potential trophic significance of Callianassa major fecal pellets
%D 1967
%V 12
%P 113-120
%B Limnology and Oceanography
%9 Article
%! The potential trophic significance of Callianassa major fecal pellets
%Z 6-122
%M UGAMI.133
%A Frankenberg, D.
%A Coles, S.L.
%A Johannes, R.E.
%K Callianassa, fecal, major, pellets, potential, significance, trophic
%0 Journal Article
%T Competitive and facilitative interactions within and between two species of coastal dune perennials
%D 2003
%V 81
%P 330-337
%B Canadian Journal of Botany
%9 Article
%! Competitive and facilitative interactions within and between two species of coastal dune perennials
%Z 913
%M UGAMI.946
%A Franks, S.J.
%K competition, disturbance, facilitation, Iva imbricata, stress, Uniola paniculata
%0 Journal Article
%T Facilitation in multiple life-history stages: evidence for nucleated succession in coastal dunes
%D 2003
%V 168
%P 1-11
%B Plant Ecology
%9 Article
%! Facilitation in multiple life-history stages: evidence for nucleated succession in coastal dunes
%Z 910
%M UGAMI.943
%A Franks, S.J.
%K disturbance, dune plants, germination, seed bank, stress
%0 Journal Article
%T New observations on Tisoa, a trace fossil from the Lincoln Creek formation (mid-Tertiary) of Washington
%D 1969
%V 47
%P 10-22
%B The Compass
%9 Article
%! New observations on Tisoa, a trace fossil from the Lincoln Creek formation (mid-Tertiary) of Washington
%Z 7-186
%M UGAMI.197
%A Frey, R.W.
%K Creek, formation, fossil, Lincoln, mid-Tertiary, New, observations, Tisoa, trace, Washington
%0 Journal Article
%T The lebensspuren of some common marine invertebrates near Beaufort, North Carolina. II. Anemone burrows
%D 1970
%V 44
%P 308-311
%B Journal of Paleontology
%9 Article
%! The lebensspuren of some common marine invertebrates near Beaufort, North Carolina. II. Anemone burrows
%Z 8-189
%M UGAMI.200
%A Frey, R.W.
%K Anemone, Beaufort, burrows, Carolina, common, invertebrates, lebensspuren, marine, near, North, some
%0 Book Section
%T Trace fossils of Fort Hays limestone member of Niobrara Chalk (Upper Cretaceous) west-central Kansas
%D 1970
%P 41pp.
%B University of Kansas Paleontological Article 53
%9 Article
%! Trace fossils of Fort Hays limestone member of Niobrara Chalk (Upper Cretaceous) west-central Kansas
%Z 8-196
%M UGAMI.206
%A Frey, R.W.
%K Chalk, Cretaceous, Fort, fossils, Hays, Kansas, limestone, member, Niobrara, Trace, Upper, west-central
%0 Journal Article
%T Ichnology--The study of fossil and recent lebensspuren
%D 1971
%V 71-1
%P 91-125
%B LSU School of Geosciences Misc. Publ.
%9 Article
%! Ichnology--The study of fossil and recent lebensspuren
%Z 8-213
%M UGAMI.223
%A Frey, R.W.
%K fossil, Ichnology, lebensspuren, recent, study
%0 Journal Article
%T Review of "Coastal Lagoons, A Symposium". A. S. Castanares and F. B. Phlegar (eds.)
%D 1972
%V 46
%P 461-462
%B Journal of Paleontology
%9 Article
%! Review of "Coastal Lagoons, A Symposium". A. S. Castanares and F. B. Phlegar (eds.)
%Z 9-233
%M UGAMI.243
%A Frey, R.W.
%K Castanares, Coastal, Lagoons, Phlegar, Review, Symposium
%0 Journal Article
%T Concepts in the study of biogenic sedimentary structures
%D 1973
%V 43
%P 6-19
%B Journal of Sedimentary Petrology
%9 Article
%! Concepts in the study of biogenic sedimentary structures
%Z 250*
%M UGAMI.260
%A Frey, R.W.
%K biogenic, Concepts, sedimentary, structures, study
%0 Journal Article
%T Distribution of ark shells (Bivalvia: Anadara), Cabretta Island Beach, Georgia
%D 1987
%V 27
%P 155-163
%B Southeastern Geology
%9 Article
%! Distribution of ark shells (Bivalvia: Anadara), Cabretta Island Beach, Georgia
%Z 20-562
%M UGAMI.575
%A Frey, R.W.
%K Anadara, ark, Beach, Bivalvia, Cabretta, Distribution, Georgia, Island, shells
%0 Journal Article
%T Hermit crabs: Neglected factors in taphonomy and palaeoecology
%D 1987
%V 2
%P 313-322
%B Palaios
%9 Article
%! Hermit crabs: Neglected factors in taphonomy and palaeoecology
%Z 586
%M UGAMI.599
%A Frey, R.W.
%K crabs, factors, Hermit, Neglected, palaeoecology, taphonomy
%0 Book Section
%T Coastal salt marshes
%D 1985
%P 225-301
%I Springer-Verlag
%C New York
%B Coastal Sedimentary Environments, 2nd Expanded Edition
%9 Article
%! Coastal salt marshes
%Z 17-499
%M UGAMI.511
%A Frey, R.W.
%A Basan, P.
%E Davis, R.A.Jr.
%K Coastal, marshes, salt
%0 Book Section
%T Coastal salt marshes
%D 1978
%P 101-169
%I Springer-Verlag
%C New York
%B Coastal Sedimentary Environments
%9 Article
%! Coastal salt marshes
%Z 13-345
%M UGAMI.357
%A Frey, R.W.
%A Basan, P.B.
%E Davis, R.A.Jr.
%K Coastal, marshes, salt
%0 Journal Article
%T Taphonomy of relict Holocene salt marsh deposits, Cabretta Island, Georgia
%D 1981
%V 13
%P 111-155
%B Senckenbergiana Maritima
%9 Article
%! Taphonomy of relict Holocene salt marsh deposits, Cabretta Island, Georgia
%Z 16-439
%M UGAMI.451
%A Frey, R.W.
%A Basan, P.B.
%K Cabretta, deposits, Georgia, Holocene, Island, marsh, relict, salt, Taphonomy
%0 Journal Article
%T Carbonate skeletal remains in beach-to-offshore sediments, Pensacola, Florida
%D 1988
%V 20
%P 31-57
%B Senckenbergiana Maritima
%9 Article
%! Carbonate skeletal remains in beach-to-offshore sediments, Pensacola, Florida
%Z 608
%M UGAMI.621
%A Frey, R.W.
%A Dorjes, J.
%K beach-to-offshore, Carbonate, Florida, Pensacola, remains, sediments, skeletal
%0 Journal Article
%T Fair- and foul-weather shell accumulations on a Georgia beach
%D 1988
%V 3
%P 561-576
%B Palaios
%9 Article
%! Fair- and foul-weather shell accumulations on a Georgia beach
%Z 601
%M UGAMI.614
%A Frey, R.W.
%A Dorjes, J.
%K accumulations, beach, Fair-, foul-weather, Georgia, shell
%0 Journal Article
%T Left-right phenomena among bivalve shells: Examples from the Georgia Coast
%D 1987
%V 19
%P 223-247
%B Senckenbergiana Maritima
%9 Article
%! Left-right phenomena among bivalve shells: Examples from the Georgia Coast
%Z 19-583
%M UGAMI.596
%A Frey, R.W.
%A Henderson, S.W.
%K bivalve, Coast, Examples, Georgia, Left-right, phenomena, shells
%0 Journal Article
%T A profile of biogenic sedimentary structures in a Holocene barrier island-salt marsh complex, Georgia
%D 1969
%V 19
%P 427-444
%B Transactions-Gulf Coast Association of Geological Societies
%9 Article
%! A profile of biogenic sedimentary structures in a Holocene barrier island-salt marsh complex, Georgia
%Z 7-180
%M UGAMI.191
%A Frey, R.W.
%A Howard, J.D.
%K barrier, biogenic, complex, Georgia, Holocene, island-salt, marsh, profile, sedimentary, structures
%0 Book Section
%T Comparison of Upper Cretaceous ichnofaunas from sandstone and chalk, western interior region U.S.A.
%D 1970
%P 141-166
%I Seel House Press
%C Liverpool
%B Trace Fossils
%9 Article
%! Comparison of Upper Cretaceous ichnofaunas from sandstone and chalk, western interior region U.S.A.
%Z 197*
%M UGAMI.207
%A Frey, R.W.
%A Howard, J.D.
%E Crimes, T.P.
%E Harper, J.C.
%K chalk, Comparison, Cretaceous, ichnofaunas, interior, region, sandstone, Upper, western
%0 Journal Article
%T Georgia Coastal Region, Sapelo Island, U.S.A.: Sedimentology and Biology. VI. Radiographic study of sedimentary structures made by beach and offshore animals in aquaria
%D 1972
%V 4
%P 169-182
%B Senckenbergiana Maritima
%9 Article
%! Georgia Coastal Region, Sapelo Island, U.S.A.: Sedimentology and Biology. VI. Radiographic study of sedimentary structures made by beach and offshore animals in aquaria
%Z 246*
%M UGAMI.256
%A Frey, R.W.
%A Howard, J.D.
%K animals, aquaria, beach, Biology, Coastal, Georgia, Island, made, offshore, Radiographic, Region, Sapelo, sedimentary, Sedimentology, structures, study
%0 Book Section
%T Physical and biogenic processes in Georgia estuaries. II. Intertidal facies
%D 1980
%P 183-220
%I Geological Association of Canada, Short Course
%B Sedimentary Processes and Animal-Sediment Relationships in Tidal Environments
%9 Article
%! Physical and biogenic processes in Georgia estuaries. II. Intertidal facies
%Z 410*
%M UGAMI.422
%A Frey, R.W.
%A Howard, J.D.
%E McCann, S.B.
%K biogenic, estuaries, facies, Georgia, Intertidal, Physical, processes
%0 Journal Article
%T Mesotidal estuarine sequences: A perspective from the Georgia Bight
%D 1986
%V 56
%P 911-924
%B Journal of Sedimentary Petrology
%9 Article
%! Mesotidal estuarine sequences: A perspective from the Georgia Bight
%Z 19-553
%M UGAMI.566
%A Frey, R.W.
%A Howard, J.D.
%K Bight, estuarine, Georgia, Mesotidal, perspective, sequences
%0 Journal Article
%T Taphonomic characteristics of offshore mollusk shells, Sapelo Island, Georgia
%D 1986
%V 19
%P 51-62
%B Tulane Studies in Geology and Paleontology
%9 Article
%! Taphonomic characteristics of offshore mollusk shells, Sapelo Island, Georgia
%Z 541
%M UGAMI.553
%A Frey, R.W.
%A Howard, J.D.
%K characteristics, Georgia, Island, mollusk, offshore, Sapelo, shells, Taphonomic
%0 Journal Article
%T Beaches and beach-related facies, Holocene barrier island of Georgia
%D 1988
%V 125
%P 621-640
%B Geological Magazine
%9 Article
%! Beaches and beach-related facies, Holocene barrier island of Georgia
%Z 597
%M UGAMI.610
%A Frey, R.W.
%A Howard, J.D.
%K barrier, beach-related, Beaches, facies, Georgia, Holocene, island
%0 Journal Article
%T Decapod burrows in Holocene barrier island beaches and washover fans, Georgia
%D 1971
%V 3
%P 53-77
%B Senckenbergiana Maritima
%9 Article
%! Decapod burrows in Holocene barrier island beaches and washover fans, Georgia
%Z 227*
%M UGAMI.237
%A Frey, R.W.
%A Mayou, T.V.
%K barrier, beaches, burrows, Decapod, fans, Georgia, Holocene, island, washover
%0 Journal Article
%T Vertebrate lebensspuren in intertidal and supratidal environments, Holocene barrier islands, Georgia
%D 1986
%V 18
%P 45-95
%B Senckenbergiana Maritima
%9 Article
%! Vertebrate lebensspuren in intertidal and supratidal environments, Holocene barrier islands, Georgia
%Z 19-533
%M UGAMI.545
%A Frey, R.W.
%A Pemberton, S.G.
%K barrier, environments, Georgia, Holocene, intertidal, islands, lebensspuren, supratidal, Vertebrate
%0 Journal Article
%T The Psilonichnus ichnocoenose, and its relationship to adjacent marine and nonmarine ichnocoenoses along the Georgia coast
%D 1987
%V 35
%P 333-357
%B Bulletin of Canadian Petroleum Geology
%9 Article
%! The Psilonichnus ichnocoenose, and its relationship to adjacent marine and nonmarine ichnocoenoses along the Georgia coast
%Z 20-563
%M UGAMI.576
%A Frey, R.W.
%A Pemberton, S.G.
%K adjacent, coast, Georgia, ichnocoenose, ichnocoenoses, marine, nonmarine, Psilonichnus, relationship
%0 Journal Article
%T Calcium-carbonate content of surficial sands seaward of Altamaha and Doboy Sounds, Georgia
%D 1978
%V 48
%P 1249-1256
%B Journal of Sedimentary Petrology
%9 Article
%! Calcium-carbonate content of surficial sands seaward of Altamaha and Doboy Sounds, Georgia
%Z 14-372
%M UGAMI.384
%A Frey, R.W.
%A Pinet, P.R.
%K Altamaha, Calcium-carbonate, content, Doboy, Georgia, sands, seaward, Sounds, surficial
%0 Journal Article
%T Techniques for sampling salt marsh benthos and burrows
%D 1973
%V 89
%P 228-234
%B American Midland Naturalist
%9 Article
%! Techniques for sampling salt marsh benthos and burrows
%Z 9-248
%M UGAMI.258
%A Frey, R.W.
%A Basan, P.B.
%A Scott, R.M.
%K benthos, burrows, marsh, salt, sampling, Techniques
%0 Journal Article
%T Rheotaxis and distribution of oysters and mussels, Georgia tidal creeks and salt marshes, U.S.A.
%D 1987
%V 61
%P 1-16
%B Palaeogeography, Palaeoclimatology, Palaeoecology
%9 Article
%! Rheotaxis and distribution of oysters and mussels, Georgia tidal creeks and salt marshes, U.S.A.
%Z 20-578
%M UGAMI.591
%A Frey, R.W.
%A Basan, P.B.
%A Smith, J.M.
%K creeks, distribution, Georgia, marshes, mussels, oysters, Rheotaxis, salt, tidal
%0 Journal Article
%T Tracemaking activities of crabs and their environmental significance: the ichnogenus Psilonichnus
%D 1984
%V 58
%P 333-350
%B Journal of Paleontology
%9 Article
%! Tracemaking activities of crabs and their environmental significance: the ichnogenus Psilonichnus
%Z 17-498
%M UGAMI.510
%A Frey, R.W.
%A Curran, H.A.
%A Pemberton, S.G.
%K activities, crabs, environmental, ichnogenus, Psilonichnus, significance, Tracemaking
%0 Journal Article
%T Ophiomorpha: Its morphologic, taxonomic, and environmental significance
%D 1978
%V 23
%P 119-229
%B Palaeogeography, Palaeoclimatology, Palaeoecology
%9 Article
%! Ophiomorpha: Its morphologic, taxonomic, and environmental significance
%Z 12-330
%M UGAMI.342
%A Frey, R.W.
%A Howard, J.D.
%A Pryor, W.A.
%K environmental, morphologic, Ophiomorpha, significance, taxonomic
%0 Journal Article
%T Estuaries of the Georgia coast, U.S.A.: Sedimentology and biology. VIII. Fossil and recent skeletal remains in Georgia estuaries
%D 1975
%V 7
%P 257-295
%B Senckenbergiana Maritima
%9 Article
%! Estuaries of the Georgia coast, U.S.A.: Sedimentology and biology. VIII. Fossil and recent skeletal remains in Georgia estuaries
%Z 12-325
%M UGAMI.337
%A Frey, R.W.
%A Voorhies, M.R.
%A Howard, J.D.
%K biology, coast, estuaries, Fossil, Georgia, recent, remains, Sedimentology, skeletal
%0 Journal Article
%T EFFECTS OF NITROGEN AND PHOSPHORUS ADDITIONS ON PRIMARY PRODUCTION AND INVERTEBRATE DENSITIES IN A GEORGIA (USA) TIDAL FRESHWATER MARSH
%D 2009
%V 29
%N 1
%P 196-203
%B Wetlands
%9 Article
%! EFFECTS OF NITROGEN AND PHOSPHORUS ADDITIONS ON PRIMARY PRODUCTION AND INVERTEBRATE DENSITIES IN A GEORGIA (USA) TIDAL FRESHWATER MARSH
%Z 966
%M UGAMI.1021
%A Frost, J.W.
%A Schleicher, T.
%A Craft, C.
%K biomass, eutrophication, nutrients, vegetation, Zizaniopsis miliacea
%0 Journal Article
%T 13C measurements as indicators of carbon flow in marine and freshwater ecosystems
%D 1984
%V 27
%P 13-47
%B Contributions in Marine Science
%9 Article
%! 13C measurements as indicators of carbon flow in marine and freshwater ecosystems
%Z 18-512
%M UGAMI.524
%A Fry, B.
%A Sherr, E.B.
%K 13C, carbon, ecosystems, flow, freshwater, indicators, marine, measurements
%0 Journal Article
%T Ecological drivers of bacterial community assembly in synthetic phycospheres
%D 2020
%V 117
%N 7
%P 3656-3662
%B Proc Natl Acad Sci U S A
%8 Feb 18
%7 2020/02/06
%9 Article
%! Ecological drivers of bacterial community assembly in synthetic phycospheres
%Z Fu, He; Uchimiya, Mario; Gore, Jeff; Moran, Mary Ann; eng; Proc Natl Acad Sci U S A. 2020 Feb 18;117(7):3656-3662. doi: 10.1073/pnas.1917265117. Epub 2020 Feb 3.
%M UGAMI.1115
%U https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/32015111
%A Fu, H.
%A Uchimiya, M.
%A Gore, J.
%A Moran, M.A.
%K community assembly, phycospheres, phytoplankton-bacteria interactions
%0 Journal Article
%T Stem Borer Frequency and Composition in Healthy Spartina alterniflora (smooth cordgrass) and Dieback Zones in a Southern Atlantic Coast Salt Marsh
%D 2011
%V 34
%N 5
%P 1078-1083
%B Estuaries and Coasts
%8 Sep
%9 Article
%! Stem Borer Frequency and Composition in Healthy Spartina alterniflora (smooth cordgrass) and Dieback Zones in a Southern Atlantic Coast Salt Marsh
%Z #998 ISI Document Delivery No.: 798EQ Times Cited: 2 Cited Reference Count: 18 Gaeta, Jereme W. Kornis, Matthew S. North Temperate Lakes LTER program; GERS Fellowship; Wisconsin SeaGrant Our research was partially supported by the North Temperate Lakes LTER program and a GERS Fellowship to J. Gaeta, a Wisconsin SeaGrant to M. Kornis, and a Wisconsin SeaGrant for a course entitled "Problems in Oceanography: Sapelo Island." We thank Jim Kitchell, Claudio Gratton, and Jake Vander Zanden for their insights on the experimental design of this project as well as for their assistance with field collections; Claudio Gratton for helpful reviews of earlier versions of this manuscript; Stephen Krauth at the University of Wisconsin''s Insect Research Collection for the help with insect identification; and the University of Georgia Marine Institute (contribution no. 998) at Sapelo Island for the use of their laboratory and residential space. We also thank one anonymous reviewer for the comments on an earlier version of this manuscript and are very grateful for the extensive constructive comments from Steven Pennings. 3 SPRINGER NEW YORK ESTUAR COAST
%M UGAMI.1032
%A Gaeta, J.W.
%A Kornis, M.S.
%K Chaetopsis spp., Dieback zones, DROUGHT, Environmental Sciences, GEORGIA, Herbivory, Marine & Freshwater Biology, Southern Atlantic coast salt marsh, Spartina alterniflora, Stem borer, Thrypticus violaceus, US
%0 Book Section
%T Remote sensing as a tool for studying the ecology of halophytes
%D 1974
%P 511-523
%I Academic Press
%C New York
%B Ecology of Halophytes
%9 Article
%! Remote sensing as a tool for studying the ecology of halophytes
%Z 10-258
%M UGAMI.268
%A Gallagher, J.L.
%E Reimold, R.J.
%E Queen, W.H.
%K ecology, halophytes, Remote, sensing, studying, tool
%0 Journal Article
%T Sampling macro-organic matter profiles in salt marsh plant root zones
%D 1974
%V 38
%P 154-155
%B Soil Science Society of America Proceedings
%9 Article
%! Sampling macro-organic matter profiles in salt marsh plant root zones
%Z 273*
%M UGAMI.284
%A Gallagher, J.L.
%K macro-organic, marsh, matter, plant, profiles, root, salt, Sampling, zones
%0 Journal Article
%T Effect of an ammonium nitrate pulse on the growth and elemental composition of natural stands of Spartina alterniflora and Juncus roemerianus
%D 1975
%V 62
%P 644-648
%B American Journal of Botany
%9 Article
%! Effect of an ammonium nitrate pulse on the growth and elemental composition of natural stands of Spartina alterniflora and Juncus roemerianus
%Z 11-285
%M UGAMI.296
%A Gallagher, J.L.
%K alterniflora, ammonium, composition, elemental, growth, Juncus, natural, nitrate, pulse, roemerianus, Spartina, stands
%0 Journal Article
%T The significance of the surface film in salt marsh plankton metabolism
%D 1975
%V 20
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%B Limnology and Oceanography
%9 Article
%! The significance of the surface film in salt marsh plankton metabolism
%Z 11-281
%M UGAMI.292
%A Gallagher, J.L.
%K film, marsh, metabolism, plankton, salt, significance, surface
%0 Book Section
%T Zonation of wetlands vegetation
%D 1977
%P 752-758
%I Wiley-Interscience
%C New York
%B Coastal Ecosystem Management
%9 Article
%! Zonation of wetlands vegetation
%Z 13-340
%M UGAMI.352
%A Gallagher, J.L.
%E Clark, J.R.
%K vegetation, wetlands, Zonation
%0 Book Section
%T Decomposition processes: Summary and recommendations
%D 1978
%P 145-151
%I Academic Press, Inc.
%C New York
%B Freshwater Wetlands: Ecological Processes and Management Potential
%9 Article
%! Decomposition processes: Summary and recommendations
%Z 338*
%M UGAMI.350
%A Gallagher, J.L.
%E Good, R.
%E Whigham, D.
%E Simpson, R.
%K Decomposition, processes, recommendations, Summary
%0 Book Section
%T Estuarine angiosperms: productivity and initial photosynthate dispersion in the ecosystem
%D 1978
%P 131-143
%I Academic Press, Inc.
%C New York
%B Estuarine Interactions
%9 Article
%! Estuarine angiosperms: productivity and initial photosynthate dispersion in the ecosystem
%Z 359*
%M UGAMI.371
%A Gallagher, J.L.
%E Wiley, M.
%K angiosperms, dispersion, ecosystem, Estuarine, initial, photosynthate, productivity
%0 Book Section
%T Ecological consideration of biosaline resource utilization
%D 1979
%P 371-378
%I Plenum Publishing Corp.
%C New York
%B The Biosaline Concept
%9 Article
%! Ecological consideration of biosaline resource utilization
%Z 14-371 (also duplicate entry 15-415)
%M UGAMI.383
%A Gallagher, J.L.
%E Hollaender, A.
%K biosaline, consideration, Ecological, resource, utilization
%0 Journal Article
%T Growth and element compositional responses of Sporobolus virginicus (L.) Kunth. to substrate salinity and nitrogen
%D 1979
%V 102
%P 68-75
%B American Midland Naturalist
%9 Article
%! Growth and element compositional responses of Sporobolus virginicus (L.) Kunth. to substrate salinity and nitrogen
%Z 13-350
%M UGAMI.362
%A Gallagher, J.L.
%K compositional, element, Growth, Kunth, nitrogen, responses, salinity, Sporobolus, substrate, virginicus
%0 Journal Article
%T Marsh plants as vectors in trace mineral dynamics in Oregon tidal marshes
%D 1980
%V 67
%P 1069-1074
%B American Journal of Botany
%9 Article
%! Marsh plants as vectors in trace mineral dynamics in Oregon tidal marshes
%Z 364*
%M UGAMI.376
%A Gallagher, J.L.
%A Kibby, H.
%K dynamics, Marsh, marshes, mineral, Oregon, plants, tidal, trace, vectors
%0 Journal Article
%T Aquatic metabolism of the communities associated with attached dead shoots of salt marsh plants
%D 1977
%V 22
%P 562-565
%B Limnology and Oceanography
%9 Article
%! Aquatic metabolism of the communities associated with attached dead shoots of salt marsh plants
%Z 12-320
%M UGAMI.332
%A Gallagher, J.L.
%A Pfeiffer, W.J.
%K Aquatic, associated, attached, communities, dead, marsh, metabolism, plants, salt, shoots
%0 Journal Article
%T Underground biomass profiles and productivity in Atlantic coastal marshes
%D 1979
%V 66
%P 156-161
%B American Journal of Botany
%9 Article
%! Underground biomass profiles and productivity in Atlantic coastal marshes
%Z 14-363
%M UGAMI.375
%A Gallagher, J.L.
%A Plumley, F.G.
%K Atlantic, biomass, coastal, marshes, productivity, profiles, Underground
%0 Conference Proceedings
%T Tidal marsh plant distribution and productivity patterns from the sea to fresh water--a challenge in resolution and discrimination
%D 1973
%P 166-183
%B Proceedings of the 4th Biennial Workshop on Color Aerial Photography
%9 Presentation
%! Tidal marsh plant distribution and productivity patterns from the sea to fresh water--a challenge in resolution and discrimination
%Z 10-274
%M UGAMI.285
%A Gallagher, J.L.
%A Reimold, R.J.
%K challenge, discrimination, distribution, fresh, marsh, patterns, plant, productivity, resolution, sea, Tidal, water
%0 Book Section
%T Field bioassays for the role of plants as vectors in contaminated transfer from dredged material
%D 1980
%P 445-463
%I Ann Arbor Sci. Publ., Inc.
%C Ann Arbor
%B Sediments and Contaminants, Vol. 2
%9 Article
%! Field bioassays for the role of plants as vectors in contaminated transfer from dredged material
%Z 387*
%M UGAMI.399
%A Gallagher, J.L.
%A Wolf, P.L.
%E Baker, R.A.
%K bioassays, contaminated, dredged, Field, material, plants, role, transfer, vectors
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%T Leaching and microbial utilization of dissolved organic carbon from leaves of Spartina alterniflora
%D 1976
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%9 Article
%! Leaching and microbial utilization of dissolved organic carbon from leaves of Spartina alterniflora
%Z 11-292
%M UGAMI.304
%A Gallagher, J.L.
%A Pfeiffer, W.J.
%A Pomeroy, L.R.
%K alterniflora, carbon, dissolved, Leaching, leaves, microbial, organic, Spartina, utilization
%0 Conference Proceedings
%T Remote sensing and salt marsh productivity
%D 1971
%P 338-348
%B Proceedings of the 38th Annual Meeting, American Society of Photogrammetry, Washington, D.C.
%9 Presentation
%! Remote sensing and salt marsh productivity
%Z 9-239
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%A Gallagher, J.L.
%A Reimold, R.J.
%A Thompson, D.E.
%K marsh, productivity, Remote, salt, sensing
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%T Aerial production, mortality, and mineral accumulation dynamics in Spartina alterniflora and Juncus roemerianus in a Georgia salt marsh
%D 1980
%V 61
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%9 Article
%! Aerial production, mortality, and mineral accumulation dynamics in Spartina alterniflora and Juncus roemerianus in a Georgia salt marsh
%Z 322*
%M UGAMI.334
%A Gallagher, J.L.
%A Reimold, R.J.
%A Linthurst, R.A.
%A Pfeiffer, W.J.
%K accumulation, Aerial, alterniflora, dynamics, Georgia, Juncus, marsh, mineral, mortality, production, roemerianus, salt, Spartina
%0 Journal Article
%T Distribution and movement of toxaphene in anaerobic saline marsh soils
%D 1979
%V 63
%P 3-9
%B Hydrobiologia
%9 Article
%! Distribution and movement of toxaphene in anaerobic saline marsh soils
%Z 13-348
%M UGAMI.360
%A Gallagher, J.L.
%A Robinson, S.E.
%A Pfeiffer, W.J.
%A Seliskar, D.M.
%K anaerobic, Distribution, marsh, movement, saline, soils, toxaphene
%0 Journal Article
%T Rhizome and root growth rates and cycles in protein and carbohydrate concentrations in Georgia Spartina alterniflora Loisel. plants
%D 1984
%V 71
%P 165-169
%B American Journal of Botany
%9 Article
%! Rhizome and root growth rates and cycles in protein and carbohydrate concentrations in Georgia Spartina alterniflora Loisel. plants
%Z 18-521
%M UGAMI.533
%A Gallagher, J.L.
%A Wolf, P.L.
%A Pfeiffer, W.J.
%K alterniflora, carbohydrate, concentrations, cycles, Georgia, growth, Loisel, plants, protein, rates, Rhizome, root, Spartina
%0 Journal Article
%T Infrared fiber optic sensor for petroleum
%D 1995
%V 29
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%B Environmental Science and Technology
%9 Article
%! Infrared fiber optic sensor for petroleum
%Z 748
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%A Ge, Z.
%A Brown, C.W.
%A Alberts, J.J.
%K fiber, Infrared, optic, petroleum, sensor
%0 Journal Article
%T Influence of Spartina and Juncus on saltmarsh sediments. III. Organic geochemistry
%D 2008
%V 255
%N 1-2
%P 114-119
%B Chemical Geology
%8 Sep
%9 Article
%! Influence of Spartina and Juncus on saltmarsh sediments. III. Organic geochemistry
%Z #975 ISI Document Delivery No.: 362ZJ Times Cited: 12 Cited Reference Count: 29 Gebrehiwet, Tsigabu Koretsky, Carla M. Krishnamurthy, R. V. National Science Foundation CAREER program [NSF EAR 0348435] The authors gratefully acknowledge the support of the National Science Foundation CAREER program (NSF EAR 0348435). This grant allowed CMK to offer a summer wetlands field course, during which Lauren Beuving, Angel Cuellar, Melanie Haveman, Terri Shattuck, and Mark Wagner completed the sampling work. The University of Georgia Marine Institute is thanked for their generosity in providing housing, vehicles and access to field sites. Help in coordinating the field course and research from Jon Garbish is particularly appreciated. Eliot Atekwana is thanked for helpful conversations. This paper also benefited very much from helpful suggestions made by Xinping Hu and two anonymous reviewers. 14 ELSEVIER SCIENCE BV AMSTERDAM CHEM GEOL
%M UGAMI.1003
%A Gebrehiwet, T.
%A Koretsky, C.M.
%A Krishnamurthy, R.V.
%K ALTERNIFLORA, Bioturbation, CARBON, Carbon stable isotopes, ESTUARY, FOOD WEBS, Geochemistry & Geophysics, GEORGIA, ISOTOPE ANALYSIS, Juncus roemarianus, MATTER, NORTH INLET, Organic matter, QUANTIFYING BIOIRRIGATION, Saltmarsh, SOILS, Spartina alterniflora
%0 Journal Article
%T Influences of land use and ecological variables on trematode prevalence and intensity at the salt marsh-upland ecotone
%D 2021
%V 12
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%P 13
%B Ecosphere
%8 Aug
%9 Article
%! Influences of land use and ecological variables on trematode prevalence and intensity at the salt marsh-upland ecotone
%Z ISI Document Delivery No.: UG7VB; Times Cited: 0; Cited Reference Count: 45; Gehman, Alyssa-Lois M. Mahaffey, Morgan Byers, James E.; Gehman, Alyssa-Lois/0000-0003-0595-9950; Byers, James/0000-0001-9240-0287; Tula Foundation; [OCE-1237140]; [OCE-1832178]; We publish this work in honor of Charles H. (Pete) Peterson. JEB got his start in marine ecology thanks to a research assistantship in Pete''s laboratory, learning more in a year than ever thought possible. We thank Richard Heard for insight on trematodes in coastal Georgia. We thank N. McLenaghan, K. Shaw, S. Shaw, G. Mills, K. McPherran, F. Li, C. Reddy, J. Shalack, and T. Montgomery for field assistance. GCE III was OCE-1237140 and OCE-1832178. A-L.M.G. was supported by a postdoctoral fellowship from the Tula Foundation. This is contribution number 1052 from the University of Georgia Marine Institute.; 0; 6; Wiley; Hoboken
%M UGAMI.1122
%A Gehman, A.L.M.
%A Mahaffey, M.
%A Byers, J.E.
%K bulkheads, digenea, Ecologist, environmental impact, Environmental Sciences Ecology, Georgia Coastal Ecosystem LTER, host, infection, parasites, Peterson, residential development, shoreline armoring, size, snails, Spartina alterniflora, spatial variation, Special Feature, transmission
%0 Book Section
%T Biomass, growth rate, and production of filamentous fungi in plant litter
%D 2002
%P 390-408
%I ASM Press
%C Washington, D.C.
%B Manual of Environmental Microbiology
%7 2nd
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%! Biomass, growth rate, and production of filamentous fungi in plant litter
%Z 896
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%A Gessner, M.O.
%A Newell, S.Y.
%E Hurst, C.J.
%E Crawford, R.L.
%E Knudsen, G.R.
%E McInerney, M.J.
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%K Biomass, filamentous, fungi, growth, litter, plant, production, rate
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%T Porewater evidence for a dynamic sedimentary iron cycle in salt marshes
%D 1984
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%! Porewater evidence for a dynamic sedimentary iron cycle in salt marshes
%Z 18-524
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%A Giblin, A.E.
%A Howarth, R.W.
%K cycle, dynamic, evidence, iron, marshes, Porewater, salt, sedimentary
%0 Journal Article
%T Conditional stability constants and binding capacities for copper(II) by ultrafilterable material isolated from six surface waters of Wyoming, USA
%D 1989
%V 188/189
%P 659-679
%B Hydrobiologia
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%Z 628
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%A Giesy, J.P.
%A Alberts, J.J.
%K binding, capacities, Conditional, constants, copper, isolated, material, stability, surface, ultrafilterable, USA, waters, Wyoming
%0 Journal Article
%T Expression patterns reveal niche diversification in a marine microbial assemblage
%D 2013
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%N 2
%P 281-298
%B Isme Journal
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%! Expression patterns reveal niche diversification in a marine microbial assemblage
%Z #1018 ISI Document Delivery No.: 114EI Times Cited: 17 Cited Reference Count: 61 Gifford, Scott M. Sharma, Shalabh Booth, Melissa Moran, Mary Ann Gordon and Betty Moore Foundation; National Science Foundation Microbial Observatories Program [MCB-0702125] We thank S Holland for helpful discussions on statistical methods and M Moore, L Griffin, B Durham and R Newton for assisting in sample collection. We also thank the three anonymous reviewers for their insightful and productive comments. This project was supported by funding from the Gordon and Betty Moore Foundation and the National Science Foundation Microbial Observatories Program (MCB-0702125). 17 NATURE PUBLISHING GROUP LONDON ISME J
%M UGAMI.1051
%A Gifford, S.M.
%A Sharma, S.
%A Booth, M.
%A Moran, M.A.
%K BACTERIA, bacterioplankton, BACTERIOPLANKTON GROUPS, CADHERIN DOMAINS, CARBON, COASTAL OCEAN, Ecology, gene expression, GENE-EXPRESSION, GROWTH-RATES, metatranscriptomics, Microbiology, niche, proteins, ribosomal, SACCHAROPHAGUS-DEGRADANS 2-40, SAR11, WATERS
%0 Journal Article
%T Atlantic beach and dune sediments of the southern United States
%D 1965
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%P 900-910
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%! Atlantic beach and dune sediments of the southern United States
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%M UGAMI.98
%A Giles, R.T.
%A Pilkey, O.H.
%K Atlantic, beach, dune, sediments, southern, States, United
%0 Journal Article
%T Building a diverse and innovative ocean workforce through collaboration and partnerships that integrate research and education: HBCUs and Marine Laboratories
%D 2007
%V 55
%N 6
%P 531-540
%B Journal of Geoscience Education
%9 Article
%! Building a diverse and innovative ocean workforce through collaboration and partnerships that integrate research and education: HBCUs and Marine Laboratories
%Z 959
%M UGAMI.1018
%A Gilligan, M.R.
%A Verity, P.G.
%A Cook, C.B.
%A Cook, S.B.
%A Booth, M.G.
%A Frischer, M.E.
%K Building, collaboration, diverse, education, HBCUs, innovative, integrate, Laboratories, Marine, ocean, partnerships, research, workforce
%0 Journal Article
%T Seasonal patterns of CO2 and water vapor exchange of Juncus roemerianus Scheele in a Georgia salt marsh
%D 1978
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%P 502-510
%B American Journal of Botany
%9 Article
%! Seasonal patterns of CO2 and water vapor exchange of Juncus roemerianus Scheele in a Georgia salt marsh
%Z 13-357
%M UGAMI.369
%A Giurgevich, J.R.
%A Dunn, E.L.
%K CO2, exchange, Georgia, Juncus, marsh, patterns, roemerianus, salt, Scheele, Seasonal, vapor, water
%0 Journal Article
%T Seasonal patterns of CO2 and water vapor exchange of the tall and short height forms of Spartina alterniflora Loisel. in a Georgia salt marsh
%D 1979
%V 43
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%B Oecologia
%9 Article
%! Seasonal patterns of CO2 and water vapor exchange of the tall and short height forms of Spartina alterniflora Loisel. in a Georgia salt marsh
%Z 14-401
%M UGAMI.413
%A Giurgevich, J.R.
%A Dunn, E.L.
%K alterniflora, CO2, exchange, forms, Georgia, height, Loisel, marsh, patterns, salt, Seasonal, short, Spartina, tall, vapor, water
%0 Journal Article
%T A comparative analysis of the CO2 and water vapor responses of two Spartina species from Georgia coastal marsh
%D 1981
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%B Estuarine and Coastal Marine Science
%9 Article
%! A comparative analysis of the CO2 and water vapor responses of two Spartina species from Georgia coastal marsh
%Z 15-412
%M UGAMI.424
%A Giurgevich, J.R.
%A Dunn, E.L.
%K analysis, CO2, coastal, comparative, Georgia, marsh, responses, Spartina, species, vapor, water
%0 Journal Article
%T Seasonal patterns of daily net phytosynthesis, transpiration, and net primary productivity of Juncus roemerianus and Spartina alterniflora in a Georgia salt marsh
%D 1982
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%B Oecologia
%9 Article
%! Seasonal patterns of daily net phytosynthesis, transpiration, and net primary productivity of Juncus roemerianus and Spartina alterniflora in a Georgia salt marsh
%Z 15-435
%M UGAMI.447
%A Giurgevich, J.R.
%A Dunn, E.L.
%K alterniflora, daily, Georgia, Juncus, marsh, net, patterns, phytosynthesis, primary, productivity, roemerianus, salt, Seasonal, Spartina, transpiration
%0 Journal Article
%T Multi-method characterisation of natural organic matter isolated from water: Characterisation of reverse osmosis-isolates from water of two semi-identical dystrophic lakes basins in Norway
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%B Water Research
%9 Article
%! Multi-method characterisation of natural organic matter isolated from water: Characterisation of reverse osmosis-isolates from water of two semi-identical dystrophic lakes basins in Norway
%Z 804
%M UGAMI.830
%A Gjessing, E.T.
%A Alberts, J.J.
%A Bruchet, A.
%A Egeberg, P.K.
%A Lydersen, E.
%A McGown, L.B.
%A Mobed, J.J.
%A Munster, U.
%A Pempkowiak, J.
%A Perdue, M.
%A Ratnawerra, H.
%A Rybacki, D.
%A Takacs, M.
%A Abbt-Braun, G.
%K acidification, characterisation, isolation, multi-method, natural organic matter, NOM, reverse osmosis, water
%0 Book Section
%T Effects of hypoxia on root and shoot respiration of Spartina alterniflora
%D 1982
%P 243-253
%I Academic Press
%C New York
%B Estuarine Comparisons
%9 Article
%! Effects of hypoxia on root and shoot respiration of Spartina alterniflora
%Z 16-454
%M UGAMI.466
%A Gleason, M.L.
%A Dunn, E.L.
%E Kennedy, V.S.
%K alterniflora, Effects, hypoxia, respiration, root, shoot, Spartina
%0 Journal Article
%T Taphofacies implications of infaunal foraminiferal assemblages in a Georgia salt marsh, Sapelo Island
%D 1993
%V 39
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%B Micropaleontology
%9 Article
%! Taphofacies implications of infaunal foraminiferal assemblages in a Georgia salt marsh, Sapelo Island
%Z 705
%M UGAMI.721
%A Goldstein, S.
%A Bagwell-Harben, E.
%K assemblages, foraminiferal, Georgia, implications, infaunal, Island, marsh, salt, Sapelo, Taphofacies
%0 Journal Article
%T Landward directed dispersal of benthic foraminiferal propagules at two shallow-water sites in the Doboy Sound area (Georgia, U.S.A.)
%D 2016
%V 47
%N 4
%P 325–336
%B Journal of Foraminiferal Research
%8 October 2017
%9 Article
%! Landward directed dispersal of benthic foraminiferal propagules at two shallow-water sites in the Doboy Sound area (Georgia, U.S.A.)
%Z 1050
%M UGAMI.1080
%A Goldstein, S.
%A Weinmann, A.
%K area, benthic, directed, dispersal, Doboy, foraminiferal, Georgia, Landward, propagules, shallow-water, sites, Sound
%0 Journal Article
%T Gametogenesis and the antiquity of reproductive pattern in the foraminiferida
%D 1997
%V 27
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%P 319-328
%B Journal of Foraminiferal Research
%9 Article
%! Gametogenesis and the antiquity of reproductive pattern in the foraminiferida
%Z 799
%M UGAMI.818
%A Goldstein, Susan T.
%K antiquity, foraminiferida, Gametogenesis, pattern, reproductive
%0 Journal Article
%T Experimental assembly of foraminiferal communities from coastal propagule banks
%D 2011
%V 437
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%! Experimental assembly of foraminiferal communities from coastal propagule banks
%Z #1008 ISI Document Delivery No.: 826GV Times Cited: 6 Cited Reference Count: 39 Goldstein, Susan T. Alve, Elisabeth National Science Foundation [OCE0850505] We thank the staff of the University of Georgia Marine Institute, Sapelo Island, for logistical support, and John Shields at the Center for Ultrastructural Research for assistance with the SEM images. We also thank the reviewers and B. W. Hayward and C. J. Duffield for useful comments on the manuscript. This study was funded in part by a National Science Foundation Grant OCE0850505 to S.T.G. This is Contribution Number 1008 from the University of Georgia Marine Institute, Sapelo Island, Georgia. 7 INTER-RESEARCH OLDENDORF LUHE MAR ECOL PROG SER
%M UGAMI.1042
%A Goldstein, S.T.
%A Alve, E.
%K AMMONIA-TEPIDA, BENTHIC FORAMINIFERA, Community assembly, Dispersal, Ecology, Foraminifera, ISLAND, Marine & Freshwater Biology, N-GEN, Oceanography, Propagules, Sapelo Island, ULTRASTRUCTURE
%0 Journal Article
%T Test ultrastructure and taphonomy of the monothalamous agglutinated foraminifer Cribrothalammina n. gen. Alba (Heron-Allen Earland)
%D 1988
%V 18
%P 130-136
%B Journal of Foraminiferal Research
%9 Article
%! Test ultrastructure and taphonomy of the monothalamous agglutinated foraminifer Cribrothalammina n. gen. Alba (Heron-Allen Earland)
%Z 595
%M UGAMI.608
%A Goldstein, S.T.
%A Barker, W.W.
%K agglutinated, Alba, Cribrothalammina, Earland, foraminifer, gen, Heron-Allen, monothalamous, taphonomy, Test, ultrastructure
%0 Journal Article
%T Gametogenesis in the monothalamous agglutinated foraminifer
%D 1990
%V 37
%P 20-27
%B Journal of Protozoology
%9 Article
%! Gametogenesis in the monothalamous agglutinated foraminifer
%Z -640
%M UGAMI.654
%A Goldstein, S.T.
%A Barker, W.W.
%K agglutinated, foraminifer, Gametogenesis, monothalamous
%0 Journal Article
%T Salt marsh foraminifera, Sapelo Island, Georgia
%D 1986
%V 18
%P 97-121
%B Senckenbergiana Maritima
%9 Article
%! Salt marsh foraminifera, Sapelo Island, Georgia
%Z 19-537
%M UGAMI.549
%A Goldstein, S.T.
%A Frey, R.W.
%K foraminifera, Georgia, Island, marsh, Salt, Sapelo
%0 Journal Article
%T Gametogenesis and the life cycle of the foraminifer Ammonia beccarii (Linne) forma Tepida (Cushman)
%D 1993
%V 23
%P 213-220
%B Journal of Foraminiferal Research
%9 Article
%! Gametogenesis and the life cycle of the foraminifer Ammonia beccarii (Linne) forma Tepida (Cushman)
%Z 721
%M UGAMI.737
%A Goldstein, S.T.
%A Moodley, L.
%K Ammonia, beccarii, Cushman, cycle, foraminifer, forma, Gametogenesis, life, Linne, Tepida
%0 Journal Article
%T Fine structure of the foraminifer Haynesina germanica (Ehrenberg) and its sequestered chloroplasts
%D 2018
%V 138
%P 63-71
%B Marine Micropaleontology
%8 2018/01/01/
%9 Article
%! Fine structure of the foraminifer Haynesina germanica (Ehrenberg) and its sequestered chloroplasts
%Z 1062
%M UGAMI.1092
%U http://www.sciencedirect.com/science/article/pii/S0377839817300725
%A Goldstein, Susan T.
%A Richardson, Elizabeth A.
%K Diatom chloroplasts, High pressure freezing and freeze substitution, Kleptoplasty, Sapelo Island, Ultrastructure
%0 Journal Article
%T Elevation and the distribution of salt-marsh foraminigera, St. Catherines Island, Georgia: a taphonomic approach
%D 1998
%V 13
%P 570-580
%B Palaios
%9 Article
%! Elevation and the distribution of salt-marsh foraminigera, St. Catherines Island, Georgia: a taphonomic approach
%Z 815
%M UGAMI.834
%A Goldstein, Susan T.
%A Watkins, G.Todd
%K distribution, elevation, foraminifera, salt marsh, St. Catherines Island
%0 Journal Article
%T Taphonomy of salt marsh foraminifera: an example from coastal Georgia
%D 1999
%V 149
%P 103-114
%B Palaeogeography Palaeoclimatology Palaeoecology
%9 Article
%! Taphonomy of salt marsh foraminifera: an example from coastal Georgia
%Z 754
%M UGAMI.817
%A Goldstein, S.T.
%A Watkins, G.T.
%K agglutinated foraminifera, GA, salt marsh foraminifera, selective preservtion, St. Catherines Island, taphonomy, TAZ
%0 Journal Article
%T XIPHOPHAGA MINUTA, AND X. ALLOMINUTA, NOV GEN., NOV SPP., NEW MONOTHALAMID FORAMINIFERA FROM COASTAL GEORGIA (USA): CRYPTIC SPECIES, GAMETOGENESIS, AND AN UNUSUAL FORM OF CHLOROPLAST SEQUESTRATION
%D 2010
%V 40
%N 1
%P 3-15
%B Journal of Foraminiferal Research
%8 Jan
%9 Article
%! XIPHOPHAGA MINUTA, AND X. ALLOMINUTA, NOV GEN., NOV SPP., NEW MONOTHALAMID FORAMINIFERA FROM COASTAL GEORGIA (USA): CRYPTIC SPECIES, GAMETOGENESIS, AND AN UNUSUAL FORM OF CHLOROPLAST SEQUESTRATION
%Z #989 ISI Document Delivery No.: 556QF Times Cited: 3 Cited Reference Count: 46 Goldstein, Susan T. Habura, Andrea Richardson, Elizabeth A. Bowser, Samuel S. NSF [DEB 0445181]; University of Georgia Marine Institute We thank Jon Garbisch, formerly of the University of Georgia Marine Institute, for logistical support of our field work on Sapelo, and for piloting the small boat used on collecting trips through the maze of tidal creeks on the Georgia coast. We also thank the staff of the Wadsworth Center''s Applied Genomic Technologies Core Facility for DNA sequencing, and Dr. Andrew A. Reilly for helpful comments. The thoughtful suggestions of two anonymous reviewers helped to improve this contribution. Research was supported by NSF grant DEB 0445181 to SSB and STG. This is contribution number 989 of the University of Georgia Marine Institute. 4 CUSHMAN FOUNDATION FORAMINIFERAL RES CAMBRIDGE J FORAMIN RES
%M UGAMI.1006
%A Goldstein, S.T.
%A Habura, A.
%A Richardson, E.A.
%A Bowser, S.S.
%K ALLOGROMIID, AMMONIA, BENTHIC FORAMINIFERA, BIODIVERSITY, DEEP-SEA, DIVERSITY, ELPHIDIUM-EXCAVATUM TERQUEM, FINE-STRUCTURE, FORAMINIFERA, LIFE-CYCLE, Paleontology, ULTRASTRUCTURE
%0 Journal Article
%T Microhabitats of salt marsh foraminifera: St. Catherines Island, Georgia, U.S.A.
%D 1995
%V 26
%P 17-29
%B Marine Micropaleontology (759)
%9 Article
%! Microhabitats of salt marsh foraminifera: St. Catherines Island, Georgia, U.S.A.
%Z 759
%M UGAMI.777
%A Goldstein, S.T.
%A Watkins, G.T.
%A Kuhn, R.M.
%K Catherines, foraminifera, Georgia, Island, marsh, Microhabitats, salt
%0 Journal Article
%T Identifying numerically abundant culturable bacteria from complex communities: an example from a lignin enrichment culture
%D 1996
%V 62
%N 12
%P 4433-4440
%B Applied and Environmental Microbiology
%9 Article
%! Identifying numerically abundant culturable bacteria from complex communities: an example from a lignin enrichment culture
%Z 797
%M UGAMI.815
%A Gonzalez, J.
%A Whitman, W.B.
%A Hodson, R.E.
%A Moran, M.A.
%K abundant, bacteria, communities, complex, culturable, culture, enrichment, example, Identifying, lignin, numerically
%0 Journal Article
%T Bacterivory rate estimates and fraction of active bacterivores in natural protist assemblages from aquatic systems
%D 1999
%V 65
%N 4
%P 1463-1469
%B Applied and Environmental Microbiology
%9 Article
%! Bacterivory rate estimates and fraction of active bacterivores in natural protist assemblages from aquatic systems
%Z 834
%M UGAMI.854
%A Gonzalez, Juan M.
%K active, aquatic, assemblages, bacterivores, Bacterivory, estimates, fraction, natural, protist, rate, systems
%0 Journal Article
%T Numerical dominance of a group of marine bacteria in the a-subclass of the class Proteobacteria in coastal seawater
%D 1997
%V 63
%N 11
%P 4237-4242
%B Applied and Environmental Microbiology
%9 Article
%! Numerical dominance of a group of marine bacteria in the a-subclass of the class Proteobacteria in coastal seawater
%Z 806
%M UGAMI.823
%A Gonzalez, J.M.
%A Moran, M.A.
%K a-subclass, bacteria, class, coastal, dominance, group, marine, Numerical, Proteobacteria, seawater
%0 Journal Article
%T Transformation of sulfur compounds by an abundant lineage of marine bacteria in the -subclass of the class Proteobacteria
%D 1999
%V 65
%N 9
%P 3810-3819
%B Applied and Environmental Microbiology
%9 Article
%! Transformation of sulfur compounds by an abundant lineage of marine bacteria in the -subclass of the class Proteobacteria
%Z 844
%M UGAMI.869
%A Gonzalez, J.M.
%A Kiene, R.P.
%A Moran, M.A.
%K -subclass, abundant, bacteria, class, compounds, lineage, marine, Proteobacteria, sulfur, Transformation
%0 Journal Article
%T Microbulbifer hydrolyticus gen. nov., sp. nov., and marinobacterium georgiense gen. nov., sp. nov., two marine bacteria from a lignin-rich pulp mill waste enrichment community
%D 1997
%V 47
%P 369-376
%B Int. J. Syst. Bacteriol.
%9 Article
%! Microbulbifer hydrolyticus gen. nov., sp. nov., and marinobacterium georgiense gen. nov., sp. nov., two marine bacteria from a lignin-rich pulp mill waste enrichment community
%Z 807
%M UGAMI.825
%A Gonzalez, J.M.
%A Moran, M.A.
%A Hodson, R.E.
%A Whitman, W.B.
%K bacteria, community, enrichment, gen, georgiense, hydrolyticus, lignin-rich, marine, marinobacterium, Microbulbifer, mill, nov, pulp, sp, waste
%0 Journal Article
%T Sagittula stellata gen. nov., sp. nov., a lignin-transforming bacterium from a coastal environment
%D 1997
%V 47
%P 773-780
%B Int. J. Syst. Bacteriol.
%9 Article
%! Sagittula stellata gen. nov., sp. nov., a lignin-transforming bacterium from a coastal environment
%Z 808
%M UGAMI.826
%A Gonzalez, J.M.
%A Moran, M.A.
%A Hodson, R.E.
%A Whitman, W.B.
%K bacterium, coastal, environment, gen, lignin-transforming, nov, Sagittula, sp, stellata
%0 Journal Article
%T Size-selective grazing on bacteria by natural assemblages of estuarine flagellates and ciliates.
%D 1990
%V 56
%P 583-589
%B Applied and Environmental Microbiology
%9 Article
%! Size-selective grazing on bacteria by natural assemblages of estuarine flagellates and ciliates.
%Z 649
%M UGAMI.664
%A Gonzalez, Juan M.
%A Sherr, E.B.
%A Sherr, B.F.
%K assemblages, bacteria, ciliates, estuarine, flagellates, grazing, natural, Size-selective
%0 Journal Article
%T Environmental gradients and herbivore feeding preferences in coastal salt marshes
%D 2004
%V 140
%N 4
%P 591-600
%B Oecologia
%9 Article
%! Environmental gradients and herbivore feeding preferences in coastal salt marshes
%Z 935
%M UGAMI.968
%A Goranson, C.E.
%A Ho, C.K.
%A Pennings, S.C.
%K attack, environmental stress, growth, halophytes, nitrogen, photosynthesis, plant, plant stress, plant vigor, plant-herbivore interactions, relative importance, salt marsh, Spartina alterniflora, stress, tolerance
%0 Thesis
%T Ecological and evolutionary responses of plant populations to the coastal dune environment
%D 2010
%V PhD
%P 137
%I University of Georgia
%9 Dissertation
%! Ecological and evolutionary responses of plant populations to the coastal dune environment
%Z #991
%M UGAMI.1026
%U http://purl.galileo.usg.edu/uga%5Fetd/gormally%5Fcara%5Fl%5F201005%5Fphd
%A Gormally, Cara Lynn
%K Cakile edentula, coastal dunes, environmental gradients, natural selection, phenotypic plasticity, population genetics, Uniola paniculata
%0 Journal Article
%T Responses of Uniola paniculata L. (Poaceae), an Essential Dune-Building Grass, to Complex Changing Environmental Gradients on the Coastal Dunes
%D 2010
%V 33
%N 5
%P 1237-1246
%B Estuaries and Coasts
%8 Sep
%9 Article
%! Responses of Uniola paniculata L. (Poaceae), an Essential Dune-Building Grass, to Complex Changing Environmental Gradients on the Coastal Dunes
%Z #984 ISI Document Delivery No.: 658SR Times Cited: 6 Cited Reference Count: 59 Gormally, Cara L. Donovan, Lisa A. National Estuarine Research Reserve System (National Oceanic and Atmospheric Administration) [NAO7NOS42-00039]; Georgia Sea Grant College [NA04OAR4170033]; Georgia Botanical Society The authors wish to thank the following people for invaluable help in the field during 2006 and 2007: Beau Brouillette, Jason Bonner, Kate Seader, Allison Hennigan, Anna Johnson, Nicole Umberger, Katherine Hale, and Anna Harvey. Research at the Sapelo Island National Estuarine Research Reserve was facilitated by the research reserve coordinator, Dorset Hurley, as well as Jon Garbisch at the University of Georgia Marine Institute. We thank Beau Brouillette, Scott Gevaert, Ethan Milton, and Becky Shirk for careful reviews of early drafts of this manuscript. We thank the National Estuarine Research Reserve System (National Oceanic and Atmospheric Administration) for a graduate fellowship that supported this work (NAO7NOS42-00039), as well as Georgia Sea Grant College Program (NA04OAR4170033) and the Georgia Botanical Society for financial support. This is contribution number #984 from the University of Georgia Marine Institute at Sapelo Island. 6 SPRINGER NEW YORK ESTUAR COAST
%M UGAMI.1023
%A Gormally, C.L.
%A Donovan, L.A.
%K AMMOPHILA-BREVILIGULATA, Coastal sand dunes, Environmental gradients, Environmental Sciences, EXPERIMENTAL BURIAL, HATTERAS NATIONAL SEASHORE, Intraspecific variation, LOCAL ADAPTATION, Marine & Freshwater Biology, Nutrients, Phenotypic plasticity, PLANT-COMMUNITIES, PRIMARY SUCCESSION, Salinity, SALT SPRAY, Sand accretion and erosion, SAND DUNES, Uniola paniculata, VEGETATION, ZONATION
%0 Journal Article
%T No Evidence of Local Adaptation in Uniola paniculata L. (Poaceae), a Coastal Dune Grass
%D 2011
%V 10
%N 4
%P 751-760
%B Southeastern Naturalist
%8 Dec
%9 Article
%! No Evidence of Local Adaptation in Uniola paniculata L. (Poaceae), a Coastal Dune Grass
%Z #988 ISI Document Delivery No.: 976TI Times Cited: 1 Cited Reference Count: 37 Gormally, Cara L. Donovan, Lisa A. SINERR (NOAA) [NA07NO54200039]; Sea Grant [NA04OAR4170033]; Georgia Botanical Society The authors wish to thank the following people for help with fieldwork: Beau Brouillette, Jason Bonner, Kate Seader, Allison Hennigan, Anna Johnson, Nicole Umberger, Meredith Barton, Victor Thompson, Scott Gevaert, Katherine Hale, Anna Harvey, Mike Boyd, Samantha Carvalho, Patrick Gormally, Maggie Kilgo, and Haley Zapal. Research at the Sapelo Island National Estuarine Research Reserve (SINERR) was facilitated by the research reserve coordinator, Dorset Hurley, and by Jon Garbisch at the University of Georgia Marine Institute. Tom Patrick at the Georgia Department of Natural Resources Wildlife Resources Center provided invaluable help in the permitting process for ramet collection. We thank Jim Hamrick and Eleanor Pardini for insightful comments throughout the experimental design process. We thank SINERR (NOAA) (NA07NO54200039), Sea Grant (NA04OAR4170033), and the Georgia Botanical Society for financial support. This is contribution number 988 from the University of Georgia Marine Institute. 1 HUMBOLDT FIELD RESEARCH INST STEUBEN SOUTHEAST NAT
%M UGAMI.1025
%A Gormally, C.L.
%A Donovan, L.A.
%K Biodiversity Conservation, DIFFERENTIATION, Ecology, EVOLUTION, GRADIENT, PLANTAGO-MARITIMA, PLASTICITY, POPULATIONS, RESPONSES, SEASHORE, VEGETATION, ZONATION
%0 Journal Article
%T GENETIC STRUCTURE OF A WIDELY DISPERSED BEACH ANNUAL, CAKILE EDENTULA (BRASSICACEAE)
%D 2011
%V 98
%N 10
%P 1657-1662
%B American Journal of Botany
%8 Oct
%9 Article
%! GENETIC STRUCTURE OF A WIDELY DISPERSED BEACH ANNUAL, CAKILE EDENTULA (BRASSICACEAE)
%Z #1016 ISI Document Delivery No.: 833ME Times Cited: 1 Cited Reference Count: 30 Gormally, C. L. Hamrick, J. L. Donovan, Lisa A. 1 BOTANICAL SOC AMER INC ST LOUIS AM J BOT
%M UGAMI.1049
%A Gormally, C.L.
%A Hamrick, J.L.
%A Donovan, L.A.
%K allozymes, beach annual, Brassicaceae, Cakile edentula, DIVERSITY, genetic, ISLAND, long-distance dispersal, MARITIMA, Plant Sciences, POPULATIONS, STARCH-GEL ELECTROPHORESIS, structure, TRAITS
%0 Journal Article
%T Inter-island but not intra-island divergence among populations of sea oats, Uniola paniculata L. (Poaceae)
%D 2013
%V 14
%N 1
%P 185-193
%B Conservation Genetics
%8 2013/02/01
%9 Article
%! Inter-island but not intra-island divergence among populations of sea oats, Uniola paniculata L. (Poaceae)
%Z #993
%M UGAMI.1028
%U http://dx.doi.org/10.1007/s10592-012-0441-z
%A Gormally, Cara L.
%A Hamrick, J.L.
%A Donovan, Lisa A.
%K Allozymes, Coastal dunes, F ST, Population differentiation, Q ST, Uniola paniculata
%0 Journal Article
%T Development, survival, and growth of larval weakfish at different prey abundances.
%D 1991
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%P 693-700
%B Transactions of the American Fisheries Society
%9 Article
%! Development, survival, and growth of larval weakfish at different prey abundances.
%Z 704
%M UGAMI.720
%A Goshorn, D.M.
%A Epifanio, C.E.
%K abundances, Development, different, growth, larval, prey, survival, weakfish
%0 Journal Article
%T Diet of larval weakfish and prey abundance in Delaware Bay.
%D 1991
%V 120
%P 684-692
%B Transactions of the American Fisheries Society
%9 Article
%! Diet of larval weakfish and prey abundance in Delaware Bay.
%Z 703
%M UGAMI.719
%A Goshorn, D.M.
%A Epifanio, C.E.
%K abundance, Bay, Delaware, Diet, larval, prey, weakfish
%0 Journal Article
%T Relationships among bulk density and organic and inorganic material in Louisiana marsh soils
%D 1984
%V 137
%P 177-180
%B Soil Science
%9 Article
%! Relationships among bulk density and organic and inorganic material in Louisiana marsh soils
%Z 16-474
%M UGAMI.486
%A Gosselink, J.G.
%A Hatton, R.
%A Hopkinson, C.S.
%K bulk, density, inorganic, Louisiana, marsh, material, organic, Relationships, soils
%0 Journal Article
%T Grazing rates of organic matter and living fungal biomass of decaying Spartina alterniflora by three species of saltmarsh invertebrates
%D 2000
%V 136
%N 2
%P 281-289
%B Marine Biology
%9 Article
%! Grazing rates of organic matter and living fungal biomass of decaying Spartina alterniflora by three species of saltmarsh invertebrates
%Z 835
%M UGAMI.855
%A Graca, M.A.S.
%A Newell, S.Y.
%A Kneib, R.T.
%K alterniflora, biomass, decaying, fungal, Grazing, invertebrates, living, matter, organic, rates, saltmarsh, Spartina, species
%0 Journal Article
%T Plant traces resembling Skolithos
%D 2006
%V 13
%P 205-216
%B Ichnos
%9 Article
%! Plant traces resembling Skolithos
%Z 955
%M UGAMI.986
%A Gregory, M.R.
%A Campbell, K.A.
%A Zuraida, R.
%A Martin, A.J.
%K dune settings, limonitic preservation, plant trace-makers, Quaternary and Recent, rhizoliths, rushes, Skolithos, Spartina
%0 Journal Article
%T Compound trace fossils formed by plant and animal interactions: Quaternary of northern New Zealand and Sapelo Island, Georgia (USA)
%D 2004
%V 51
%P 88-105
%B Fossils and Strata
%9 Article
%! Compound trace fossils formed by plant and animal interactions: Quaternary of northern New Zealand and Sapelo Island, Georgia (USA)
%Z 926
%M UGAMI.959
%A Gregory, M.R.
%A Martin, A.J.
%A Campbell, K.A.
%K compound/complex traces, continental trace fossils, New Zealand, Quaternary, root-insect interactions, Sapelo Island
%0 Journal Article
%T Relationship between aboveground and belowground biomass of Spartina alterniflora (smooth cordgrass)
%D 1991
%V 14
%P 180-191
%B Estuaries
%9 Article
%! Relationship between aboveground and belowground biomass of Spartina alterniflora (smooth cordgrass)
%Z 689
%M UGAMI.705
%A Gross, M.F.
%A Hardisky, M.A.
%A Wolf, P.L.
%A Klemas, V.
%K aboveground, alterniflora, belowground, biomass, cordgrass, Relationship, smooth, Spartina
%0 Journal Article
%T Geographic variation in plant community structure of salt marshes: species, functional and phylogenetic perspectives
%D 2015
%V 10
%N 5
%P e0127781
%B PloS one
%8 2015
%9 Article
%! Geographic variation in plant community structure of salt marshes: species, functional and phylogenetic perspectives
%Z 26010135
%M UGAMI.1070
%A Guo, Hongyu
%A Chamberlain, Scott A.
%A Elhaik, Eran
%A Jalli, Inder
%A Lynes, Alana-Rose
%A Marczak, Laurie
%A Sabath, Niv
%A Vargas, Amy
%A Wieski, Kazimierz
%A Zelig, Emily M.
%A Pennings, Steven C.
%K Index, Medicus
%0 Journal Article
%T Mechanisms mediating plant distributions across estuarine landscapes in a low-latitude tidal estuary
%D 2012
%V 93
%N 1
%P 90-100
%B Ecology
%8 Jan
%9 Article
%! Mechanisms mediating plant distributions across estuarine landscapes in a low-latitude tidal estuary
%Z #1009 ISI Document Delivery No.: 915AU Times Cited: 15 Cited Reference Count: 69 Guo, Hongyu Pennings, Steven C. NSF [OCE06-20959] We thank Jane Buck, Christine Ewers, Alana Lynes, Brittany D. McCall, Daniel Saucedo, Jacob Shalack, Huy Vu, Kazimierz Wieski, and Yihui Zhang for field assistance; Christine Hladik, Zhenjiang Lan, and Wade Sheldon for help in the analyses of elevation and flooding data; and Debra Ayres and two anonymous reviewers for constructive comments. This work is a contribution of the GCE-LTER program, which is funded by NSF (OCE06-20959). This is contribution number 1009 from the University of Georgia Marine Institute. 15 ECOLOGICAL SOC AMER WASHINGTON ECOLOGY
%M UGAMI.1043
%A Guo, H.Y.
%A Pennings, S.C.
%K Altamaha River estuary, BIOTIC, biotic interaction, competition, Ecology, estuary, facilitation, flooding, FRESH-WATER, Georgia, INTERACTIONS, marsh, PHYSICAL FACTORS, physical gradient, POSITIVE INTERACTIONS, RELATIVE IMPORTANCE, SALICORNIA-EUROPAEA, salinity, SALT-MARSH PLANTS, SPARTINA-ALTERNIFLORA, STRESS-GRADIENT HYPOTHESIS, tidal, transplant experiments, USA, zonation
%0 Journal Article
%T Post-mortem ecosystem engineering by oysters creates habitat for a rare marsh plant
%D 2012
%V 170
%N 3
%P 789-798
%B Oecologia
%8 Nov
%9 Article
%! Post-mortem ecosystem engineering by oysters creates habitat for a rare marsh plant
%Z #1014 ISI Document Delivery No.: 021DT Times Cited: 2 Cited Reference Count: 83 Guo, Hongyu Pennings, Steven C. Pennings, Steven/A-8326-2013 Pennings, Steven/0000-0003-4757-7125 NSF [OCE06-20959] We thank Jane Buck, Christine Ewers, Daniel Saucedo, Jacob Shalack, Kazimierz Wieski, and Yihui Zhang for Weld assistance, and John Silander and two anonymous reviewers for constructive comments. The experiments described in this paper complied with the current laws of the United States. This is a contribution of the Georgia Coastal Ecosystems Long-Term Ecological Research program, which is funded by NSF (OCE06-20959). This is contribution number 1014 from the University of Georgia Marine Institute. 2 SPRINGER NEW YORK OECOLOGIA
%M UGAMI.1047
%A Guo, H.Y.
%A Pennings, S.C.
%K COMMUNITY, Competition, CRABS PANOPEUS-HERBSTII, CRASSOSTREA-VIRGINICA, Ecology, EURYPANOPEUS-DEPRESSUS, JAMES RIVER, Microhabitat, Oyster shell, POPULATION-DYNAMICS, Salt marsh, SALT-MARSH, SPARTINA-ALTERNIFLORA, STRUCTURE, Suaeda linearis, SUAEDA-MARITIMA, UNITED-STATES
%0 Journal Article
%T Relative influence of deterministic processes on structuring marsh plant communities varies across an abiotic gradient
%D 2014
%V 123
%N 2
%P 173-178
%B Oikos
%8 Feb
%9 Article
%! Relative influence of deterministic processes on structuring marsh plant communities varies across an abiotic gradient
%Z #1031 ISI Document Delivery No.: 292IW Times Cited: 0 Cited Reference Count: 49 Guo, Hongyu Wieski, Kazimierz Lan, Zhenjiang Pennings, Steven C. Georgia Coastal Ecosystems LTER program (NSF) [OCE06-20959] We thank Ken Helm, Alana Lynes and Daniel Saucedo for field assistance. This is a contribution of the Georgia Coastal Ecosystems LTER program (NSF award OCE06-20959). This is contribution number 1031 from the Univ. of Georgia Marine Institute. We also thank David Chalcraft for comments which greatly improved the manuscript. 0 WILEY-BLACKWELL HOBOKEN OIKOS
%M UGAMI.1063
%A Guo, H.Y.
%A Wieski, K.
%A Lan, Z.J.
%A Pennings, S.C.
%K BETA-DIVERSITY, BIOTIC INTERACTIONS, Ecology, ESTUARINE MARSHES, FRESH-WATER, MARSHES, NEUTRAL THEORY, SALINITY GRADIENTS, SALT, SEED BANKS, STRESS TOLERANCE, TIDAL MARSHES
%0 Journal Article
%T Effects of shelter on growth and survival in age-0 black sea bass, Centropristis striata (L.)
%D 2003
%V 34
%P 1387-1390
%B Aquaculture Research
%9 Article
%! Effects of shelter on growth and survival in age-0 black sea bass, Centropristis striata (L.)
%Z 944
%M UGAMI.977
%A Gwak, Woo-Seok
%K black sea bass, growth, juvenile, shelter, survival
%0 Journal Article
%T Sex- and habitat-specific movement of an omnivorous semi-terrestrial crab controls habitat connectivity and subsidies: a multi-parameter approach
%D 2015
%V 178
%N 4
%P 999-1015
%B Oecologia
%8 Aug 2015
%9 Article
%! Sex- and habitat-specific movement of an omnivorous semi-terrestrial crab controls habitat connectivity and subsidies: a multi-parameter approach
%Z #1038
%M UGAMI.1069
%U http://dx.doi.org/10.1007/s00442-015-3271-0
%A Hübneṙ, Lena
%A Pennings, Steven C.
%A Zimmer, Martin
%K Coastal forest, Habitat connectivity, Land crab, Motile link organism, Saltmarsh, Sexual dimorphism, Spatial subsidy
%0 Journal Article
%T Stable carbon isotope composition of fauna and organic matter collected in a Mississippi estuary
%D 1980
%V 10
%P 703-708
%B Estuarine and Coastal Marine Science
%9 Article
%! Stable carbon isotope composition of fauna and organic matter collected in a Mississippi estuary
%Z 15-403
%M UGAMI.415
%A Hackney, C.T.
%A Haines, E.B.
%K carbon, collected, composition, estuary, fauna, isotope, matter, Mississippi, organic, Stable
%0 Journal Article
%T Early diagenesis of lignin-associated phenolics in the saltmarsh grass Spartina alterniflora
%D 1992
%V 56
%P 3751-3764
%B Geochimica et Cosmochimica Acta
%9 Article
%! Early diagenesis of lignin-associated phenolics in the saltmarsh grass Spartina alterniflora
%Z 699
%M UGAMI.715
%A Haddad, R.I.
%A Newell, S.Y.
%A Martens, C.S.
%A Fallon, R.D.
%K alterniflora, diagenesis, Early, grass, lignin-associated, phenolics, saltmarsh, Spartina
%0 Journal Article
%T Barrier development of submerged coasts: Problems of sea-level changes from a study of the Atlantic coastal plain of Georgia, U.S.A., and parts of the east Australian coast
%D 1968
%V 7
%P 24-55
%B Zeitschrift für Geomorphologie
%9 Article
%! Barrier development of submerged coasts: Problems of sea-level changes from a study of the Atlantic coastal plain of Georgia, U.S.A., and parts of the east Australian coast
%Z 6-135
%M UGAMI.146
%A Hails, J.R.
%A Hoyt, J.H.
%K Atlantic, Australian, Barrier, changes, coast, coastal, coasts, development, east, Georgia, parts, plain, Problems, sea-level, study, submerged
%0 Journal Article
%T An appraisal of the evolution of the lower Atlantic coastal plain of Georgia, U.S.A.
%D 1969
%V Trans. Publ. No. 46
%P 53-68
%B The Institute of British Geographers Publications
%9 Article
%! An appraisal of the evolution of the lower Atlantic coastal plain of Georgia, U.S.A.
%Z 6-151
%M UGAMI.162
%A Hails, J.R.
%A Hoyt, J.H.
%K appraisal, Atlantic, coastal, evolution, Georgia, lower, plain
%0 Journal Article
%T The significance and limitations of statistical parameters for distinguishing ancient and modern sedimentary environments of the lower Georgia coastal plain
%D 1969
%V 39
%P 559-580
%B Journal of Sedimentary Petrology
%9 Article
%! The significance and limitations of statistical parameters for distinguishing ancient and modern sedimentary environments of the lower Georgia coastal plain
%Z 7-163
%M UGAMI.174
%A Hails, J.R.
%A Hoyt, J.H.
%K ancient, coastal, distinguishing, environments, Georgia, limitations, lower, modern, parameters, plain, sedimentary, significance, statistical
%0 Journal Article
%T The question of late Quaternary changes of sea level in New South Wales, Australia
%D 1971
%V 14
%P 255-264
%B Quaternaria
%9 Article
%! The question of late Quaternary changes of sea level in New South Wales, Australia
%Z 188
%M UGAMI.199
%A Hails, J.R.
%A Hoyt, J.H.
%K Australia, changes, late, level, New, Quaternary, question, sea, South, Wales
%0 Journal Article
%T Growth and resource allocation responses of Spartina alterniflora Loisel. to three levels of NH4-N, Fe, and NaCl in solution culture
%D 1976
%V 137
%P 224-230
%B Botanical Gazette
%9 Article
%! Growth and resource allocation responses of Spartina alterniflora Loisel. to three levels of NH4-N, Fe, and NaCl in solution culture
%Z 12-329
%M UGAMI.341
%A Haines, B.L.
%A Dunn, E.L.
%K allocation, alterniflora, culture, Fe, Growth, levels, Loisel, NaCl, NH4-N, resource, responses, solution, Spartina
%0 Book Section
%T Coastal salt marshes
%D 1985
%P 323-347
%I Chapman & Hall
%C London
%B Physiological Ecology of North American Plant Communities
%9 Article
%! Coastal salt marshes
%Z 16-452
%M UGAMI.464
%A Haines, B.L.
%A Dunn, E.L.
%E Mooney, H.A.
%E Chabot, B.F.
%K Coastal, marshes, salt
%0 Journal Article
%T Nitrogen content and acidity of rain on the Georgia coast
%D 1976
%V 12
%P 1223-1231
%B Water Resources Bulletin
%9 Article
%! Nitrogen content and acidity of rain on the Georgia coast
%Z 12-313
%M UGAMI.325
%A Haines, E.B.
%K acidity, coast, content, Georgia, Nitrogen, rain
%0 Journal Article
%T Relation between the stable carbon isotope composition of fiddler crabs, plants and soils in a salt marsh
%D 1976
%V 21
%P 880-883
%B Limnology and Oceanography
%9 Article
%! Relation between the stable carbon isotope composition of fiddler crabs, plants and soils in a salt marsh
%Z 11-310
%M UGAMI.322
%A Haines, E.B.
%K carbon, composition, crabs, fiddler, isotope, marsh, plants, Relation, salt, soils, stable
%0 Journal Article
%T Stable carbon isotope ratios in the biota, soils, and tidal water of a Georgia salt marsh
%D 1976
%V 4
%P 609-619
%B Estuarine and Coastal Marine Science
%9 Article
%! Stable carbon isotope ratios in the biota, soils, and tidal water of a Georgia salt marsh
%Z 11-307
%M UGAMI.319
%A Haines, E.B.
%K biota, carbon, Georgia, isotope, marsh, ratios, salt, soils, Stable, tidal, water
%0 Journal Article
%T The origin of detritus in Georgia salt marsh estuaries
%D 1977
%V 29
%P 254-260
%B Oikos
%9 Article
%! The origin of detritus in Georgia salt marsh estuaries
%Z 13-334
%M UGAMI.346
%A Haines, E.B.
%K detritus, estuaries, Georgia, marsh, origin, salt
%0 Journal Article
%T Growth dynamics of cordgrass, Spartina alterniflora Loisel., on control and sewage sludge fertilized plots in a Georgia salt marsh
%D 1979
%V 2
%P 50-53
%B Estuaries
%9 Article
%! Growth dynamics of cordgrass, Spartina alterniflora Loisel., on control and sewage sludge fertilized plots in a Georgia salt marsh
%Z 13-346
%M UGAMI.358
%A Haines, E.B.
%K alterniflora, control, cordgrass, dynamics, fertilized, Georgia, Growth, Loisel, marsh, plots, salt, sewage, sludge, Spartina
%0 Book Section
%T Interactions between Georgia salt marshes and coastal waters: A changing paradigm
%D 1979
%P 35-46
%I Plenum Press
%C New York
%B Proceedings of the Conference on Ecological Processes in Coastal and Marine Systems
%9 Article
%! Interactions between Georgia salt marshes and coastal waters: A changing paradigm
%Z 14-382
%M UGAMI.394
%A Haines, E.B.
%E Livingston, R.J.
%K changing, coastal, Georgia, Interactions, marshes, paradigm, salt, waters
%0 Journal Article
%T Nitrogen pools in Georgia coastal waters
%D 1979
%V 2
%P 34-39
%B Estuaries
%9 Article
%! Nitrogen pools in Georgia coastal waters
%Z 13-356
%M UGAMI.368
%A Haines, E.B.
%K coastal, Georgia, Nitrogen, pools, waters
%0 Journal Article
%T Experimental degradation of detritus made from the salt marsh plants Spartina alterniflora Loisel., Salicornia virginica L., and Juncus roemerianus Scheele
%D 1979
%V 40
%P 27-40
%B Journal Experimental Marine Biology and Ecology
%9 Article
%! Experimental degradation of detritus made from the salt marsh plants Spartina alterniflora Loisel., Salicornia virginica L., and Juncus roemerianus Scheele
%Z 14-383
%M UGAMI.395
%A Haines, E.B.
%A Hanson, R.B.
%K alterniflora, degradation, detritus, Experimental, Juncus, Loisel, made, marsh, plants, roemerianus, Salicornia, salt, Scheele, Spartina, virginica
%0 Journal Article
%T Food sources of estuarine invertebrates analyzed using 13C/12C ratios
%D 1979
%V 60
%P 48-56
%B Ecology
%9 Article
%! Food sources of estuarine invertebrates analyzed using 13C/12C ratios
%Z 13-360
%M UGAMI.372
%A Haines, E.B.
%A Montague, C.L.
%K 12C, 13C, analyzed, estuarine, Food, invertebrates, ratios, sources
%0 Book Section
%T Nitrogen pools and fluxes in a Georgia salt marsh
%D 1977
%V II
%P 241-254
%I Academic Press, Inc.
%C New York
%B Estuarine Processes: Circulation, Sediments and Transfer of Material in the Estuary
%9 Article
%! Nitrogen pools and fluxes in a Georgia salt marsh
%Z 11-308
%M UGAMI.320
%A Haines, E.B.
%A Chalmers, A.
%A Hanson, R.
%A Sherr, B.
%E Wiley, Martin
%K fluxes, Georgia, marsh, Nitrogen, pools, salt
%0 Journal Article
%T Armored mud balls from Cabretta and Sapelo Barrier Islands, Georgia
%D 1984
%V 54
%P 831-835
%B Journal of Sedimentary Petrology
%9 Article
%! Armored mud balls from Cabretta and Sapelo Barrier Islands, Georgia
%Z 17-496
%M UGAMI.508
%A Hall, A.M.
%A Fritz, W.J.
%K Armored, balls, Barrier, Cabretta, Georgia, Islands, mud, Sapelo
%0 Journal Article
%T Comparison of nitrogen fixation activity in tall and short Spartina alterniflora salt marsh soils
%D 1977
%V 33
%P 596-602
%B Applied and Environmental Microbiology
%9 Article
%! Comparison of nitrogen fixation activity in tall and short Spartina alterniflora salt marsh soils
%Z 13-332
%M UGAMI.344
%A Hanson, R.B.
%K activity, alterniflora, Comparison, fixation, marsh, nitrogen, salt, short, soils, Spartina, tall
%0 Journal Article
%T Nitrogen fixation (acetylene reduction) in a salt marsh amended with sewage sludge and organic carbon and nitrogen compounds
%D 1977
%V 33
%P 846-852
%B Applied and Environmental Microbiology
%9 Article
%! Nitrogen fixation (acetylene reduction) in a salt marsh amended with sewage sludge and organic carbon and nitrogen compounds
%Z 13-333
%M UGAMI.345
%A Hanson, R.B.
%K acetylene, amended, carbon, compounds, fixation, marsh, nitrogen, organic, reduction, salt, sewage, sludge
%0 Journal Article
%T Pelagic Sargassum community metabolism: Carbon and nitrogen
%D 1977
%V 29
%P 107-118
%B Journal Experimental Marine Biology and Ecology
%9 Article
%! Pelagic Sargassum community metabolism: Carbon and nitrogen
%Z 13-341
%M UGAMI.353
%A Hanson, R.B.
%K Carbon, community, metabolism, nitrogen, Pelagic, Sargassum
%0 Journal Article
%T Nitrogen fixation activity (acetylene reduction) in the rhizosphere of salt marsh angiosperms, Georgia, USA
%D 1983
%V 26
%P 49-59
%B Botanica Marina
%9 Article
%! Nitrogen fixation activity (acetylene reduction) in the rhizosphere of salt marsh angiosperms, Georgia, USA
%Z 16-467
%M UGAMI.479
%A Hanson, R.B.
%K acetylene, activity, angiosperms, fixation, Georgia, marsh, Nitrogen, reduction, rhizosphere, salt, USA
%0 Journal Article
%T Microheterotrophic activity in a salt-marsh estuary, Sapelo Island, Georgia
%D 1979
%V 60
%P 99-107
%B Ecology
%9 Article
%! Microheterotrophic activity in a salt-marsh estuary, Sapelo Island, Georgia
%Z 14-369
%M UGAMI.381
%A Hanson, R.B.
%A Snyder, J.
%K activity, estuary, Georgia, Island, Microheterotrophic, salt-marsh, Sapelo
%0 Journal Article
%T Enzymatic determination of glucose in marine environments: Improvement and note of caution
%D 1979
%V 7
%P 353-362
%B Marine Chemistry
%9 Article
%! Enzymatic determination of glucose in marine environments: Improvement and note of caution
%Z 14-388
%M UGAMI.400
%A Hanson, R.B.
%A Snyder, J.S.
%K caution, determination, environments, Enzymatic, glucose, Improvement, marine, note
%0 Journal Article
%T Glucose exchanges in a salt marsh estuary: Biological activity and chemical measurement
%D 1980
%V 25
%P 633-642
%B Limnology and Oceanography
%9 Article
%! Glucose exchanges in a salt marsh estuary: Biological activity and chemical measurement
%Z 389*
%M UGAMI.401
%A Hanson, R.B.
%A Snyder, J.S.
%K activity, Biological, chemical, estuary, exchanges, Glucose, marsh, measurement, salt
%0 Journal Article
%T Heterotrophic activity associated with particulate size fractions in a Spartina alterniflora salt-marsh estuary, Sapelo Island, Georgia U.S.A., and the continental shelf waters
%D 1977
%V 42
%P 321-330
%B Marine Biology
%9 Article
%! Heterotrophic activity associated with particulate size fractions in a Spartina alterniflora salt-marsh estuary, Sapelo Island, Georgia U.S.A., and the continental shelf waters
%Z 13-331
%M UGAMI.343
%A Hanson, R.B.
%A Wiebe, W.J.
%K activity, alterniflora, associated, continental, estuary, fractions, Georgia, Heterotrophic, Island, particulate, salt-marsh, Sapelo, shelf, size, Spartina, waters
%0 Journal Article
%T Nitrogen recycling in coastal waters of southeastern U. S. during summer of 1986
%D 1990
%V 48
%P 641-660
%B Journal of Marine Research
%9 Article
%! Nitrogen recycling in coastal waters of southeastern U. S. during summer of 1986
%Z 666
%M UGAMI.681
%A Hanson, R.B.
%A Robertson, C.Y.
%A Yoder, J.A.
%A Verity, P.G.
%A Bishop, S.S.
%K coastal, during, Nitrogen, recycling, southeastern, summer, waters
%0 Journal Article
%T Flood Risk as Legacy Vulnerability: Reading the past into the present for environmental justice
%D 2023
%V 142
%N 103757
%B Geoforum
%9 Article
%Z published
%M UGAMI.1134
%R 10.1016/j.geoforum.2023.103757
%U https://doi.org/10.1016/j.geoforum.2023.103757
%A Hardy, Dean
%K Environmental justice, Flood risk, Legacy effect, Gullah Geechee, Sapelo Island, UGAMI Publication
%0 Journal Article
%T "I am Sapelo:" Racialized Uneven Development and Land Politics within the Gullah/Geechee Corridor
%D 2020
%B Environment and Planning E: Nature and Space
%9 Article
%! "I am Sapelo:" Racialized Uneven Development and Land Politics within the Gullah/Geechee Corridor
%Z published
%M UGAMI.1120
%A Hardy, Dean
%A Heynen, Nik
%K am, Corridor, Development, Geechee, Gullah, Land, Politics, Racialized, Sapelo, Uneven
%0 Generic
%T "We''re Still Here": An Abolition Ecology Blockade of Double Dispossession of Gullah/Geechee Land
%D 2021
%C Annals of the American Association of Geographers
%9 Article
%! "We''re Still Here": An Abolition Ecology Blockade of Double Dispossession of Gullah/Geechee Land
%Z presented
%M UGAMI.1132
%A Hardy, Dean
%A Bailey, Maurice
%A Heynen, Nik
%K Abolition, Blockade, Dispossession, Double, Ecology, Geechee, Gullah, Here, Land, Still
%0 Journal Article
%T Temperature and salinity control of the concentration of skeletal Na, Mn, and Fe in Dendraster excentricus
%D 1966
%V 20
%P 235-238
%B Pacific Science
%9 Article
%! Temperature and salinity control of the concentration of skeletal Na, Mn, and Fe in Dendraster excentricus
%Z 5-74
%M UGAMI.85
%A Harriss, R.C.
%A Pilkey, O.H.
%K concentration, control, Dendraster, excentricus, Fe, Mn, Na, salinity, skeletal, Temperature
%0 Journal Article
%T Use of sandy beach habitat by Fundulus majalis, a surf-zone fish
%D 1998
%V 164
%P 307-310
%B Marine Ecology Progress Series
%9 Article
%! Use of sandy beach habitat by Fundulus majalis, a surf-zone fish
%Z 809
%M UGAMI.827
%A Harvey, Chris J.
%K beach, fish, Fundulus, habitat, majalis, sandy, surf-zone
%0 Journal Article
%T The effect of organic matter and oxygen on the degradation of bacterial membrane lipids in marine sediments
%D 1986
%V 50
%P 795-804
%B Geochimica et Cosmochimica Acta
%9 Article
%! The effect of organic matter and oxygen on the degradation of bacterial membrane lipids in marine sediments
%Z 19-547
%M UGAMI.559
%A Harvey, H.R.
%A Fallon, R.D.
%A Patton, J.S.
%K bacterial, degradation, lipids, marine, matter, membrane, organic, oxygen, sediments
%0 Journal Article
%T Methanogenesis and microbial lipid synthesis in anoxic salt marsh sediments
%D 1989
%V 7
%P 111-130
%B Biogeochemistry
%9 Article
%! Methanogenesis and microbial lipid synthesis in anoxic salt marsh sediments
%Z -643
%M UGAMI.657
%A Harvey, H.R.
%A Fallon, R.D.
%A Patton, J.S.
%K anoxic, lipid, marsh, Methanogenesis, microbial, salt, sediments, synthesis
%0 Journal Article
%T Facies relations of Crossopodia sp., a trace fossil from the Upper Cretaceous of Kansas, Iowa, and Oklahoma
%D 1969
%V 43
%P 1435-1440
%B Journal of Paleontology
%9 Article
%! Facies relations of Crossopodia sp., a trace fossil from the Upper Cretaceous of Kansas, Iowa, and Oklahoma
%Z 7-185
%M UGAMI.196
%A Hattin, D.E.
%A Frey, R.W.
%K Cretaceous, Crossopodia, Facies, fossil, Iowa, Kansas, Oklahoma, relations, sp, trace, Upper
%0 Journal Article
%T Accumulation of soil carbon drives denitrification potential and lab incubated gas production along a chronosequence of salt marsh development.
%D 2016
%V 172
%P 72-80
%B Estuarine, Coastal, and Shelf Science
%9 Article
%! Accumulation of soil carbon drives denitrification potential and lab incubated gas production along a chronosequence of salt marsh development.
%Z 1045
%M UGAMI.1075
%U http://www.sciencedirect.com/science/article/pii/S0272771416300452
%A He, Y.
%A Widney, S.
%A Ruan, M.
%A Herbert, E.
%A Li, X.
%A Craft, C.
%K Denitrification potential, Ecosystem development, Georgia, Greenhouse gas production, Organic matter accumulation, Salt marsh, Sapelo Island, Soil carbon, USA
%0 Journal Article
%T New species of Marionina (Annelida:Oligochaeta: Enchytraeidae) from Spartina marshes on Sapelo Island, Georgia, USA
%D 1994
%V 107
%P 164-173
%B Proceedings of the Bilogical Society of Washington
%9 Article
%! New species of Marionina (Annelida:Oligochaeta: Enchytraeidae) from Spartina marshes on Sapelo Island, Georgia, USA
%Z 733
%M UGAMI.749
%A Healy, B.
%K Annelida, Enchytraeidae, Georgia, Island, Marionina, marshes, New, Oligochaeta, Sapelo, Spartina, species, USA
%0 Journal Article
%T Oligochaeta in Spartina stems:the microdistribution of Enchytraeidae and Tubificidae in a salt marsh, Sapelo Island, USA
%D 1994
%V 278
%P 111-123
%B Hydrobiologia
%9 Article
%! Oligochaeta in Spartina stems:the microdistribution of Enchytraeidae and Tubificidae in a salt marsh, Sapelo Island, USA
%Z 719
%M UGAMI.735
%A Healy, B.
%A Walters, K.
%K Enchytraeidae, Island, marsh, microdistribution, Oligochaeta, salt, Sapelo, Spartina, stems, Tubificidae, USA
%0 Journal Article
%T Parasites of the clapper rail, Rallus longirostris Boddaert. II. Some trematodes and cestodes from Spartina marshes of the eastern United States
%D 1970
%V 37
%P 147-153
%B Proceedings Helminthological Society Washington
%9 Article
%! Parasites of the clapper rail, Rallus longirostris Boddaert. II. Some trematodes and cestodes from Spartina marshes of the eastern United States
%Z 183*
%M UGAMI.194
%A Heard, R.W.
%K Boddaert, cestodes, clapper, eastern, longirostris, marshes, Parasites, rail, Rallus, Some, Spartina, States, trematodes, United
%0 Journal Article
%T Feeding habits of white catfish from a Georgia estuary
%D 1975
%V 38
%P 20-28
%B Florida Scientist
%9 Article
%! Feeding habits of white catfish from a Georgia estuary
%Z 11-283
%M UGAMI.294
%A Heard, R.W.
%K catfish, estuary, Feeding, Georgia, habits, white
%0 Journal Article
%T A new species of Corophium Latreille, 1806 (Crustacea:Amphipoda) from Georgia brackish waters with some ecological notes
%D 1971
%V 84
%P 467-476
%B Proceedings of the Biological Society of Washington
%9 Article
%! A new species of Corophium Latreille, 1806 (Crustacea:Amphipoda) from Georgia brackish waters with some ecological notes
%Z 9-218
%M UGAMI.228
%A Heard, R.W.III
%A Sikora, W.
%K Amphipoda, brackish, Corophium, Crustacea, ecological, Georgia, Latreille, new, notes, some, species, waters
%0 Journal Article
%T Probolocoryphe otagaki, 1958 (Trematoda:Microphallidae), a senior synonym of Mecynophallus Cable, Connor, and Balling, 1960, with notes on the genus
%D 1969
%V 55
%P 674-675
%B Journal of Parasitology
%9 Article
%! Probolocoryphe otagaki, 1958 (Trematoda:Microphallidae), a senior synonym of Mecynophallus Cable, Connor, and Balling, 1960, with notes on the genus
%Z 7-172
%M UGAMI.183
%A Heard, R.W.III
%A Sikora, W.B.
%K Balling, Cable, Connor, genus, Mecynophallus, Microphallidae, notes, otagaki, Probolocoryphe, senior, synonym, Trematoda
%0 Journal Article
%T Taphonomic redistribution of mollusk shells in a tidal inlet channel, Sapelo Island, Georgia
%D 1986
%V 1
%P 3-16
%B Palaios
%9 Article
%! Taphonomic redistribution of mollusk shells in a tidal inlet channel, Sapelo Island, Georgia
%Z 19-540
%M UGAMI.552
%A Henderson, S.W.
%A Frey, R.W.
%K channel, Georgia, inlet, Island, mollusk, redistribution, Sapelo, shells, Taphonomic, tidal
%0 Book Section
%T Marine science programs at the University of Georgia Marine Institute, Sapelo Island, Georgia
%D 1968
%P 15-17
%I University of Georgia Marine Institute and Coastal Area Planning and Development Commission
%B The Future of the Marshlands and Sea Islands of Georgia
%9 Article
%! Marine science programs at the University of Georgia Marine Institute, Sapelo Island, Georgia
%Z 175*
%M UGAMI.186
%A Henry, V.J.Jr.
%E Maney, D.S.
%E Marland, F.C.
%E West, C.B.
%K Georgia, Institute, Island, Marine, programs, Sapelo, science, University
%0 Journal Article
%T Origin of capes and shoals along the southeastern coast of the United States: Reply
%D 1971
%V 82
%P 3541-3542
%B Geological Society of America Buletin
%9 Article
%! Origin of capes and shoals along the southeastern coast of the United States: Reply
%Z 9-222
%M UGAMI.232
%A Henry, V.J.Jr.
%K capes, coast, Origin, Reply, shoals, southeastern, States, United
%0 Journal Article
%T Quaternary paralic and shelf sediments of Georgia
%D 1968
%V 9
%P 195-214
%B Southeastern Geology
%9 Article
%! Quaternary paralic and shelf sediments of Georgia
%Z 6-150
%M UGAMI.161
%A Henry, V.J.Jr.
%A Hoyt, J.H.
%K Georgia, paralic, Quaternary, sediments, shelf
%0 Book Section
%T Geology of the Chatham County area, Georgia
%D 1973
%P 67-80
%I Univ. Ga., Dept. Geol., Guidebook, 8th Ann. Ga. Geol. Soc. Field Trip
%B The Neogene of the Georgia Coast
%9 Article
%! Geology of the Chatham County area, Georgia
%Z 10-270
%M UGAMI.281
%A Henry, V.J.Jr.
%A Giles, R.T.
%A Woolsey, J.R.
%E Frey, R.W.
%K area, Chatham, County, Geology, Georgia
%0 Journal Article
%T Consumer diversity across kingdoms supports multiple functions in a coastal ecosystem
%D 2013
%V 110
%N 51
%P 20621-20626
%B Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences of the United States of America
%8 Dec
%9 Article
%! Consumer diversity across kingdoms supports multiple functions in a coastal ecosystem
%Z #1034 ISI Document Delivery No.: 273PR Times Cited: 1 Cited Reference Count: 53 Hensel, Marc J. S. Silliman, Brian R. National Science Foundation (NSF); National Oceanic and Atmospheric Association through the Sapelo Island National Estuarine Research Reserve System Graduate Research Fellowship; University of Florida; Georgia Coastal Ecosystems Long Term Ecological Research program [NSF OCE06-20959]; University of Georgia Marine Institute [1034] We thank J. Griffin, C. Angelini, C. Osenberg, T. Palmer, J. Byrnes, and three anonymous reviewers for comments on earlier versions of this manuscript. We also thank S. Buhler, E. Monaco, and D. Abbey for dedicated work in the field. This work was mainly supported through a National Science Foundation (NSF) CAREER Grant [biological oceanography (BIO-OCE)] awarded to B. R. S., and in part by the National Oceanic and Atmospheric Association through the Sapelo Island National Estuarine Research Reserve System Graduate Research Fellowship awarded to M. J. S. H. and by the University of Florida (University Scholars Program awarded to M. J. S. H.). This work is part of the Georgia Coastal Ecosystems Long Term Ecological Research program (NSF OCE06-20959), and is contribution number 1034 from the University of Georgia Marine Institute. 1 NATL ACAD SCIENCES WASHINGTON P NATL ACAD SCI USA
%M UGAMI.1065
%A Hensel, M.J.S.
%A Silliman, B.R.
%K ATLANTIC SALT MARSHES, BIODIVERSITY LOSS, CURRENT KNOWLEDGE, DIE-OFF, FUNGAL, fungus, Litoraria irrorata, Multidisciplinary Sciences, multifunctionality, PLANT DIVERSITY, SERVICES, Sesarma reticulatum, SPARTINA-ALTERNIFLORA, SPECIES RICHNESS, TOP-DOWN CONTROL
%0 Journal Article
%T Differential effects of chronic and acute seawater intrusion on tidal freshwater marsh carbon cycling
%D 2018
%B Biogeochemistry
%7 24 March 2018
%9 Article
%! Differential effects of chronic and acute seawater intrusion on tidal freshwater marsh carbon cycling
%Z published
%M UGAMI.1095
%A Herbert, E.R.
%A Schubauer-Berigan, J.
%A Craft, C.
%K acute, carbon, chronic, cycling, Differential, effects, freshwater, intrusion, marsh, seawater, tidal
%0 Journal Article
%T Effects of ten years of nitrogen and phosphorus fertilization in tidal freshwater marshes
%D 2018
%V IN REVISION
%B Limnology and Oceanography
%9 Article
%! Effects of ten years of nitrogen and phosphorus fertilization in tidal freshwater marshes
%Z published
%M UGAMI.1096
%A Herbert, E.R.
%A Schubauer-Berigan, J.
%A Craft, C.B.
%K Effects, fertilization, freshwater, marshes, nitrogen, phosphorus, tidal, years
%0 Journal Article
%T Abstracts of research reports from the University of Georgia Marine Institute Student Intern Program, 1992-1995
%D 1996
%V 54
%N 2
%P 91-98
%B Georgia Journal of Science
%9 Article
%! Abstracts of research reports from the University of Georgia Marine Institute Student Intern Program, 1992-1995
%Z 771
%M UGAMI.792
%A Hermeno, E.
%A Knowlton, M.K.
%A Krueger, J.P.
%A Lerberg, S.
%A Nomann, B.E.
%A Page, T.
%A Richards, C.L.
%A Stallins, J.A.
%A Townsend, H.
%K Abstracts, Georgia, Institute, Intern, Marine, Program, reports, research, Student, University
%0 Journal Article
%T Evaluation of a Localized Treatment Technique Using Three Ready-to-Use Products Against the Drywood Termite Incisitermes snyderi (Kalotermitidae) in Naturally Infested Lumber
%D 2012
%V 3
%N 1
%P 25-40
%B Insects
%9 Article
%! Evaluation of a Localized Treatment Technique Using Three Ready-to-Use Products Against the Drywood Termite Incisitermes snyderi (Kalotermitidae) in Naturally Infested Lumber
%Z #1021
%M UGAMI.1054
%U http://www.mdpi.com/2075-4450/3/1/25
%A Hickman, Robert
%A Forschler, Brian T.
%K Against, Drywood, Evaluation, Incisitermes, Infested, Kalotermitidae, Localized, Lumber, Naturally, Products, Ready-to-Use, snyderi, Technique, Termite, Treatment
%0 Journal Article
%T Gas chromatographic analysis of muramic acid and glucosamine for microbial biomass determinations
%D 1982
%V 51 p.
%B University of Georgia Sea Grant Technical Report 82-2
%9 Article
%! Gas chromatographic analysis of muramic acid and glucosamine for microbial biomass determinations
%Z 466*
%M UGAMI.478
%A Hicks, R.E.
%A Newell, S.Y.
%K acid, analysis, biomass, chromatographic, determinations, Gas, glucosamine, microbial, muramic
%0 Journal Article
%T An improved gas chromatographic method for measuring glucosamine and muramic acid concentrations
%D 1983
%V 128
%P 438-445
%B Analytical Biochemistry
%9 Article
%! An improved gas chromatographic method for measuring glucosamine and muramic acid concentrations
%Z 16-471
%M UGAMI.483
%A Hicks, R.E.
%A Newell, S.Y.
%K acid, chromatographic, concentrations, gas, glucosamine, improved, measuring, method, muramic
%0 Journal Article
%T A comparison of glucosamine and biovolume conversion factors for estimating fungal biomass
%D 1984
%V 42
%P 355-360
%B Oikos
%9 Article
%! A comparison of glucosamine and biovolume conversion factors for estimating fungal biomass
%Z 17-487
%M UGAMI.499
%A Hicks, R.E.
%A Newell, S.Y.
%K biomass, biovolume, comparison, conversion, estimating, factors, fungal, glucosamine
%0 Journal Article
%T The growth of bacteria and the fungus Phaeosphaeria typharum (Desm.) Holm (Eumycota:Ascomycotina) in salt-marsh microcosms in the presence and absence of mercury.
%D 1984
%V 78
%P 143-155
%B Journal Experimental Marine Biology and Ecology
%9 Article
%! The growth of bacteria and the fungus Phaeosphaeria typharum (Desm.) Holm (Eumycota:Ascomycotina) in salt-marsh microcosms in the presence and absence of mercury.
%Z 17-500
%M UGAMI.512
%A Hicks, R.E.
%A Newell, S.Y.
%K absence, Ascomycotina, bacteria, Desm, Eumycota, fungus, growth, Holm, mercury, microcosms, Phaeosphaeria, presence, salt-marsh, typharum
%0 Journal Article
%T Salt marsh elevation and habitat mapping using hyperspectral and LIDAR data
%D 2013
%V 139
%P 318-330
%B Remote Sensing of Environment
%8 Dec
%9 Article
%! Salt marsh elevation and habitat mapping using hyperspectral and LIDAR data
%Z #1032 ISI Document Delivery No.: 285TK Times Cited: 2 Cited Reference Count: 75 Hladik, Christine Schalles, John Alber, Merryl Georgia Coastal Ecosystems LTER Project (NSF) [OCE-0620959, OCE-1237140]; National Estuarine Research Reserve System Graduate Research Fellowship (NOAA) [NA09NOS4200046]; Environmental Cooperative Science Center (NOAA) [NS17AE1624]; NASA-Nebraska Space Grant (NASA) [NNG05GJ03H] We thank K. Anstead, C. Connor, N. Scoville and J. Shalack for all of their assistance with the RTK survey. We thank G. Alfayo, H. Guo, K. Helm, G. Hemenway, T. Kenemer, M. Machmuller, P. Merani, E. Milton, D. Saucedo, J. Schalles, M. Volkmer Steele, and K. Wieski for field assistance in the 2006 and 2007 hyperspectral imagery salt marsh surveys; R. Perk and M. Steele for flight planning and AISA data acquisition and initial processing; J. Carpenter with assistance in GIS procedures and data analysis; J. Garbisch, B. Miller, and M. Price and other staff for logistical support at the University of Georgia Marine Institute; and A. Gaddis for logistical support, F. Hay, D. Hurley and other staff at the Sapelo Island National Estuarine Research Reserve. S. Pennings, M. Madden, C. Alexander, J. Morris and an anonymous reviewer provided comments on the manuscript. This research was supported by the Georgia Coastal Ecosystems LTER Project (NSF Awards OCE-0620959 and OCE-1237140), a National Estuarine Research Reserve System Graduate Research Fellowship (NOAA Award NA09NOS4200046), the Environmental Cooperative Science Center (NOAA Award NS17AE1624), and the NASA-Nebraska Space Grant (NASA Award NNG05GJ03H) for Creighton student research support. This is contribution number 1032 from the University of Georgia Marine Institute. 2 ELSEVIER SCIENCE INC NEW YORK REMOTE SENS ENVIRON
%M UGAMI.1064
%A Hladik, C.
%A Schalles, J.
%A Alber, M.
%K ACCURACY ASSESSMENT, COASTAL, Digital elevation model (DEM), Environmental Sciences, FUSION, Hyperspectral imagery, Imaging Science & Photographic, LAND-COVER CLASSIFICATION, LIDAR, MARSH, marshes, Multisensor data, MULTISPECTRAL IMAGERY, PATTERNS, Remote Sensing, Salt, SEA-LEVEL RISE, SPARTINA-ALTERNIFLORA, Technology, TIDAL, WETLAND VEGETATION
%0 Journal Article
%T CONSEQUENCES OF OMNIVORY FOR TROPHIC INTERACTIONS ON A SALT MARSH SHRUB
%D 2008
%V 89
%N 6
%P 1714-1722
%B Ecology
%9 Article
%! CONSEQUENCES OF OMNIVORY FOR TROPHIC INTERACTIONS ON A SALT MARSH SHRUB
%Z 958
%M UGAMI.989
%A Ho, Chuan-Kai
%A Pennings, S.C.
%K Armases cinereum, food web, herbivory, Iva frutescens, omnivory, Ophraella notulata, Paria aterrima, predation, salt marsh, top-down bottom-up, trophic cascade, Uroleucon ambrosiae.
%0 Journal Article
%T Preference and Performance in Plant-Herbivore Interactions across Latitude-A Study in US Atlantic Salt Marshes
%D 2013
%V 8
%N 3
%P e59829
%B PLoS One
%8 Mar 22
%9 Article
%! Preference and Performance in Plant-Herbivore Interactions across Latitude-A Study in US Atlantic Salt Marshes
%Z #1027 Times Cited: 1 Cited Reference Count: 65 1
%M UGAMI.1060
%A Ho, Chuan-Kai
%A Pennings, Steven C.
%K Ophraella, Paroxya clavuliger Orchelimum, Spartina, Uroleucon, alterniflora]/Insecta, amino acids, Angiospermae, Angiosperms, Animalia, Animals, Arthropoda, Arthropods, Atlantic salt marsh, Biochemistry studies - Proteins, biology - Animal, body size, Coleoptera [75304], Compositae, Dicots, Ecology: environmental, Ecology: environmental biology - Plant, Environmental Sciences), experimental morphology, fidicinium], geographic difference, Gramineae [25305], Homoptera [75324], Insecta, Insects, interaction, Invertebrata, Invertebrata: comparative, Invertebrates, leaf, life-history constraint, Monocots, Nearctic region, nitrogen/chlorophyll, North America, notulata]/Dicotyledones, Orthoptera [75340], peptides and, physiology and pathology - Insecta: physiology, Plantae, Plants, species preference, species-species, Spermatophyta, Spermatophytes, Terrestrial Ecology (Ecology, tissue, toughness, USA, Vascular Plants
%0 Journal Article
%T Is Diet Quality an Overlooked Mechanism for Bergmann''s Rule?
%D 2010
%V 175
%N 2
%P 269-276
%B American Naturalist
%8 Feb
%9 Article
%! Is Diet Quality an Overlooked Mechanism for Bergmann''s Rule?
%Z #987 ISI Document Delivery No.: 544IV Times Cited: 23 Cited Reference Count: 65 Ho, Chuan-Kai Pennings, Steven C. Carefoot, Thomas H. Pennings, Steven/A-8326-2013 Pennings, Steven/0000-0003-4757-7125 National Oceanic and Atmospheric Administration''s National Estuarine Research Reserve (NERR) Graduate Research Fellowship (GRF) [NA04 NOS 4200137]; National Science Foundation [OCE99-82133, DEB-0296160, DEB-0638796, DEB-0709923]; Natural Sciences and Engineering Research Council of Canada; Georgia Coastal Ecosystems LTER; University of Georgia Marine Institute [987] We thank the National Oceanic and Atmospheric Administration''s National Estuarine Research Reserve (NERR) Graduate Research Fellowship (GRF) program (NA04 NOS 4200137), National Science Foundation (OCE99-82133, DEB-0296160, 0638796, 0709923), and Natural Sciences and Engineering Research Council of Canada for funding and the Ashepoo, Combahee, and Edisto Basin Reserve for serving as the GRF host reserve. We thank staff from 12 NERR and three Long-Term Ecological Research (LTER) sites, especially L. Blum, T. Buck, C. Buzzelli, M. Dionne, R. Gleeson, C. Hopkinson, D. Hurley, M. Kennish, P. Kenny, K. McGlathery, P. Murray, K. O''Brien, J. Porter, K. Raposa, W. Reay, R. Scarborough, B. Smith, B. Stankelis, B. Stroud, B. Truitt, C. Weidman, H. Wells, E. L. Wenner, and C. Zemp, for assistance. We thank R. Azevedo, B. Cole, R. Denno (1945-2008), T. Frankino, E. Siemann, M. Travisano, and two anonymous reviewers for advice and comments on the manuscript. This work would not be done without support from Y. Chung, C.-Y. Ho, H.-C.-M. Ho, A. Lynes, F.-J. Sha, L. Wason, and K. Wieski. This is a contribution of the Georgia Coastal Ecosystems LTER program and contribution 987 from the University of Georgia Marine Institute. 24 UNIV CHICAGO PRESS CHICAGO AM NAT
%M UGAMI.1007
%A Ho, C.K.
%A Pennings, S.C.
%A Carefoot, T.H.
%K biogeography, body size, BODY-SIZE, COAST SALT MARSHES, DROSOPHILA-MELANOGASTER, Ecology, ECTOTHERMS, Evolutionary Biology, GEOGRAPHIC-VARIATION, herbivore, latitudinal variation, plant quality, PREDATION RISK, SEED-FEEDING BEETLE, SEXUAL SIZE DIMORPHISM, Spartina alterniflora, TEMPERATURE
%0 Journal Article
%T A new species of Halophytophthora from Atlantic and Pacific subtropical islands
%D 1992
%V 84
%P 548-554
%B Mycologia
%9 Article
%! A new species of Halophytophthora from Atlantic and Pacific subtropical islands
%Z 696
%M UGAMI.712
%A Ho, H.H.
%A Nakagiri, A.
%A Newell, S.Y.
%K Atlantic, Halophytophthora, islands, new, Pacific, species, subtropical
%0 Report
%T Microbial degradation of natural and pollutionally-derived lignocellulosic detritus in wetland ecosystems
%D 1982
%P 58
%B Office Water Resour. Technol. Proj. Tech. Rept. A-082-Ga.
%! Microbial degradation of natural and pollutionally-derived lignocellulosic detritus in wetland ecosystems
%Z 479*
%M UGAMI.491
%A Hodson, R.E.
%A Benner, R.
%A Maccubbin, A.E.
%E Interior, United States Department of the
%K degradation, detritus, ecosystems, lignocellulosic, Microbial, natural, pollutionally-derived, wetland
%0 Book Section
%T Transformations and fate of lignocellulosic detritus in marine environments
%D 1983
%V 5
%P 185-195
%I John Wiley & Son
%B Biodeterioration
%9 Article
%! Transformations and fate of lignocellulosic detritus in marine environments
%Z 17-475
%M UGAMI.487
%A Hodson, R.E.
%A Benner, R.
%A Maccubbin, A.E.
%E Oxley, T.A.
%K detritus, environments, fate, lignocellulosic, marine, Transformations
%0 Journal Article
%T Lignocellulose and lignin in the salt marsh grass Spartina alterniflora: initial concentrations and short-term, post-depositional changes in detrital matter
%D 1984
%V 81
%P 1-7
%B Marine Biology
%9 Article
%! Lignocellulose and lignin in the salt marsh grass Spartina alterniflora: initial concentrations and short-term, post-depositional changes in detrital matter
%Z 18-515
%M UGAMI.527
%A Hodson, R.E.
%A Christian, R.R.
%A Maccubbin, A.E.
%K alterniflora, changes, concentrations, detrital, grass, initial, lignin, Lignocellulose, marsh, matter, post-depositional, salt, short-term, Spartina
%0 Book Section
%T Microbial transformation of detrital carbon in wetland ecosystems
%D 1982
%P 277-297
%I Van Nostrand Reinhold Co., Inc.
%B Ecological Aspects of Wetland Treatment of Wastewater
%9 Article
%! Microbial transformation of detrital carbon in wetland ecosystems
%Z 17-477
%M UGAMI.489
%A Hodson, R.E.
%A Maccubbin, A.E.
%A Benner, R.
%A Murray, R.
%E Larson, J.
%K carbon, detrital, ecosystems, Microbial, transformation, wetland
%0 Book Section
%T Modeling the persistence of lignocellulosic detritus in wetland ecosystems
%D 1987
%V 1
%P 357-374
%I Plenum Publ. Corp.
%C New York
%B Biodeterioration Research
%9 Article
%! Modeling the persistence of lignocellulosic detritus in wetland ecosystems
%Z 20-579
%M UGAMI.592
%A Hodson, R.E.
%A Moran, M.A.
%A Benner, R.
%E Llewellyn, G.C.
%E O''Rear, C.E.
%K detritus, ecosystems, lignocellulosic, Modeling, persistence, wetland
%0 Journal Article
%T Ectoparasitism by juvenile sea catfish, Galeichthys felis
%D 1966
%V 4
%P 880-881
%B Copeia
%9 Article
%! Ectoparasitism by juvenile sea catfish, Galeichthys felis
%Z 5-109
%M UGAMI.120
%A Hoese, H.D.
%K catfish, Ectoparasitism, felis, Galeichthys, juvenile, sea
%0 Journal Article
%T Effect of higher than normal salinities on salt marshes
%D 1967
%V 12
%P 249-261
%B Contributions in Marine Science
%9 Article
%! Effect of higher than normal salinities on salt marshes
%Z 6-120
%M UGAMI.131
%A Hoese, H.D.
%K higher, marshes, normal, salinities, salt
%0 Journal Article
%T Dolphin feeding out of water in a salt marsh
%D 1971
%V 52
%P 222-223
%B Journal of Mammalogy
%9 Article
%! Dolphin feeding out of water in a salt marsh
%Z 9-217
%M UGAMI.227
%A Hoese, R.
%K Dolphin, feeding, marsh, out, salt, water
%0 Journal Article
%T Shallow-water benthic and pelagic metabolism: evidence of heterotrophy in the nearshore Georgia Bight
%D 1985
%V 87
%P 19-32
%B Marine Biology
%9 Article
%! Shallow-water benthic and pelagic metabolism: evidence of heterotrophy in the nearshore Georgia Bight
%Z 18-530
%M UGAMI.542
%A Hopkinson, C.S.
%K benthic, Bight, evidence, Georgia, heterotrophy, metabolism, nearshore, pelagic, Shallow-water
%0 Journal Article
%T Nutrient regeneration in shallow-water sediments of the estuarine plume region of the nearshore Georgia Bight, USA
%D 1987
%V 94
%P 127-142
%B Marine Biology
%9 Article
%! Nutrient regeneration in shallow-water sediments of the estuarine plume region of the nearshore Georgia Bight, USA
%Z 558
%M UGAMI.571
%A Hopkinson, C.S.
%K Bight, estuarine, Georgia, nearshore, Nutrient, plume, regeneration, region, sediments, shallow-water, USA
%0 Book Section
%T Patterns of organic carbon exchange between coastal ecosystems: The mass balance approach in salt marsh ecosystems
%D 1988
%P 122-154
%I Springer-Verlag
%C Berlin/Heidelberg
%B Coastal-Offshore Ecosystems Interactions
%9 Article
%! Patterns of organic carbon exchange between coastal ecosystems: The mass balance approach in salt marsh ecosystems
%Z 20-577
%M UGAMI.590
%A Hopkinson, C.S.
%E Jansson, B.-O.
%K approach, balance, carbon, coastal, ecosystems, exchange, marsh, mass, organic, Patterns, salt
%0 Journal Article
%T A comparison of ecosystem dynamics in freshwater wetlands
%D 1992
%V 15
%P 549-562
%B Estuaries
%9 Article
%! A comparison of ecosystem dynamics in freshwater wetlands
%Z 743
%M UGAMI.742
%A Hopkinson, C.S.
%K comparison, dynamics, ecosystem, freshwater, wetlands
%0 Book Section
%T The energy pattern of development in coastal Louisiana
%D 1981
%P 413-424
%I Elsevier Co.
%C New York
%B Energy and Ecological Modelling
%9 Article
%! The energy pattern of development in coastal Louisiana
%Z 15-428
%M UGAMI.440
%A Hopkinson, C.S.
%A Day, J.W.
%E Bosserman, R.
%E Mitsch, W.J.
%E Klopatek, J.
%K coastal, development, energy, Louisiana, pattern
%0 Journal Article
%T Rapid sampling of organic matter in flooded soils and sediments
%D 1984
%V 7
%P 181-184
%B Estuaries
%9 Article
%! Rapid sampling of organic matter in flooded soils and sediments
%Z 17-484
%M UGAMI.496
%A Hopkinson, C.S.
%A Dunn, E.L.
%K flooded, matter, organic, Rapid, sampling, sediments, soils
%0 Book Section
%T The estuary extended--A recipient-system of estuarine outwelling in Georgia
%D 1984
%P 313-330
%I Academic Press
%C New York
%B The Estuary as a Filter
%9 Article
%! The estuary extended--A recipient-system of estuarine outwelling in Georgia
%Z 17-503
%M UGAMI.515
%A Hopkinson, C.S.
%A Hoffman, F.A.
%E Kennedy, V.S.
%K estuarine, estuary, extended, Georgia, outwelling, recipient-system
%0 Journal Article
%T Static and dynamic aspects of nitrogen cycling in the salt marsh graminoid Spartina alterniflora
%D 1984
%V 65
%P 961-969
%B Ecology
%9 Article
%! Static and dynamic aspects of nitrogen cycling in the salt marsh graminoid Spartina alterniflora
%Z 17-489
%M UGAMI.501
%A Hopkinson, C.S.
%A Schubauer, J.P.
%K alterniflora, aspects, cycling, dynamic, graminoid, marsh, nitrogen, salt, Spartina, Static
%0 Generic
%T Comparative Metabolism and Blue Carbon Sequestration of Two Wetland-Dominated Estuaries
%D 2021
%9 Article
%! Comparative Metabolism and Blue Carbon Sequestration of Two Wetland-Dominated Estuaries
%Z published
%M UGAMI.1124
%A Hopkinson, Charles S.
%A Weston, Nathaniel B.
%K carbon budget, carbon burial, carbon dioxide, net ecosystem production, organic carbon, primary production, respiration, salt marsh
%0 Journal Article
%T In situ measurements of nutrient and oxygen fluxes in a coastal benthic community
%D 1982
%V 10
%P 29-35
%B Marine Ecology-Progress Series
%9 Article
%! In situ measurements of nutrient and oxygen fluxes in a coastal benthic community
%Z 16-462
%M UGAMI.474
%A Hopkinson, C.S.
%A Wetzel, R.L.
%K benthic, coastal, community, fluxes, measurements, nutrient, oxygen, situ
%0 Journal Article
%T Ecological significance of summer storms in a shallow water estuarine system
%D 1985
%V 28
%P 69-77
%B Contributions in Marine Science
%9 Article
%! Ecological significance of summer storms in a shallow water estuarine system
%Z 18-529
%M UGAMI.541
%A Hopkinson, C.S.
%A Day, J.W.
%A Kjerfve, B.
%K Ecological, estuarine, shallow, significance, storms, summer, system, water
%0 Journal Article
%T Community metabolism and nutrient cycling of Gray''s Reef, a hard bottom habitat in the Georgia Bight
%D 1991
%V 73
%P 105-120
%B Marine Ecology-Progress Series
%9 Article
%! Community metabolism and nutrient cycling of Gray''s Reef, a hard bottom habitat in the Georgia Bight
%Z 667
%M UGAMI.682
%A Hopkinson, C.S.
%A Fallon, R.D.
%A Jansson, B.O.
%A Schubauer, J.P.
%K Bight, bottom, Community, cycling, Georgia, Gray''s, habitat, hard, metabolism, nutrient, Reef
%0 Book Section
%T Nitrogen pools and turnover times in a tropical seagrass system
%D 1988
%P 171-180
%I Springer-Verlag
%B Ecology of the Southern Gulf of Mexico Coastal Zone
%9 Article
%! Nitrogen pools and turnover times in a tropical seagrass system
%Z 20-572
%M UGAMI.585
%A Hopkinson, C.S.
%A Kipp, S.
%A Stevenson, J.
%E Yanez-Arancibia, A.
%K Nitrogen, pools, seagrass, system, times, tropical, turnover
%0 Journal Article
%T Microbial regeneration of ammonium in the water column of Davies Reef, Australia
%D 1987
%V 41
%P 147-153
%B Marine Ecology-Progress Series
%9 Article
%! Microbial regeneration of ammonium in the water column of Davies Reef, Australia
%Z 590
%M UGAMI.603
%A Hopkinson, C.S.
%A Sherr, B.F.
%A Ducklow, H.W.
%K ammonium, Australia, column, Davies, Microbial, Reef, regeneration, water
%0 Journal Article
%T Size-fractionated metabolism of coastal microbial plankton
%D 1989
%V 51
%P 155-166
%B Marine Ecology-Progress Series
%9 Article
%! Size-fractionated metabolism of coastal microbial plankton
%Z 619
%M UGAMI.632
%A Hopkinson, C.S.
%A Sherr, B.F.
%A Wiebe, W.J.
%K coastal, metabolism, microbial, plankton, Size-fractionated
%0 Book Section
%T Simulation models of coastal wetland and estuarine systems: Realization of goals
%D 1988
%P 67-97
%I Elsevier Science Publishers B. V.
%C Amsterdam
%B Wetland Modelling
%9 Article
%! Simulation models of coastal wetland and estuarine systems: Realization of goals
%Z 20-582
%M UGAMI.595
%A Hopkinson, C.S.
%A Wetzel, R.L.
%A Day, J.W.
%E Mitsch, W.J.
%E Straskraba, M.
%E Jorgensen, S.
%K coastal, estuarine, goals, models, Realization, Simulation, systems, wetland
%0 Book Section
%T The Upland/Estuary/Nearshore couple
%D 1989
%P 77-87
%I NOAA Estuary-of-the-Month Seminar Series No. 12
%B Barrier Island/Salt Marsh Estuaries, Southeast Atlantic Coast: Issues, Resources, Status, and Management.
%9 Article
%! The Upland/Estuary/Nearshore couple
%Z 607
%M UGAMI.620
%A Hopkinson, C.S.Jr.
%K couple, Estuary, Nearshore, Upland
%0 Journal Article
%T Studies on the bioluminescence of Renilla reniformis. V. Absorption and fluorescence characteristics of chromatographically pure luciferin
%D 1965
%V 102
%P 386-396
%B Biochimica et Biophysica Acta
%9 Article
%! Studies on the bioluminescence of Renilla reniformis. V. Absorption and fluorescence characteristics of chromatographically pure luciferin
%Z 5-84
%M UGAMI.95
%A Hori, K.
%A Cormier, M.J.
%K Absorption, bioluminescence, characteristics, chromatographically, fluorescence, luciferin, pure, reniformis, Renilla, Studies
%0 Journal Article
%T Studies on the bioluminescence of Renilla reniformis. VI. Some chemical properties and the tentative partial structure of luciferin
%D 1966
%V 130
%P 420-425
%B Biochimica et Biophysica Acta
%9 Article
%! Studies on the bioluminescence of Renilla reniformis. VI. Some chemical properties and the tentative partial structure of luciferin
%Z 6-117
%M UGAMI.128
%A Hori, K.
%A Cormier, M.J.
%K bioluminescence, chemical, luciferin, partial, properties, reniformis, Renilla, Some, structure, Studies, tentative
%0 Journal Article
%T Renilla luciferin as the substrate for calcium induced photoprotein bioluminescence. Assignment of luciferin tautomers in aequorin and mnemiopsin
%D 1975
%V 14
%P 2371-2376
%B Biochemistry
%9 Article
%! Renilla luciferin as the substrate for calcium induced photoprotein bioluminescence. Assignment of luciferin tautomers in aequorin and mnemiopsin
%Z 11-302
%M UGAMI.314
%A Hori, K.
%A Anderson, J.M.
%A Ward, W.W.
%A Cormier, M.J.
%K aequorin, Assignment, bioluminescence, calcium, induced, luciferin, mnemiopsin, photoprotein, Renilla, substrate, tautomers
%0 Journal Article
%T Structure of native Renilla reniformis luciferin
%D 1977
%V 74
%P 4285-4287
%B Proceedings of the National Academy of Science of the USA
%9 Article
%! Structure of native Renilla reniformis luciferin
%Z 13-339
%M UGAMI.351
%A Hori, K.
%A Charbonneau, H.
%A Hart, R.C.
%A Cormier, M.J.
%K luciferin, native, reniformis, Renilla, Structure
%0 Journal Article
%T Studies on the bioluminescence of Renilla reniformis. XI. Location of the sulfate group in luciferyl sulfate
%D 1972
%V 256
%P 638-644
%B Biochimica et Biophysica Acta
%9 Article
%! Studies on the bioluminescence of Renilla reniformis. XI. Location of the sulfate group in luciferyl sulfate
%Z 9-244
%M UGAMI.254
%A Hori, K.
%A Nakano, Y.
%A Cormier, M.J.
%K bioluminescence, group, Location, luciferyl, reniformis, Renilla, Studies, sulfate
%0 Journal Article
%T Identification of the product excited states during the chemiluminescent and bioluminescent oxidation of Renilla (sea pansy) luciferin and certain of its analogs
%D 1973
%V 12
%P 4463-4468
%B Biochemistry
%9 Article
%! Identification of the product excited states during the chemiluminescent and bioluminescent oxidation of Renilla (sea pansy) luciferin and certain of its analogs
%Z 10-272
%M UGAMI.283
%A Hori, K.
%A Wampler, J.E.
%A Matthews, J.C.
%A Cormier, M.J.
%K analogs, bioluminescent, certain, chemiluminescent, during, excited, Identification, luciferin, oxidation, pansy, product, Renilla, sea, states
%0 Journal Article
%T Characteristic trace fossils in Upper Cretaceous sandstones of Book Cliffs and Wasatch Plateau
%D 1966
%V 80
%P 35-53
%B Coals of Central Utah Bulletin Utah Geological Survey
%9 Article
%! Characteristic trace fossils in Upper Cretaceous sandstones of Book Cliffs and Wasatch Plateau
%Z 5-113
%M UGAMI.124
%A Howard, J.D.
%K Book, Characteristic, Cliffs, Cretaceous, fossils, Plateau, sandstones, trace, Upper, Wasatch
%0 Journal Article
%T Patterns of sediment dispersal in the Fountain Formation of Colorado
%D 1966
%V 3
%P 147-153
%B The Mountain Geologist
%9 Article
%! Patterns of sediment dispersal in the Fountain Formation of Colorado
%Z 5-110
%M UGAMI.121
%A Howard, J.D.
%K Colorado, dispersal, Formation, Fountain, Patterns, sediment
%0 Journal Article
%T Sedimentation of the Panther Sandstone Tongue
%D 1966
%V 80
%P 23-33
%B Coals of Central Utah Bulletin Utah Geological Survey
%9 Article
%! Sedimentation of the Panther Sandstone Tongue
%Z 5-114
%M UGAMI.125
%A Howard, J.D.
%K Panther, Sandstone, Sedimentation, Tongue
%0 Journal Article
%T X-ray radiography for examination of burrowing in sediments by marine invertebrate organisms
%D 1968
%V 11
%P 249-258
%B Sedimentology
%9 Article
%! X-ray radiography for examination of burrowing in sediments by marine invertebrate organisms
%Z 7-164
%M UGAMI.175
%A Howard, J.D.
%K burrowing, examination, invertebrate, marine, organisms, radiography, sediments, X-ray
%0 Journal Article
%T Depositional control of Upper Cretaceous coal units
%D 1969
%V 6
%P 143-146
%B Mountain Geologist
%9 Article
%! Depositional control of Upper Cretaceous coal units
%Z 7-177
%M UGAMI.188
%A Howard, J.D.
%K coal, control, Cretaceous, Depositional, units, Upper
%0 Journal Article
%T Radiographic examination of variations in barrier island facies: Sapelo Island, Georgia
%D 1969
%V 19
%P 217-232
%B Transactions-Gulf Coast Association of Geological Societies
%9 Article
%! Radiographic examination of variations in barrier island facies: Sapelo Island, Georgia
%Z 7-181
%M UGAMI.192
%A Howard, J.D.
%K barrier, examination, facies, Georgia, island, Radiographic, Sapelo, variations
%0 Book Section
%T Amphipod bioturbate textures in Recent and Pleistocene beach sediments
%D 1971
%P 213-223
%B Recent Advances in Paleoecology and Ichnology AGI Short Course Lecture Notes
%9 Article
%! Amphipod bioturbate textures in Recent and Pleistocene beach sediments
%Z 242*
%M UGAMI.252
%A Howard, J.D.
%K Amphipod, beach, bioturbate, Pleistocene, Recent, sediments, textures
%0 Book Section
%T Comparison of the beach-to-offshore sequence in modern and ancient sediments
%D 1971
%P 148-183
%B Recent Advances in Paleoecology and Ichnology AGI Short Course Lecture Notes
%9 Article
%! Comparison of the beach-to-offshore sequence in modern and ancient sediments
%Z 240*
%M UGAMI.250
%A Howard, J.D.
%K ancient, beach-to-offshore, Comparison, modern, sediments, sequence
%0 Book Section
%T Trace fossils as criteria for recognizing shorelines as stratigraphic record
%D 1971
%V 16
%P 215-225
%I SEPM Sp. Publ.
%B Recognition of Ancient Sedimentary Environments
%9 Article
%! Trace fossils as criteria for recognizing shorelines as stratigraphic record
%Z 9-226
%M UGAMI.236
%A Howard, J.D.
%E Rigby, J.K.
%E Hamblin, W.K.
%K criteria, fossils, recognizing, record, shorelines, stratigraphic, Trace
%0 Book Section
%T Trace fossils in paleoecological tools
%D 1971
%P 184-212
%B Recent Advances in Paleoecology and Ichnology AGI Short Course Lecture Notes
%9 Article
%! Trace fossils in paleoecological tools
%Z 241*
%M UGAMI.251
%A Howard, J.D.
%K fossils, paleoecological, tools, Trace
%0 Book Section
%T Burrowing patterns of haustoriid amphipods from Sapelo Island, Georgia
%D 1971
%P 243-262
%I Seel House Press
%C Liverpool
%B Trace Fossils
%9 Article
%! Burrowing patterns of haustoriid amphipods from Sapelo Island, Georgia
%Z 193*
%M UGAMI.204
%A Howard, J.D.
%A Edlers, C.A.
%E Crimes, T.P.
%E Harper, J.C.
%K amphipods, Burrowing, Georgia, haustoriid, Island, patterns, Sapelo
%0 Journal Article
%T Characteristic physical and biogenic sedimentary structures in Georgia estuaries
%D 1973
%V 57
%P 1169-1184
%B Bulletin of the American Association of Petroleum Geologists
%9 Article
%! Characteristic physical and biogenic sedimentary structures in Georgia estuaries
%Z 10-264
%M UGAMI.274
%A Howard, J.D.
%A Frey, R.W.
%K biogenic, Characteristic, estuaries, Georgia, physical, sedimentary, structures
%0 Journal Article
%T Estuaries of the Georgia coast, U.S.A.: Sedimentology and biology. I. Introduction
%D 1975
%V 7
%P 1-31
%B Senckenbergiana Maritima
%9 Article
%! Estuaries of the Georgia coast, U.S.A.: Sedimentology and biology. I. Introduction
%Z 12-323
%M UGAMI.335
%A Howard, J.D.
%A Frey, R.W.
%K biology, coast, Estuaries, Georgia, Introduction, Sedimentology
%0 Journal Article
%T Estuaries of the Georgia coast, U.S.A.: Sedimentology and biology. II. Regional animal-sediment characteristics of Georgia estuaries
%D 1975
%V 7
%P 33-103
%B Senckenbergiana Maritima
%9 Article
%! Estuaries of the Georgia coast, U.S.A.: Sedimentology and biology. II. Regional animal-sediment characteristics of Georgia estuaries
%Z 12-324
%M UGAMI.336
%A Howard, J.D.
%A Frey, R.W.
%K animal-sediment, biology, characteristics, coast, estuaries, Georgia, Regional, Sedimentology
%0 Book Section
%T Holocene depositional environments of the Georgia coast and continental shelf
%D 1980
%P 66-134
%I Georgia Geological Survey Guidebook
%B Excursions in Southeastern Geology: The Archaeology-Geology of the Georgia Coast, Vol. 20
%9 Article
%! Holocene depositional environments of the Georgia coast and continental shelf
%Z 417*
%M UGAMI.429
%A Howard, J.D.
%A Frey, R.W.
%E Howard, J.D.
%E DePratter, C.B.
%E Frey, R.W.
%K coast, continental, depositional, environments, Georgia, Holocene, shelf
%0 Book Section
%T Physical and biogenic processes in Georgia estuaries. I. Coastal setting and subtidal facies
%D 1980
%P 153-182
%I Geological Association of Canada, Short Course
%B Sedimentary Processes and Animal-Sediment Relationships in Tidal Environments
%9 Article
%! Physical and biogenic processes in Georgia estuaries. I. Coastal setting and subtidal facies
%Z 409*
%M UGAMI.421
%A Howard, J.D.
%A Frey, R.W.
%E McCann, S.B.
%K biogenic, Coastal, estuaries, facies, Georgia, Physical, processes, setting, subtidal
%0 Book Section
%T Physical and biogenic processes in Georgia estuaries. III. Vertical sequences
%D 1980
%P 221-232
%I Geological Association of Canada, Short Course
%B Sedimentary Processes and Animal-Sediment Relationships in Tidal Environments
%9 Article
%! Physical and biogenic processes in Georgia estuaries. III. Vertical sequences
%Z 411*
%M UGAMI.423
%A Howard, J.D.
%A Frey, R.W.
%E McCann, S.B.
%K biogenic, estuaries, Georgia, Physical, processes, sequences, Vertical
%0 Journal Article
%T Physical and biogenic aspects of backbarrier sedimentary sequences, Georgia coast, U.S.A.
%D 1985
%V 63
%P 77-127
%B Marine Geology
%9 Article
%! Physical and biogenic aspects of backbarrier sedimentary sequences, Georgia coast, U.S.A.
%Z 18-511
%M UGAMI.523
%A Howard, J.D.
%A Frey, R.W.
%K aspects, backbarrier, biogenic, coast, Georgia, Physical, sedimentary, sequences
%0 Journal Article
%T Sampling device for semiconsolidated and unconsolidated sediments
%D 1966
%V 36
%P 818-820
%B Journal of Sedimentary Petrology
%9 Article
%! Sampling device for semiconsolidated and unconsolidated sediments
%Z 5-104
%M UGAMI.115
%A Howard, J.D.
%A Henry, V.J.Jr.
%K device, Sampling, sediments, semiconsolidated, unconsolidated
%0 Journal Article
%T Use of X-radiography in the study of bioturbate textures
%D 1967
%P 4
%B Preprint, 7th International Sedimentological Congress
%9 Article
%! Use of X-radiography in the study of bioturbate textures
%Z 6-144
%M UGAMI.155
%A Howard, J.D.
%A Henry, V.J.Jr.
%K bioturbate, study, textures, X-radiography
%0 Journal Article
%T Large non-tectonic deformational structures from Upper Cretaceous rocks of Utah
%D 1969
%V 39
%P 1032-1039
%B Journal of Sedimentary Petrology
%9 Article
%! Large non-tectonic deformational structures from Upper Cretaceous rocks of Utah
%Z 7-179
%M UGAMI.190
%A Howard, J.D.
%A Lohrengel, C.F.II
%K Cretaceous, deformational, Large, non-tectonic, rocks, structures, Upper, Utah
%0 Journal Article
%T Georgia coastal region, Sapelo Island, U.S.A.: Sedimentology and biology. IV. Physical and biogenic sedimentary structures of the nearshore shelf
%D 1972
%V 4
%P 81-123
%B Senckenbergiana Maritima
%9 Article
%! Georgia coastal region, Sapelo Island, U.S.A.: Sedimentology and biology. IV. Physical and biogenic sedimentary structures of the nearshore shelf
%Z 251*
%M UGAMI.261
%A Howard, J.D.
%A Frey, R.W.
%A Reineck, H.E.
%K biogenic, biology, coastal, Georgia, Island, nearshore, Physical, region, Sapelo, sedimentary, Sedimentology, shelf, structures
%0 Book Section
%T Holocene sediments of the Georgia coastal area
%D 1973
%P 1-58
%I Univ. Ga., Dept. Geol., Guidebook, 8th Ann. Ga. Geol. Soc. Field Trip
%B The Neogene of the Georgia Coast
%9 Article
%! Holocene sediments of the Georgia coastal area
%Z 10-268
%M UGAMI.279
%A Howard, J.D.
%A Frey, R.W.
%A Reineck, H.E.
%E Frey, R.W.
%K area, coastal, Georgia, Holocene, sediments
%0 Journal Article
%T Sulfate reduction in the salt marshes at Sapelo Island, Georgia
%D 1983
%V 28
%P 70-82
%B Limnology and Oceanography
%9 Article
%! Sulfate reduction in the salt marshes at Sapelo Island, Georgia
%Z 17-509
%M UGAMI.521
%A Howarth, R.W.
%A Giblin, A.
%K Georgia, Island, marshes, reduction, salt, Sapelo, Sulfate
%0 Book Section
%T Sulfate reduction in salt marshes, with some comparisons to sulfate reduction in microbial mats
%D 1984
%P 245-263
%I Alan R. Liss
%C New York
%B Microbial Mats: Stromatolites
%9 Article
%! Sulfate reduction in salt marshes, with some comparisons to sulfate reduction in microbial mats
%Z 18-523
%M UGAMI.535
%A Howarth, R.W.
%A Marino, R.
%E Cohen, Y.
%E Castenholz, R.W.
%E Halvorson, H.O.
%K comparisons, marshes, mats, microbial, reduction, salt, some, sulfate
%0 Journal Article
%T Pyrite formation and the measurement of sulfate reduction in salt marsh sediments
%D 1984
%V 29
%P 598-608
%B Limnology and Oceanography
%9 Article
%! Pyrite formation and the measurement of sulfate reduction in salt marsh sediments
%Z 18-525
%M UGAMI.537
%A Howarth, R.W.
%A Merkel, S.
%K formation, marsh, measurement, Pyrite, reduction, salt, sediments, sulfate
%0 Journal Article
%T High angle beach stratification, Sapelo Island, Georgia
%D 1962
%V 32
%P 309-311
%B Journal of Sedimentary Petrology
%9 Article
%! High angle beach stratification, Sapelo Island, Georgia
%Z 3-41
%M UGAMI.50
%A Hoyt, J.H.
%K angle, beach, Georgia, High, Island, Sapelo, stratification
%0 Journal Article
%T Air and sand movements to the lee of dunes
%D 1966
%V 7
%P 137-143
%B Sedimentology
%9 Article
%! Air and sand movements to the lee of dunes
%Z 6-115
%M UGAMI.126
%A Hoyt, J.H.
%K Air, dunes, lee, movements, sand
%0 Journal Article
%T Barrier island formation
%D 1967
%V 78
%P 1125-1136
%B Geological Society of America Bulletin
%9 Article
%! Barrier island formation
%Z 6-128
%M UGAMI.139
%A Hoyt, J.H.
%K Barrier, formation, island
%0 Journal Article
%T Intercontinental correlation of late Pleistocene sea levels
%D 1967
%V 2l5
%P 612-614
%B Nature
%9 Article
%! Intercontinental correlation of late Pleistocene sea levels
%Z 6-132
%M UGAMI.143
%A Hoyt, J.H.
%K correlation, Intercontinental, late, levels, Pleistocene, sea
%0 Journal Article
%T Occurrence of high-angle stratification in littoral and shallow neritic environments, central Georgia coast, U.S.A.
%D 1967
%V 8
%P 229-238
%B Sedimentology
%9 Article
%! Occurrence of high-angle stratification in littoral and shallow neritic environments, central Georgia coast, U.S.A.
%Z 6-131
%M UGAMI.142
%A Hoyt, J.H.
%K central, coast, environments, Georgia, high-angle, littoral, neritic, Occurrence, shallow, stratification
%0 Journal Article
%T Review of "Processes of Coastal Development" by V. P. Zenkowich
%D 1967
%V 76
%P 606-607
%B Journal of Geology
%9 Article
%! Review of "Processes of Coastal Development" by V. P. Zenkowich
%Z 6-153
%M UGAMI.164
%A Hoyt, J.H.
%K Coastal, Development, Processes, Review, Zenkowich
%0 Conference Proceedings
%T Theory of barrier island facies association
%D 1967
%P 1-4
%B Preprint, 7th International Sedimentological Congress
%9 Presentation
%! Theory of barrier island facies association
%Z 6-134
%M UGAMI.145
%A Hoyt, J.H.
%K association, barrier, facies, island, Theory
%0 Journal Article
%T Barrier island formation: Reply
%D 1968
%V 79
%P 1427-1432
%B Geological Society of America Bulletin
%9 Article
%! Barrier island formation: Reply
%Z 6-152
%M UGAMI.163
%A Hoyt, J.H.
%K Barrier, Reply, formation, island
%0 Journal Article
%T Barrier island formation: Reply
%D 1968
%V 79
%P 947
%B Geological Society of America Bulletin
%9 Article
%! Barrier island formation: Reply
%Z 6-147
%M UGAMI.158
%A Hoyt, J.H.
%K Barrier, formation, island, Reply
%0 Conference Proceedings
%T Genesis of sedimentary deposits along coasts of submergence
%D 1968
%P 311-321
%B XXIII International Geological Congress, Vol. 8
%9 Presentation
%! Genesis of sedimentary deposits along coasts of submergence
%Z 6-146
%M UGAMI.157
%A Hoyt, J.H.
%K coasts, deposits, Genesis, sedimentary, submergence
%0 Book Section
%T Geology of the Golden Isles and lower Georgia coastal plain
%D 1968
%P 18-34
%I University of Georgia Marine Institute and Coastal Area Planning and Development Commission
%B The Future of the Marshlands and Sea Islands of Georgia
%9 Article
%! Geology of the Golden Isles and lower Georgia coastal plain
%Z 166*
%M UGAMI.177
%A Hoyt, J.H.
%E Maney, D.S.
%E Marland, F.C.
%E West, C.B.
%K coastal, Geology, Georgia, Golden, Isles, lower, plain
%0 Journal Article
%T Chenier versus barrier, genetic and stratigraphic distinction
%D 1969
%V 53
%P 299-306
%B American Association of Petroleum Geologists
%9 Article
%! Chenier versus barrier, genetic and stratigraphic distinction
%Z 7-165
%M UGAMI.176
%A Hoyt, J.H.
%K barrier, Chenier, distinction, genetic, stratigraphic, versus
%0 Journal Article
%T Late Cenozoic structural movements, northern Florida
%D 1969
%V 19
%P 1-9
%B Transactions of the Gulf Coast Association Geological Society
%9 Article
%! Late Cenozoic structural movements, northern Florida
%Z 7-178
%M UGAMI.189
%A Hoyt, J.H.
%K Cenozoic, Florida, Late, movements, northern, structural
%0 Journal Article
%T Development and migration of barrier islands, northern Gulf of Mexico: Discussion
%D 1970
%V 81
%P 3779-3782
%B Geological Society of America Bulletin
%9 Article
%! Development and migration of barrier islands, northern Gulf of Mexico: Discussion
%Z 8-202
%M UGAMI.212
%A Hoyt, J.H.
%K barrier, Development, Discussion, Gulf, islands, Mexico, migration, northern
%0 Book
%T Field Guide to Beaches
%D 1971
%P 46
%I Boston, MA
%C Houghton Mifflin Co.
%9 Book
%! Field Guide to Beaches
%Z 190*
%M UGAMI.201
%A Hoyt, J.H.
%K Beaches, Field, Guide
%0 Journal Article
%T Shoreline processes
%D 1972
%V 10
%P 16-22
%B Journal of Geological Education
%9 Article
%! Shoreline processes
%Z 8-198
%M UGAMI.208
%A Hoyt, J.H.
%K processes, Shoreline
%0 Journal Article
%T Pleistocene and shoreline sediments in coastal Georgia: Deposition and modification
%D 1967
%V 155
%P 1541-1543
%B Science
%9 Article
%! Pleistocene and shoreline sediments in coastal Georgia: Deposition and modification
%Z 6-125
%M UGAMI.136
%A Hoyt, J.H.
%A Hails, J.R.
%K coastal, Deposition, Georgia, modification, Pleistocene, sediments, shoreline
%0 Journal Article
%T Pleistocene shorelines in a relatively stable area, southeastern Georgia, U.S.A.
%D 1967
%V XXXV
%P 105-117
%B Giornale di Geologia
%9 Article
%! Pleistocene shorelines in a relatively stable area, southeastern Georgia, U.S.A.
%Z Vol.7
%M UGAMI.144
%A Hoyt, J.H.
%A Hails, J.R.
%K area, Georgia, Pleistocene, relatively, shorelines, southeastern, stable
%0 Journal Article
%T Significance of radiocarbon dates from Botany Bay Island, South Carolina
%D 1967
%V 10
%P 61-65
%B Geologic Notes
%9 Article
%! Significance of radiocarbon dates from Botany Bay Island, South Carolina
%Z 6-121
%M UGAMI.132
%A Hoyt, J.H.
%A Hails, J.R.
%K Bay, Botany, Carolina, dates, Island, radiocarbon, Significance, South
%0 Journal Article
%T Regional distortions along the southeastern United States coast
%D 1971
%V 15
%P 51-63
%B Quaternaria
%9 Article
%! Regional distortions along the southeastern United States coast
%Z 187
%M UGAMI.198
%A Hoyt, J.H.
%A Hails, J.R.
%K coast, distortions, Regional, southeastern, States, United
%0 Book Section
%T Pleistocene stratigraphy of southeastern Georgia
%D 1974
%P p. 191-205
%B Post-Miocene Stratigraphy - Central and Southern Atlantic Coastal Plain - TEXT CURRENTLY UNAVAILABLE
%9 Article
%! Pleistocene stratigraphy of southeastern Georgia
%Z 130*
%M UGAMI.141
%A Hoyt, J.H.
%A Hails, J.R.
%E Oaks, R.Q.
%E DuBar, J.R.
%K Georgia, Pleistocene, southeastern, stratigraphy
%0 Journal Article
%T Development and geologic significance of soft beach sand
%D 1963
%V 3
%P 44-51
%B Sedimentology
%9 Article
%! Development and geologic significance of soft beach sand
%Z 4-65
%M UGAMI.76
%A Hoyt, J.H.
%A Henry, V.J.Jr.
%K beach, Development, geologic, sand, significance, soft
%0 Journal Article
%T Rhomboid ripple mark, indicator of current direction and environment
%D 1963
%V 33
%P 604-608
%B Journal of Sedimentary Petrology
%9 Article
%! Rhomboid ripple mark, indicator of current direction and environment
%Z 4-59
%M UGAMI.70
%A Hoyt, J.H.
%A Henry, V.J.Jr.
%K current, direction, environment, indicator, mark, Rhomboid, ripple
%0 Book Section
%T Significance of inlet sedimentation in the recognition of ancient barrier islands
%D 1965
%P 190-194
%I Wyoming Geological Assoc. Guidebook, Casper, Wyoming
%B Symposium on Sedimentation of Late Cretaceous and Tertiary Outcrops, Rock Spring Uplift, Wyoming
%9 Article
%! Significance of inlet sedimentation in the recognition of ancient barrier islands
%Z 5-90
%M UGAMI.101
%A Hoyt, J.H.
%A Henry, V.J.Jr.
%K ancient, barrier, inlet, islands, recognition, sedimentation, Significance
%0 Journal Article
%T Influence of island migration on barrier island sedimentation
%D 1967
%V 78
%P 77-86
%B Geological Society of America Bulletin
%9 Article
%! Influence of island migration on barrier island sedimentation
%Z 6-116
%M UGAMI.127
%A Hoyt, J.H.
%A Henry, V.J.Jr.
%K barrier, Influence, island, migration, sedimentation
%0 Journal Article
%T Origin of capes and shoals along the southeastern coast of the United States
%D 1971
%V 82
%P 59-66
%B Geological Society of America Bulletin
%9 Article
%! Origin of capes and shoals along the southeastern coast of the United States
%Z 8-208
%M UGAMI.218
%A Hoyt, J.H.
%A Henry, V.J.Jr.
%K capes, coast, Origin, shoals, southeastern, States, United
%0 Journal Article
%T Comparison of modern and ancient beaches, central Georgia coast
%D 1963
%V 47
%P 529-531
%B Bulletin of the American Association of Petrology and Geology
%9 Article
%! Comparison of modern and ancient beaches, central Georgia coast
%Z 4-50
%M UGAMI.60
%A Hoyt, J.H.
%A Weimer, R.J.
%K ancient, beaches, central, coast, Comparison, Georgia, modern
%0 Book Section
%T The origin and significance of Ophiomorpha (Halymenites) in the Cretaceous of the Western Interior
%D 1965
%P 203-207
%I Wyoming Geological Assoc. Guidebook, Casper, Wyoming
%B Symposium on Sedimentation of Late Cretaceous and Tertiary Outcrops, Rock Spring Uplift, Wyoming.
%9 Article
%! The origin and significance of Ophiomorpha (Halymenites) in the Cretaceous of the Western Interior
%Z 5-88
%M UGAMI.99
%A Hoyt, J.H.
%A Weimer, R.J.
%K Cretaceous, Halymenites, Interior, Ophiomorpha, origin, significance, Western
%0 Book Section
%T Age of late-Pleistocene shoreline deposits, coastal Georgia
%D 1968
%P 381-393
%I University of Utah Press
%C Salt Lake City
%B Means of Correlation of Quaternary Successions
%9 Article
%! Age of late-Pleistocene shoreline deposits, coastal Georgia
%Z 6-107
%M UGAMI.118
%A Hoyt, J.H.
%A Henry, V.J.Jr
%A Weimer, R.J.
%E Morrison, R.B.
%E H.E.Wright, Jr.
%K Age, coastal, deposits, Georgia, late-Pleistocene, shoreline
%0 Journal Article
%T Pleistocene and Holocene Sediments, Sapelo Island, Georgia and Vicinity
%D 1966
%V 78
%B Geological Society of America, Southeastern Section Guidebook
%9 Article
%! Pleistocene and Holocene Sediments, Sapelo Island, Georgia and Vicinity
%Z 105
%M UGAMI.116
%A Hoyt, J.H.
%A Howard, J.D.
%A Henry, V.J.Jr.
%K Georgia, Holocene, Island, Pleistocene, Sapelo, Sediments, Vicinity
%0 Journal Article
%T Offshore sediments and valleys of the Orange River (South and Southwest Africa)
%D 1969
%V 7
%P 69-84
%B Marine Geology
%9 Article
%! Offshore sediments and valleys of the Orange River (South and Southwest Africa)
%Z 7-169
%M UGAMI.180
%A Hoyt, J.H.
%A Oostdam, B.L.
%A Smith, D.D.
%K Africa, Offshore, Orange, River, sediments, South, Southwest, valleys
%0 Book Section
%T Late pleistocene and recent sedimentation, central Georgia coast, U.S.A.
%D 1964
%V 1
%P 170-176
%I Elsevier Publ. Co.,
%C Amsterdam
%B Deltaic and Shallow Marine Deposits
%S Developments in Sedimentology
%9 Article
%! Late pleistocene and recent sedimentation, central Georgia coast, U.S.A.
%Z 4-46
%M UGAMI.56
%A Hoyt, J.H.
%A Weimer, R.J.
%A Henry, V.J.Jr.
%E Van Stratten, L.M.U.
%K central, coast, Georgia, Late, pleistocene, recent, sedimentation
%0 Journal Article
%T Sex Ratios in Field Populations of Reticulitermes spp. (Isoptera: Rhinotermitidae) on Sapelo Island, Georgia, USA
%D 2011
%V 57
%N 3
%P 555-563
%B Sociobiology
%9 Article
%! Sex Ratios in Field Populations of Reticulitermes spp. (Isoptera: Rhinotermitidae) on Sapelo Island, Georgia, USA
%Z #1023 ISI Document Delivery No.: 761BE Times Cited: 0 Cited Reference Count: 22 Hu, Jian Forschler, Brian T. 0 CALIFORNIA STATE UNIV CHICO SOCIOBIOLOGY
%M UGAMI.1056
%A Hu, J.
%A Forschler, B.T.
%K ALATE PRODUCTION, CASTE DETERMINATION, COLONIES, COPTOTERMES-LACTEUS, DIMORPHISM, Entomology, fluctuations of sex, Isoptera, ORIGIN, ratios, Reticulitermes, sample size, sex ratio, SOLDIERS, TERMITE
%0 Journal Article
%T Sample Size Requirement in the Study of Subterranean Termite (Isoptera: Rhinotermitidae) Sex Ratio
%D 2011
%V 46
%N 1
%P 23-29
%B Journal of Entomological Science
%8 Jan
%9 Article
%! Sample Size Requirement in the Study of Subterranean Termite (Isoptera: Rhinotermitidae) Sex Ratio
%Z #1024 ISI Document Delivery No.: 724AU Times Cited: 0 Cited Reference Count: 23 Hu, Jian Forschler, Brian T. Georgia Department of Agriculture; Guangdong Entomological Institute, China This work was funded by State appropriations from the Georgia Department of Agriculture and a Start-up grant from the Guangdong Entomological Institute, China. 0 GEORGIA ENTOMOLOGICAL SOC INC TIFTON J ENTOMOL SCI
%M UGAMI.1057
%A Hu, J.A.
%A Forschler, B.T.
%K COLONIES, DIMORPHISM, Entomology, FORAGING POPULATIONS, RECAPTURE, Reticulitermes flavipes, RETICULITERMES-FLAVIPES ISOPTERA, sample size, SELECTION, sex ratio, SOLDIERS, SYSTEM, termite
%0 Journal Article
%T Subtidal food webs in a Georgia estuary:13C analysis
%D 1983
%V 67
%P 227-242
%B Journal Experimental Marine Biology and Ecology
%9 Article
%! Subtidal food webs in a Georgia estuary:13C analysis
%Z 16-472
%M UGAMI.484
%A Hughes, E.H.
%A Sherr, E.B.
%K 13C, analysis, estuary, food, Georgia, Subtidal, webs
%0 Generic
%T Impacts of crab bioturbation on marsh sediment properties and tidal creek incision
%D 2021
%9 Article
%! Impacts of crab bioturbation on marsh sediment properties and tidal creek incision
%Z published
%M UGAMI.1123
%A Hughes, Zoe J.
%A Farron, Sarah J.
%A FitzGerald, Duncan M.
%K bioturbation, crab, creek, Impacts, incision, on marsh, properties, sediment, tidal
%0 Journal Article
%T Influence of water motion on the distribution and transport of materials in a salt marsh estuary
%D 1983
%V 28
%P 201-214
%B Limnology and Oceanography
%9 Article
%! Influence of water motion on the distribution and transport of materials in a salt marsh estuary
%Z 398*
%M UGAMI.410
%A Imberger, J.
%A Berman, T.
%A Christian, R.R.
%A Sherr, E.B.
%A Whitney, D.E.
%A Pomeroy, L.R.
%A Wiegert, R.G.
%A Wiebe, W.J.
%K distribution, estuary, Influence, marsh, materials, motion, salt, transport, water
%0 Journal Article
%T Carbon inputs to bivalve mollusks: a comparison of two estuaries
%D 1982
%V 39
%P 1348-1352
%B Canadian Journal of Fisheries and Aquatic Sciences
%9 Article
%! Carbon inputs to bivalve mollusks: a comparison of two estuaries
%Z 16-464
%M UGAMI.476
%A Incze, L.S.
%A Mayer, L.M.
%A Sherr, E.B.
%A Macko, S.A.
%K bivalve, Carbon, comparison, estuaries, inputs, mollusks
%0 Book Section
%T Terrestrial soils and freshwater and marine sediments: cascading effects of deforestation on ecosystem services across spatially separated habitats
%D 2004
%V 64
%P 431
%I Island Press
%C Washington, DC
%B Sustaining Biodiversity and Ecosystem Services in Soils and Sediments
%S SCOPE Series
%7 Chapter 9
%9 Article
%! Terrestrial soils and freshwater and marine sediments: cascading effects of deforestation on ecosystem services across spatially separated habitats
%Z 933
%M UGAMI.966
%A Ineson, P.
%A Levin, L.A.
%A Kneib, R.T.
%A Hall, R.O.
%A Weslawski, J.M.
%A Bardgett, R.D.
%A Wardle, D.A.
%A Wall, D.H.
%A Van der Putten, W.H.
%E Wall, Diana H.
%K across, cascading, deforestation, ecosystem, effects, freshwater, habitats, marine, sediments, separated, services, soils, spatially, Terrestrial
%0 Journal Article
%T Laboratory cultivation of the marine copepd Pseudodiaptomus coronatus Williams
%D 1961
%V 6
%P 443-446
%B Limnology and Oceanography
%9 Article
%! Laboratory cultivation of the marine copepd Pseudodiaptomus coronatus Williams
%Z 2-27
%M UGAMI.33
%A Jacobs, J.
%K copepd, coronatus, cultivation, Laboratory, marine, Pseudodiaptomus, Williams
%0 Journal Article
%T Animal behaviour and water movement as co-determinants of plankton distribution in a tidal system
%D 1968
%V 34
%P 355-370
%B Sarsia
%9 Article
%! Animal behaviour and water movement as co-determinants of plankton distribution in a tidal system
%Z 6-141
%M UGAMI.152
%A Jacobs, J.
%K Animal, behaviour, co-determinants, distribution, movement, plankton, system, tidal, water
%0 Journal Article
%T Effects of an Omnivorous Katydid, Salinity, and Nutrients on a Planthopper-Spartina Food Web
%D 2012
%V 35
%N 2
%P 475-485
%B Estuaries and Coasts
%8 Mar
%9 Article
%! Effects of an Omnivorous Katydid, Salinity, and Nutrients on a Planthopper-Spartina Food Web
%Z #1010 ISI Document Delivery No.: 898WA Times Cited: 6 Cited Reference Count: 40 Jimenez, Juan M. Wieski, Kazimierz Marczak, Laurie B. Ho, Chuan-Kai Pennings, Steven C. Pennings, Steven/A-8326-2013 Pennings, Steven/0000-0003-4757-7125 NSF [DEB-0296160]; Biology and Biochemistry department of the University of Houston We thank Chris Craft for generously performing C/N analyses and B. DeLong, E. Wilkinson and the GCE-LTER schoolyard teachers for help with experiments. Financial support was provided by NSF (DEB-0296160) and the Biology and Biochemistry department of the University of Houston. We are grateful to A. Armitage, R. Azevedo, A. Frankino, S. Murphy, E. Siemann, G. Wimp, and anonymous reviewers for comments on the manuscript. This is a contribution of the Georgia Coastal Ecosystems LTER program, and contribution number 1010 from the University of Georgia Marine Institute. 6 SPRINGER NEW YORK ESTUAR COAST
%M UGAMI.1044
%A Jimenez, J.M.
%A Wieski, K.
%A Marczak, L.B.
%A Ho, C.K.
%A Pennings, S.C.
%K BOTTOM-UP FORCES, COMMUNITY, DIVERSITY, ENERGY-FLOW, Environmental Sciences, Marine & Freshwater Biology, Omnivory, Orchelimum fidicinium, PHYTOPHAGOUS INSECT POPULATIONS, PLANTHOPPER, PREDATOR, PRIMARY PRODUCTIVITY, Prokelisia spp., RELATIVE STRENGTH, Salt marsh, SALT-MARSH, Spartina alterniflora, TOP-DOWN, Top-down and bottom-up interactions, TROPHIC CASCADES
%0 Journal Article
%T Influence of marine protozoa on nutrient regeneration
%D 1965
%V 10
%P 434-442
%B Limnology and Oceanography
%9 Article
%! Influence of marine protozoa on nutrient regeneration
%Z 5-85
%M UGAMI.96
%A Johannes, R.
%K Influence, marine, nutrient, protozoa, regeneration
%0 Journal Article
%T Phosphorus excretion and body size in marine animals; microzooplankton and nutrient regeneration
%D 1964
%V 146
%P 923-924
%B Science
%9 Article
%! Phosphorus excretion and body size in marine animals; microzooplankton and nutrient regeneration
%Z 4-68
%M UGAMI.79
%A Johannes, R.E.
%K animals, body, excretion, marine, microzooplankton, nutrient, Phosphorus, regeneration, size
%0 Journal Article
%T Ecology of organic aggregates in the vicinity of a coral reef
%D 1967
%V 12
%P 189-195
%B Limnology and Oceanography
%9 Article
%! Ecology of organic aggregates in the vicinity of a coral reef
%Z 6-127
%M UGAMI.138
%A Johannes, R.E.
%K aggregates, coral, Ecology, organic, reef, vicinity
%0 Book Section
%T Nutrient regeneration in lakes and oceans
%D 1968
%P 203-213
%I Academic Press, Inc.
%C New York
%B Advances in Marine Microbiology
%9 Article
%! Nutrient regeneration in lakes and oceans
%Z 6-145
%M UGAMI.156
%A Johannes, R.E.
%E Droop, C.M.
%E Wood, E.J.F.
%K lakes, Nutrient, oceans, regeneration
%0 Journal Article
%T Composition and nutritive value of fecal pellets of a marine crustacean
%D 1966
%V 11
%P 191-197
%B Limnology and Oceanography
%9 Article
%! Composition and nutritive value of fecal pellets of a marine crustacean
%Z 5-106
%M UGAMI.117
%A Johannes, R.E.
%A Satomi, M.
%K Composition, crustacean, fecal, marine, nutritive, pellets, value
%0 Journal Article
%T Measuring organic matter retained by aquatic invertebrates
%D 1967
%V 24
%P 2467-2471
%B Journal of the Fisheries Research Board of Canada
%9 Article
%! Measuring organic matter retained by aquatic invertebrates
%Z 6-140
%M UGAMI.151
%A Johannes, R.E.
%A Satomi, M.
%K aquatic, invertebrates, matter, Measuring, organic, retained
%0 Journal Article
%T Release of dissolved amino acids by marine zooplankton
%D 1965
%V 150
%P 76-77
%B Science
%9 Article
%! Release of dissolved amino acids by marine zooplankton
%Z 5-93
%M UGAMI.104
%A Johannes, R.E.
%A Webb, K.L.
%K acids, amino, dissolved, marine, Release, zooplankton
%0 Conference Proceedings
%T Release of dissolved organic compound by marine and freshwater invertebrates
%D 1969
%P 257-273
%I Pergamon Press
%C Virginia Institute of Marine Science, Gloucester Point, Virginia
%B Symposium on Organic Matter in Natural Waters, Univ. of Alaska
%9 Presentation
%! Release of dissolved organic compound by marine and freshwater invertebrates
%Z 8-160
%M UGAMI.171
%A Johannes, R.E.
%A Webb, K.L.
%K compound, dissolved, freshwater, invertebrates, marine, organic, Release
%0 Journal Article
%T Are dissolved amino acids an energy source for marine invertebrates?
%D 1969
%V 29
%P 283-288
%B Comparative Biochemistry and Physiology
%9 Article
%! Are dissolved amino acids an energy source for marine invertebrates?
%Z 7-167
%M UGAMI.178
%A Johannes, R.E.
%A Coward, S.J.
%A Webb, K.L.
%K acids, amino, dissolved, energy, invertebrates, marine, source
%0 Journal Article
%T An ecological survey of the coastal region of Georgia
%D 1974
%V 233 p.
%B National Park Service Report, U.S. Gov''t Printing Office, Washington, D.C.
%9 Article
%! An ecological survey of the coastal region of Georgia
%Z 256*
%M UGAMI.266
%A Johnson, A.S.
%A Hillestad, H.O.
%A Fanning, S.
%A Shanholtzer, G.F.
%K coastal, ecological, Georgia, region, survey
%0 Journal Article
%T Biased sex ratios in fiddler crabs (Brachyura, Ocypodidae): A review and evaluation of the influence of sampling method, size class, and sex-specific mortality
%D 2003
%V 76
%N 5
%P 559-580
%B Crustaceana
%9 Article
%! Biased sex ratios in fiddler crabs (Brachyura, Ocypodidae): A review and evaluation of the influence of sampling method, size class, and sex-specific mortality
%Z 917
%M UGAMI.950
%A Johnson, P.T.J.
%K Biased, Brachyura, class, crabs, evaluation, fiddler, influence, method, mortality, Ocypodidae, ratios, review, sampling, sex, sex-specific, size
%0 Journal Article
%T Isolation and characterization of Ca2+-dependent modulator protein from the marine invertebrate Renilla reniformis
%D 1979
%V 18
%P 55-60
%B Biochemistry
%9 Article
%! Isolation and characterization of Ca2+-dependent modulator protein from the marine invertebrate Renilla reniformis
%Z 14-375
%M UGAMI.387
%A Jones, H.P.
%A Matthews, J.C.
%A Cormier, M.J.
%K Ca2+-dependent, characterization, invertebrate, Isolation, marine, modulator, protein, reniformis, Renilla
%0 Journal Article
%T Effects of Increased Salinity and Inundation on Inorganic Nitrogen Exchange and Phosphorus Sorption by Tidal Freshwater Floodplain Forest Soils, Georgia (USA)
%D 2013
%V 36
%N 3
%P 508-518
%B Estuaries and Coasts
%8 May
%9 Article
%! Effects of Increased Salinity and Inundation on Inorganic Nitrogen Exchange and Phosphorus Sorption by Tidal Freshwater Floodplain Forest Soils, Georgia (USA)
%Z #1004 ISI Document Delivery No.: 135NP Times Cited: 3 Cited Reference Count: 51 Jun, Mihee Altor, Anne E. Craft, Christopher B. US Department of Energy [TUL-563-07/08]; National Science Foundation [OCE-9982133] We thank John M. Marton and John Carswell, the Satilla River Keeper for their assistance in the field. We appreciate the constructive comments of two anonymous reviewers of the manuscript. This research was supported by the US Department of Energy through grant #TUL-563-07/08 and the National Science Foundation grant #OCE-9982133 to the Georgia Coastal Ecosystems Long Term Ecological Research program. This is contribution number 1004 from the University of Georgia Marine Institute. 3 SPRINGER NEW YORK ESTUAR COAST
%M UGAMI.1038
%A Jun, M.
%A Altor, A.E.
%A Craft, C.B.
%K AMMONIUM, ANOXIC MARINE-SEDIMENTS, Environmental Sciences, ESTUARINE, Inundation, Marine & Freshwater Biology, N exchange, ORGANIC-MATTER MINERALIZATION, P sorption and, precipitation, RETENTION, RIVER, SALT MARSHES, Saltwater intrusion, Sea level rise, SEDIMENTS, SULFATE REDUCTION, SULFIDE INHIBITION, Tidal freshwater floodplain forest, WETLANDS
%0 Journal Article
%T Royal tern nesting on Little Egg Island
%D 1958
%V 23
%P 36-37
%B The Oriole
%9 Article
%! Royal tern nesting on Little Egg Island
%Z 1-7B
%M UGAMI.10
%A Kale, H.W.
%A Teal, J.M.
%K Egg, Island, Little, nesting, Royal, tern
%0 Journal Article
%T Food of the long-billed marsh wren, Telmatodytes palustris griseus, in the salt marshes of Sapelo Island, Georgia
%D 1964
%V 29
%P 47-66
%B The Oriole
%9 Article
%! Food of the long-billed marsh wren, Telmatodytes palustris griseus, in the salt marshes of Sapelo Island, Georgia
%Z 5-81
%M UGAMI.92
%A Kale, H.W.II
%K Food, Georgia, griseus, Island, long-billed, marsh, marshes, palustris, salt, Sapelo, Telmatodytes, wren
%0 Journal Article
%T Nesting of purple martins aboard a ship
%D 1964
%V 76
%P 62-67
%B Wilson Bulletin
%9 Article
%! Nesting of purple martins aboard a ship
%Z 4-56
%M UGAMI.66
%A Kale, H.W.II
%K aboard, martins, Nesting, purple, ship
%0 Journal Article
%T Ecology and bioenergetics of the long-billed marsh wren, Telmatodytes palustris griseus, in a salt marsh ecosystem
%D 1965
%V 142 p.
%B Nuttall Ornithological Club No. 5016
%9 Article
%! Ecology and bioenergetics of the long-billed marsh wren, Telmatodytes palustris griseus, in a salt marsh ecosystem
%Z 75*
%M UGAMI.86
%A Kale, H.W.II
%K bioenergetics, Ecology, ecosystem, griseus, long-billed, marsh, palustris, salt, Telmatodytes, wren
%0 Journal Article
%T Plumage and molts in the long-billed marsh wren
%D 1966
%V 83
%P 140-141
%B The Auk
%9 Article
%! Plumage and molts in the long-billed marsh wren
%Z 5-82
%M UGAMI.93
%A Kale, H.W.II
%K long-billed, marsh, molts, Plumage, wren
%0 Journal Article
%T Recoveries of black skimmers banded on Little Egg Island, Georgia
%D 1967
%V 32
%P 13-16
%B The Oriole
%9 Article
%! Recoveries of black skimmers banded on Little Egg Island, Georgia
%Z 6-138
%M UGAMI.149
%A Kale, H.W.II
%K banded, black, Egg, Georgia, Island, Little, Recoveries, skimmers
%0 Journal Article
%T Water sources of the long-billed marsh wren in Georgia salt marshes
%D 1967
%V 84
%P 589-591
%B The Auk
%9 Article
%! Water sources of the long-billed marsh wren in Georgia salt marshes
%Z 6-137
%M UGAMI.148
%A Kale, H.W.II
%K Georgia, long-billed, marsh, marshes, salt, sources, Water, wren
%0 Journal Article
%T Additions to the birds of Sapelo Island and vicinity
%D 1966
%V 31
%P 1-11
%B The Oriole
%9 Article
%! Additions to the birds of Sapelo Island and vicinity
%Z 5-103
%M UGAMI.114
%A Kale, H.W.II
%A Hyypio, P.A.
%K Additions, birds, Island, Sapelo, vicinity
%0 Journal Article
%T The royal tern colony of Little Egg Island, Georgia
%D 1965
%V 36
%P 21-27
%B Bird-Banding
%9 Article
%! The royal tern colony of Little Egg Island, Georgia
%Z 4-64
%M UGAMI.75
%A Kale, H.W.II
%A Sciple, G.W.
%A Tomkins, I.R.
%K colony, Egg, Georgia, Island, Little, royal, tern
%0 Journal Article
%T Temporal Dynamics of South End Tidal Creek (Sapelo Island, Georgia) Bacterial Communities
%D 2009
%V 75
%N 4
%P 1058-1064
%B Applied and Environmental Microbiology
%8 Feb
%9 Article
%! Temporal Dynamics of South End Tidal Creek (Sapelo Island, Georgia) Bacterial Communities
%Z #977 ISI Document Delivery No.: 403YY Times Cited: 2 Cited Reference Count: 36 Kara, Emily Shade, Ashley North Temperate Lakes Microbial Observatory NSF [MCB-0702395] Field efforts were supported by funds from the Wisconsin Sea Grant Institute to J. Kitchell; laboratory work and analyses were supported by North Temperate Lakes Microbial Observatory NSF grant MCB-0702395 to K. D. McMahon. 2 AMER SOC MICROBIOLOGY WASHINGTON APPL ENVIRON MICROB
%M UGAMI.1005
%A Kara, E.
%A Shade, A.
%K BACTERIOPLANKTON, Biotechnology & Applied Microbiology, DIVERSITY, ECOLOGY, ESTUARY, INTERANNUAL DYNAMICS, INTERGENIC SPACER ANALYSIS, LAKE, MICROBIAL COMMUNITIES, Microbiology, SALINITY GRADIENT, VARIABILITY
%0 Journal Article
%T Isolation and properties of Renilla reniformis luciferase, a low molecular weight energy conversion enzyme
%D 1971
%V 10
%P 317-326
%B Biochemistry
%9 Article
%! Isolation and properties of Renilla reniformis luciferase, a low molecular weight energy conversion enzyme
%Z 8-210
%M UGAMI.220
%A Karkhanis, Y.D.
%A Cormier, M.J.
%K conversion, energy, enzyme, Isolation, low, luciferase, molecular, properties, reniformis, Renilla, weight
%0 Journal Article
%T Direct uptake of detrital carbon by the deposit-feeding polychaete Euzonus mucronata (Treadwell)
%D 1986
%V 99
%P 49-61
%B Journal Experimental Marine Biology and Ecology
%9 Article
%! Direct uptake of detrital carbon by the deposit-feeding polychaete Euzonus mucronata (Treadwell)
%Z 19-551
%M UGAMI.564
%A Kemp, P.F.
%K carbon, deposit-feeding, detrital, Direct, Euzonus, mucronata, polychaete, Treadwell, uptake
%0 Journal Article
%T Potential impact on bacteria of grazing by a macrofaunal deposit-feeder, and the fate of bacterial production
%D 1987
%V 36
%P 151-161
%B Marine Ecology-Progress Series
%9 Article
%! Potential impact on bacteria of grazing by a macrofaunal deposit-feeder, and the fate of bacterial production
%Z 20-569
%M UGAMI.582
%A Kemp, P.F.
%K bacteria, bacterial, deposit-feeder, fate, grazing, impact, macrofaunal, Potential, production
%0 Journal Article
%T Bacterivory by benthic ciliates: Significance as a carbon source and impact on sediment bacteria
%D 1988
%V 49
%P 163-169
%B Marine Ecology-Progress Series
%9 Article
%! Bacterivory by benthic ciliates: Significance as a carbon source and impact on sediment bacteria
%Z 611
%M UGAMI.624
%A Kemp, P.F.
%K bacteria, Bacterivory, benthic, carbon, ciliates, impact, sediment, Significance, source
%0 Journal Article
%T The fate of benthic bacterial production
%D 1990
%V 2
%P 109-124
%B Reviews in Aquatic Science
%9 Article
%! The fate of benthic bacterial production
%Z 617
%M UGAMI.630
%A Kemp, P.F.
%K bacterial, benthic, fate, production
%0 Journal Article
%T Acute toxicity of interstitial and particle-bound cadmium to a marine infaunal amphipod
%D 1988
%V 26
%P 135-153
%B Marine Environmental Research
%9 Article
%! Acute toxicity of interstitial and particle-bound cadmium to a marine infaunal amphipod
%Z 618
%M UGAMI.631
%A Kemp, P.F.
%A Swartz, R.C.
%K Acute, amphipod, cadmium, infaunal, interstitial, marine, particle-bound, toxicity
%0 Journal Article
%T Importance of grazing on the salt-marsh grass Spartina alterniflora to nitrogen turnover in a macrofaunal consumer, Littorina irrorata, and to decomposition of standing-dead Spartina
%D 1990
%V 104
%P 311-319
%B Marine Biology
%9 Article
%! Importance of grazing on the salt-marsh grass Spartina alterniflora to nitrogen turnover in a macrofaunal consumer, Littorina irrorata, and to decomposition of standing-dead Spartina
%Z 645
%M UGAMI.659
%A Kemp, P.F.
%A Newell, S.Y.
%A Hopkinson, C.S.
%K alterniflora, consumer, decomposition, grass, grazing, Importance, irrorata, Littorina, macrofaunal, nitrogen, salt-marsh, Spartina, standing-dead, turnover
%0 Journal Article
%T Effects of filter-feeding by the ribbed mussel Geukensia demissa on the water-column microbiota of a Spartina alterniflora saltmarsh
%D 1990
%V 59
%P 119-131
%B Marine Ecology-Progress Series
%9 Article
%! Effects of filter-feeding by the ribbed mussel Geukensia demissa on the water-column microbiota of a Spartina alterniflora saltmarsh
%Z 642
%M UGAMI.656
%A Kemp, P.F.
%A Newell, S.Y.
%A Krambeck, C.
%K alterniflora, demissa, Effects, filter-feeding, Geukensia, microbiota, mussel, ribbed, saltmarsh, Spartina, water-column
%0 Journal Article
%T Response of the phoxocephalid amphipod, Rhepoxynius abronius, to a small oil spill in Yaquina Bay, Oregon
%D 1986
%V 9
%P 340-347
%B Estuaries
%9 Article
%! Response of the phoxocephalid amphipod, Rhepoxynius abronius, to a small oil spill in Yaquina Bay, Oregon
%Z 20-560
%M UGAMI.573
%A Kemp, P.F.
%A Swartz, R.C.
%A Lamberson, J.O.
%K abronius, amphipod, Bay, oil, Oregon, phoxocephalid, Response, Rhepoxynius, small, spill, Yaquina
%0 Book Section
%T Ammonium regeneration in the sediments of a tropical seagrass (Thalassia testudinum) community
%D 1988
%P 181-192
%I Springer-Verlag.
%B Ecology of the Southern Gulf of Mexico Coastal Zone
%9 Article
%! Ammonium regeneration in the sediments of a tropical seagrass (Thalassia testudinum) community
%Z 20-574
%M UGAMI.587
%A Kemp, W.M.
%A Boynton, W.
%A Stevenson, J.
%A Hopkinson, C.S.
%A Day, D.
%A Yanez-Arancibia, A.
%E Yanez-Arancibia, A.
%K Ammonium, community, regeneration, seagrass, sediments, testudinum, Thalassia, tropical
%0 Journal Article
%T Effects of five years of nitrogen and phosphorus additions on a Zizaniopsis miliacea tidal freshwater marsh
%D 2011
%V 95
%N 1
%P 17-23
%B Aquatic Botany
%8 Jul
%9 Article
%! Effects of five years of nitrogen and phosphorus additions on a Zizaniopsis miliacea tidal freshwater marsh
%Z #1003 ISI Document Delivery No.: 781BF Times Cited: 6 Cited Reference Count: 39 Ket, Wesley A. Schubauer-Berigan, Joseph P. Craft, Christopher B. Schubauer-Berigan, Joseph/B-3260-2009 U.S. Environmental Protection Agency [RD 83222001-0]; National Science Foundation [OCE-9982133]; U.S. EPA ORD We thank Nate Knowles, John Marton, and Iza Redlinski for their help in the lab and field and two anonymous reviewers for their guidance on the manuscript. This research was supported by grants RD 83222001-0 from the U.S. Environmental Protection Agency''s Science to Achieve Results (STAR) program and OCE-9982133 from the National Science Foundation to the Georgia Coastal Ecosystem LTER program to CC and support from the U.S. EPA ORD to JSB. This is contribution 1003 of the University of Georgia Marine Institute. The views expressed in this paper are those of the authors and do not necessarily reflect the views or policies of the USEPA. 6 ELSEVIER SCIENCE BV AMSTERDAM AQUAT BOT
%M UGAMI.1037
%A Ket, W.A.
%A Schubauer-Berigan, J.P.
%A Craft, C.B.
%K Aboveground biomass, ACCUMULATION, Belowground biomass, ECOSYSTEM, ENRICHMENT, ESTUARINE SALINITY GRADIENT, Fertilizer, Marine & Freshwater Biology, N:P ratio, Nitrogen, Nutrient limitation, Phosphorus, Plant Sciences, Pontederia cordata, PRODUCTIVITY, Sagittaria lancifolia, SALT-MARSH, SEA-LEVEL, SEDIMENTS, SPARTINA-ALTERNIFLORA, Tidal freshwater marsh, Zizaniopsis miliacea
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%T Dimethyl sulfide production from dimethylsulfoniopropionate in coastal seawater samples and bacterial cultures
%D 1990
%V 56
%P 3292-3297
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%9 Article
%! Dimethyl sulfide production from dimethylsulfoniopropionate in coastal seawater samples and bacterial cultures
%Z 658
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%A Kiene, R.P.
%K bacterial, coastal, cultures, Dimethyl, dimethylsulfoniopropionate, production, samples, seawater, sulfide
%0 Journal Article
%T Evidence for the biological turnover of thiols in anoxic marine sediments
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%B Biogeochemistry
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%K anoxic, biological, Evidence, marine, sediments, thiols, turnover
%0 Book Section
%T Production and consumption of methane in aquatic systems
%D 1991
%P 111-146
%I American Society for Microbiology
%C Washington, D. C.
%B Microbial Production and Consumption of Greenhouse Gases:Methane, Nitrogen, Oxides, and Halomethanes
%9 Article
%! Production and consumption of methane in aquatic systems
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%E Rogers, J.E.
%E Whitman, W.B.
%K aquatic, consumption, methane, Production, systems
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%M UGAMI.701
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%K dimethyl, dimethylsulfoiopropionate, Dynamics, oceanic, samples, sulfude, water
%0 Book Section
%T Measurement of dimethylsulfide (DMS) and dimethylsulfoniopropionate (DMSP) in seawater and estimation of DMS turnover rates
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%P 601-610
%I Lewis Pubs.
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%B Handbook of methods in aquatic microbial ecology
%9 Article
%! Measurement of dimethylsulfide (DMS) and dimethylsulfoniopropionate (DMSP) in seawater and estimation of DMS turnover rates
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%A Kiene, R.P.
%E Kemp, P.F.
%E Sherr, B.F.
%E Sherr, E.B.
%E Cole, J.J.
%K dimethylsulfide, dimethylsulfoniopropionate, DMS, DMSP, estimation, Measurement, rates, seawater, turnover
%0 Book Section
%T Microbial sources and sinks for methylated sulfur compounds in the marine environment
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%I Intercept Ltd.
%C Andover, England
%B Microbial Growth on C1 Compounds
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%A Kiene, R.P.
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%K compounds, environment, marine, methylated, Microbial, sinks, sources, sulfur
%0 Book Section
%T Microbial cycling of organosulfur gases in marine and freshwater environments
%D 1996
%V 23E
%I Schweitzerbart''sche Verlagsbuchhandlung, Nagele U. Obermiller
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%B Cycling of reduced gases in the hydrosphere
%9 Article
%! Microbial cycling of organosulfur gases in marine and freshwater environments
%Z 662
%M UGAMI.677
%A Kiene, R.P.
%E Adams, D.
%E Crill, P.
%E Seitzinger, S.
%K cycling, environments, freshwater, gases, marine, Microbial, organosulfur
%0 Journal Article
%T Biological removal of dimethyl sulphide from sea water
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%V 345
%P 702-705
%B Nature
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%! Biological removal of dimethyl sulphide from sea water
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%A Bates, T.S.
%K Biological, dimethyl, removal, sea, sulphide, water
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%T Decomposition of dissolved DMSP and DMS in estuarine waters: dependence on temperature and substrate concentration.
%D 1991
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%A Kiene, R.P.
%A Service, S.K.
%K concentration, Decomposition, dependence, dissolved, DMS, DMSP, estuarine, substrate, temperature, waters
%0 Book Section
%T The influence of glycine betaine on dimethyl sulfide and dimethylsulfoniopropionate concentrations in seawater
%D 1993
%P 654-671
%I Chapman and Hall
%C New York
%B The Biogeochemistry of Global Change:Radiatively Active Trace Gases
%9 Article
%! The influence of glycine betaine on dimethyl sulfide and dimethylsulfoniopropionate concentrations in seawater
%Z 710
%M UGAMI.726
%A Kiene, R.P.
%A Service, S.K.
%E Oremland, R.S.
%K betaine, concentrations, dimethyl, dimethylsulfoniopropionate, glycine, influence, seawater, sulfide
%0 Journal Article
%T Demethylation of dimethylsulfoniopropionate and production of thiols in anoxic marine sediments
%D 1988
%V 54
%P 2208-2212
%B Applied and Environmental Microbiology
%9 Article
%! Demethylation of dimethylsulfoniopropionate and production of thiols in anoxic marine sediments
%Z 609
%M UGAMI.622
%A Kiene, R.P.
%A Taylor, B.F.
%K anoxic, Demethylation, dimethylsulfoniopropionate, marine, production, sediments, thiols
%0 Book Section
%T Metabolism of acrylate and 3-mercaptopropionate, decomposition products of dimethylsulfoniopropionate, in anoxic marine sediments
%D 1989
%P 222-229
%I American Chemical Society
%C Washingon, D. C.
%B Biogenic Sulfur in the Environment
%S ACS Symposium Series 393, Chapter 14
%9 Article
%! Metabolism of acrylate and 3-mercaptopropionate, decomposition products of dimethylsulfoniopropionate, in anoxic marine sediments
%Z 622
%M UGAMI.635
%A Kiene, R.P.
%A Taylor, B.F.
%E Saltzmand, E.
%E Cooper, W.
%K 3-mercaptopropionate, acrylate, anoxic, decomposition, dimethylsulfoniopropionate, marine, Metabolism, products, sediments
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%T Sulfur-containing amino acids as precursors of thiols in anoxic coastal sediments
%D 1990
%V 56
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%! Sulfur-containing amino acids as precursors of thiols in anoxic coastal sediments
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%A Kiene, R.P.
%A Malloy, K.D.
%A Taylor, B.F.
%K acids, amino, anoxic, coastal, precursors, sediments, Sulfur-containing, thiols
%0 Journal Article
%T Relation of soil water movement and sulfide concentration to Spartina alterniflora productivity in a Georgia salt marsh
%D 1982
%V 218
%P 61-63
%B Science
%9 Article
%! Relation of soil water movement and sulfide concentration to Spartina alterniflora productivity in a Georgia salt marsh
%Z 16-470
%M UGAMI.482
%A King, G.
%A Klug, M.
%A Wiegert, R.G.
%A Chalmers, A.G.
%K alterniflora, concentration, Georgia, marsh, movement, productivity, Relation, salt, soil, Spartina, sulfide, water
%0 Journal Article
%T Methane release from soils of a Georgia salt marsh
%D 1978
%V 42
%P 343-348
%B Geochimica et Cosmochimica Acta
%9 Article
%! Methane release from soils of a Georgia salt marsh
%Z 343*
%M UGAMI.355
%A King, G.M.
%A Wiebe, W.J.
%K Georgia, marsh, Methane, release, salt, soils
%0 Journal Article
%T Regulation of sulfate concentration in methanogenesis in salt marsh soil
%D 1980
%V 10
%P 215-223
%B Estuarine and Coastal Marine Science
%9 Article
%! Regulation of sulfate concentration in methanogenesis in salt marsh soil
%Z 397*
%M UGAMI.409
%A King, G.M.
%A Wiebe, W.J.
%K concentration, marsh, methanogenesis, Regulation, salt, soil, sulfate
%0 Journal Article
%T Trace analysis of methanogenesis in salt marsh soils
%D 1980
%V 39
%P 877-881
%B Applied and Environmental Microbiology
%9 Article
%! Trace analysis of methanogenesis in salt marsh soils
%Z 15-413
%M UGAMI.425
%A King, G.M.
%A Wiebe, W.J.
%K analysis, marsh, methanogenesis, salt, soils, Trace
%0 Journal Article
%T Methane formation in acidic peats of Okefenokee Swamp, Georgia
%D 1981
%V 105
%P 386-389
%B American Midland Naturalist
%9 Article
%! Methane formation in acidic peats of Okefenokee Swamp, Georgia
%Z 15-414
%M UGAMI.426
%A King, G.M.
%A Berman, T.
%A Wiebe, W.J.
%K acidic, formation, Georgia, Methane, Okefenokee, peats, Swamp
%0 Journal Article
%T Distribution, Diversity and Activity of Marine CO-Oxidizing Bacteria in a Sapelo Island, GA Saltmarsh, and Isolation of Novel Marine CO Oxidizers
%D 2008
%V 108
%P 398
%B Abstracts of the General Meeting of the American Society for Microbiology
%9 Article
%! Distribution, Diversity and Activity of Marine CO-Oxidizing Bacteria in a Sapelo Island, GA Saltmarsh, and Isolation of Novel Marine CO Oxidizers
%Z #999 Times Cited: 0 Cited Reference Count: 0 108th General Meeting of the American-Society-for-Microbiology Boston, MA, USA June 01 -05, 2008 Amer Soc Microbiol 0
%M UGAMI.1033
%A King, G.M.
%A Weber, C.F.
%A Nanba, K.
%A Bach, E.
%A Borowske, A.
%A Drew, K.
%A Euser, K.
%A Griepenstroh, L.
%A Haugberg, N.
%A Moses, J.
%A Shirakawa, Y.
%A Wachutka, E.
%A Vullmahn, V.
%K Rhodobium]/Anoxygenic Phototrophic Bacteria, Spartina, Vibrio, alterniflora]/Insecta, Angiospermae, Angiosperms, Animal distribution, Animalia, Animals, Arthropoda, Arthropods, assemblage, Bacteria, Bacteria [05000], biochemistry of bacteria, Biochemistry studies -, Biogeography (Population Studies), biology - General and methods, carbon monoxide oxidizer, distinct, Ecology:, Ecology: environmental, Ecology: environmental biology -, Ecology: environmental biology - Animal, environmental biology - Oceanography, Environmental Sciences), Eubacteria, experimental morphology, General biology - Symposia, genetic, Genetics - Animal, Genetics - General, Genetics - Plant, Genetics - Population genetics, Genetics of bacteria and viruses, Georgia, Gramineae [25305], Homoptera [75324], Insects, Invertebrata, Invertebrata: comparative, Invertebrates, laboratory techniques, Marine Ecology (Ecology, Microorganisms, Monocots, Nearctic region, North America, Nucleic acids, PCR, Physiology and, physiology and pathology - Insecta: physiology, Plant, Plantae, Plants, polymerase chain reaction, population density, Population Genetics (Population, population size, purines and pyrimidines, Purple Bacteria, Sapelo Island, sequence diversity, Spermatophyta, Spermatophytes, Studies), techniques, transactions and proceedings, USA, Vascular Plants, Vibrionaceae [06704]
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%P 989-991
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%9 Article
%! Alkalinity changes and coral reef calcification
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%M UGAMI.396
%A Kinsey, D.W.
%K Alkalinity, calcification, changes, coral, reef
%0 Conference Proceedings
%T The Pacific/Atlantic reef growth controversy
%D 1981
%P 493-498
%B Proceedings of the Fourth International Coral Reef Symposium, Manila
%9 Presentation
%! The Pacific/Atlantic reef growth controversy
%Z 15-433
%M UGAMI.445
%A Kinsey, D.W.
%K Atlantic, controversy, growth, Pacific, reef
%0 Book Section
%T Carbon turnover, calcification, and growth in coral reefs
%D 1979
%P 131-162
%I Elsevier
%B Biogeochemical Cycling of Mineral-forming Elements
%9 Article
%! Carbon turnover, calcification, and growth in coral reefs
%Z 15-419
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%A Kinsey, D.W.
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%E Trudinger, P.A.
%K calcification, Carbon, coral, growth, reefs, turnover
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%P 624-631
%B Applied and Environmental Microbiology
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%Z 17-506
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%A Kirchman, D.
%A Hodson, R.E.
%K acid, amino, bacterial, implications, incorporation, Inhibition, natural, peptides, populations, regulation, transport, uptake, waters
%0 Journal Article
%T Leucine incorporation and its potential as a measure of protein synthesis by bacteria in natural aquatic systems
%D 1985
%V 49
%P 599-607
%B Applied and Environmental Microbiology
%9 Article
%! Leucine incorporation and its potential as a measure of protein synthesis by bacteria in natural aquatic systems
%Z 19-532
%M UGAMI.544
%A Kirchman, D.
%A K'nees, E.
%A Hodson, R.E.
%K aquatic, bacteria, incorporation, Leucine, measure, natural, potential, protein, synthesis, systems
%0 Journal Article
%T On the diets of calanoid copepods
%D 1993
%V 99
%P 183-195
%B Marine Ecology Progress Series
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%! On the diets of calanoid copepods
%Z 730
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%K calanoid, copepods, diets
%0 Government Document
%T Tidal marsh conceptual model. Sacramento (CA): Delta Regional Ecosystem Restoration Implementation Plan.
%D 2008
%C Sacramento, CA
%Z #986
%M UGAMI.1009
%A Kneib, R.
%A Simenstad, C.
%A Nobriga, M.
%A Talley, D.
%K CA, conceptual, Delta, Ecosystem, Implementation, marsh, model, Plan, Regional, Restoration, Sacramento, Tidal
%0 Journal Article
%T Reanalysis of conversion efficiencies for larval Fundulus heteroclitus
%D 1981
%V 63
%P 213-215
%B Marine Biology
%9 Article
%! Reanalysis of conversion efficiencies for larval Fundulus heteroclitus
%Z 15-422
%M UGAMI.434
%A Kneib, R.T.
%K conversion, efficiencies, Fundulus, heteroclitus, larval, Reanalysis
%0 Journal Article
%T Size-specific effects of density on the growth, fecundity and mortality of the fish Fundulus heteroclitus in an intertidal salt marsh
%D 1981
%V 6
%P 203-212
%B Marine Ecology-Progress Series
%9 Article
%! Size-specific effects of density on the growth, fecundity and mortality of the fish Fundulus heteroclitus in an intertidal salt marsh
%Z 15-436
%M UGAMI.448
%A Kneib, R.T.
%K density, effects, fecundity, fish, Fundulus, growth, heteroclitus, intertidal, marsh, mortality, salt, Size-specific
%0 Journal Article
%T Habitat preference, predation, and intertidal distribution of gammaridean amphipods in a North Carolina salt marsh
%D 1982
%V 59
%P 219-230
%B Journal Experimental Marine Biology and Ecology
%9 Article
%! Habitat preference, predation, and intertidal distribution of gammaridean amphipods in a North Carolina salt marsh
%Z 15-437
%M UGAMI.449
%A Kneib, R.T.
%K amphipods, Carolina, distribution, gammaridean, Habitat, intertidal, marsh, North, predation, preference, salt
%0 Journal Article
%T The effects of predation by wading birds (Ardeidae) and blue crabs (Callinectes sapidus) on the population size structure of the common mummichog, Fundulus heteroclitus
%D 1982
%V 14
%P 159-165
%B Estuarine, Coastal and Shelf Science
%9 Article
%! The effects of predation by wading birds (Ardeidae) and blue crabs (Callinectes sapidus) on the population size structure of the common mummichog, Fundulus heteroclitus
%Z 15-431
%M UGAMI.443
%A Kneib, R.T.
%K Ardeidae, birds, blue, Callinectes, common, crabs, effects, Fundulus, heteroclitus, mummichog, population, predation, sapidus, size, structure, wading
%0 Journal Article
%T Patterns in the utilization of the intertidal salt marsh by larvae and juveniles of Fundulus heteroclitus (Limnaeus) and Fundulus luciae (Baird)
%D 1984
%V 83
%P 41-51
%B Journal Experimental Marine Biology and Ecology
%9 Article
%! Patterns in the utilization of the intertidal salt marsh by larvae and juveniles of Fundulus heteroclitus (Limnaeus) and Fundulus luciae (Baird)
%Z 18-518
%M UGAMI.530
%A Kneib, R.T.
%K Baird, Fundulus, heteroclitus, intertidal, juveniles, larvae, Limnaeus, luciae, marsh, Patterns, salt, utilization
%0 Journal Article
%T Patterns of invertebrate distribution and abundance in the intertidal salt marsh: causes and questions
%D 1984
%V 7
%P 392-412
%B Estuaries
%9 Article
%! Patterns of invertebrate distribution and abundance in the intertidal salt marsh: causes and questions
%Z 18-522
%M UGAMI.534
%A Kneib, R.T.
%K abundance, causes, distribution, intertidal, invertebrate, marsh, Patterns, questions, salt
%0 Journal Article
%T Predation and disturbance by grass shrimp, Palaemonetes pugio Holthus, in soft-substratum benthic invertebrate assemblages
%D 1985
%V 93
%P 91-102
%B Journal Experimental Marine Biology and Ecology
%9 Article
%! Predation and disturbance by grass shrimp, Palaemonetes pugio Holthus, in soft-substratum benthic invertebrate assemblages
%Z 19-542
%M UGAMI.554
%A Kneib, R.T.
%K assemblages, benthic, disturbance, grass, Holthus, invertebrate, Palaemonetes, Predation, pugio, shrimp, soft-substratum
%0 Journal Article
%T Size-specific patterns in the reproductive cycle of the killifish, Fundulus heteroclitus (Pisces: Fundulidae) from Sapelo Island, Georgia
%D 1986
%V 1986(2)
%P 342-351
%B Copeia
%9 Article
%! Size-specific patterns in the reproductive cycle of the killifish, Fundulus heteroclitus (Pisces: Fundulidae) from Sapelo Island, Georgia
%Z 19-534
%M UGAMI.546
%A Kneib, R.T.
%K cycle, Fundulidae, Fundulus, Georgia, heteroclitus, Island, killifish, patterns, Pisces, reproductive, Sapelo, Size-specific
%0 Journal Article
%T The role of Fundulus heteroclitus in salt marsh trophic dynamics
%D 1986
%V 26
%P 259-269
%B American Zoologist
%9 Article
%! The role of Fundulus heteroclitus in salt marsh trophic dynamics
%Z 18-514
%M UGAMI.526
%A Kneib, R.T.
%K dynamics, Fundulus, heteroclitus, marsh, role, salt, trophic
%0 Journal Article
%T Predation risk and use of intertidal habitats by young fishes and shrimp
%D 1987
%V 68
%P 379-386
%B Ecology
%9 Article
%! Predation risk and use of intertidal habitats by young fishes and shrimp
%Z 20-557
%M UGAMI.570
%A Kneib, R.T.
%K fishes, habitats, intertidal, Predation, risk, shrimp, young
%0 Journal Article
%T Testing for indirect effects of predation in an intertidal soft-bottom community
%D 1988
%V 69
%P 1795-1805
%B Ecology
%9 Article
%! Testing for indirect effects of predation in an intertidal soft-bottom community
%Z 604
%M UGAMI.617
%A Kneib, R.T.
%K community, effects, indirect, intertidal, predation, soft-bottom, Testing
%0 Journal Article
%T Flume weir for the quantitative collection of nekton from vegetated intertidal habitats.
%D 1991
%V 75
%P 29-38
%B Marine Ecology-Progress Series
%9 Article
%! Flume weir for the quantitative collection of nekton from vegetated intertidal habitats.
%Z 681
%M UGAMI.697
%A Kneib, R.T.
%K collection, Flume, habitats, intertidal, nekton, quantitative, vegetated, weir
%0 Journal Article
%T Indirect effects in experimental studies of marine soft-sediment communities
%D 1991
%V 31
%P 874-885
%B American Zoologist
%9 Article
%! Indirect effects in experimental studies of marine soft-sediment communities
%Z 673
%M UGAMI.689
%A Kneib, R.T.
%K communities, effects, experimental, Indirect, marine, soft-sediment, studies
%0 Journal Article
%T Population dynamics of the tanaid Hargeria rapax (Crustacea:Peracarda) in a tidal marsh
%D 1992
%V 113
%P 437-445
%B Marine Biology
%9 Article
%! Population dynamics of the tanaid Hargeria rapax (Crustacea:Peracarda) in a tidal marsh
%Z 692
%M UGAMI.708
%A Kneib, R.T.
%K Crustacea, dynamics, Hargeria, marsh, Peracarda, Population, rapax, tanaid, tidal
%0 Journal Article
%T Growth and mortality in successive cohorts of fish larvae within an estuarine nursery
%D 1993
%V 94
%P 115-127
%B Marine Ecology-Progress Series
%9 Article
%! Growth and mortality in successive cohorts of fish larvae within an estuarine nursery
%Z 720
%M UGAMI.736
%A Kneib, R.T.
%K cohorts, estuarine, fish, Growth, larvae, mortality, nursery, successive
%0 Book Section
%T Spatial pattern, spatial scale, and feeding in fishes
%D 1994
%P 171-185
%I University of South Carolina Press
%C Columbia, SC
%B Theory and application in fish feeding ecology
%9 Article
%! Spatial pattern, spatial scale, and feeding in fishes
%Z 722
%M UGAMI.738
%A Kneib, R.T.
%E Stouder, D.
%E Fresh, K.
%K feeding, fishes, pattern, scale, spatial
%0 Journal Article
%T Behaviour separates potential and realized effects of decapod crustaceans in salt marsh communities
%D 1995
%V 193
%P 239-256
%B Journal of Experimental Marine Biology and Ecology (761)
%9 Article
%! Behaviour separates potential and realized effects of decapod crustaceans in salt marsh communities
%Z 761
%M UGAMI.779
%A Kneib, R.T.
%K behaviour, community structure, decapod crustacean, foraging, predator-prey interaction, salt marshes
%0 Journal Article
%T The University of Georgia Marine Institute
%D 1996
%V 54
%N 2
%P 81-89
%B Georgia Journal of Science
%9 Article
%! The University of Georgia Marine Institute
%Z 777
%M UGAMI.795
%A Kneib, R.T.
%K Georgia, Institute, Marine, University
%0 Journal Article
%T Early life stages of resident nekton in intertidal marshes
%D 1997
%V 20
%N 1
%P 214-230
%B Estuaries
%9 Article
%! Early life stages of resident nekton in intertidal marshes
%Z 783
%M UGAMI.801
%A Kneib, R.T.
%K Early, intertidal, life, marshes, nekton, resident, stages
%0 Edited Book
%T The role of tidal marshes in the ecology of estuarine nekton
%D 1997
%V 35
%P 163-220
%I UCL Press Limited
%C London, UK
%B Oceanology and Marine Biology: An Annual Review 1997
%! The role of tidal marshes in the ecology of estuarine nekton
%Z 795
%M UGAMI.813
%A Kneib, R.T.
%E Ansell, A.D.
%E Gibson, R.N.
%E Barnes, Margaret
%K ecology, estuarine, marshes, nekton, role, tidal
%0 Book Section
%T Salt marsh ecoscapes and production transfers by estuarine nekton in the southeastern United States
%D 2000
%P 267-291
%I Kluwer Academic Publishers
%C Dordrecht, The Netherlands
%B Concepts and Controversies in Tidal Marsh Ecology
%9 Article
%! Salt marsh ecoscapes and production transfers by estuarine nekton in the southeastern United States
%Z 825
%M UGAMI.846
%A Kneib, R.T.
%E Weinstein, M.P.
%E Kreeger, D.
%K ecoscapes, estuarine, marsh, nekton, production, Salt, southeastern, States, transfers, United
%0 Journal Article
%T Book Review - The Ecology of Seashores
%D 2002
%B Limnology and Oceanography
%9 Article
%! Book Review - The Ecology of Seashores
%Z 899
%M UGAMI.928
%A Kneib, R.T.
%K Book, Ecology, Review, Seashores
%0 Journal Article
%T Bioenergetic and landcape considerations for scaling expectations of nekton production from intertidal marshes
%D 2003
%V 264
%P 279-296
%B Marine Ecology Progress Series - Theme Section
%9 Article
%! Bioenergetic and landcape considerations for scaling expectations of nekton production from intertidal marshes
%Z 925
%M UGAMI.958
%A Kneib, R.T.
%K estuaries, Fundulus, Litopenaeus, P:B ratio, Palaemonetes, salt marsh
%0 Journal Article
%T Genotypic variation does not explain differences in growth of mummichogs Fundulus heteroclitus from simple and complex tidal marsh landscapes
%D 2009
%V 386
%P 207-219
%B Marine Ecology Progress Series
%9 Article
%! Genotypic variation does not explain differences in growth of mummichogs Fundulus heteroclitus from simple and complex tidal marsh landscapes
%Z 976
%M UGAMI.1004
%A Kneib, R.T.
%K ARCTIC, CHARR, Coded wire tags, Ecology, Estuary, FISH, Fundulus heteroclitus, Genome, HABITAT USE, JUVENILE, Killifish, Marine & Freshwater Biology, MOVEMENT, Mummichog, NURSERY, Oceanography, RATES, SHRIMP LITOPENAEUS-SETIFERUS, SITE FIDELITY, SPATIAL VARIATION, Wetlands
%0 Journal Article
%T Oiling the wheels of system change
%D 2010
%V 8
%N 5
%P 227-227
%B Frontiers in Ecology and the Environment
%8 Jun
%9 Article
%! Oiling the wheels of system change
%Z #994 ISI Document Delivery No.: 607OT Times Cited: 0 Cited Reference Count: 0 Kneib, Ronald T. 0 ECOLOGICAL SOC AMER WASHINGTON FRONT ECOL ENVIRON
%M UGAMI.1008
%A Kneib, R.T.
%K Ecology, Environmental Sciences
%0 Journal Article
%T Efficacy of minnow traps for sampling mummichogs in tidal marshes
%D 2001
%V 24
%N 6A
%P 884-893
%B Estuaries
%9 Article
%! Efficacy of minnow traps for sampling mummichogs in tidal marshes
%Z 867
%M UGAMI.890
%A Kneib, R.T.
%A Craig, A.H.
%K Efficacy, marshes, minnow, mummichogs, sampling, tidal, traps
%0 Journal Article
%T Tag placement, mark retention, survival and growth of juvenile white shrimp (Litopenaeus setiferus Perez Farfante, 1969) injected with coded wire tags
%D 2001
%V 266
%P 109-120
%B Journal of Experimental Marine Biology and Ecology
%9 Article
%! Tag placement, mark retention, survival and growth of juvenile white shrimp (Litopenaeus setiferus Perez Farfante, 1969) injected with coded wire tags
%Z 885
%M UGAMI.901
%A Kneib, R.T.
%A Huggler, M.C.
%K Ferromagnetic tag, Mark-recapture, Mortality, Penaeidae, Prawn
%0 Journal Article
%T Stage-structured interactions between seasonal and permanent residents of an estuarine nekton community
%D 1995
%V 103
%P 425-434
%B Oecologia
%9 Article
%! Stage-structured interactions between seasonal and permanent residents of an estuarine nekton community
%Z 764
%M UGAMI.786
%A Kneib, R.T.
%A Knowlton, M.Kathryn
%K Estuaries, Nursery habitat, Palaemonetes, Penaeus, Stage-structured interactions
%0 Journal Article
%T Gross conversion efficiences of mummichog and spotfin killifish larvae from a Georgia salt marsh
%D 1991
%V 120
%P 803-809
%B Transactions of the American Fisheries Society
%9 Article
%! Gross conversion efficiences of mummichog and spotfin killifish larvae from a Georgia salt marsh
%Z 678
%M UGAMI.694
%A Kneib, R.T.
%A Parker, J.H.
%K conversion, efficiences, Georgia, Gross, killifish, larvae, marsh, mummichog, salt, spotfin
%0 Journal Article
%T Does tethering of mobile prey measure relative predation potential? An empirical test using mummichogs and grass shrimp
%D 2000
%V 198
%P 181-190
%B Marine Ecology Progress Series
%9 Article
%! Does tethering of mobile prey measure relative predation potential? An empirical test using mummichogs and grass shrimp
%Z 846
%M UGAMI.864
%A Kneib, R.T.
%A Scheele, C.E.H.
%K Estuaries, Fundulus, Palaeonetes, Predator-prey interactions
%0 Journal Article
%T Stable carbon isotope ratios in Fundulus heteroclitus (L) muscle tissue and gut contents from a North Carolina Spartina salt marsh
%D 1980
%V 46
%P 89-98
%B Journal Experimental Marine Biology and Ecology
%9 Article
%! Stable carbon isotope ratios in Fundulus heteroclitus (L) muscle tissue and gut contents from a North Carolina Spartina salt marsh
%Z 15-408
%M UGAMI.420
%A Kneib, R.T.
%A Stiven, A.E.
%K carbon, Carolina, contents, Fundulus, gut, heteroclitus, isotope, marsh, muscle, North, ratios, salt, Spartina, Stable, tissue
%0 Journal Article
%T Benthic invertebrate responses to size and density manipulations of the common mummichog, Fundulus heteroclitus (L.) in an intertidal salt marsh
%D 1982
%V 63
%P 1518-1532
%B Ecology
%9 Article
%! Benthic invertebrate responses to size and density manipulations of the common mummichog, Fundulus heteroclitus (L.) in an intertidal salt marsh
%Z 16-446
%M UGAMI.458
%A Kneib, R.T.
%A Stiven, A.E.
%K Benthic, common, density, Fundulus, heteroclitus, intertidal, invertebrate, manipulations, marsh, mummichog, responses, salt, size
%0 Journal Article
%T Nekton use of vegetated marsh habitats at different stages of tidal inundation
%D 1994
%V 106
%P 227-238
%B Marine Ecology Progress Series
%9 Article
%! Nekton use of vegetated marsh habitats at different stages of tidal inundation
%Z 742
%M UGAMI.758
%A Kneib, R.T.
%A Wagner, S.L.
%K different, habitats, inundation, marsh, Nekton, stages, tidal, vegetated
%0 Journal Article
%T Intertidal distribution and feeding habits of the mud crab, Eurytium limosum
%D 1990
%V 13
%P 462-468
%B Estuaries
%9 Article
%! Intertidal distribution and feeding habits of the mud crab, Eurytium limosum
%Z -650
%M UGAMI.665
%A Kneib, R.T.
%A Weeks, C.A.
%K crab, distribution, Eurytium, feeding, habits, Intertidal, limosum, mud
%0 Journal Article
%T Adult-juvenile interactions in the crabs Sesarma (Perisesarma) bidens and S. (Holometopus) dehaani (Decapoda: Grapsidae) from intertidal mangrove habitats in Hong Kong
%D 1999
%V 234
%P 255-273
%B Journal of Experimental Marine Biology and Ecology
%9 Article
%! Adult-juvenile interactions in the crabs Sesarma (Perisesarma) bidens and S. (Holometopus) dehaani (Decapoda: Grapsidae) from intertidal mangrove habitats in Hong Kong
%Z 822
%M UGAMI.842
%A Kneib, R.T.
%A Lee, S.Y.
%A Kneib, J.P.
%K Adult-juvenile, bidens, crabs, Decapoda, dehaani, Grapsidae, habitats, Holometopus, Hong, interactions, intertidal, Kong, mangrove, Perisesarma, Sesarma
%0 Journal Article
%T Survival growth and reproduction of the salt marsh amphipod Uhlorchestia spartinophila reared on natural diets of senescent and dead Spartina alterniflora leaves
%D 1997
%V 128
%P 423-431
%B Marine Biology
%9 Article
%! Survival growth and reproduction of the salt marsh amphipod Uhlorchestia spartinophila reared on natural diets of senescent and dead Spartina alterniflora leaves
%Z 794
%M UGAMI.812
%A Kneib, R.T.
%A Newell, S.Y.
%A Hermeno, E.T.
%K alterniflora, amphipod, dead, diets, growth, leaves, marsh, natural, reared, reproduction, salt, senescent, Spartina, spartinophila, Survival, Uhlorchestia
%0 Journal Article
%T Seasonal abundance, distribution and growth of postlarval and juvenile grass shrimp (Palaemonetes pugio) in a Georgia, USA, salt marsh
%D 1987
%V 96
%P 215-223
%B Marine Biology
%9 Article
%! Seasonal abundance, distribution and growth of postlarval and juvenile grass shrimp (Palaemonetes pugio) in a Georgia, USA, salt marsh
%Z 20-576
%M UGAMI.589
%A Kneib, T.R.
%K abundance, distribution, Georgia, grass, growth, juvenile, marsh, Palaemonetes, postlarval, pugio, salt, Seasonal, shrimp, USA
%0 Book Section
%T Marine and Estuarine Mycelial Eumycota and Oomycota
%D 2004
%P 533-545
%I Elsevier Academic Press
%C Burlington, MA
%B Biodiversity of Fungi: Inventory and Monitoring Methods
%S Chapter 24
%9 Article
%! Marine and Estuarine Mycelial Eumycota and Oomycota
%Z 942
%M UGAMI.975
%A Kohlmeyer, J.
%A Volkmann-Kohlmeyer, B.
%A Newell, S.Y.
%E Mueller, G.M.
%E Bills, G.F.
%E Foster, M.S.
%K Estuarine, Eumycota, Marine, Mycelial, Oomycota
%0 Journal Article
%T Seasonal influence of the needle rush Juncus roemarianus on saltmarsh pore water geochemistry
%D 2008
%V 31
%N 1
%P 70-84
%B Estuaries and Coasts
%8 Feb
%9 Article
%! Seasonal influence of the needle rush Juncus roemarianus on saltmarsh pore water geochemistry
%Z #978 ISI Document Delivery No.: 259GF Times Cited: 4 Cited Reference Count: 62 Koretsky, Carla M. Miller, Douglas 4 SPRINGER NEW YORK ESTUAR COAST
%M UGAMI.1011
%A Koretsky, C.M.
%A Miller, D.
%K Environmental Sciences, IRON, Juncus roemarianus, macrophyte, Marine & Freshwater Biology, NITROGEN, OXIDATION, PLANT-ROOTS, pore water, RADIAL OXYGEN LOSS, redox stratification, saltmarsh, SAPELO ISLAND, SEDIMENTS, SPARTINA-ALTERNIFLORA ROOTS, SULFATE REDUCTION, TAGUS ESTUARY
%0 Journal Article
%T Influence of Spartina and Juncus on saltmarsh sediments. II. Trace element geochemistry
%D 2008
%V 255
%N 1-2
%P 100-113
%B Chemical Geology
%8 Sep
%9 Article
%! Influence of Spartina and Juncus on saltmarsh sediments. II. Trace element geochemistry
%Z #974 ISI Document Delivery No.: 362ZJ Times Cited: 19 Cited Reference Count: 94 Koretsky, Carla M. Cuellar, Angel Haveman, Melanie Beuving, Lauren Shattuck, Terri Wagner, Mark National Science Foundation CAREER program [NSF EAR 0348435] The authors gratefully acknowledge the support of the National Science Foundation CAREER program (NSF EAR 0348435). This grant allowed CMK to offer a summer wetlands field course, during which LB, AC, MH, TS, and MW completed much of the sampling and analytical work presented in this study. The University of Georgia Marine Institute is thanked for their generosity in providing housing, vehicles and access to field sites. Help in coordinating the field course and research from Jon Garbish is particularly appreciated. This paper benefited greatly from the comments of three anonymous reviewers and the handling editor. 19 ELSEVIER SCIENCE BV AMSTERDAM CHEM GEOL
%M UGAMI.1002
%A Koretsky, C.M.
%A Cuellar, A.
%A Haveman, M.
%A Beuving, L.
%A Shattuck, T.
%A Wagner, M.
%K alterniflora, ALTERNIFLORA LOISEL, ESTUARINE SEDIMENT, ESTUARY, Geochemistry & Geophysics, Juncus roemarianus, LAKE-SEDIMENTS, METAL SPECIATION, PHRAGMITES-AUSTRALIS, PORE-WATER GEOCHEMISTRY, Saltmarsh, Sequential extraction, SEQUENTIAL EXTRACTION PROCEDURE, Spartina, SULFATE REDUCTION, TAGUS, Trace element, Trace metal, X-RAY-FLUORESCENCE
%0 Journal Article
%T Influence of Spartina and Juncus on Saltmarsh Sediments. I. Pore Water Geochemistry
%D 2008
%V 255
%N 1-2
%P 87-99
%B Chemical Geology
%8 Sep
%9 Article
%! Influence of Spartina and Juncus on Saltmarsh Sediments. I. Pore Water Geochemistry
%Z #973 ISI Document Delivery No.: 362ZJ Times Cited: 19 Cited Reference Count: 79 Koretsky, Carla M. Haveman, Melanie Cuellar, Angel Beuving, Lauren Shattuck, Terri Wagner, Mark National Science Foundation CAREER program [NSF EAR 0348435] The authors gratefully acknowledge the support of the National Science Foundation CAREER program (NSF EAR 0348435). This grant allowed CMK to offer a summer wetlands field course, during which LB, AC, MH, TS, and MW completed much of the sampling and analytical work presented in this study. The University of Georgia Marine Institute is thanked for their generosity in providing housing, vehicles and access to field sites. Help in coordinating the field course and research from Jon Garbish is particularly appreciated. Tsigabu Gebrehiwet is thanked for his help in analysis of sulfate profiles. This paper benefited substantially from the thoughtful comments of three external reviewers and the handling editor, David Rickard. 21 ELSEVIER SCIENCE BV AMSTERDAM CHEM GEOL
%M UGAMI.1001
%A Koretsky, C.M.
%A Haveman, M.
%A Cuellar, A.
%A Beuving, L.
%A Shattuck, T.
%A Wagner, M.
%K AQUATIC SEDIMENTS, Geochemistry & Geophysics, IRON REDUCTION, Juncus, MARINE-SEDIMENTS, MODELING APPROACH, Nutrient, OXYGEN DYNAMICS, QUANTIFYING BIOIRRIGATION, Redox stratification, roemarianus, Saltmarsh, SCIRPUS-MARITIMUS, Spartina alterniflora, SULFATE REDUCTION, TAGUS ESTUARY, ZOSTERA-NOLTII
%0 Journal Article
%T Quantifying bioirrigation using ecological parameters: a stochastic approach
%D 2002
%V 3
%P 17-30
%B Geochemical Transactions
%8 Feb
%9 Article
%! Quantifying bioirrigation using ecological parameters: a stochastic approach
%Z #980 ISI Document Delivery No.: 625ZT Times Cited: 45 Cited Reference Count: 72 Koretsky, CM Meile, C Van Cappellen, P Van Cappellen, Philippe/A-2906-2013 Van Cappellen, Philippe/0000-0001-5476-0820 48 ROYAL SOC CHEMISTRY CAMBRIDGE GEOCHEM T
%M UGAMI.1010
%A Koretsky, C.M.
%A Meile, C.
%A Van Cappellen, P.
%K BENTHIC FLUXES, BURROW STRUCTURE, DISTRIBUTIONS, EARLY DIAGENESIS, Geochemistry & Geophysics, MARINE-SEDIMENTS, MAXMUELLERIA-LANKESTERI HERDMAN, NEREIS-DIVERSICOLOR, SEDIMENT-WATER EXCHANGE, SOLUTE, SULFATE REDUCTION, WASHINGTON CONTINENTAL-SHELF
%0 Journal Article
%T Seasonal oscillation of microbial iron and sulfate reduction in saltmarsh sediments (Sapelo Island, GA, USA)
%D 2003
%V 64
%N 2
%P 179-203
%B Biogeochemistry
%8 Jun-Jul
%9 Article
%! Seasonal oscillation of microbial iron and sulfate reduction in saltmarsh sediments (Sapelo Island, GA, USA)
%Z #979 ISI Document Delivery No.: 705UU Times Cited: 58 Cited Reference Count: 77 Koretsky, CM Moore, CM Lowe, KL Meile, C Dichristina, TJ VAN Cappellen, P Van Cappellen, Philippe/A-2906-2013 Van Cappellen, Philippe/0000-0001-5476-0820 58 KLUWER ACADEMIC PUBL DORDRECHT BIOGEOCHEMISTRY
%M UGAMI.1012
%A Koretsky, C.M.
%A Moore, C.M.
%A Lowe, K.L.
%A Meile, C.
%A Dichristina, T.J.
%A Van Cappellen, P.
%K AQUATIC, BIOIRRIGATION, COASTAL MARINE-SEDIMENTS, Environmental Sciences, FERRIC IRON, FRESH-WATER SEDIMENTS, Geosciences, MANGANESE REDUCTION, microbial iron reduction, Multidisciplinary, QUANTIFYING, redox zonation, REDUCING BACTERIA, RIBOSOMAL-RNA, saltmarsh, SEDIMENTS, SHEWANELLA-PUTREFACIENS, SPARTINA-ALTERNIFLORA, sulfate reduction
%0 Journal Article
%T Salt marsh pore water geochemistry does not correlate with microbial community structure
%D 2005
%V 62
%P 233-251
%B Estuarine, Coastal and Shelf Science
%9 Article
%! Salt marsh pore water geochemistry does not correlate with microbial community structure
%Z 948
%M UGAMI.979
%A Koretsky, C.M.
%A Van Cappellen, P.
%A DiChristina, T.J.
%A Kostka, J.E.
%A Lowe, K.L.
%A Moore, C.M.
%A Roychoudhury, A.N.
%A Viollier, E.
%K biogeochemistry, microbial community structure, pore water, redox stratification, salt marshes, sediment chemistry
%0 Journal Article
%T Rates and controls of anaerobic microbial respiration across spatial and temporal gradients in saltmarsh sediments
%D 2002
%V 60
%N 1
%P 49-76
%B Biogeochemistry
%9 Article
%! Rates and controls of anaerobic microbial respiration across spatial and temporal gradients in saltmarsh sediments
%Z 906
%M UGAMI.939
%A Kostka, J.E.
%A Roychoudhury, A.
%A Van Cappellen, P.
%K CARBON OXIDATION, CONTINENTAL-MARGIN SEDIMENTS, IRON, MARINE-SEDIMENTS, PATHWAYS, REDUCTION, SALT-MARSH SEDIMENTS, SPARTINA-ALTERNIFLORA PRODUCTION, SULFATE-REDUCING BACTERIA, WATER
%0 Journal Article
%T Offshore currents, larval transport, and establishment of southern populations of Littorina littorea Linne along the U.S. Atlantic coast
%D 1974
%V 10
%P 159-170
%B Thalassia Jugoslavica
%9 Article
%! Offshore currents, larval transport, and establishment of southern populations of Littorina littorea Linne along the U.S. Atlantic coast
%Z 11-294
%M UGAMI.306
%A Kraeuter, J.
%K Atlantic, coast, currents, establishment, larval, Linne, littorea, Littorina, Offshore, populations, southern, transport
%0 Journal Article
%T Biodeposition by salt-marsh invertebrates
%D 1976
%V 35
%P 215-223
%B Marine Biology
%9 Article
%! Biodeposition by salt-marsh invertebrates
%Z 11-295
%M UGAMI.307
%A Kraeuter, J.
%K Biodeposition, invertebrates, salt-marsh
%0 Journal Article
%T The seasonal cycle of Scyphozoa and Cubozoa in Georgia estuaries
%D 1975
%V 25
%P 66-74
%B Bulletin of Marine Science
%9 Article
%! The seasonal cycle of Scyphozoa and Cubozoa in Georgia estuaries
%Z 11-280
%M UGAMI.291
%A Kraeuter, J.
%A Setzler, E.
%K Cubozoa, cycle, estuaries, Georgia, Scyphozoa, seasonal
%0 Journal Article
%T Dentaliid taxa referred to the Siphonodentaliidae (Mollusca:Scaphopoda) with a description of a new species
%D 1972
%V 15
%P 21-28
%B The Veliger
%9 Article
%! Dentaliid taxa referred to the Siphonodentaliidae (Mollusca:Scaphopoda) with a description of a new species
%Z 9-247
%M UGAMI.257
%A Kraeuter, J.N.
%K Dentaliid, description, Mollusca, new, referred, Scaphopoda, Siphonodentaliidae, species, taxa
%0 Journal Article
%T Notes on mollusks Ostrea and Siphonaria from Georgia (U.S.A.)
%D 1973
%V 87
%P 75-77
%B The Nautilus
%9 Article
%! Notes on mollusks Ostrea and Siphonaria from Georgia (U.S.A.)
%Z 10-267A
%M UGAMI.277
%A Kraeuter, J.N.
%K Georgia, mollusks, Notes, Ostrea, Siphonaria
%0 Journal Article
%T Pycnogonida from Georgia
%D 1973
%V 7
%P 493-498
%B Journal of Natural History
%9 Article
%! Pycnogonida from Georgia
%Z 9-232
%M UGAMI.242
%A Kraeuter, J.N.
%K Georgia, Pycnogonida
%0 Journal Article
%T Cephalopod mollusks from the waters off Georgia, U.S.A.
%D 1975
%V 25
%P 301-303
%B Bulletin of Marine Science
%9 Article
%! Cephalopod mollusks from the waters off Georgia, U.S.A.
%Z 11-286B
%M UGAMI.298
%A Kraeuter, J.N.
%A Thomas, R.F.
%K Cephalopod, Georgia, mollusks, waters
%0 Book Section
%T The relationship of marine macroinvertebrates to salt marsh plants
%D 1974
%P 449-462
%I Academic Press, Inc.
%C New York
%B Ecology of Halophytes
%9 Article
%! The relationship of marine macroinvertebrates to salt marsh plants
%Z 10-259
%M UGAMI.269
%A Kraeuter, J.N.
%A Wolf, P.L.
%E Reimold, R.J.
%E Queen, W.H.
%K macroinvertebrates, marine, marsh, plants, relationship, salt
%0 Journal Article
%T Sizing bacterioplankton: a juxtaposition of bias due to shrinkage, halos subjectivity in image interpretation and asymmetric distributions
%D 1990
%V 2
%P 11-20
%B Binary
%9 Article
%! Sizing bacterioplankton: a juxtaposition of bias due to shrinkage, halos subjectivity in image interpretation and asymmetric distributions
%Z 652
%M UGAMI.667
%A Krambeck, C.
%A Krambeck, H.J.
%A Schroder, D.
%A Newell, S.Y.
%K asymmetric, bacterioplankton, bias, distributions, due, halos, image, interpretation, juxtaposition, shrinkage, Sizing, subjectivity
%0 Journal Article
%T Inhibition of Renilla reniformis bioluminescence by light: Effects on luciferase and its substrates
%D 1967
%V 141
%P 181-183
%B Biochimica et Biophysica Acta
%9 Article
%! Inhibition of Renilla reniformis bioluminescence by light: Effects on luciferase and its substrates
%Z 6-129
%M UGAMI.140
%A Kreiss, P.
%A Cormier, M.J.
%K bioluminescence, Effects, Inhibition, light, luciferase, reniformis, Renilla, substrates
%0 Journal Article
%T ECOSYSTEM DEVELOPMENT OF A SANDBAR EMERGENT TIDAL MARSH, ALTAMAHA RIVER ESTUARY, GEORGIA, USA
%D 2009
%V 29
%N 1
%P 314-322
%B Wetlands
%9 Article
%! ECOSYSTEM DEVELOPMENT OF A SANDBAR EMERGENT TIDAL MARSH, ALTAMAHA RIVER ESTUARY, GEORGIA, USA
%Z 965
%M UGAMI.1020
%A Krull, K.
%A Craft, C.
%K nitrogen, nutrient pools, organic carbon, phosphorus, primary succession, salt marsh, Sapelo Island, soils, Spartina alterniflora, vegetation
%0 Journal Article
%T Abstracts-Research reports presented to The University of Georgia Marine Institute Student Intern Program, 1987-1991
%D 1991
%V 49
%P 162-168
%B Georgia Journal of Science
%9 Article
%! Abstracts-Research reports presented to The University of Georgia Marine Institute Student Intern Program, 1987-1991
%Z 716
%M UGAMI.732
%A Kudela, R.
%A Covi, M.
%A Robinson, J.
%A Babin, M.
%A Berchok, C.L.
%A Reynolds, K.
%A Gaylor, M.O.
%A Gran, J.E.
%A Griffin, C.A.
%A Hagy, J.D.III
%A Poteet, M.F.
%A Wagner, S.L.
%A Rejwan, C.
%K Abstracts-Research, Georgia, Institute, Intern, Marine, presented, Program, reports, Student, University
%0 Journal Article
%T Phosphorus budget of a mussel population
%D 1961
%V 6
%P 400-415
%B Limnology and Oceanography
%9 Article
%! Phosphorus budget of a mussel population
%Z 2-32
%M UGAMI.38
%A Kuenzler, E.J.
%K budget, mussel, Phosphorus, population
%0 Journal Article
%T Structure and energy flow of a mussel population in a Georgia salt marsh
%D 1961
%V 6
%P 191-204
%B Limnology and Oceanography
%9 Article
%! Structure and energy flow of a mussel population in a Georgia salt marsh
%Z 2-28
%M UGAMI.34
%A Kuenzler, E.J.
%K energy, flow, Georgia, marsh, mussel, population, salt, Structure
%0 Journal Article
%T Amino acid sequence of the Ca2+- triggered luciferin binding protein of Renilla reniformis
%D 1990
%V 268
%P 287-290
%B FEBS Letters
%9 Article
%! Amino acid sequence of the Ca2+- triggered luciferin binding protein of Renilla reniformis
%Z 654
%M UGAMI.669
%A Kumar, S.
%A Harrylock, M.
%A Walsh, K.A.
%A Cormier, M.J.
%A Charbonneau, H.
%K acid, Amino, binding, Ca2+-, luciferin, protein, reniformis, Renilla, sequence, triggered
%0 Journal Article
%T Patterns of Plant Diversity in Georgia and Texas Salt Marshes
%D 2008
%V 31
%N 4
%P 673-681
%B Estuaries and Coasts
%9 Article
%! Patterns of Plant Diversity in Georgia and Texas Salt Marshes
%Z 969
%M UGAMI.997
%A Kunza, A.E.
%A Pennings, S.C.
%K Assembly rules . Biodiversity . Competition ., Biogeography . Salt marsh . Species diversity
%0 Journal Article
%T Larval development under laboratory conditions of the xanthid mud crab Eurytium limosum (Say, 1818) (Brachyura:Xanthidae) from Georgia.
%D 1981
%V 7
%P 19-25
%B Gulf Research Reports
%9 Article
%! Larval development under laboratory conditions of the xanthid mud crab Eurytium limosum (Say, 1818) (Brachyura:Xanthidae) from Georgia.
%Z 15-424
%M UGAMI.436
%A Kurata, H.
%A Heard, R.W.
%A Martin, J.W.
%K Brachyura, conditions, crab, development, Eurytium, Georgia, laboratory, Larval, limosum, mud, Say, under, xanthid, Xanthidae
%0 Journal Article
%T Crystalline bacterial luciferase from Photobacterium fischeri
%D 1965
%V 53
%P 822-828
%B Proceedings of the National Academy of Science of the USA
%9 Article
%! Crystalline bacterial luciferase from Photobacterium fischeri
%Z 5-83
%M UGAMI.94
%A Kuwabara, S.
%A Cormier, M.J.
%A Dure, L.S.
%A Kreiss, P.
%A Pfuderer, P.
%K bacterial, Crystalline, fischeri, luciferase, Photobacterium
%0 Journal Article
%T Amphibians, reptiles, and mammals of Sapelo Island, Georgia
%D 1999
%V 115
%N 2
%P 104-126
%B Journal of the Elisha Mitchell Scientific Society
%9 Article
%! Amphibians, reptiles, and mammals of Sapelo Island, Georgia
%Z 854
%M UGAMI.932
%A Laerm, J.
%A Carter, T.C.
%A Menzel, M.A.
%A McCay, T.S.
%A Boone, J.L.
%A Ford, W.M.
%A Lepardo, L.T.
%A Krishon, D.M.
%A Balkcom, G.
%A Van Der Maath, N.L.
%A Harris, M.J.
%K amphibians, faunal survey, Georgia, mammals, reptiles, Sapelo Island
%0 Journal Article
%T Eolian cross-bedding in the beach dune environment, Sapelo Island, Georgia
%D 1964
%V 34
%P 389-394
%B Journal of Sedimentary Petrology
%9 Article
%! Eolian cross-bedding in the beach dune environment, Sapelo Island, Georgia
%Z 4-57
%M UGAMI.68
%A Land, L.S.
%K beach, cross-bedding, dune, environment, Eolian, Georgia, Island, Sapelo
%0 Journal Article
%T Sedimentation in a meandering estuary
%D 1966
%V 6
%P 191-207
%B Sedimentology
%9 Article
%! Sedimentation in a meandering estuary
%Z 5-78
%M UGAMI.89
%A Land, L.S.
%A Hoyt, J.H.
%K estuary, meandering, Sedimentation
%0 Journal Article
%T Effects of biogenic struture on prey consumption by the xanthid crabs Eurytium limosum and Panopeus herbstii in a salt marsh
%D 1994
%V 104
%P 39-47
%B Marine Ecology Progress Series
%9 Article
%! Effects of biogenic struture on prey consumption by the xanthid crabs Eurytium limosum and Panopeus herbstii in a salt marsh
%Z 738
%M UGAMI.754
%A Lee, S.Y.
%A Kneib, R.T.
%K biogenic, consumption, crabs, Effects, Eurytium, herbstii, limosum, marsh, Panopeus, prey, salt, struture, xanthid
%0 Journal Article
%T Dissolved organic matter composition in a marsh-dominated estuary: Response to seasonal forcing and to the passage of a hurricane
%D 2019
%B Journal of Geophysical Research: Biogeosciences
%9 Article
%! Dissolved organic matter composition in a marsh-dominated estuary: Response to seasonal forcing and to the passage of a hurricane
%Z published
%M UGAMI.1111
%A Letourneau, M.L.
%A Medeiros, P.M.
%K composition, Dissolved, estuary, forcing, hurricane, marsh-dominated, matter, organic, passage, Response, seasonal
%0 Journal Article
%T Spatio-temporal changes in dissolved organic matter composition along the salinity gradient of a marsh-influenced estuarine complex
%D 2021
%V 66
%N 8
%P 3040-3054
%B Limnology and Oceanography
%8 Aug
%9 Article
%! Spatio-temporal changes in dissolved organic matter composition along the salinity gradient of a marsh-influenced estuarine complex
%Z ISI Document Delivery No.: TV5AE; Times Cited: 1; Cited Reference Count: 60; Letourneau, Maria L. Schaefer, Sylvia C. Chen, Huan McKenna, Amy M. Alber, Merryl Medeiros, Patricia M.; Letourneau, Maria/0000-0002-2575-8868; Medeiros, Patricia/0000-0001-6818-2603; National Science FoundationNational Science Foundation (NSF) [OCE 1902131, 1803159]; National Science Foundation through the GCE-LTER Program [OCE 1832178]; National Science Foundation through a grant from the U.S. Environmental Protection Agency; Environmental Protection Division of the Department of Natural Resources, State of Georgia [GA EPD 321907]; National Science Foundation Division of ChemistryNational Science Foundation (NSF) [DMR-1644779]; State of Florida; National Science Foundation Division of Materials ResearchNational Science Foundation (NSF) [DMR-1644779]; We thank P. Hernes and two anonymous reviewers for their insightful comments, which led to a much-improved manuscript. A. Peterson, D. Smith, J. Shalack, and J. Sandow from the Georgia Coastal Ecosystems Long Term Ecological Research (GCE-LTER) are acknowledged for their help with sample collection. We appreciate the assistance of Y. Corilo with PetroOrg software use (http://www.petroorg.com).This research was supported by the National Science Foundation through grants OCE 1902131 and 1803159, through the GCE-LTER Program (OCE 1832178) and through a grant from the U.S. Environmental Protection Agency under the Provisions of Section 106 of the Federal Water Pollution Control Act, as amended, and by the Environmental Protection Division of the Department of Natural Resources, State of Georgia (GA EPD 321907). A portion of this work was performed at the National High Magnetic Field Laboratory ICR User Facility, which is supported by the National Science Foundation Division of Chemistry and Division of Materials Research through DMR-1644779 and the State of Florida. This is UGAMI contribution number 1093. Data for this manuscript are available in the Supporting Information (Tables S1 and S2) and will be available online at the Georgia Coastal Ecosystems LTER data portal.; 1; 17; Wiley; Hoboken; 1939-5590
%M UGAMI.1125
%A Letourneau, M.L.
%A Schaefer, S.C.
%A Chen, H.
%A McKenna, A.M.
%A Alber, M.
%A Medeiros, P.M.
%K altamaha river, carbon, degradation, dom, export, georgia, Marine Freshwater Biology, microbial decomposition, ocean, Oceanography, resolution, storm event
%0 Journal Article
%T Seven year''s measurement of deposition and erosion, Holocene salt marsh, Sapelo Island, Georgia
%D 1983
%V 15
%P 157-165
%B Senckenbergiana Maritima
%9 Article
%! Seven year''s measurement of deposition and erosion, Holocene salt marsh, Sapelo Island, Georgia
%Z 18-510
%M UGAMI.522
%A Letzsch, W.S.
%K deposition, erosion, Georgia, Holocene, Island, marsh, measurement, salt, Sapelo, year''s
%0 Journal Article
%T Deposition and erosion in a Holocene salt marsh, Sapelo Island, Georgia
%D 1980
%V 50
%P 529-542
%B Journal of Sedimentary Petrology
%9 Article
%! Deposition and erosion in a Holocene salt marsh, Sapelo Island, Georgia
%Z 15-407
%M UGAMI.419
%A Letzsch, W.S.
%A Frey, R.W.
%K Deposition, erosion, Georgia, Holocene, Island, marsh, salt, Sapelo
%0 Journal Article
%T Erosion of salt marsh tidal creek banks, Sapelo Island, Georgia
%D 1980
%V 12
%P 201-212
%B Senckenbergiana Maritima
%9 Article
%! Erosion of salt marsh tidal creek banks, Sapelo Island, Georgia
%Z 15-406
%M UGAMI.418
%A Letzsch, W.S.
%A Frey, R.W.
%K banks, creek, Erosion, Georgia, Island, marsh, salt, Sapelo, tidal
%0 Journal Article
%T Organic carbon in a Holocene salt marsh, Sapelo Island, Georgia
%D 1980
%V 39
%P 15-23
%B Georgia Journal of Science
%9 Article
%! Organic carbon in a Holocene salt marsh, Sapelo Island, Georgia
%Z 15-405
%M UGAMI.417
%A Letzsch, W.S.
%A Frey, R.W.
%K carbon, Georgia, Holocene, Island, marsh, Organic, salt, Sapelo
%0 Journal Article
%T Phaeosphaeria spartinicola, a new species on Spartina
%D 1991
%V XLI
%P 1-7
%B Mycotaxon
%9 Article
%! Phaeosphaeria spartinicola, a new species on Spartina
%Z 663
%M UGAMI.678
%A Leuchtmann, A.
%A Newell, S.Y.
%K new, Phaeosphaeria, Spartina, spartinicola, species
%0 Journal Article
%T The function of marine critical transition zones and the importance of sediment biodiversity
%D 2001
%V 4
%N 5
%P 430-451
%B Ecosystems
%9 Article
%! The function of marine critical transition zones and the importance of sediment biodiversity
%Z 874
%M UGAMI.897
%A Levin, L.A.
%A Boesch, D.F.
%A Covich, A.
%A Dahm, C.
%A Erseus, C.
%A Ewel, K.C.
%A Kneib, R.T
%A Moldenke, A.
%A Palmer, M.
%A Snelgrove, P.
%A Strayer, D.
%A Weslawski, J.M.
%K climate change, diversity, ecosystem function, estuaries, eutrophication, functional group, habitat alteration, mangrove, overfishing, salt marsh, species invasion, wetlands
%0 Journal Article
%T Responses of Tidal Freshwater and Brackish Marsh Macrophytes to Pulses of Saline Water Simulating Sea Level Rise and Reduced Discharge
%D 2018
%V 38
%N 5
%P 885-891
%B Wetlands
%8 Oct
%9 Article
%! Responses of Tidal Freshwater and Brackish Marsh Macrophytes to Pulses of Saline Water Simulating Sea Level Rise and Reduced Discharge
%Z ISI Document Delivery No.: HA5JA Times Cited: 1 Cited Reference Count: 47 Li, Fan Pennings, Steven C. National Science Foundation through the Georgia Coastal Ecosystems Long-Term Ecological Research program [OCE-1237140] This material is based upon work supported by the National Science Foundation through the Georgia Coastal Ecosystems Long-Term Ecological Research program under Grant No. OCE-1237140. We thank Huy Vu, Wei-Ting Lin, Jacob Shalack, Caroline Reddy, Tim Montgomery, Zachary Chejanovski, Carolyn Kilgore and George Wheeler for help with this project. We thank Wade Sheldon for assistance with the salinity data. This is contribution number 1068 of the University of Georgia Marine Institute. 1 15 Springer Dordrecht 1943-6246
%M UGAMI.1098
%A Li, F.
%A Pennings, S.C.
%K Brackish marsh, coastal marshes, drought, ecosystem, Environmental Sciences & Ecology, fluctuating salinity, Freshwater marsh, inundation, miliacea, oligohaline marsh, plant community, Polygonum hydropiperoides, Pontederia cordata, Saline intrusion, saltwater intrusion, sediments, services, vegetation, Zizaniopsis
%0 Journal Article
%T Response and Recovery of Low-Salinity Marsh Plant Communities to Presses and Pulses of Elevated Salinity
%D 2019
%V 42
%N 3
%P 708-718
%B Estuaries and Coasts
%8 May
%9 Article
%! Response and Recovery of Low-Salinity Marsh Plant Communities to Presses and Pulses of Elevated Salinity
%Z Li, Fan Pennings, Steven C. 1559-2731
%M UGAMI.1105
%A Li, F.
%A Pennings, S.C.
%K Communities, Elevated, Low-Salinity, Marsh, Plant, Presses, Pulses, Recovery, Response, Salinity
%0 Journal Article
%T Responses of a tidal freshwater marsh plant community to chronic and pulsed saline intrusion
%D 2022
%V 110
%P 1508-1524
%B Journal of Ecology
%9 Article
%Z published
%M UGAMI.1138
%R 10.1111/1365-2745.13885
%U https://besjournals.onlinelibrary.wiley.com/doi/full/10.1111/1365-2745.13885
%A Li, Fan
%A Angelini, Christine
%A Byers, James
%A Craft, Christopher B.
%A Pennings, Steven C.
%K tidal, freshwater, marsh, plants, saline intrusion, sea water, salinity, UGAMI Publication
%0 Journal Article
%T Disturbance in Georgia salt marshes: variation across space and time
%D 2016
%V 7
%N 10
%P 11
%B Ecosphere
%8 Oct
%9 Article
%! Disturbance in Georgia salt marshes: variation across space and time
%Z ISI Document Delivery No.: EB2TU Times Cited: 0 Cited Reference Count: 42 Li, Shanze Pennings, Steven C. National Science Foundation [OCE99-82133, OCE06-20959, OCE12-37140]; National Key Basic Research Program of China [2013CB430406] This research was funded by the National Science Foundation (OCE99-82133, OCE06-20959, OCE12-37140). Shanze Li was able to participate thanks to the National Key Basic Research Program of China (2013CB430406) and the China Scholarship Council. We thank everyone who helped sample the permanent plots over the years and thank Merryl Alber, Brian Silliman, and Kazimerz Wieski for helpful comments on the manuscript. This work is a contribution of the Georgia Coastal Ecosystems LTER program and contribution number 1051 of the University of Georgia Marine Institute. 0 Wiley-blackwell Hoboken
%M UGAMI.1081
%A Li, S.Z.
%A Pennings, S.C.
%K climate, climate-change, competition, coral-reefs, diversity, Environmental Sciences & Ecology, herbivory, Long-Term Ecological Research, long-term monitoring, plant, plant community, productivity, Spartina alterniflora, spartina-alterniflora, top-down, wrack
%0 Journal Article
%T Timing of disturbance affects biomass and flowering of a saltmarsh plant and attack by stem-boring herbivores
%D 2017
%V 8
%N 2
%P 9
%B Ecosphere
%8 Feb
%9 Article
%! Timing of disturbance affects biomass and flowering of a saltmarsh plant and attack by stem-boring herbivores
%Z ISI Document Delivery No.: EP0QH Times Cited: 0 Cited Reference Count: 49 Li, Shanze Pennings, Steven C. Pennings, Steven/0000-0003-4757-7125 National Science Foundation [OCE12-37140]; China Scholarship Council S. C. P. was supported by the National Science Foundation (OCE12-37140) and S. L. by the China Scholarship Council. We thank Fan Li, Leslie Wu, Caroline Reddy, and Qiang He for help in the field. This work is a contribution of the Georgia Coastal Ecosystems LTER program, and contribution number 1057 of the University of Georgia Marine Institute. S. L. and S. P. conceived the ideas and designed methodology; S. L. collected and analyzed the data; S. L. led the writing of the manuscript; S. L. and S. P. contributed critically to drafts and gave final approval for publication. 0 6 Wiley Hoboken
%M UGAMI.1087
%A Li, S.Z.
%A Pennings, S.C.
%K bottom-up, community, competition, disturbance, dynamics, Environmental Sciences & Ecology, flowering, growth, phenology, plant population and community, plant-herbivore interactions, primary production, productivity, sexual reproduction, southeastern united-states, spartina-alterniflora, stem borer, top-down, wrack
%0 Journal Article
%T Climate drivers of Zizaniopsis miliacea biomass in a Georgia, USA tidal fresh marsh
%D 2018
%V 63
%N 5
%P 2266-2276
%B Limnology and Oceanography
%8 Sep
%9 Article
%! Climate drivers of Zizaniopsis miliacea biomass in a Georgia, USA tidal fresh marsh
%Z ISI Document Delivery No.: GZ0IM Times Cited: 0 Cited Reference Count: 58 Li, Shanze Hopkinson, Charles S. Schubauer-Berigan, Joseph P. Pennings, Steven C. Li, Shanze/0000-0003-3246-3571; hopkinson, charles/0000-0002-7331-8322 National Science Foundation [OCE99-82133, OCE06-20959, OCE12-37140]; US EPA [R806728010]; Open Research Fund of State Key Laboratory of Simulation and Regulation of Water Cycle in River Basin, China Institute of Water Resources and Hydropower Research [SKL2018ZY04]; China Post-doctoral Science Foundation Grant [2018M630182]; China Scholarship Council We thank everyone who helped with the field work, and especially the GCE-LTER field technicians who organized and conducted much of the routine data collection. This work is a contribution of the Georgia Coastal Ecosystems LTER program, and contribution number 1069 of the University of Georgia Marine Institute. The views expressed in this paper are those of the authors and do not necessarily reflect the views or policies of the USEPA. This research was funded by the National Science Foundation (OCE99-82133, OCE06-20959, OCE12-37140) and the US EPA (R806728010). Shanze Li was funded by the Open Research Fund of State Key Laboratory of Simulation and Regulation of Water Cycle in River Basin, China Institute of Water Resources and Hydropower Research (SKL2018ZY04), China Post-doctoral Science Foundation Grant (2018M630182) and the China Scholarship Council. 0 6 Wiley Hoboken 1939-5590
%M UGAMI.1099
%A Li, S.Z.
%A Hopkinson, C.S.
%A Schubauer-Berigan, J.P.
%A Pennings, S.C.
%K ecosystem, invertebrate densities, Marine & Freshwater Biology, nitrogen, Oceanography, organic-matter, phosphorus additions, salt-marsh, sea-level, spartina-alterniflora loisel, top-down, water
%0 Journal Article
%T Reticulitermes nelsonae, a New Species of Subterranean Termite (Rhinotermitidae) from the Southeastern United States
%D 2012
%V 3
%N 1
%P 62-90
%B Insects
%8 March
%9 Article
%! Reticulitermes nelsonae, a New Species of Subterranean Termite (Rhinotermitidae) from the Southeastern United States
%Z #1020 ZOOR14805032321
%M UGAMI.1053
%A Lim, Su Yee
%A Forschler, Brian T.
%K North Carolina., alates keyed separately, Animalia, Arthropoda, Arthropods, Evolution, Genetics, Georgia-USA, Insecta, Insects, Invertebrates, Isoptera, Key, Land zones, Nearctic region, New taxa, Nomenclature, North America, P. 76]., p. 86]., Reticulitermes (Isoptera): [Key to species, Reticulitermes nelsonae (Isoptera): [Sp nov, Soldier &, Systematics, Taxonomy, USA
%0 Journal Article
%T Scale-dependent predator-prey interaction in a ladybug-aphid system
%D 2018
%V In review
%B Ecology and Evolution
%9 Article
%! Scale-dependent predator-prey interaction in a ladybug-aphid system
%Z published
%M UGAMI.1097
%A Lin, W.
%A Pennings, S.C.
%K interaction, ladybug-aphid, predator-prey, Scale-dependent, system
%0 Edited Book
%T Proceedings of the Oyster Culture Workshop, July 11-13, 1967
%D 1968
%V Contribution Series Number 6
%P 83
%I University of Georgia Marine Institute and Georgia Game and Fish Commission
%C Marine Fisheries Division, Brunswick, Georgia
%8 July 11-13, 1967
%! Proceedings of the Oyster Culture Workshop, July 11-13, 1967
%Z 156*
%M UGAMI.167
%A Linton, T.L.
%K Culture, July, Oyster, Proceedings, Workshop
%0 Edited Book
%T Feasibility study of methods of improving oyster production in Georgia
%D 1969
%V Completion Report 2-10-R
%P 172
%I University of Georgia Marine Institute and Georgia Game and Fish Commission
%! Feasibility study of methods of improving oyster production in Georgia
%Z 158
%M UGAMI.169
%A Linton, T.L.
%K Feasibility, Georgia, improving, methods, oyster, production, study
%0 Journal Article
%T Young common snook on the coast of Georgia
%D 1965
%V 28
%P 185-189
%B Quarterly Journal of the Florida Academy of Sciences
%9 Article
%! Young common snook on the coast of Georgia
%Z 5-92
%M UGAMI.103
%A Linton, T.L.
%A Rickards, W.L.
%K coast, common, Georgia, snook, Young
%0 Journal Article
%T Sources of polyamines in coastal waters and their links to phytoplankton
%D 2022
%V 242
%N 104121
%B Marine Chemistry
%9 Article
%Z published
%M UGAMI.1140
%R 10.1016/j.marchem.2022.104121
%U https://www.sciencedirect.com/science/article/pii/S030442032200038X#:~:text=Phytoplankton%20have%20been%20considered%20as,Nishibori%20et%20al.%2C%202001%2C
%A Liu, Qian
%A Nishibori, Naoyoshi
%A Hollibaugh, James T.
%K Polyamines, Diatoms, Picoeukaryotes, cyanobacteria, Dissolved organic nitrogen, DON, DOC, UGAMI Publication
%0 Journal Article
%T Light and temperature control the seasonal distribution of thaumarchaeota in the South Atlantic bight
%D 2018
%V 12
%N 6
%P 1473-1485
%B Isme Journal
%8 Jun
%9 Article
%! Light and temperature control the seasonal distribution of thaumarchaeota in the South Atlantic bight
%Z Liu, Qian Tolar, Bradley B. Ross, Meredith J. Cheek, Jelani B. Sweeney, Corinne M. Wallsgrove, Natalie J. Popp, Brian N. Hollibaugh, James T. Hollibaugh, James/0000-0001-8037-160X 1751-7370
%M UGAMI.1089
%A Liu, Q.
%A Tolar, B.B.
%A Ross, M.J.
%A Cheek, J.B.
%A Sweeney, C.M.
%A Wallsgrove, N.J.
%A Popp, B.N.
%A Hollibaugh, J.T.
%K Atlantic, bight, control, distribution, Light, seasonal, South, temperature, thaumarchaeota
%0 Journal Article
%T Self-thinning and size-dependent flowering of the grass Spartina alterniflora across space and time
%D 2019
%B Functional Ecology
%9 Article
%! Self-thinning and size-dependent flowering of the grass Spartina alterniflora across space and time
%Z published
%M UGAMI.1112
%A Liu, Wenwen
%A Pennings, Steven C.
%K across, alterniflora, flowering, grass, Self-thinning, size-dependent, space, Spartina, time
%0 Journal Article
%T Carbon Sequestration and Nutrient (Nitrogen, Phosphorus) Accumulation in River-Dominated Tidal Marshes, Georgia, USA
%D 2010
%V 74
%N 3
%P 1028-1036
%B Soil Science Society of America Journal
%8 May-June 2010
%7 12 Feb 2010
%9 Article
%! Carbon Sequestration and Nutrient (Nitrogen, Phosphorus) Accumulation in River-Dominated Tidal Marshes, Georgia, USA
%Z #982
%M UGAMI.1013
%A Loomis, Mark J.
%A Craft, Christopher B.
%K Accumulation, Carbon, Georgia, Marshes, Nitrogen, Nutrient, Phosphorus, River-Dominated, Sequestration, Tidal, USA
%0 Journal Article
%T Isolation and expression of a cDNA encoding Renilla reniformis luciferase
%D 1991
%V 88
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%B Proceedings of the National Academy of Science of the USA
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%! Isolation and expression of a cDNA encoding Renilla reniformis luciferase
%Z 659
%M UGAMI.674
%A Lorenz, W.W.
%A McCann, R.O.
%A Longiaru, M.
%A Cormier, M.J.
%K cDNA, encoding, expression, Isolation, luciferase, reniformis, Renilla
%0 Journal Article
%T Recovery and phylogenetic analysis of nifH sequences from diazotrophic bacteria associated with dead aboveground biomass of Spartina alterniflora
%D 2001
%V 67
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%P 5308-5314
%B Applied and Environmental Microbiology
%9 Article
%! Recovery and phylogenetic analysis of nifH sequences from diazotrophic bacteria associated with dead aboveground biomass of Spartina alterniflora
%Z 891
%M UGAMI.918
%A Lovell, C.R.
%A Friez, M.J.
%A Longshore, J.W.
%A Bagwell, C.E.
%K aboveground, alterniflora, analysis, associated, bacteria, biomass, dead, diazotrophic, nifH, phylogenetic, Recovery, sequences, Spartina
%0 Journal Article
%T Microbiological and geochemical characterization of microbial Fe(III) reduction in salt marsh sediments
%D 2000
%V 17
%P 163-178
%B Geomicrobiology Journal
%9 Article
%! Microbiological and geochemical characterization of microbial Fe(III) reduction in salt marsh sediments
%Z 878
%M UGAMI.907
%A Lowe, K.L.
%A DiChristina, T.J.
%A Roychoudhury, A.N.
%A Van Cappellen, P.
%K dissimilatory Fe(III) reduction, redox zonation, salt marsh sediments, sulfate reduction
%0 Journal Article
%T A new method of oocyte separation and preservation for fish reproduction studies
%D 1993
%V 91
%N 1
%P 165-170
%B Fishery Bulletin
%9 Article
%! A new method of oocyte separation and preservation for fish reproduction studies
%Z 928
%M UGAMI.961
%A Lowerre-Barbieri, S.K.
%A Barbieri, L.R.
%K fish, method, new, oocyte, preservation, reproduction, separation, studies
%0 Journal Article
%T Use of Passive Acoustics to Determine Red Drum Spawning in Georgia Waters
%D 2008
%V 137
%N 2
%P 562-575
%B Transactions of the American Fisheries Society
%9 Article
%! Use of Passive Acoustics to Determine Red Drum Spawning in Georgia Waters
%Z 963
%M UGAMI.994
%A Lowerre-Barbieri, S.K.
%A Barbieri, L.R.
%A Flanders, J.R.
%A Woodward, A.G.
%A Cotton, C.F.
%A Knowlton, M.K.
%K Acoustics, Determine, Drum, Georgia, Passive, Red, Spawning, Waters
%0 Journal Article
%T Multiple spawning and the dynamics of fish populations: Inferences from an individual-based simulation model
%D 1998
%V 55
%N 10
%P 2244-2254
%B Canadian Journal of Fisheries and Aquatic Sciences
%9 Article
%! Multiple spawning and the dynamics of fish populations: Inferences from an individual-based simulation model
%Z 929
%M UGAMI.962
%A Lowerre-Barbieri, S.K.
%A Lowerre, J.M.
%A Barbieri, L.R.
%K dynamics, fish, individual-based, Inferences, model, Multiple, populations, simulation, spawning
%0 Journal Article
%T Utilizing Repeat UAV Imagery to Evaluate the Spatiotemporal Patterns and Environmental Drivers of Wrack in a Coastal Georgia Salt Marsh
%D 2023
%B Estuaries and Coasts
%9 Article
%Z published
%M UGAMI.1135
%R 10.1007/s12237-023-01265-z
%U https://doi.org/10.1007/s12237-023-01265-z
%A Lynn, Tyler
%A Alber, Merryl
%A Shalack, Jacob
%A Mishra, Deepak
%K UAV, salt marsh, wrack, Sapelo Island, UGAMI Publication
%0 Journal Article
%T Diversity of ascomycete laccase gene sequences in a southeastern US salt marsh
%D 2003
%V 45
%P 270-281
%B Microbial Ecology
%9 Article
%! Diversity of ascomycete laccase gene sequences in a southeastern US salt marsh
%Z 915
%M UGAMI.948
%A Lyons, J.I.
%A Newell, S.Y.
%A Buchan, A.
%A Moran, M.A.
%K ascomycete, Diversity, gene, laccase, marsh, salt, sequences, southeastern, US
%0 Journal Article
%T Mineralization of detrital lignocelluloses by salt marsh sediment microflora
%D 1980
%V 40
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%B Applied and Environmental Microbiology
%9 Article
%! Mineralization of detrital lignocelluloses by salt marsh sediment microflora
%Z 15-420
%M UGAMI.432
%A Maccubbin, A.E.
%A Hodson, R.E.
%K detrital, lignocelluloses, marsh, microflora, Mineralization, salt, sediment
%0 Book Section
%T Interactions between pulp mill effluents and microbial populations in coastal waters and sediments
%D 1983
%V 5
%P 246-256
%I John Wiley & Son
%B Biodeterioration
%9 Article
%! Interactions between pulp mill effluents and microbial populations in coastal waters and sediments
%Z 17-476
%M UGAMI.488
%A Maccubbin, A.E.
%A Benner, R.
%A Hodson, R.E.
%E Oxley, T.A.
%K coastal, effluents, Interactions, microbial, mill, populations, pulp, sediments, waters
%0 Journal Article
%T Conference on the Future of the Marshlands and Sea Islands of Georgia
%D 1968
%V 128 p.
%B Published by University of Georgia Marine Institute and Coastal Area Planning and Development Commission
%9 Article
%! Conference on the Future of the Marshlands and Sea Islands of Georgia
%Z 176*
%M UGAMI.187
%A Maney, D.S.
%A Marland, F.C.
%A West, C.L.
%K Conference, Future, Georgia, Islands, Marshlands, Sea
%0 Journal Article
%T Some opisthobranchs from Sapelo Island, Georgia, U.S.A.
%D 1967
%V 6
%P 199-222
%B Malacologia
%9 Article
%! Some opisthobranchs from Sapelo Island, Georgia, U.S.A.
%Z 6-143
%M UGAMI.154
%A Marcus, E.
%A Marcus, E.
%K Georgia, Island, opisthobranchs, Sapelo, Some
%0 Journal Article
%T Latitudinal variation in top-down and bottom-up control of a salt marsh food web
%D 2011
%V 92
%N 2
%P 276-281
%B Ecology
%8 Feb
%9 Article
%! Latitudinal variation in top-down and bottom-up control of a salt marsh food web
%Z #996 ISI Document Delivery No.: 750NC Times Cited: 7 Cited Reference Count: 25 Marczak, L. B. Ho, C. -K. Wieski, K. Vu, H. Denno, R. F. Pennings, S. C. Pennings, Steven/A-8326-2013 Pennings, Steven/0000-0003-4757-7125 National Science Foundation [DEB-0296160, DEB-0638813, OCE06-20959] We thank Conan Phelan for field assistance and the National Science Foundation (DEB-0296160, DEB-0638813, OCE06-20959) for funding. This work is a contribution of the Georgia Coastal Ecosystem Long-Term Ecological Research program, and contribution number 996 from the University of Georgia Marine Institute. Two anonymous reviewers contributed greatly to the clarity of this work. 7 ECOLOGICAL SOC AMER WASHINGTON ECOLOGY
%M UGAMI.1030
%A Marczak, L.B.
%A Ho, C.K.
%A Wieski, K.
%A Vu, H.
%A Denno, R.F.
%A Pennings, S.C.
%K aphids, bottom-up control, CHRYSOMELIDAE, COLEOPTERA, COMPETITION, COMPLEXITY, CONSEQUENCES, Ecology, food web, HABITAT, HERBIVORE, Iva frutescens, latitude, multi-trophic interaction, omnivory, PALATABILITY, PLANTS, salt marsh, TEMPERATURE, top-down, trophic cascade, Uroleucon ambrosiae
%0 Journal Article
%T Importance of local vs. geographic variation in salt marsh plant quality for arthropod herbivore communities
%D 2013
%V 101
%N 5
%P 1169-1182
%B Journal of Ecology
%8 Sep
%9 Article
%! Importance of local vs. geographic variation in salt marsh plant quality for arthropod herbivore communities
%Z #1030 ISI Document Delivery No.: 208SG Times Cited: 1 Cited Reference Count: 67 Marczak, Laurie B. Wieski, Kazimierz Denno, Robert F. Pennings, Steven C. National Science Foundation [DEB-0296160, DEB-0638813, OCE06-20959] We thank the National Science Foundation (DEB-0296160, DEB-0638813, OCE06-20959) for funding and two anonymous reviewers for their constructive commentary. This work is a contribution of the Georgia Coastal Ecosystem Long-Term Ecological Research programme and contribution number 1030 from the University of Georgia Marine Institute. 1 WILEY-BLACKWELL HOBOKEN J ECOL
%M UGAMI.1062
%A Marczak, L.B.
%A Wieski, K.
%A Denno, R.F.
%A Pennings, S.C.
%K alterniflora, bottom-up, BOTTOM-UP FORCES, Ecology, FOOD-WEB, INTRAGUILD PREDATION, LATITUDINAL, latitudinal gradient, Plant Sciences, plant-herbivore interactions, POPULATION-DYNAMICS, PREY SUPPRESSION, RELATIVE STRENGTH, salt marsh, Spartina, SPARTINA-ALTERNIFLORA, TOP-DOWN CONTROL, top-down vs, TROPHIC CASCADES, VARIATION
%0 Book Section
%T The impending crisis--phosphate mining off the Georgia coast
%D 1968
%P 55-58
%I University of Georgia Marine Institute and Coastal Area Planning and Development Commission
%B The Future of the Marshlands and Sea Islands of Georgia
%9 Article
%! The impending crisis--phosphate mining off the Georgia coast
%Z 174*
%M UGAMI.185
%A Marland, F.C.
%E Maney, D.S.
%E Marland, F.C.
%E West, C.B.
%K coast, crisis, Georgia, impending, mining, phosphate
%0 Journal Article
%T A radionuclide tracer study of arthropod food chains in a Spartina salt marsh ecosystem
%D 1966
%V 47
%P 270-277
%B Ecology
%9 Article
%! A radionuclide tracer study of arthropod food chains in a Spartina salt marsh ecosystem
%Z 5-89
%M UGAMI.100
%A Marples, T.
%K arthropod, chains, ecosystem, food, marsh, radionuclide, salt, Spartina, study, tracer
%0 Journal Article
%T Resting traces of Ocypode quadrata associated with hydration and respiration: Sapelo Island, Georgia, USA
%D 2006
%V 13
%P 57-67
%B Ichnos
%9 Article
%! Resting traces of Ocypode quadrata associated with hydration and respiration: Sapelo Island, Georgia, USA
%Z 956
%M UGAMI.987
%A Martin, A.J.
%K associated, Georgia, hydration, Island, Ocypode, quadrata, respiration, Resting, Sapelo, traces, USA
%0 Book Section
%T Arthropod tracemakers of Nereites? Neoichnological observations of juvenile limulids and their paleoichnological applications
%D 2007
%P 479-491
%I Elsevier Press
%C Amserdam
%B Trace Fossils: Concepts, Problems, Prospects
%9 Article
%! Arthropod tracemakers of Nereites? Neoichnological observations of juvenile limulids and their paleoichnological applications
%Z 954
%M UGAMI.985
%A Martin, A.J.
%A Rindsber, A.K.
%E Miller, W.M.III
%K applications, Arthropod, juvenile, limulids, Neoichnological, Nereites, observations, paleoichnological, tracemakers
%0 Journal Article
%T Neoichnological novelties from Sapelo Island (Georgia) and their applications to the fossil record
%D 2007
%V 39
%N 2
%P 73
%B Geological Society of America Abstracts with Programs
%9 Article
%! Neoichnological novelties from Sapelo Island (Georgia) and their applications to the fossil record
%Z published
%M UGAMI.984
%A Martin, A.J.
%A Rindsberg, A.K.
%K applications, fossil, Georgia, Island, Neoichnological, novelties, record, Sapelo
%0 Journal Article
%T Assessing the contribution of seasonality, tides, and microbial processing to dissolved organic matter composition variability in a Southeastern U.S. estuary
%D 2021
%B Frontiers in Marine Science
%9 Article
%Z in review
%M UGAMI.1133
%A Martineac, Rachel
%A Vorobev, Alexey V.
%A Moran, Mary Ann
%A Medeiros, Patricia M.
%K composition, dissolved, estuary, microbial, organic, processing, seasonality, Southeastern, tides, variability, UGAMI Publication
%0 Journal Article
%T Some observations on the herpetofauna of Sapelo Island, Georgia
%D 1963
%V 19
%P 70-72
%B Herpetologica
%9 Article
%! Some observations on the herpetofauna of Sapelo Island, Georgia
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%A Martof, B.S.
%K Georgia, herpetofauna, Island, observations, Sapelo, Some
%0 Journal Article
%T The nearctic species of Idris foerster. Part I: The melleus-group (Hymenoptera: Scelionidae)
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%V 128
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%B The Canadian Entomologist
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%! The nearctic species of Idris foerster. Part I: The melleus-group (Hymenoptera: Scelionidae)
%Z 802
%M UGAMI.821
%A Masner, L.
%A Denis, J.
%K foerster, Hymenoptera, Idris, melleus-group, nearctic, Part, Scelionidae, species
%0 Book Section
%T Rapid microassay for the calcium-dependent protein modulator of cyclic nucleotide phosphodiesterase
%D 1978
%P 107-122
%I Academic Press, Inc.
%C New York
%B Methods in Enzymology, Vol. 57
%9 Article
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%Z 14-365
%M UGAMI.377
%A Matthews, J.C.
%A Cormier, M.J.
%E DeLuca, M.A.
%K calcium-dependent, cyclic, microassay, modulator, nucleotide, phosphodiesterase, protein, Rapid
%0 Journal Article
%T Purification and properties of Renilla reniformis luciferase
%D 1977
%V 16
%P 85-94
%B Biochemistry
%9 Article
%! Purification and properties of Renilla reniformis luciferase
%Z 12-321
%M UGAMI.333
%A Matthews, J.C.
%A Hori, K.
%A Cormier, M.J.
%K luciferase, properties, Purification, reniformis, Renilla
%0 Journal Article
%T Substrate and substrate analogue binding properties of Renilla luciferase
%D 1977
%V 16
%P 5217-5220
%B Biochemistry
%9 Article
%! Substrate and substrate analogue binding properties of Renilla luciferase
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%M UGAMI.354
%A Matthews, J.C.
%A Hori, K.
%A Cormier, M.J.
%K analogue, binding, luciferase, properties, Renilla, substrate
%0 Journal Article
%T Disturbance and Recovery of Salt Marsh Arthropod Communities following BP Deepwater Horizon Oil Spill
%D 2012
%V 7
%N 3
%P 7
%B Plos One
%8 Mar
%9 Article
%! Disturbance and Recovery of Salt Marsh Arthropod Communities following BP Deepwater Horizon Oil Spill
%Z #1013 ISI Document Delivery No.: 929KK Times Cited: 7 Cited Reference Count: 39 McCall, Brittany D. Pennings, Steven C. Pennings, Steven/A-8326-2013 Pennings, Steven/0000-0003-4757-7125 National Science Foundation [OCE10-45221, OCE06-20959] We thank the National Science Foundation (OCE10-45221, OCE06-20959) for financial support. The funders had no role in study design, data collection and analysis, decision to publish, or preparation of the manuscript. 7 PUBLIC LIBRARY SCIENCE SAN FRANCISCO PLOS ONE
%M UGAMI.1046
%A McCall, B.D.
%A Pennings, S.C.
%K BOTTOM-UP FORCES, CONTAMINATION, FOOD-WEB, IMPACT, Multidisciplinary Sciences, PETROLEUM-HYDROCARBONS, PHYTOPHAGOUS INSECT POPULATIONS, RELATIVE STRENGTH, RESIDUAL PETROLEUM, TOP-DOWN, VEGETATION
%0 Journal Article
%T Geographic variation in salt marsh structure and function
%D 2012
%V 170
%N 3
%P 777-787
%B Oecologia
%8 Nov
%9 Article
%! Geographic variation in salt marsh structure and function
%Z #1015 ISI Document Delivery No.: 021DT Times Cited: 1 Cited Reference Count: 56 McCall, Brittany D. Pennings, Steven C. Pennings, Steven/A-8326-2013 Pennings, Steven/0000-0003-4757-7125 National Science Foundation [DEB-0638796, OCE-1045221, OCE-0620959] We thank T. Decker, B. DeLong, C. Gratton, C. Grimm, H. Guo, C-K. Ho, L. Marczak, J. Martinez, M. Richardson, A. Stark, K. Wieski, G. Wimp, and H. Vu for help in the field and laboratory, and K. Wieski for help with the SEM analysis. We thank B. Cole, A. Frankino, and E. Siemann as well as two anonymous reviewers for advice and comments on the manuscript. We are grateful to the sponsors and staff of the 22 field sites where we worked for facilitating access and welcoming our activities. We thank the National Science Foundation (DEB-0638796, OCE-1045221, OCE-0620959) for financial support. This is contribution number 1015 from the University of Georgia Marine Institute. This work is a contribution of the Georgia Coastal Ecosystems Long-Term Ecological Research program. 1 SPRINGER NEW YORK OECOLOGIA
%M UGAMI.1048
%A McCall, B.D.
%A Pennings, S.C.
%K BIOLOGICAL, BOTTOM-UP FORCES, COMMUNITY STRUCTURE, Ecology, Fertilize, GLOBAL PATTERNS, INTERACTIONS, Latitude, LATITUDINAL VARIATION, LITTER DECOMPOSITION, PHYTOPHAGOUS INSECT POPULATIONS, RELATIVE STRENGTH, Spartina, STRUCTURE, Tide range, TOP-DOWN, VEGETATION, Wrack
%0 Journal Article
%T Impact of Fertilization on a Salt Marsh Food Web in Georgia
%D 2008
%V 31
%N 2
%P 313-325
%B Estuaries and Coasts
%9 Article
%! Impact of Fertilization on a Salt Marsh Food Web in Georgia
%Z 962
%M UGAMI.993
%A McFarlin, C.R.
%A Brewer, J.S.
%A Buck, T.L.
%A Pennings, S.C.
%K Eutrophication . Fertilization . Herbivory., Juncus . Salt marsh . Spartina
%0 Journal Article
%T Drought-induced Variability in Dissolved Organic Matter Composition in a Marsh-dominated Estuary
%D 2015
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%B Geophysical Research Letters
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%M UGAMI.904
%R 10.1002/2015GL064653
%A Medeiros, Patricia M.
%A Seidel, Michael
%A Dittmar, Thorsten
%A Whitman, William B.
%A Moran, Mary Ann
%K Dissolved organic matter, Marshes, Drought, FTICRMS, Molecular composition
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%D 2017
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%N 69
%B Frontiers in Marine Science
%8 2017-March-14
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%Z published
%M UGAMI.1088
%U https://www.frontiersin.org/article/10.3389/fmars.2017.00069
%A Medeiros, Patricia M.
%A Seidel, Michael
%A Gifford, Scott M.
%A Ballantyne, Ford
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%A Moran, Mary Ann
%K Biodegradation, Dissolved organic matter (DOM), DOM composition, Estuarine processes, FT-ICR MS.
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%A Koretsky, C.M.
%A Van Cappellen, P.
%K approach, aquatic, bioirrigation, inverse, modeling, Quantifying, sediments
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%A Miller, William L.
%A Moran, Mary Ann
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%K 65Zn, body, Excretion, irrorata, Littorina, rate, relation, size, temperature
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%A Montague, C.L.
%K Atlantic, crabs, fiddler, genus, history, impact, marsh, natural, reference, salt, temperate, Uca, western
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%T The influence of fiddler crab burrows and burrowing on metabolic processes in salt marsh sediments
%D 1982
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%E Kennedy, V.S.
%K burrowing, burrows, crab, fiddler, influence, marsh, metabolic, processes, salt, sediments
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%M UGAMI.502
%A Moore, J.N.
%A Fritz, W.J.
%A Futch, R.S.
%K Georgia, Island, megaripples, Morphology, Occurrence, processes, ridge, runnel, Sapelo, system
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%A Hodson, R.E.
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%A Moran, M.A.
%A Hodson, R.E.
%K alterniflora, carbon, Contributions, degrading, dissolved, lignocellulose, marsh, organic, pool, salt, Spartina
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%A Benner, R.
%A Hodson, R.E.
%K degradation, ecosystems, Kinetics, material, microbial, plant, vascular, wetland
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%Z 691
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%A Moran, M.A.
%A Pomeroy, L.R.
%A Sheppard, L.S.
%A Atkinson, L.P.
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%K Continental, derived, dissolved, Distribution, matter, organic, shelf, southeastern, terrestrially
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%A Moran, Mary Ann
%A Rutherford, Laura T.
%A Hodson, Robert E.
%K 16S, determined, environment, Evidence, indigenous, marine, populations, Probe, rRNA, Streptomyces
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%A Moran, M.A.
%A Torsvik, V.L.
%A Torsvik, T.
%A Hodson, R.E.
%K Direct, ecological, extraction, Purification, rRNA, studies
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%A Munson, D.A.
%K amoebae, coastal, Georgia, Marine, surface, waters
%0 Book Section
%T Biodiversity and Ecology of the Oomycetous fungus, Halophytophthora
%D 1996
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%I DIWPA
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%S DIWPA Conference Proceedings / DIWPA Series
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%! Biodiversity and Ecology of the Oomycetous fungus, Halophytophthora
%Z 782
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%A Nakagiri, A.
%A Newell, S.Y.
%A Ito, T.
%A Tan, T.K.
%A Pek, C.L.
%E Turner, I.M.
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%K Biodiversity, Ecology, fungus, Halophytophthora, Oomycetous
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%M UGAMI.1136
%R 10.1016/j.ecolind.2022.109045
%U https://www.sciencedirect.com/science/article/pii/S1470160X22005167
%A Narron, Caroline
%A O'Connell, Jessica L.
%A Mishra, Deepak
%A Cotten, David L.
%A Hawman, Peter
%A Mao, Lishen
%K Tidal inundation, Salt marshes, Flooding, Sea level rise, Spartina alterniflora, Coastal wetland, Georgia Coastal Ecosystems Long Term Ecological Re, Google Earth Engine, UGAMI Publication
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%0 Journal Article
%T A preliminary study of the sediment hydrology of a Georgia salt marsh using Rhodamine WT as a tracer
%D 1977
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%B Southeastern Geology
%9 Article
%! A preliminary study of the sediment hydrology of a Georgia salt marsh using Rhodamine WT as a tracer
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%A Nestler, J.
%K Georgia, hydrology, marsh, preliminary, Rhodamine, salt, sediment, study, tracer, WT
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%T Interstitial salinity as a cause of ecophenic variation in Spartina alterniflora
%D 1977
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%A Nestler, J.
%K alterniflora, cause, ecophenic, Interstitial, salinity, Spartina, variation
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%T Tidal Freshwater Wetlands
%D 2009
%P 253-266
%I Backhuys Publishers
%C Leiden, the Netherlands
%B Tidal Freshwater Wetlands
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%Z 968
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%A Neubauer, Scott C.
%A Craft, Christoper B.
%E Barendregt, Aat
%E Whigham, Dennis
%E Baldwin, Andrew
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%D 1981
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%! Fungi and bacteria in or on leaves of eelgrass (Zostera marina L.) from Chesapeake Bay
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%M UGAMI.437
%A Newell, S.Y.
%K bacteria, Bay, Chesapeake, eelgrass, Fungi, leaves, marina, or, Zostera
%0 Conference Proceedings
%T Bacterial and fungal productivity in the marine environment: a contrastive overview
%D 1984
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%B International Colloquium for Marine Bacteriology, Marseille, France, May 1982
%9 Presentation
%! Bacterial and fungal productivity in the marine environment: a contrastive overview
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%A Newell, S.Y.
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%T Modification of the gelatin-matrix method for enumeration of respiring bacterial cells for use with salt-marsh water samples
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%A Newell, S.Y.
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%T Autumn distribution of marine Pythiaceae across a mangrove-saltmarsh boundary
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%K across, Autumn, boundary, distribution, mangrove-saltmarsh, marine, Pythiaceae
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%T Estimating fungal biomass and productivity in decomposing litter
%D 1992
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%I Marcel Dekker, Inc.
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%B The Fungal Community
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%M UGAMI.680
%A Newell, S.Y.
%E Carroll, G.C.
%E Wicklow, D.T.
%K biomass, decomposing, Estimating, fungal, litter, productivity
%0 Book Section
%T Decomposition of shoots of a saltmarsh grass
%D 1993
%V 13
%P 301-326
%I Plenum Press
%C New York
%B Advances in microbial ecology
%9 Article
%! Decomposition of shoots of a saltmarsh grass
%Z 729
%M UGAMI.746
%A Newell, S.Y.
%E Jones, J.G.
%K Decomposition, grass, saltmarsh, shoots
%0 Book Section
%T Membrane-containing fungal mass and fungal specific growth rate in natural samples
%D 1993
%P 579-586
%I Lewis Pubs.
%C Boca Raton, FL
%B Current methods in aquatic microbial ecology
%9 Article
%! Membrane-containing fungal mass and fungal specific growth rate in natural samples
%Z 700
%M UGAMI.716
%A Newell, S.Y.
%E Kemp, P.F.
%E Sherr, B.F.
%E Sherr, E.B.
%E Cole, J.J.
%K fungal, growth, mass, Membrane-containing, natural, rate, samples, specific
%0 Journal Article
%T Ecomethodology for Organoosmotrophs:Prokaryotic Unicellular Versus Euraryotic Mycelial
%D 1994
%V 28
%P 151-157
%B Microbial Ecology
%9 Article
%! Ecomethodology for Organoosmotrophs:Prokaryotic Unicellular Versus Euraryotic Mycelial
%Z 756
%M UGAMI.774
%A Newell, S.Y.
%K Ecomethodology, Euraryotic, Mycelial, Organoosmotrophs, Prokaryotic, Unicellular, Versus
%0 Journal Article
%T Total and free ergosterol in mycelia of saltmarsh ascomycetes with access to whole leaves or aqueous extracts of leaves
%D 1994
%V 60
%P 3479-3482
%B Applied and Environmental Microbiology
%9 Article
%! Total and free ergosterol in mycelia of saltmarsh ascomycetes with access to whole leaves or aqueous extracts of leaves
%Z 755
%M UGAMI.773
%A Newell, S.Y.
%K access, aqueous, ascomycetes, ergosterol, extracts, free, leaves, mycelia, or, saltmarsh, Total, whole
%0 Journal Article
%T Minimizing Ergosterol Loss during Preanalytical Handling and Shipping of Samples of Plant Litter
%D 1995
%V 61
%N 7
%P 2794-2797
%B Applied and Environmental Microbiology
%9 Article
%! Minimizing Ergosterol Loss during Preanalytical Handling and Shipping of Samples of Plant Litter
%Z 767
%M UGAMI.783
%A Newell, Steven Y.
%K during, Ergosterol, Handling, Litter, Loss, Minimizing, Plant, Preanalytical, Samples, Shipping
%0 Journal Article
%T Established and potential impacts of eukaryotic mycelial decomposers in marine/terrestrial ecotones
%D 1996
%V 200
%P 187-206
%B Journal of Experimental Marine Biology and Ecology
%9 Article
%! Established and potential impacts of eukaryotic mycelial decomposers in marine/terrestrial ecotones
%Z 780
%M UGAMI.798
%A Newell, Steven Y.
%K decomposers, ecotones, Established, eukaryotic, impacts, marine, mycelial, potential, terrestrial
%0 Journal Article
%T The [14C]acetate-to-ergosterol method: factors for conversion from acetate incorporated to organic fungal mass synthesized
%D 1996
%V 28
%N 4/5
%P 681-683
%B Soil Biology and Biochemistry
%9 Article
%! The [14C]acetate-to-ergosterol method: factors for conversion from acetate incorporated to organic fungal mass synthesized
%Z 781
%M UGAMI.799
%A Newell, Steven Y.
%K [14C]acetate-to-ergosterol, acetate, conversion, factors, fungal, incorporated, mass, method, organic, synthesized
%0 Book Section
%T Methods for determining biomass and productivity of mycelial marine fungi
%D 2000
%P 69-91
%I Fungal Diversity Press
%C Hong Kong
%B Marine Mycology - A Practical Approach
%S Fungal Diversity Research Series
%7 1
%9 Article
%! Methods for determining biomass and productivity of mycelial marine fungi
%Z 836
%M UGAMI.856
%A Newell, S.Y.
%E Hyde, K.D.
%E Pointing, S.B.
%K ergosterol, fungal biomass, fungal productivity, glucosamine, mycelial volume
%0 Journal Article
%T Fungal biomass and productivity in standing-decaying leaves of black needlerush (Juncus roemerianus)
%D 2001
%V 52
%P 249-255
%B Marine and Freshwater Research
%9 Article
%! Fungal biomass and productivity in standing-decaying leaves of black needlerush (Juncus roemerianus)
%Z 861
%M UGAMI.884
%A Newell, S.Y.
%K [14C]acetate, ascomycetes, biomass, black needlerush, decomposition, ergosterol, fungi, Juncus roemerianus, marshgrass, nitrogen, phosphorus, saltmarsh, standing-decaying
%0 Book Section
%T Fungal Biomass and Productivity
%D 2001
%V 30
%P 357-372
%I Academic Press
%B Methods in Microbiology
%9 Article
%! Fungal Biomass and Productivity
%Z 895
%M UGAMI.923
%A Newell, S.Y.
%K Biomass, Fungal, Productivity
%0 Journal Article
%T Multiyear patterns of fungal biomass dynamics and productivity within naturally decaying smooth cordgrass shoots
%D 2001
%V 46
%N 3
%P 573-583
%B Limnology and Oceanography
%9 Article
%! Multiyear patterns of fungal biomass dynamics and productivity within naturally decaying smooth cordgrass shoots
%Z 864
%M UGAMI.887
%A Newell, S.Y.
%K biomass, cordgrass, decaying, dynamics, fungal, Multiyear, naturally, patterns, productivity, shoots, smooth
%0 Journal Article
%T Spore-expulsion rates and extents of blade occupation by ascomycetes of the smooth-cordgrass standing-decay system
%D 2001
%V 44
%P 277-285
%B Botanica Marina
%9 Article
%! Spore-expulsion rates and extents of blade occupation by ascomycetes of the smooth-cordgrass standing-decay system
%Z 862
%M UGAMI.885
%A Newell, S.Y.
%K ascomycetes, blade, extents, occupation, rates, smooth-cordgrass, Spore-expulsion, standing-decay, system
%0 Book Section
%T Fungi in marine/estuarine waters
%D 2002
%P 1394-1400
%I Wiley
%C New York, NY
%B The Encyclopedia of Environmental Microbiology
%9 Article
%! Fungi in marine/estuarine waters
%Z 882
%M UGAMI.911
%A Newell, S.Y.
%E Bitton, G.
%K estuarine, Fungi, marine, waters
%0 Journal Article
%T Fungal content and activities in standing-decaying leaf blades of plants of the Georgia Coastal Ecosystems research area
%D 2003
%V 32
%P 95-103
%B Aquatic Microbial Ecology
%9 Article
%! Fungal content and activities in standing-decaying leaf blades of plants of the Georgia Coastal Ecosystems research area
%Z 916
%M UGAMI.949
%A Newell, S.Y.
%K Altamaha River, CO2 release, ergosterol, freshwater marsh, fugal productivity, fungal biomass, saltmarsh, standing decay
%0 Journal Article
%T Removal of fungal and total organic matter from decaying cordgrass leaves by shredder snails
%D 1993
%V 171
%P 39-49
%B Journal of experimental marine biology and ecology
%9 Article
%! Removal of fungal and total organic matter from decaying cordgrass leaves by shredder snails
%Z 727
%M UGAMI.744
%A Newell, S.Y.
%A Barlocher, F.
%K cordgrass, decaying, fungal, leaves, matter, organic, Removal, shredder, snails, total
%0 Journal Article
%T Frequency of dividing cells as an estimator of bacterial productivity
%D 1981
%V 42
%P 23-31
%B Applied and Environmental Microbiology
%9 Article
%! Frequency of dividing cells as an estimator of bacterial productivity
%Z 15-429
%M UGAMI.441
%A Newell, S.Y.
%A Christian, R.R.
%K bacterial, cells, dividing, estimator, Frequency, productivity
%0 Journal Article
%T Bacterial productivity in the water column and sediments of the Georgia (USA) coastal zone: estimates via direct counting and parallel measurement of thymidine incorporation
%D 1982
%V 8
%P 33-46
%B Microbial Ecology
%9 Article
%! Bacterial productivity in the water column and sediments of the Georgia (USA) coastal zone: estimates via direct counting and parallel measurement of thymidine incorporation
%Z 16-458
%M UGAMI.470
%A Newell, S.Y.
%A Fallon, R.D.
%K Bacterial, coastal, column, counting, direct, estimates, Georgia, incorporation, measurement, parallel, productivity, sediments, thymidine, USA, via, water, zone
%0 Conference Proceedings
%T Study of fungal biomass dynamics within dead leaves of cordgrass: Progress and potential
%D 1983
%P 150-160
%B Proceedings of the International Symposium on Aquatic Macrophytes, Nijmegen, The Netherlands
%9 Presentation
%! Study of fungal biomass dynamics within dead leaves of cordgrass: Progress and potential
%Z 17-493
%M UGAMI.505
%A Newell, S.Y.
%A Fallon, R.D.
%K biomass, cordgrass, dead, dynamics, fungal, leaves, potential, Progress, Study
%0 Journal Article
%T Litterbags, leaf tags and decay of non-abscised intertidal leaves
%D 1989
%V 67
%P 2324-2327
%B Canadian Journal of Botany
%9 Article
%! Litterbags, leaf tags and decay of non-abscised intertidal leaves
%Z 613
%M UGAMI.626
%A Newell, S.Y.
%A Fallon, R.D.
%K decay, intertidal, leaf, leaves, Litterbags, non-abscised, tags
%0 Journal Article
%T Toward a method for measuring instantaneous fungal growth rates in field samples
%D 1991
%V 72
%P 1547-1559
%B Ecology
%9 Article
%! Toward a method for measuring instantaneous fungal growth rates in field samples
%Z 664
%M UGAMI.679
%A Newell, S.Y.
%A Fallon, R.D.
%K field, fungal, growth, instantaneous, measuring, method, rates, samples, Toward
%0 Journal Article
%T Mycoflora of turtlegrass (Thalassia testudinum Konig) as recorded after seawater incubation
%D 1980
%V 23
%P 265-275
%B Botanica Marina
%9 Article
%! Mycoflora of turtlegrass (Thalassia testudinum Konig) as recorded after seawater incubation
%Z 15-402
%M UGAMI.414
%A Newell, S.Y.
%A Fell, J.W.
%K incubation, Konig, Mycoflora, recorded, seawater, testudinum, Thalassia, turtlegrass
%0 Journal Article
%T Near-ultraviolet light in incubation of marine leaf-litter samples
%D 1982
%V 74
%P 508-510
%B Mycologia
%9 Article
%! Near-ultraviolet light in incubation of marine leaf-litter samples
%Z 16-440
%M UGAMI.452
%A Newell, S.Y.
%A Fell, J.W.
%K incubation, leaf-litter, light, marine, Near-ultraviolet, samples
%0 Journal Article
%T Surface sterilization and the active mycoflora of leaves of a seagrass
%D 1982
%V 25
%P 339-346
%B Botanica Marina
%9 Article
%! Surface sterilization and the active mycoflora of leaves of a seagrass
%Z 16-459
%M UGAMI.471
%A Newell, S.Y.
%A Fell, J.W.
%K active, leaves, mycoflora, seagrass, sterilization, Surface
%0 Journal Article
%T Distribution and experimental responses to substrate for marine oomycetes (Hyaophytophthora species) in mangrove ecosystems
%D 1992
%V 96
%P 851-856
%B Mycological Research
%9 Article
%! Distribution and experimental responses to substrate for marine oomycetes (Hyaophytophthora species) in mangrove ecosystems
%Z 688
%M UGAMI.704
%A Newell, S.Y.
%A Fell, J.W.
%K Distribution, ecosystems, experimental, Hyaophytophthora, mangrove, marine, oomycetes, responses, species, substrate
%0 Journal Article
%T Ergosterol content of living and submerged, decaying leaves and twigs of red mangrove
%D 1992
%V 38
%P 979-982
%B Canadian Journal of Microbiology
%9 Article
%! Ergosterol content of living and submerged, decaying leaves and twigs of red mangrove
%Z 694
%M UGAMI.710
%A Newell, S.Y.
%A Fell, J.W.
%K content, decaying, Ergosterol, leaves, living, mangrove, red, submerged, twigs
%0 Journal Article
%T Parallel testing of media for measuring frequencies of occurrence for Halophytophthora spp. (Oomycota) from decomposing mangrove leaves
%D 1994
%V 40
%P 250-256
%B Canadian Journal of Microbiology
%9 Article
%! Parallel testing of media for measuring frequencies of occurrence for Halophytophthora spp. (Oomycota) from decomposing mangrove leaves
%Z 745
%M UGAMI.761
%A Newell, S.Y.
%A Fell, J.W.
%K decomposing, frequencies, Halophytophthora, leaves, mangrove, measuring, media, occurrence, Oomycota, Parallel, testing
%0 Journal Article
%T Do halophytophthoras (marine Pythiaceae) rapidly occupy fallen leaves by intraleaf mycelial gorwth?
%D 1995
%V 73
%P 761-765
%B Can. J. Bot.
%9 Article
%! Do halophytophthoras (marine Pythiaceae) rapidly occupy fallen leaves by intraleaf mycelial gorwth?
%Z 765
%M UGAMI.785
%A Newell, Steven Y.
%A Fell, Jack W.
%K Do, fallen, gorwth, halophytophthoras, intraleaf, leaves, marine, mycelial, occupy, Pythiaceae, rapidly
%0 Journal Article
%T Cues for zoospore release by marine oomycotes in naturally decaying submerged leaves.
%D 1996
%V 88
%N 6
%P 934-938
%B Mycologia
%9 Article
%! Cues for zoospore release by marine oomycotes in naturally decaying submerged leaves.
%Z 787
%M UGAMI.805
%A Newell, Steven Y.
%A Fell, Jack W.
%K Cues, decaying, leaves, marine, naturally, oomycotes, release, submerged, zoospore
%0 Journal Article
%T Competition among mangrove oomycotes, and between oomycotes and other microbes
%D 1997
%V 12
%P 21-28
%B Aquatic Microbial Ecology
%9 Article
%! Competition among mangrove oomycotes, and between oomycotes and other microbes
%Z 796
%M UGAMI.814
%A Newell, S.Y.
%A Fell, J.W.
%K Competition, mangrove, microbes, oomycotes, other
%0 Book Section
%T Halophytophthoran zoospores versus mangrove protozooplankters
%D 2002
%P 135-144
%I Fungal Diversity Press
%C Hong Kong
%B Fungi in Marine Environments
%S Fungal Diversity Research Series
%7 7
%9 Article
%! Halophytophthoran zoospores versus mangrove protozooplankters
%Z 893
%M UGAMI.922
%A Newell, S.Y.
%A Fell, J.W.
%E Hyde, K.D.
%K Halophytophthora, Predation, Protozoa, Protozooplankton, Zoospore
%0 Journal Article
%T Direct-count estimates of fungal and bacterial biovolume in dead leaves of smooth cordgrass (Spartina alterniflora Loisel.)
%D 1982
%V 5
%P 246-260
%B Estuaries
%9 Article
%! Direct-count estimates of fungal and bacterial biovolume in dead leaves of smooth cordgrass (Spartina alterniflora Loisel.)
%Z 16-468
%M UGAMI.480
%A Newell, S.Y.
%A Hicks, R.E.
%K alterniflora, bacterial, biovolume, cordgrass, dead, Direct-count, estimates, fungal, leaves, Loisel, smooth, Spartina
%0 Journal Article
%T Responses of bacterioplankton to tidal inundations of a saltmarsh in a flume and adjacent mussel enclosures
%D 1995
%V 190
%P 79-95
%B Journal of Experimental Marine Biology and Ecology (760)
%9 Article
%! Responses of bacterioplankton to tidal inundations of a saltmarsh in a flume and adjacent mussel enclosures
%Z 760
%M UGAMI.778
%A Newell, S.Y.
%A Krambeck, C.
%K adjacent, bacterioplankton, enclosures, flume, inundations, mussel, Responses, saltmarsh, tidal
%0 Journal Article
%T Responses of bacterial assemblages on standing-decaying blades of smooth cordgrass to additions of water and nitrogen
%D 1998
%V 83
%N 2
%P 115-122
%B International Review of Hydrobiology (former: Int. Rev. Ges. Hydrobiol.)
%9 Article
%! Responses of bacterial assemblages on standing-decaying blades of smooth cordgrass to additions of water and nitrogen
%Z 810
%M UGAMI.828
%A Newell, S.Y.
%A Palm, L.A.
%K bacterioplankton, decomposition, epiphytic bacteria, saltmarsh, Spartina alterniflora
%0 Book Section
%T Microbial secondary production from salt marsh-grass shoots, and its known and potential fates
%D 2000
%P 159-185
%I Kluwer Academic Publishers
%C Dordrecht, The Netherlands
%B Concepts and Controversies in Tidal Marsh Ecology
%9 Article
%! Microbial secondary production from salt marsh-grass shoots, and its known and potential fates
%Z 831
%M UGAMI.852
%A Newell, S.Y.
%A Porter, D.
%E Weinstein, M.P.
%E Kreeger, D.A.
%K ascomycete ecology, bacterial productivity, fungal productivity, gastropod shredders, lignocellulose digestion, saltmarsh, Spartina alterniflora
%0 Journal Article
%T Factors for conversion of fungal biovolume values to biomass, carbon, and nitrogen: variation with mycelial ages, growth conditions, and strains of fungi from a salt marsh
%D 1982
%V 39
%P 261-268
%B Oikos
%9 Article
%! Factors for conversion of fungal biovolume values to biomass, carbon, and nitrogen: variation with mycelial ages, growth conditions, and strains of fungi from a salt marsh
%Z 16-442
%M UGAMI.454
%A Newell, S.Y.
%A Statzell-Tallman, A.
%K ages, biomass, biovolume, carbon, conditions, conversion, Factors, fungal, fungi, growth, marsh, mycelial, nitrogen, salt, strains, values, variation
%0 Journal Article
%T Response of saltmarsh fungi to the presence of mercury and polychlorinated biphenyls at a Superfund site
%D 1998
%V 90
%N 5
%P 777-784
%B Mycologia
%9 Article
%! Response of saltmarsh fungi to the presence of mercury and polychlorinated biphenyls at a Superfund site
%Z 816
%M UGAMI.835
%A Newell, S.Y.
%A Wall, V.D.
%K ascospore-expulsion rate, fungal biomass, LCP Chemical, methylmercury, Phaeosphaeria spartinicola, Spartina alterniflora
%0 Journal Article
%T Sexual productivity and spring intramarsh distriubtion of a key salt-marsh microbial secondary producer
%D 1995
%V 18
%N 1B
%P 241-249
%B Estuaries
%9 Article
%! Sexual productivity and spring intramarsh distriubtion of a key salt-marsh microbial secondary producer
%Z 758
%M UGAMI.776
%A Newell, S.Y.
%A Wasowski, J
%K distriubtion, intramarsh, key, microbial, producer, productivity, salt-marsh, secondary, Sexual, spring
%0 Journal Article
%T Measuring summer patterns of ascospore release by saltmarsh fungi
%D 2000
%V 41
%P 211-215
%B Mycoscience
%9 Article
%! Measuring summer patterns of ascospore release by saltmarsh fungi
%Z 850
%M UGAMI.870
%A Newell, S.Y.
%A Zakel, K.L.
%K ascomycetes, ascospore-expulsion rate, marshgrass, Mycosphaerella, Phaeosphaeria
%0 Journal Article
%T Fundamental procedures for determining ergosterol content of decaying plant material by liquid chromatography
%D 1988
%V 54
%P 1876-1879
%B Applied and Environmental Microbiology
%9 Article
%! Fundamental procedures for determining ergosterol content of decaying plant material by liquid chromatography
%Z 603
%M UGAMI.616
%A Newell, S.Y.
%A Arsuffi, T.L.
%A Fallon, R.D.
%K chromatography, content, decaying, determining, ergosterol, Fundamental, liquid, material, plant, procedures
%0 Journal Article
%T Misting and nitrogen fertilization of shoots of a saltmarsh grass: effects upon fungal decay of leaf blades
%D 1996
%V 108
%N 3
%P 495-502
%B Oecologia
%9 Article
%! Misting and nitrogen fertilization of shoots of a saltmarsh grass: effects upon fungal decay of leaf blades
%Z 784
%M UGAMI.802
%A Newell, S.Y.
%A Arsuffi, T.L.
%A Palm, L.A.
%K blades, decay, effects, fertilization, fungal, grass, leaf, Misting, nitrogen, saltmarsh, shoots, upon
%0 Journal Article
%T Seasonal and vertical demography of dead portions of shoots of smooth cordgrass in a south-temperate saltmarsh
%D 1998
%V 60
%P 325-335
%B Aquatic Botany
%9 Article
%! Seasonal and vertical demography of dead portions of shoots of smooth cordgrass in a south-temperate saltmarsh
%Z 811
%M UGAMI.829
%A Newell, S.Y.
%A Arsuffi, T.L.
%A Palm, L.A.
%K Fallen litter, Saltmarsh, Smooth cordgrass, Spartina alterniflora, Standing dead biomass, Vertical profile
%0 Journal Article
%T Water potential of standing-dead shoots of an intertidal grass
%D 1991
%V 85
%P 321-326
%B Oecologia
%9 Article
%! Water potential of standing-dead shoots of an intertidal grass
%Z 657
%M UGAMI.672
%A Newell, S.Y.
%A Arsuffi, T.S.
%A Kemp, P.F.
%A Scott, L.A.
%K grass, intertidal, potential, shoots, standing-dead, Water
%0 Journal Article
%T Autumnal biomass and potential productivity of salt marsh fungi from 29o to 43o north latitude along the United States Atlantic coast
%D 2000
%V 66
%N 1
%P 180-185
%B Applied and Environmental Microbiology
%9 Article
%! Autumnal biomass and potential productivity of salt marsh fungi from 29o to 43o north latitude along the United States Atlantic coast
%Z 843
%M UGAMI.868
%A Newell, S.Y.
%A Blum, L.K.
%A Crawford, R.E.
%A Dai, T.
%A Dionne, M.
%K 43o, Atlantic, Autumnal, biomass, coast, fungi, latitude, marsh, north, potential, productivity, salt, States, United
%0 Journal Article
%T Acute impact of an organophosphorus insecticide on microbes and small invertebrates of a mangrove estuary
%D 1981
%V 10
%P 427-435
%B Archives of Environmental Contamination and Toxicology
%9 Article
%! Acute impact of an organophosphorus insecticide on microbes and small invertebrates of a mangrove estuary
%Z 15-418
%M UGAMI.430
%A Newell, S.Y.
%A Cooksey, K.E.
%A Fell, J.W.
%A Master, I.M.
%A Miller, C.
%A Walter, M.A.
%K Acute, estuary, impact, insecticide, invertebrates, mangrove, microbes, organophosphorus, small
%0 Book Section
%T Measuring fungal-biomass dynamics in standing-dead leaves of a salt marsh vascular plant
%D 1986
%P 19-25
%I Cambridge University Press
%B Biology of Marine Fungi
%9 Article
%! Measuring fungal-biomass dynamics in standing-dead leaves of a salt marsh vascular plant
%Z 19-548
%M UGAMI.560
%A Newell, S.Y.
%A Fallon, R.D.
%A Miller, J.D.
%E Moss, S.T.
%K dynamics, fungal-biomass, leaves, marsh, Measuring, plant, salt, standing-dead, vascular
%0 Journal Article
%T Decomposition and microbial dynamics for standing, naturally positioned leaves of a salt-marsh grass, Spartina alterniflora
%D 1989
%V 101
%P 471-481
%B Marine Biology
%9 Article
%! Decomposition and microbial dynamics for standing, naturally positioned leaves of a salt-marsh grass, Spartina alterniflora
%Z 627
%M UGAMI.640
%A Newell, S.Y.
%A Fallon, R.D.
%A Miller, J.D.
%K alterniflora, Decomposition, dynamics, grass, leaves, microbial, naturally, positioned, salt-marsh, Spartina, standing
%0 Book Section
%T Direct microscopy of natural assemblages
%D 1986
%V 2
%P 1-48
%I Plenum Publ. Corp.
%B Bacteria in Nature
%9 Article
%! Direct microscopy of natural assemblages
%Z 17-488
%M UGAMI.500
%A Newell, S.Y.
%A Fallon, R.D.
%A Tabor, P.S.
%E Poindexter, J.S.
%E Leadbetter, E.R.
%K assemblages, Direct, microscopy, natural
%0 Journal Article
%T Influence of rain, tidal wetting and relative humidity on release of carbon dioxide by standing-dead salt-marsh plants
%D 1985
%V 68
%P 73-79
%B Oecologia
%9 Article
%! Influence of rain, tidal wetting and relative humidity on release of carbon dioxide by standing-dead salt-marsh plants
%Z 544
%M UGAMI.556
%A Newell, S.Y.
%A Fallon, R.D.
%A Cal Rodriguez, R.M.
%A Groene, L.C.
%0 Journal Article
%T Mesoscale temporal variation in bacterial standing crop, percent active cells, productivity and output in a saltmarsh tidal river
%D 1988
%V 23
%P 1839-1845
%B Verhandlungen Internationale Vereinigung Limnololgie
%9 Article
%! Mesoscale temporal variation in bacterial standing crop, percent active cells, productivity and output in a saltmarsh tidal river
%Z 570
%M UGAMI.583
%A Newell, S.Y.
%A Fallon, R.D.
%A Sherr, B.F.
%A Sherr, E.B.
%K active, bacterial, cells, crop, Mesoscale, output, percent, productivity, river, saltmarsh, standing, temporal, tidal, variation
%0 Journal Article
%T Deposition and decomposition of turtlegrass leaves
%D 1986
%V 71
%P 363-369
%B Internationale Revue der gesamten Hydrobiologie
%9 Article
%! Deposition and decomposition of turtlegrass leaves
%Z 19-555
%M UGAMI.568
%A Newell, S.Y.
%A Fell, J.W.
%A Miller, C.
%K decomposition, Deposition, leaves, turtlegrass
%0 Journal Article
%T Carbon and nitrogen dynamics in decomposing leaves of three coastal marine vascular plants of the subtropics
%D 1984
%V 19
%P 183-192
%B Aquatic Botany
%9 Article
%! Carbon and nitrogen dynamics in decomposing leaves of three coastal marine vascular plants of the subtropics
%Z 17-501
%M UGAMI.513
%A Newell, S.Y.
%A Fell, J.W.
%A Statzell-Tallman, A.
%A Miller, C.
%A Cefalu, R.
%K Carbon, coastal, decomposing, dynamics, leaves, marine, nitrogen, plants, subtropics, vascular
%0 Journal Article
%T Content of mercury in leaves of Spartina alterniflora Loisel. in Georgia, U.S.A.
%D 1982
%V 14
%P 465-469
%B Estuarine, Coastal and Shelf Science
%9 Article
%! Content of mercury in leaves of Spartina alterniflora Loisel. in Georgia, U.S.A.
%Z 16-447
%M UGAMI.459
%A Newell, S.Y.
%A Hicks, R.E.
%A Nicora, M.
%K alterniflora, Content, Georgia, leaves, Loisel, mercury, Spartina
%0 Journal Article
%T Patterns of nitrogenase activity (acetylene reduction) associated with standing decaying shoots of Spartina alterniflora
%D 1992
%V 35
%P 127-140
%B Estuarine, Coastal and Shelf Science
%9 Article
%! Patterns of nitrogenase activity (acetylene reduction) associated with standing decaying shoots of Spartina alterniflora
%Z 695
%M UGAMI.711
%A Newell, S.Y.
%A Hopkinson, C.S.
%A Scott, L.A.
%K acetylene, activity, alterniflora, associated, decaying, nitrogenase, Patterns, reduction, shoots, Spartina, standing
%0 Book Section
%T A salt marsh decomposition system and its ascomycetous laccase genes
%D 2006
%P 694-709, Chapter 18
%I Cambridge University Press
%B Fungi in the Environment
%9 Article
%! A salt marsh decomposition system and its ascomycetous laccase genes
%Z 930
%M UGAMI.963
%A Newell, S.Y.
%A Lyons, J.I.
%A Moran, M.A.
%E Gadd, G.M.et al
%K ascomycetous, decomposition, genes, laccase, marsh, salt, system
%0 Journal Article
%T Ergosterol content of salt-marsh fungi: Effect of growth conditions and mycelial age
%D 1987
%V 79
%P 688-695
%B Mycologia
%9 Article
%! Ergosterol content of salt-marsh fungi: Effect of growth conditions and mycelial age
%Z 20-581
%M UGAMI.594
%A Newell, S.Y.
%A Miller, J.D.
%A Fallon, R.D.
%K age, conditions, content, Ergosterol, fungi, growth, mycelial, salt-marsh
%0 Journal Article
%T Rapid and pervasive occupation of mangrove leaves by a marine zoosporic fungus
%D 1987
%V 53
%P 2464-2469
%B Applied and Environmental Microbiology
%9 Article
%! Rapid and pervasive occupation of mangrove leaves by a marine zoosporic fungus
%Z 588
%M UGAMI.601
%A Newell, S.Y.
%A Miller, J.D.
%A Fell, J.W.
%K fungus, leaves, mangrove, marine, occupation, pervasive, Rapid, zoosporic
%0 Journal Article
%T Productivities of microbial decomposers during early stages of decomposition of leaves of a freshwater sedge
%D 1995
%V 34
%P 135-148
%B Freshwater Biology
%9 Article
%! Productivities of microbial decomposers during early stages of decomposition of leaves of a freshwater sedge
%Z 762
%M UGAMI.780
%A Newell, S.Y.
%A Moran, M.A.
%A Wicks, R.
%A Hodson, R.E.
%K decomposers, decomposition, during, early, freshwater, leaves, microbial, Productivities, sedge, stages
%0 Journal Article
%T Lignocellulolysis by ascomycetes (Fungi) of a saltmarsh grass (smooth cordgrass)
%D 1996
%V 33
%P 32-46
%B Microscopy Research and Technique (Special Issue: Aquatic Microorganisms)
%9 Article
%! Lignocellulolysis by ascomycetes (Fungi) of a saltmarsh grass (smooth cordgrass)
%Z 747
%M UGAMI.763
%A Newell, S.Y.
%A Porter, D.
%A Lingle, W.L.
%K ascomycetes, cordgrass, Fungi, grass, Lignocellulolysis, saltmarsh, smooth
%0 Journal Article
%T Bacterial response to presence of eukaryote inhibitors in water from a coastal marine environment
%D 1983
%V 10
%P 147-157
%B Marine Environmental Research
%9 Article
%! Bacterial response to presence of eukaryote inhibitors in water from a coastal marine environment
%Z 17-483
%M UGAMI.495
%A Newell, S.Y.
%A Sherr, B.F.
%A Sherr, E.B.
%A Fallon, R.D.
%K Bacterial, coastal, environment, eukaryote, inhibitors, marine, presence, response, water
%0 Journal Article
%T Fungal biomass in saltmarsh grass blades at two contaminated sites.
%D 2000
%V 38
%P 268-273
%B Archives of Environmental Contamination and Toxicology
%9 Article
%! Fungal biomass in saltmarsh grass blades at two contaminated sites.
%Z 842
%M UGAMI.862
%A Newell, S.Y.
%A Wall, V.D.
%A Maruya, K.A.
%K biomass, blades, contaminated, Fungal, grass, saltmarsh, sites
%0 Journal Article
%T A simple flotation technique for separating meiobenthic nematodes from fine-grained sediments
%D 1979
%V 98
%P 127-130
%B Transactions of the American Microscopical Society
%9 Article
%! A simple flotation technique for separating meiobenthic nematodes from fine-grained sediments
%Z 344B
%M UGAMI.653
%A Nichols, J.A.
%K fine-grained, flotation, meiobenthic, nematodes, sediments, separating, simple, technique
%0 Journal Article
%T The occurrence of the subfamily xyalinae (Nematoda, Monhysteroidea) in the Georgia Bight with a description of two new species
%D 1979
%V 22
%P 151-159
%B Cahiers De Biologie Marine
%9 Article
%! The occurrence of the subfamily xyalinae (Nematoda, Monhysteroidea) in the Georgia Bight with a description of two new species
%Z 378
%M UGAMI.390
%A Nichols, J.A.
%K Bight, description, Georgia, Monhysteroidea, Nematoda, new, occurrence, species, subfamily, xyalinae
%0 Journal Article
%T Free-living marine nematodes from sandy sediments off the coast of Peru
%D 1979
%V 20
%P 449-459
%B Cahiers De Biologie Marine
%9 Article
%! Free-living marine nematodes from sandy sediments off the coast of Peru
%Z 399*
%M UGAMI.411
%A Nichols, J.A.
%A Musselman, M.R.
%K coast, Free-living, marine, nematodes, Peru, sandy, sediments
%0 Journal Article
%T Field evidence that the eastern mud snail, Ilyanassa obsoleta, influences nematode community structure
%D 1979
%V 93
%P 44-46
%B Nautilus
%9 Article
%! Field evidence that the eastern mud snail, Ilyanassa obsoleta, influences nematode community structure
%Z 14-379
%M UGAMI.391
%A Nichols, J.A.
%A Robertson, J.R.
%K community, eastern, evidence, Field, Ilyanassa, influences, mud, nematode, obsoleta, snail, structure
%0 Journal Article
%T Fiddler crab-vegetation interactions in hypersaline habitats
%D 1998
%V 225
%P 53-68
%B Journal of Experimental Marine Biology and Ecology
%9 Article
%! Fiddler crab-vegetation interactions in hypersaline habitats
%Z 800
%M UGAMI.819
%A Nomann, B.E.
%A Pennings, S.C.
%K crab-vegetation, Fiddler, habitats, hypersaline, interactions
%0 Journal Article
%T Microspatial differences in soil temperature cause phenology change on par with long-term climate warming in salt marshes
%D 2019
%B Ecosystems
%9 Article
%! Microspatial differences in soil temperature cause phenology change on par with long-term climate warming in salt marshes
%Z published
%M UGAMI.1109
%A O'Connell, Jessica
%A Alber, Merryl
%A Pennings, Steven C.
%K salt marsh, LTER, Landsat, temperature, elevation, Spartina alterniflora
%0 Journal Article
%T A smart classifier for extracting environmental data from digital image time-series: Applications for PhenoCam data in a tidal salt marsh
%D 2016
%V 84
%P 134-139
%B Environmental Modelling & Software
%8 Oct
%9 Article
%! A smart classifier for extracting environmental data from digital image time-series: Applications for PhenoCam data in a tidal salt marsh
%Z ISI Document Delivery No.: DZ1JR Times Cited: 0 Cited Reference Count: 10 O''Connell, Jessica L. Alber, Merryl National Science Foundation [OCE12-37140] The Georgia Coastal Ecosystems LTER is supported by the National Science Foundation (OCE12-37140). We thank Wade Sheldon, Jacob Shalack and the National PhenoCam Network for managing and curating the GCE PhenoCam. This is contribution 1046 of the University of Georgia Marine Institute. 0 3 Elsevier sci ltd Oxford 1873-6726
%M UGAMI.1076
%A O'Connell, J.L.
%A Alber, M.
%K Computer Science, Engineering, Environmental Sciences & Ecology, Flooding, Georgia Coastal Ecosystems LTER, marsh, PhenoCam, Phenology, Salt, Tides, Wetlands
%0 Journal Article
%T The Tidal Marsh Inundation Index (TMII): An inundation filter to flag flooded pixels and improve MODIS tidal marsh vegetation time-series analysis
%D 2017
%V 201
%P 34-46
%B Remote Sensing of Environment
%8 Nov
%9 Article
%! The Tidal Marsh Inundation Index (TMII): An inundation filter to flag flooded pixels and improve MODIS tidal marsh vegetation time-series analysis
%Z ISI Document Delivery No.: FJ6KJ Times Cited: 0 Cited Reference Count: 45 O''Connell, Jessica L. Mishra, Deepak R. Cotten, David L. Wang, Li Alber, Merryl NASA [NNX14AR30G]; Georgia Coastal Ecosystems LTER - National Science Foundation [OCE12-37140] This project was funded by D. Mishra''s NASA grant#NNX14AR30G and the Georgia Coastal Ecosystems LTER, which is supported by the National Science Foundation (OCE12-37140). We thank Jacob Spaulding, Wenjing Xu, Ayn Remillard, Alexander Lawrence, Hailong Huang, Wei Wu, Jacob Shalack, and Wade Sheldon for their assistance with data, equipment, supplies, lab space and field labor. We thank hike Forbrich for her assistance with tide gauge data at the Plum Island Ecosystems LTER, MA. This is contribution 1060 of the University of Georgia Marine Institute. 0 31 Elsevier science inc New york 1879-0704
%M UGAMI.1090
%A O'Connell, J.L.
%A Mishra, D.R.
%A Cotten, D.L.
%A Wang, L.
%A Alber, M.
%K alterniflora, Bayou Sauvage National Wildlife Refuge, carbon, chlorophyll, Coastal wetlands, difference water index, ecosystem, Environmental Sciences & Ecology, Georgia, Grand Bay, gulf-of-mexico, habitats, Imaging Science &, Juncus roemerianus, marsh, Moderate, National Estuarine Research Reserve, ndwi, PhenoCam, Phenology, Photographic Technology, photosynthesis, Plum, productivity, Remote Sensing, Resolution Imagery Spectroradiometer (MODIS), Salt and brackish, salt-marsh, Sapelo Island National Estuarine Research Reserve, Sparrina, Spartina patens
%0 Journal Article
%T Examination of abiotic drivers and their influence on Spartina alterniflora biomass over a twenty-eight year period using Landsat 5 TM satellite imagery of the Central Georgia Coast
%D 2016
%V 8
%N 6
%P 22
%B Remote Sensing in Coastal Environments
%9 Article
%! Examination of abiotic drivers and their influence on Spartina alterniflora biomass over a twenty-eight year period using Landsat 5 TM satellite imagery of the Central Georgia Coast
%Z 1047
%M UGAMI.1077
%U http://www.mdpi.com/2072-4292/8/6/477/html
%A O'Donnell, John P.R.
%A Schalles, John F.
%K climate forcing, coastal remote sensing, ecosystem health, Landsat 5 TM, long-term data, river discharge, salt marsh ecology, sea level, Spartina alterniflora, vegetation stress
%0 Book Section
%T Factors which regulate primary productivity and heterotrophic utilization in the ecosystem
%D 1961
%P 65-71
%B Algae and Metropolitan Wastes Trans. 1960 Seminar, U. S. Public Health Service, R. A. Taft Sanitary Eng. Center, Cincinnati
%9 Article
%! Factors which regulate primary productivity and heterotrophic utilization in the ecosystem
%Z 2-20
%M UGAMI.26
%A Odum, E.P.
%K ecosystem, Factors, heterotrophic, primary, productivity, regulate, utilization, which
%0 Conference Proceedings
%T The role of tidal marshes in estuarine production
%D 1961
%P 12-15, 35
%B Information Leaflet, June-July 1961, N. Y. State Conservation Dept.
%9 Presentation
%! The role of tidal marshes in estuarine production
%Z 2-29
%M UGAMI.35
%A Odum, E.P.
%K estuarine, marshes, production, role, tidal
%0 Book Section
%T A proposal for a marshbank and the strategy of ecosystem development for the estuarine zone of Georgia
%D 1968
%P 74-85
%I University of Georgia Marine Institute and Coastal Area Planning and Development Commission
%B The Future of the Marshlands and Sea Islands of Georgia
%9 Article
%! A proposal for a marshbank and the strategy of ecosystem development for the estuarine zone of Georgia
%Z 170*
%M UGAMI.181
%A Odum, E.P.
%E Maney, D.S.
%E Marland, F.C.
%E West, C.B.
%K development, ecosystem, estuarine, Georgia, marshbank, proposal, strategy, zone
%0 Journal Article
%T Detritus as a major component of ecosystems
%D 1963
%V 13
%P 39-40
%B American Institute of Biological Science Bulletin
%9 Article
%! Detritus as a major component of ecosystems
%Z 4-55
%M UGAMI.65
%A Odum, E.P.
%A de la Cruz, A.A.
%K component, Detritus, ecosystems, major
%0 Book Section
%T Particulate organic detritus in a Georgia salt marsh estuarine ecosystem
%D 1967
%P 383-388
%I AAAS Publ. No. 83
%B Estuaries
%9 Article
%! Particulate organic detritus in a Georgia salt marsh estuarine ecosystem
%Z 6-118
%M UGAMI.129
%A Odum, E.P.
%A de la Cruz, A.A.
%E Lauff, G.
%K detritus, ecosystem, estuarine, Georgia, marsh, organic, Particulate, salt
%0 Journal Article
%T Comparison of productivity of Spartina alterniflora and Spartina cynosuroides in Georgia coastal marshes
%D 1973
%V 31
%P 1-12
%B Bulletin of the Georgia Academy of Science
%9 Article
%! Comparison of productivity of Spartina alterniflora and Spartina cynosuroides in Georgia coastal marshes
%Z 9-238
%M UGAMI.248
%A Odum, E.P.
%A Fanning, M.
%K alterniflora, coastal, Comparison, cynosuroides, Georgia, marshes, productivity, Spartina
%0 Journal Article
%T Comparison of population energy flow of a herbivorous and a deposit-feeding invertebrate in a salt marsh ecosystem
%D 1959
%V 45
%P 617-622
%B Proceedings of the National Academy of Science of the USA
%9 Article
%! Comparison of population energy flow of a herbivorous and a deposit-feeding invertebrate in a salt marsh ecosystem
%Z 2-14
%M UGAMI.18
%A Odum, E.P.
%A Smalley, A.E.
%K Comparison, deposit-feeding, ecosystem, energy, flow, herbivorous, invertebrate, marsh, population, salt
%0 Journal Article
%T Mullet grazing on the dinoflagellate bloom
%D 1968
%V 9
%P 202-204
%B Chesapeake Science
%9 Article
%! Mullet grazing on the dinoflagellate bloom
%Z 7-154
%M UGAMI.165
%A Odum, W.E.
%K bloom, dinoflagellate, grazing, Mullet
%0 Journal Article
%T The ecological significance of fine particle selection by striped mullet, Mugil cephalus
%D 1968
%V 13
%P 92-98
%B Limnology and Oceanography
%9 Article
%! The ecological significance of fine particle selection by striped mullet, Mugil cephalus
%Z 6-142
%M UGAMI.153
%A Odum, W.E.
%K cephalus, ecological, fine, Mugil, mullet, particle, selection, significance, striped
%0 Book Section
%T A sedimentary framework of the substrates adjacent to Georgia tidal inlets
%D 1973
%P 59-66
%I Univ. Ga., Dept. Geol., Guidebook, 8th Ann. Ga. Geol. Soc. Field Trip
%B The Neogene of the Georgia Coast
%9 Article
%! A sedimentary framework of the substrates adjacent to Georgia tidal inlets
%Z 10-269
%M UGAMI.280
%A Oertel, G.F.
%E Frey, R.W.
%K adjacent, framework, Georgia, inlets, sedimentary, substrates, tidal
%0 Journal Article
%T Isolation and transmission of the Lyme disease spirochete from the southeastern United States
%D 1993
%V 90
%P 7371-7375
%B Proceedings of the National Academy of Science
%9 Article
%! Isolation and transmission of the Lyme disease spirochete from the southeastern United States
%Z 877
%M UGAMI.900
%A Oliver, J.H.
%A Chandler, F.W.Jr.
%A Luttrell, M.P.
%A James, A.M.
%A Stallknecht, D.E.
%A McGuire, B.S.
%A Hutcheson, H.J.
%A Cummins, G.A.
%A Lane, R.S.
%K Amblyomma americanum, black-legged tick, Borrelia burgdorferi, cotton mice, Ixodes scapularis, lone-star tick, Lyme disease, Peromyscus gossypinus
%0 Journal Article
%T Natural occurrence and characterization of the lyme disease spirochete, Borrelia burgdorferi, in cotton rats (Sigmodon hispidus) from Georgia and Florida
%D 1995
%V 81
%N 1
%P 30-36
%B Journal of Parasitology
%9 Article
%! Natural occurrence and characterization of the lyme disease spirochete, Borrelia burgdorferi, in cotton rats (Sigmodon hispidus) from Georgia and Florida
%Z 873
%M UGAMI.896
%A Oliver, J.H.Jr.
%A Chandler, F.W.Jr.
%A James, A.M.
%A Sanders, F.H.Jr.
%A Hutcheson, H.J.
%A Huey, L.O.
%A McGuire, B.S.
%A Lane, R.S.
%K Borrelia, burgdorferi, characterization, cotton, disease, Florida, Georgia, hispidus, lyme, Natural, occurrence, rats, Sigmodon, spirochete
%0 Journal Article
%T Arylsulfatase activity in salt marsh soils
%D 1979
%V 38
%P 337-340
%B Applied and Environmental Microbiology
%9 Article
%! Arylsulfatase activity in salt marsh soils
%Z 14-390
%M UGAMI.402
%A Oshrain, R.
%A Wiebe, W.J.
%K activity, Arylsulfatase, marsh, salt, soils
%0 Journal Article
%T Allocation of particulate organic carbon from different sources in two contrasting estuaries of southeastern U.S.A.
%D 2000
%V 45
%N 8
%P 1753-1763
%B Limnology and Oceanography
%9 Article
%! Allocation of particulate organic carbon from different sources in two contrasting estuaries of southeastern U.S.A.
%Z 868
%M UGAMI.891
%A Otero, E.
%A Culp, R.
%A Noakes, J.E.
%A Hodson, R.E.
%K Allocation, carbon, contrasting, different, estuaries, organic, particulate, sources, southeastern
%0 Journal Article
%T The effect of grazing by a gastropod, Nassarius obsoletus, on the benthic microbial community of a salt marsh mudflat
%D 1979
%V 9
%P 121-134
%B Estuarine and Coastal Marine Science
%9 Article
%! The effect of grazing by a gastropod, Nassarius obsoletus, on the benthic microbial community of a salt marsh mudflat
%Z 14-373
%M UGAMI.385
%A Pace, M.L.
%A Shimmel, S.
%A Darley, W.M.
%K benthic, community, gastropod, grazing, marsh, microbial, mudflat, Nassarius, obsoletus, salt
%0 Journal Article
%T Foliar release of soluble reactive phosphorus from Spartina alterniflora in a Georgia (USA) salt marsh
%D 1992
%V 90
%P 53-60
%B Marine Ecology Progress Series
%9 Article
%! Foliar release of soluble reactive phosphorus from Spartina alterniflora in a Georgia (USA) salt marsh
%Z 725
%M UGAMI.741
%A Pakulski, J.D.
%K alterniflora, Foliar, Georgia, marsh, phosphorus, reactive, release, salt, soluble, Spartina, USA
%0 Journal Article
%T Foliar release of dimethylsulfoniopopionate from Spartina alterniflora
%D 1992
%V 81
%P 277-287
%B Marine Ecology-Progress Series
%9 Article
%! Foliar release of dimethylsulfoniopopionate from Spartina alterniflora
%Z 697
%M UGAMI.713
%A Pakulski, J.D.
%A Kiene, R.P.
%K alterniflora, dimethylsulfoniopopionate, Foliar, release, Spartina
%0 Journal Article
%T Populations of anaerobic phototrophic bacteria in a Spartina alterniflora salt marsh
%D 1988
%V 54
%P 1360-1364
%B Applied and Environmental Microbiology
%9 Article
%! Populations of anaerobic phototrophic bacteria in a Spartina alterniflora salt marsh
%Z 606
%M UGAMI.619
%A Paterek, J.R.
%A Paynter, M.J.B.
%K alterniflora, anaerobic, bacteria, marsh, phototrophic, Populations, salt, Spartina
%0 Journal Article
%T Studies on bacterial utilization of uronic acids. III. Induction of oxidative enzymes in a marine isolate
%D 1958
%V 76
%P 301-307
%B Journal of Bacteriology
%9 Article
%! Studies on bacterial utilization of uronic acids. III. Induction of oxidative enzymes in a marine isolate
%Z 2-16A
%M UGAMI.20
%A Payne, W.J.
%K acids, bacterial, enzymes, Induction, isolate, marine, oxidative, Studies, uronic, utilization
%0 Journal Article
%T Growth yield and efficiency in chemosynthetic microorganisms
%D 1978
%V 32
%P 155-183
%B Annual Review of Microbiology
%9 Article
%! Growth yield and efficiency in chemosynthetic microorganisms
%Z 13-355
%M UGAMI.367
%A Payne, W.J.
%A Wiebe, W.
%K chemosynthetic, efficiency, Growth, microorganisms, yield
%0 Journal Article
%T Some observations on the physiology of Pseudomonas natriegens, nov. spec.
%D 1961
%V 27
%P 121-128
%B Antonie van Leeuwenhoek
%9 Article
%! Some observations on the physiology of Pseudomonas natriegens, nov. spec.
%Z 2-26
%M UGAMI.32
%A Payne, W.J.
%A Eagon, R.G.
%A Williams, A.K.
%K natriegens, nov, observations, physiology, Pseudomonas, Some, spec
%0 Journal Article
%T Phosphorite in Georgia continental shelf sediments
%D 1966
%V 77
%P 849-858
%B Geological Society of American Bulletin
%9 Article
%! Phosphorite in Georgia continental shelf sediments
%Z 5-112
%M UGAMI.123
%A Peaver, D.R.
%A Pilkey, O.H.
%K continental, Georgia, Phosphorite, sediments, shelf
%0 Journal Article
%T Microautoradiographic study of thymidine uptake of brackish waters around Sapelo Island, Georgia
%D 1989
%V 55
%P 83-94
%B Marine Ecology-Progress Series
%9 Article
%! Microautoradiographic study of thymidine uptake of brackish waters around Sapelo Island, Georgia
%Z 624
%M UGAMI.637
%A Pedros-Alio, C.
%A Newell, S.Y.
%K around, brackish, Georgia, Island, Microautoradiographic, Sapelo, study, thymidine, uptake, waters
%0 Journal Article
%T Testing for synergisms between chemical and mineral defenses - a comment
%D 1996
%V 77
%N 6
%P 1948-1950
%B Ecology
%9 Article
%! Testing for synergisms between chemical and mineral defenses - a comment
%Z 774
%M UGAMI.791
%A Pennings, S.C.
%K chemical, comment, defenses, mineral, synergisms, Testing
%0 Book Section
%T Salt Marsh Communities
%D 2001
%P 289-316
%I Sinauer Press
%C Sunderland, MA
%B Marine Community Ecology
%9 Article
%! Salt Marsh Communities
%Z 837
%M UGAMI.857
%A Pennings, S.C.
%A Bertness, M.D.
%E Bertness, M.D.
%E Hay, M.E.
%E Gaines, S.
%K Communities, Marsh, Salt
%0 Journal Article
%T Using latitudinal variation to examine effects of climate on coastal salt marsh pattern and process
%D 1999
%V 3
%P 100-111
%B Current Topics in Wetland Biogeochemistry
%9 Article
%! Using latitudinal variation to examine effects of climate on coastal salt marsh pattern and process
%Z 823
%M UGAMI.844
%A Pennings, S.C.
%A Bertress, M.D.
%K climate change, positive interactoins, salinity, salt marsh, salt pan, zonation
%0 Journal Article
%T Impact of a parasitic plant on the structure and dynamics of salt marsh vegetation
%D 1996
%V 77
%N 5
%P 1410-1419
%B Ecology
%9 Article
%! Impact of a parasitic plant on the structure and dynamics of salt marsh vegetation
%Z 772
%M UGAMI.789
%A Pennings, S.C.
%A Callaway, R.M.
%K dynamics, Impact, marsh, parasitic, plant, salt, structure, vegetation
%0 Journal Article
%T The advantages of clonal integration under different ecological conditions: a community-wide test
%D 2000
%V 81
%N 3
%P 709-716
%B Ecology
%9 Article
%! The advantages of clonal integration under different ecological conditions: a community-wide test
%Z 826
%M UGAMI.847
%A Pennings, S.C.
%A Callaway, R.M.
%K abiotic stress, clonal integration, clonal plants, disturbance, halophytes, plant comunities, salt marsh ecology
%0 Journal Article
%T Parasitic plants: parallels and contrasts with herbivores
%D 2002
%V 131
%N 4
%P 479-489
%B Oecologia
%9 Article
%! Parasitic plants: parallels and contrasts with herbivores
%Z 900
%M UGAMI.929
%A Pennings, S.C.
%A Callaway, R.M.
%K parasite, parasite-host interactions, parasitic plant, plant community, plant-herbivore interactions
%0 Book
%T Community ecology of salt marshes
%D 2021
%I Cambridge University Press
%C New York
%B Salt marshes
%9 Book
%! Community ecology of salt marshes
%Z published
%M UGAMI.1130
%A Pennings, S.C.
%A He, Q.
%E Fitzgerald, D.
%E Hughes, Z.
%K Community, ecology, marshes, salt
%0 Journal Article
%T Zonation of shrubs in western Atlantic salt marshes
%D 2001
%V 126
%N 4
%P 587-594
%B Oecologia
%9 Article
%! Zonation of shrubs in western Atlantic salt marshes
%Z 859
%M UGAMI.881
%A Pennings, S.C.
%A Moore, D.J.
%K competition, generality, physical stress, salt marsh, zonation
%0 Journal Article
%T Effects of wrack burial in salt-stressed habitats: Batis maritima in a southwest Atlantic salt marsh
%D 1998
%V 21
%N 6
%P 630-638
%B Ecography
%9 Article
%! Effects of wrack burial in salt-stressed habitats: Batis maritima in a southwest Atlantic salt marsh
%Z 817
%M UGAMI.836
%A Pennings, S.C.
%A Richards, C.L.
%K Atlantic, Batis, burial, Effects, habitats, maritima, marsh, salt, salt-stressed, southwest, wrack
%0 Journal Article
%T Linking biogeography and community ecology: Latitudinal variation in plant-herbivore interaction strength
%D 2005
%V 86
%N 9
%P 2310-2319
%B Ecology
%9 Article
%! Linking biogeography and community ecology: Latitudinal variation in plant-herbivore interaction strength
%Z 947
%M UGAMI.978
%A Pennings, S.C.
%A Silliman, B.R.
%K gastropods, grasshoppers, interaction strength, latitude, plant-herbivore interactions, salt marsh, Spartina, top-down effects
%0 Journal Article
%T Feeding preferences of a generalist salt-marsh crab: relative importance of multiple plant traits
%D 1998
%V 79
%N 6
%P 1968-1979
%B Ecology
%9 Article
%! Feeding preferences of a generalist salt-marsh crab: relative importance of multiple plant traits
%Z 805
%M UGAMI.824
%A Pennings, S.C.
%A Carefoot, T.H.
%A Siska, E.L.
%A Chase, M.A.
%A Page, T.A.
%K Armases, chemical defenses, crab, decapod, feeding preferences, herbivory, plant defenses, plant toughness, plant-herbivore interactions, salt marsh, silica
%0 Journal Article
%T Feeding preferences of supralittoral isopods and amphipods
%D 2000
%V 78
%N 11
%P 1918-1929
%B Canadian Journal of Zoology
%9 Article
%! Feeding preferences of supralittoral isopods and amphipods
%Z 857
%M UGAMI.933
%A Pennings, S.C.
%A Carefoot, T.H.
%A Zimmer, M.
%A Danko, J.P.
%A Ziegler, A.
%K amphipods, Feeding, isopods, preferences, supralittoral
%0 Journal Article
%T Plant zonation in low-latitude salt marshes: disentangling the roles of flooding, salinity and competition
%D 2005
%V 93
%N 1
%P 159-167
%B Journal of Ecology
%9 Article
%! Plant zonation in low-latitude salt marshes: disentangling the roles of flooding, salinity and competition
%Z 938
%M UGAMI.971
%A Pennings, S.C.
%A Grant, M.B.
%A Bertness, M.D.
%K competition, Juncus roemerianus, latitude, physical gradient, soil salinity, Spartina alterniflora, zonation
%0 Journal Article
%T Latitudinal variation in herbivore pressure in Atlantic Coast salt marshes
%D 2009
%V 90
%N 1
%P 183–195
%B Ecology
%8 January 2009
%9 Article
%! Latitudinal variation in herbivore pressure in Atlantic Coast salt marshes
%Z 971
%M UGAMI.999
%A Pennings, Steven C.
%A Ho, Chuan-Kai
%A Salgado, Cristiano S.
%A Więski, Kazimierz
%A Davé, Nilam
%A Kunza, Amy E.
%A Wason, Elizabeth L.
%K biogeography, common-garden experiment, herbivore pressure, latitudinal variation, plant–herbivore interactions, salt marsh, top-down effects
%0 Journal Article
%T Vulnerability of sea hares to fish predators: importance of diet and fish species
%D 2001
%V 20
%P 320-324
%B Coral Reefs
%9 Article
%! Vulnerability of sea hares to fish predators: importance of diet and fish species
%Z 881
%M UGAMI.934
%A Pennings, S.C.
%A Nastisch, S.
%A Paul, V.J.
%K chemical defense, cyanobacteria, Guam, predation, sea hare, Stylocheilus
%0 Journal Article
%T Geographic variation in postive and negative interactions among salt marsh plants
%D 2003
%V 84
%N 6
%P 1527-1538
%B Ecology
%9 Article
%! Geographic variation in postive and negative interactions among salt marsh plants
%Z 908
%M UGAMI.941
%A Pennings, S.C.
%A Selig, E.R.
%A Houser, L.T.
%A Bertness, M.D.
%K biogeography, competition, facilitation, latitude, positive interactions, salt marsh
%0 Journal Article
%T Latitudinal differences in plant palatability in Atlantic Coast salt marshes
%D 2001
%V 82
%N 5
%P 1344-1359
%B Ecology
%9 Article
%! Latitudinal differences in plant palatability in Atlantic Coast salt marshes
%Z 853
%M UGAMI.876
%A Pennings, S.C.
%A Siska, E.L.
%A Bertness, M.D.
%K biogeography, chemical defense, herbivory, latitudinal variation, plant defenses, plant-herbivore interactions, salt marsh
%0 Journal Article
%T Nutrient effects on the composition of salt marsh plant communities along the southern Atlantic and Gulf coasts of the United States
%D 2002
%V 25
%N 6A
%P 1164-1173
%B Estuaries
%9 Article
%! Nutrient effects on the composition of salt marsh plant communities along the southern Atlantic and Gulf coasts of the United States
%Z 901
%M UGAMI.930
%A Pennings, S.C.
%A Stanton, L.E.
%A Brewer, J.S.
%K Atlantic, coasts, communities, composition, effects, Gulf, marsh, Nutrient, plant, salt, southern, States, United
%0 Journal Article
%T Assessing salt marsh health: A test of the utility of five potential indicators
%D 2002
%V 22
%N 2
%P 405-414
%B Wetlands
%9 Article
%! Assessing salt marsh health: A test of the utility of five potential indicators
%Z 897
%M UGAMI.926
%A Pennings, S.C.
%A Wall, D.V.
%A Moore, D.J.
%A Pattanayek, M.
%A Buck, T.L.
%A Alberts, J.J.
%K ecosystem health, environmental impacts, Georgia, glutathione, indicators, Microtox, peroxidase, photsynthesis, pollution, salt marsh, Spartina alterniflora, transpiration
%0 Journal Article
%T Marine ecoregion and Deepwater Horizon oil spill affect recruitment and population structure of a saltmarsh snail
%D 2016
%V 7
%N 12
%B Ecosphere
%9 Article
%! Marine ecoregion and Deepwater Horizon oil spill affect recruitment and population structure of a saltmarsh snail
%Z #1056
%M UGAMI.1086
%A Pennings, S.C.
%A Zengel, S.
%A Oehrig, J.
%A Alber, M.
%A Bishop, T.D.
%A Deis, D.R.
%A Devlin, D.
%A Hughes, A.R.
%A Hutchens, J.J.Jr.
%A Kiehn, W.M.
%A McFarlin, C.R.
%A Montague, C.L.
%A Powers, S.
%A Proffitt, C.E.
%A Rutherford, N.
%A Stagg, C.L.
%A Walters, K.
%K biogeography, BP Deepwater Horizon, gastropod, Littoraria, marine invertebrate, oil spill, population, recruitment, salt marsh, Spartina, structure
%0 Journal Article
%T Fat cycles and condition factors of Altamaha River shad
%D 1971
%V 52
%P 359-362
%B Ecology
%9 Article
%! Fat cycles and condition factors of Altamaha River shad
%Z 9-215
%M UGAMI.225
%A Perkins, R.
%A Dahlberg, M.D.
%K Altamaha, condition, cycles, factors, Fat, River, shad
%0 Journal Article
%T Sulfur, carbon, and nitrogen isotopes used to trace organic matter flow in the salt-marsh estuaries of Sapelo Island, Georgia
%D 1987
%V 32
%N 6
%P 1195-1213
%B Limnology and Oceanography
%9 Article
%! Sulfur, carbon, and nitrogen isotopes used to trace organic matter flow in the salt-marsh estuaries of Sapelo Island, Georgia
%Z 753
%M UGAMI.770
%A Peterson, Bruce J.
%A Howarth, Robert W.
%K carbon, estuaries, flow, Georgia, Island, isotopes, matter, nitrogen, organic, salt-marsh, Sapelo, Sulfur, trace, used
%0 Journal Article
%T Scaling restoration actions in the marine environment to meet quantitative targets of enhanced ecosystem services
%D 2003
%V 264
%P 173-175
%B Marine Ecology Progress Series - Theme Section
%9 Article
%! Scaling restoration actions in the marine environment to meet quantitative targets of enhanced ecosystem services
%Z 927
%M UGAMI.960
%A Peterson, C.H.
%A Kneib, R.T.
%A Manen, C.A.
%K actions, ecosystem, enhanced, environment, marine, meet, quantitative, restoration, Scaling, services, targets
%0 Journal Article
%T Groundwater discharge dynamics into a salt marsh tidal river
%D 2019
%V 218
%P 324-333
%B Estuarine Coastal and Shelf Science
%8 Mar
%9 Article
%! Groundwater discharge dynamics into a salt marsh tidal river
%Z ISI Document Delivery No.: HM5ML Times Cited: 0 Cited Reference Count: 68 Peterson, Richard N. Meile, Christof Peterson, Leigha E. Carter, Matthew Miklesh, David National Science Foundation Long Term Ecological Research program [NSF OCE-1237140] This project was funded by the National Science Foundation Long Term Ecological Research program (NSF OCE-1237140). The authors appreciate the field assistance from Jacob Shalack and the technicians at the University of Georgia Marine Institute. We are also grateful for field and lab assistance from Rich Viso, Austin Waldorf, Sarah Chappel, Brad Craig, and Patrick Hutchins. We appreciate the helpful contributions from two anonymous reviewers. This is UGAMI contribution #1071. 0 2 Academic press ltd- elsevier science ltd London 1096-0015
%M UGAMI.1101
%A Peterson, R.N.
%A Meile, C.
%A Peterson, L.E.
%A Carter, M.
%A Miklesh, D.
%K coastal zone, continuous monitor, creek, Duplin, estuary, exchange, flow, Groundwater discharge, hydrology, inorganic carbon, Marine & Freshwater Biology, Oceanography, Permeable sediments, Radioisotopes, Radon, River, rn-222, Sapelo Island, water
%0 Journal Article
%T The estuarine formation of United States Atlantic coastal plain phosphorite
%D 1966
%V 61
%P 251-256
%B Economic Geology
%9 Article
%! The estuarine formation of United States Atlantic coastal plain phosphorite
%Z 96*
%M UGAMI.107
%A Pevear, D.G.
%K Atlantic, coastal, estuarine, formation, phosphorite, plain, States, United
%0 Conference Proceedings
%T Photographic imagery and spectral properties of salt marsh vegetation as indicators of canopy characteristics
%D 1973
%P 1004-1015
%B Proceedings of the American Society of Photogrammetry Fall Convention, Lake Buena Vista, Fla., October 2-5, 1973
%9 Presentation
%! Photographic imagery and spectral properties of salt marsh vegetation as indicators of canopy characteristics
%Z 10-267B
%M UGAMI.278
%A Pfeiffer, W.J.
%A Linthurst, R.A.
%A Gallagher, J.L.
%K canopy, characteristics, imagery, indicators, marsh, Photographic, properties, salt, spectral, vegetation
%0 Journal Article
%T An inexpensive portable vibrocorer for sampling unconsolidated sands
%D 1969
%V 39
%P 385-390
%B Journal of Sedimentary Petrology
%9 Article
%! An inexpensive portable vibrocorer for sampling unconsolidated sands
%Z 7-171
%M UGAMI.182
%A Pierce, J.W.
%A Howard, J.D.
%K inexpensive, portable, sampling, sands, unconsolidated, vibrocorer
%0 Journal Article
%T Heavy minerals of the U. S. South Atlantic continental shelf and slope
%D 1963
%V 74
%P 641-648
%B Geological Society of American Bulletin
%9 Article
%! Heavy minerals of the U. S. South Atlantic continental shelf and slope
%Z 4-51
%M UGAMI.61
%A Pilkey, O.H.
%K Atlantic, continental, Heavy, minerals, shelf, slope, South
%0 Journal Article
%T Mineralogy of the fine fraction in certain carbonate cores
%D 1964
%V 14
%P 126-139
%B Bulletin of Marine Science of the Gulf and Caribbean
%9 Article
%! Mineralogy of the fine fraction in certain carbonate cores
%Z 4-60
%M UGAMI.71
%A Pilkey, O.H.
%K carbonate, certain, cores, fine, fraction, Mineralogy
%0 Journal Article
%T The size distribution and mineralogy of the carbonate fraction of United States and south Atlantic shelf and upper slope sediments
%D 1964
%V 2
%P 121-136
%B Marine Geology
%9 Article
%! The size distribution and mineralogy of the carbonate fraction of United States and south Atlantic shelf and upper slope sediments
%Z 4-72
%M UGAMI.83
%A Pilkey, O.H.
%K Atlantic, carbonate, distribution, fraction, mineralogy, sediments, shelf, size, slope, south, States, United, upper
%0 Journal Article
%T The relict-recent sediment boundary on the Georgia continental shelf
%D 1964
%V 22
%P 37-40
%B Bulletin of the Georgia Academy of Science
%9 Article
%! The relict-recent sediment boundary on the Georgia continental shelf
%Z 4-63
%M UGAMI.74
%A Pilkey, O.H.
%A Frankenberg, D.
%K boundary, continental, Georgia, relict-recent, sediment, shelf
%0 Journal Article
%T Bottom topography of the Georgia continental shelf
%D 1965
%V 7
%P 15-18
%B Southeastern Geology
%9 Article
%! Bottom topography of the Georgia continental shelf
%Z 5-95
%M UGAMI.106
%A Pilkey, O.H.
%A Giles, R.T.
%K Bottom, continental, Georgia, shelf, topography
%0 Journal Article
%T The effect of the intertidal environment on the composition of calcareous skeletal material
%D 1966
%V 11
%P 381-385
%B Limnology and Oceanography
%9 Article
%! The effect of the intertidal environment on the composition of calcareous skeletal material
%Z 5-111
%M UGAMI.122
%A Pilkey, O.H.
%A Harriss, R.C.
%K calcareous, composition, environment, intertidal, material, skeletal
%0 Journal Article
%T Carbonate and clay mineralogy of the Persian Gulf
%D 1966
%V 13
%P 1-16
%B Deep-Sea Research
%9 Article
%! Carbonate and clay mineralogy of the Persian Gulf
%Z 5-94
%M UGAMI.105
%A Pilkey, O.H.
%A Noble, D.
%K Carbonate, clay, Gulf, mineralogy, Persian
%0 Journal Article
%T Beach profiles of a Georgia barrier island
%D 1964
%V 6
%P 11-19
%B Southeastern Geology
%9 Article
%! Beach profiles of a Georgia barrier island
%Z 4-71
%M UGAMI.82
%A Pilkey, O.H.
%A Richter, D.M.
%K barrier, Beach, Georgia, island, profiles
%0 Journal Article
%T Aspects of carbonate sedimentation on the Atlantic continental shelf off the southern United States
%D 1969
%V 39
%P 744-768
%B Journal of Sedimentary Petrology
%9 Article
%! Aspects of carbonate sedimentation on the Atlantic continental shelf off the southern United States
%Z 7-173
%M UGAMI.184
%A Pilkey, O.H.
%A Blackwelder, B.W.
%A Doyle, L.J.
%A Estes, E.
%A Terlecky, P.M.
%K Aspects, Atlantic, carbonate, continental, sedimentation, shelf, southern, States, United
%0 Journal Article
%T Oolites on the Georgia continental shelf edge
%D 1966
%V 36
%P 462-467
%B Journal of Sedimentary Petrology
%9 Article
%! Oolites on the Georgia continental shelf edge
%Z 5-108
%M UGAMI.119
%A Pilkey, O.H.
%A Schnitker, D.
%A Pevear, D.R.
%K continental, edge, Georgia, Oolites, shelf
%0 Journal Article
%T The annual cycle of plutonium in the water column of a warm, monomictic reserviour.
%D 1992
%V 17
%P 59-81
%B Journal of Environmental Radioactivity
%9 Article
%! The annual cycle of plutonium in the water column of a warm, monomictic reserviour.
%Z 684
%M UGAMI.700
%A Pinder, J.E.III
%A Alberts, J.J.
%A Bowling, J.W.
%A Nelson, D.M.
%A Orlandini, K.A.
%K annual, column, cycle, monomictic, plutonium, reserviour, warm, water
%0 Journal Article
%T Organic carbon in surface sands seaward of Altamaha and Doboy Sounds, Georgia
%D 1977
%V 88
%P 1731-1739
%B Geological Society of American Bulletin
%9 Article
%! Organic carbon in surface sands seaward of Altamaha and Doboy Sounds, Georgia
%Z 12-328
%M UGAMI.340
%A Pinet, P.R.
%A Frey, R.W.
%K Altamaha, carbon, Doboy, Georgia, Organic, sands, seaward, Sounds, surface
%0 Journal Article
%T Implications of clay-provenance studies in two Georgia estuaries
%D 1979
%V 49
%P 575-580
%B Journal of Sedimentary Petrology
%9 Article
%! Implications of clay-provenance studies in two Georgia estuaries
%Z 14-385
%M UGAMI.397
%A Pinet, P.R.
%A Morgan, W.P.
%K clay-provenance, estuaries, Georgia, Implications, studies
%0 Journal Article
%T Practicing coastal seascape ecology
%D 2011
%V 427
%P 187-190
%B Marine Ecology Progress Series
%9 Article
%! Practicing coastal seascape ecology
%Z #1006 ISI Document Delivery No.: 749SM Times Cited: 11 Cited Reference Count: 21 Pittman, Simon J. Kneib, Ronald T. Simenstad, Charles A. Georgia Sea Grant College; National Science Foundation S.J.P. is grateful to the NOAA Biogeography Branch and Coral Reef Conservation Program for supporting seascape ecology research. R. T. K. is grateful for financial support of the Georgia Sea Grant College Program and the National Science Foundation, which funded his research into the application of landscape concepts to salt marsh seascapes, and to the UGA President''s Venture Fund which provided travel support to co-host the symposium on seascape ecology at the November 2009 CERF conference, on which this Theme Section is based. 11 INTER-RESEARCH OLDENDORF LUHE MAR ECOL PROG SER
%M UGAMI.1040
%A Pittman, S.J.
%A Kneib, R.T.
%A Simenstad, C.A.
%K Ecology, ENVIRONMENT, FISH, GROWTH, HABITATS, Landscape ecology, Marine & Freshwater Biology, MOVEMENTS, Oceanography, Seascapes, Spatial pattern, Spatial planning, SURVIVAL
%0 Electronic Book Section
%T Seascape ecology: application of landscape ecology to the marine environment
%D 2011
%V 427
%P 187-302
%I Inter-Research
%S Marine Ecology Progress Series
%8 12 April 2011
%9 Theme section
%! Seascape ecology: application of landscape ecology to the marine environment
%Z #1005
%M UGAMI.1039
%A Pittman, S.J.
%A Kneib, R.T.
%A Simenstad, C.A.
%A Nagelkerken, I.
%K application, ecology, environment, landscape, marine, Seascape
%0 Journal Article
%T Algal productivity in salt marshes of Georgia
%D 1959
%V 4
%P 386-397
%B Limnology and Oceanography
%9 Article
%! Algal productivity in salt marshes of Georgia
%Z 2-8
%M UGAMI.12
%A Pomeroy, L.R.
%K Algal, Georgia, marshes, productivity, salt
%0 Journal Article
%T Primary productivity of Boca Ciega Bay, Florida
%D 1960
%V 10
%P 1-l0
%B Bulletin of Marine Science of the Gulf and Caribbean
%9 Article
%! Primary productivity of Boca Ciega Bay, Florida
%Z 2-15
%M UGAMI.19
%A Pomeroy, L.R.
%K Bay, Boca, Ciega, Florida, Primary, productivity
%0 Journal Article
%T Residence time of dissolved phosphate in natural waters
%D 1960
%V 131
%P 1731-1732
%B Science
%9 Article
%! Residence time of dissolved phosphate in natural waters
%Z 2-17
%M UGAMI.22
%A Pomeroy, L.R.
%K dissolved, natural, phosphate, Residence, time, waters
%0 Book Section
%T Productivity and how to measure it. Methods of measurement of primary production in natural waters
%D 1961
%P 61-65
%B Algae and Metropolitan Wastes Trans. 1960 Seminar, U. S. Public Health Service, R. A. Taft Sanitary Eng. Center, Cincinnati
%9 Article
%! Productivity and how to measure it. Methods of measurement of primary production in natural waters
%Z 2-19
%M UGAMI.25
%A Pomeroy, L.R.
%K measure, measurement, Methods, natural, primary, production, Productivity, waters
%0 Book Section
%T Experimental studies of the turnover of phosphate in marine environments
%D 1963
%P 163-166
%I Reinhold Publ. Corp.
%C New York
%B Radioecology
%9 Article
%! Experimental studies of the turnover of phosphate in marine environments
%Z 3-33
%M UGAMI.39
%A Pomeroy, L.R.
%E Schultz, V.
%E Klement, A.W.Jr.
%K environments, Experimental, marine, phosphate, studies, turnover
%0 Conference Proceedings
%T Isotopic and other techniques for measuring benthic primary production
%D 1963
%P 97-102
%I U.S. Atomic Energy Commission, Division of Technical Information, Washington, D.C. (TID-7633)
%B Proceedings of the Conference on Primary Productivity Measurement, Marine and Freshwater
%9 Presentation
%! Isotopic and other techniques for measuring benthic primary production
%Z 3-34
%M UGAMI.40
%A Pomeroy, L.R.
%E Doty, M.S.
%K benthic, Isotopic, measuring, other, primary, production, techniques
%0 Book Section
%T Mineral cycling in marine ecosystems
%D 1975
%P 209-223
%I Energy Research and Development Administration Symposium Series (CONF-740513)
%B Mineral Cycling in Southeastern Ecosystems
%9 Article
%! Mineral cycling in marine ecosystems
%Z 11-282
%M UGAMI.293
%A Pomeroy, L.R.
%E Howell, F.G.
%E Gentry, J.B.
%E Smith, M.H.
%K cycling, ecosystems, marine, Mineral
%0 Book Section
%T Problems and challenges in ecosystem analysis
%D 1988
%P 317-323
%I Springer-Verlag
%C New York, NY
%B Concepts of Ecosystem Ecology
%9 Article
%! Problems and challenges in ecosystem analysis
%Z 829
%M UGAMI.850
%A Pomeroy, L.R.
%A Alberts, J.J.
%E Pomeroy, L.R.
%E Alberts, J.J.
%K analysis, challenges, ecosystem, Problems
%0 Journal Article
%T Total plankton respiration
%D 1966
%V 13
%P 971-973
%B Deep-Sea Research
%9 Article
%! Total plankton respiration
%Z 5-102
%M UGAMI.113
%A Pomeroy, L.R.
%A Johannes, R.E.
%K plankton, respiration, Total
%0 Book Section
%T The University of Georgia Marine Institute: The First Decade
%D 2001
%P 128-142
%I Taylor and Francis
%B Holistic Science: The Evolution of the Georgia Institute of Ecology (1940-2000), G.W. Barrett and T.L. Barrett, Foreward by E.P. Odum
%9 Article
%! The University of Georgia Marine Institute: The First Decade
%Z 920
%M UGAMI.953
%A Pomeroy, L.R.
%A Scott, D.C.
%K Decade, First, Georgia, Institute, Marine, University
%0 Book Section
%T Flux of organic matter through a salt marsh
%D 1977
%V II
%P 270-279
%I Academic Press, Inc.
%C New York
%B Estuarine Processes: Circulation, Sediments and Transfer of Material in the Estuary
%9 Article
%! Flux of organic matter through a salt marsh
%Z 11-298
%M UGAMI.310
%A Pomeroy, L.R.
%A Bancroft, K.
%A Breed, J.
%A Christian, R.R.
%A Frankenberg, D.
%A Hall, J.R.
%A Maurer, L.G.
%A Wiebe, W.J.
%A Wiegert, R.G.
%A Wetzel, R.L.
%E Wiley, Martin
%K Flux, marsh, matter, organic, salt
%0 Book Section
%T The Ecosystem Perspective
%D 1988
%P 1-17
%I Springer-Verlag
%C New York, NY
%B Concepts of Ecosystem Ecology
%9 Article
%! The Ecosystem Perspective
%Z 828
%M UGAMI.849
%A Pomeroy, L.R.
%A Hargrove, E.C.
%A Alberts, J.J.
%E Pomeroy, L.R.
%E Alberts, J.J.
%K Ecosystem, Perspective
%0 Journal Article
%T Observations on dinoflagellate blooms
%D 1956
%V 1
%P 54-60
%B Limnology and Oceanography
%9 Article
%! Observations on dinoflagellate blooms
%Z 1-2A
%M UGAMI.3
%A Pomeroy, L.R.
%A Haskin, H.H.
%A Ragotzkie, R.A.
%K blooms, dinoflagellate, Observations
%0 Book Section
%T The phosphorus and zinc cycles and productivity of a salt marsh
%D 1969
%P 412-418
%I Clearinghouse for Federal Sci. Tech. Information
%C Springfield, VA
%B Proceedings of the Second National Symposium on Radioecology
%9 Article
%! The phosphorus and zinc cycles and productivity of a salt marsh
%Z 6-149
%M UGAMI.160
%A Pomeroy, L.R.
%A Johannes, R.E.
%A Odum, E.P.
%A Roffman, B.
%E Nelson, D.J.
%E Evans, F.C.
%K cycles, marsh, phosphorus, productivity, salt, zinc
%0 Journal Article
%T Excretion of phosphate and soluble organic phosphorus compounds of zooplankton
%D 1963
%V 8
%P 50-55
%B Limnology and Oceanography
%9 Article
%! Excretion of phosphate and soluble organic phosphorus compounds of zooplankton
%Z 3-45
%M UGAMI.54
%A Pomeroy, L.R.
%A Mathews, H.M.
%A Min, H.S.
%K compounds, Excretion, organic, phosphate, phosphorus, soluble, zooplankton
%0 Book Section
%T Flux of 32P and 65Zn through a salt marsh ecosystem
%D 1966
%P 177-188
%C Vienna
%B Disposal of Radioactive Wastes in Seas, Oceans and Surface Waters
%9 Article
%! Flux of 32P and 65Zn through a salt marsh ecosystem
%Z 5-101
%M UGAMI.112
%A Pomeroy, L.R.
%A Odum, E.P.
%A Johannes, R.E.
%A Roffman, B.
%K 32P, 65Zn, ecosystem, Flux, marsh, salt
%0 Book Section
%T Nutrient flux in estuaries
%D 1972
%V 1
%P 274-291
%I American Society of Limnology and Oceanography
%B Symposium on Nutrients and Europhication
%7 Special Symposia
%9 Article
%! Nutrient flux in estuaries
%Z 9-219
%M UGAMI.229
%A Pomeroy, L.R.
%A Shenton, L.R.
%A Jones, R.D.H.
%A Reimold, R.J.
%K estuaries, flux, Nutrient
%0 Journal Article
%T The exchange of phosphate between estuarine water and sediments
%D 1965
%V 10
%P 167-172
%B Limnology and Oceanography
%9 Article
%! The exchange of phosphate between estuarine water and sediments
%Z 5-76
%M UGAMI.87
%A Pomeroy, L.R.
%A Smith, E.E.
%A Grant, C.M.
%K estuarine, exchange, phosphate, sediments, water
%0 Journal Article
%T Endolithic thraustochytrid marine fungi from planted shell fragments
%D 1992
%V 84
%P 289-299
%B Mycologia
%9 Article
%! Endolithic thraustochytrid marine fungi from planted shell fragments
%Z 709
%M UGAMI.725
%A Porter, D.
%A Lingle, W.L.
%K Endolithic, fragments, fungi, marine, planted, shell, thraustochytrid
%0 Journal Article
%T Tunneling bacteria in decaying leaves of seagrass
%D 1989
%V 35
%P 395-401
%B Aquatic Botany
%9 Article
%! Tunneling bacteria in decaying leaves of seagrass
%Z 626
%M UGAMI.639
%A Porter, D.
%A Newell, S.Y.
%A Lingle, W.L.
%K bacteria, decaying, leaves, seagrass, Tunneling
%0 Journal Article
%T Protozoa in planktonic food webs
%D 1985
%V 32
%P 409-415
%B Journal of Protozoology
%9 Article
%! Protozoa in planktonic food webs
%Z 18-528
%M UGAMI.540
%A Porter, K.G.
%A Sherr, E.B.
%A Sherr, B.F.
%A Pace, M.
%A Sanders, R.W.
%K food, planktonic, Protozoa, webs
%0 Journal Article
%T Effects of heavy-metal contaminants (Cd, Pb, Zn) on benthic foraminiferal assemblages grown from propagules, Sapelo Island, Georgia (USA)
%D 2019
%V 147
%P 1-11
%B Marine Micropaleontology
%8 Mar
%9 Article
%! Effects of heavy-metal contaminants (Cd, Pb, Zn) on benthic foraminiferal assemblages grown from propagules, Sapelo Island, Georgia (USA)
%Z Price, Ellen Brouillette Kabengi, Nadine Goldstein, Susan T. 1872-6186
%M UGAMI.1106
%A Price, E.B.
%A Kabengi, N.
%A Goldstein, S.T.
%K assemblages, benthic, Cd, contaminants, Effects, foraminiferal, Georgia, grown, heavy-metal, Island, Pb, propagules, Sapelo, USA, Zn
%0 Journal Article
%T Mortality of loggerhead turtle eggs from excessive rainfall
%D 1956
%V 40
%P 303-305
%B Ecology
%9 Article
%! Mortality of loggerhead turtle eggs from excessive rainfall
%Z 2-9
%M UGAMI.13
%A Ragotzkie, R.A.
%K eggs, excessive, loggerhead, Mortality, rainfall, turtle
%0 Journal Article
%T Plankton productivity in estuarine waters of Georgia
%D 1959
%V 6
%P 146-158
%B Institute of Marine Science, University of Texas
%9 Article
%! Plankton productivity in estuarine waters of Georgia
%Z 2-21
%M UGAMI.27
%A Ragotzkie, R.A.
%K estuarine, Georgia, Plankton, productivity, waters
%0 Journal Article
%T Hydrography of the Duplin River, Sapelo Island, Georgia
%D 1955
%V 5
%P 297-314
%B Bulletin of Marine Science of the Gulf and Caribbean
%9 Article
%! Hydrography of the Duplin River, Sapelo Island, Georgia
%Z 1-1
%M UGAMI.1
%A Ragotzkie, R.A.
%A Bryson, R.A.
%K Duplin, Georgia, Hydrography, Island, River, Sapelo
%0 Journal Article
%T Life history of a dinoflagellate bloom
%D 1957
%V 2
%P 62-69
%B Limnology and Oceanography
%9 Article
%! Life history of a dinoflagellate bloom
%Z 1-5
%M UGAMI.6
%A Ragotzkie, R.A.
%A Pomeroy, L.R.
%K bloom, dinoflagellate, history, Life
%0 Journal Article
%T Namalycastis abiuma (Muller in Grube) 1871, an aberrant nereidid polychaete of a Georgia salt marsh area and its faunal associations
%D 1994
%V 9
%N 1
%P 17-28
%B Gulf Research Reports
%9 Article
%! Namalycastis abiuma (Muller in Grube) 1871, an aberrant nereidid polychaete of a Georgia salt marsh area and its faunal associations
%Z 746
%M UGAMI.762
%A Rasmussen, E
%K aberrant, abiuma, area, associations, faunal, Georgia, Grube, marsh, Muller, Namalycastis, nereidid, polychaete, salt
%0 Journal Article
%T Observations on Extant Populations of the Softshell Clam, Mya Arenaria Linne, 1758 (Bivalvia: Myidae), from Georgia (USA) Estuarine Habitats
%D 1995
%V 9
%N 2
%P 85-96
%B Gulf Research Reports
%9 Article
%! Observations on Extant Populations of the Softshell Clam, Mya Arenaria Linne, 1758 (Bivalvia: Myidae), from Georgia (USA) Estuarine Habitats
%Z 763
%M UGAMI.781
%A Rasmussen, Erik
%A Heard, Richard W.
%K Arenaria, Bivalvia, Clam, Estuarine, Extant, Georgia, Habitats, Linne, Mya, Myidae, Observations, Populations, Softshell, USA
%0 Journal Article
%T Organic matter metabolizability and calcium carbonate dissolution in nearshore marine muds
%D 1986
%V 56
%P 486-494
%B Journal of Sedimentary Petrology
%9 Article
%! Organic matter metabolizability and calcium carbonate dissolution in nearshore marine muds
%Z 20-564
%M UGAMI.577
%A Reaves, C.
%K calcium, carbonate, dissolution, marine, matter, metabolizability, muds, nearshore, Organic
%0 Journal Article
%T Setttlement, abundance, growth and mortality of juvenile flatfish in a subtropical tidal estuary (Georgia, U.S.A.)
%D 1991
%V 27
%P 375-391
%B Netherlands Journal of Sea Research
%9 Article
%! Setttlement, abundance, growth and mortality of juvenile flatfish in a subtropical tidal estuary (Georgia, U.S.A.)
%Z 677
%M UGAMI.693
%A Reichert, M.J.M.
%A van der Veer, H.W.
%K abundance, estuary, flatfish, Georgia, growth, juvenile, mortality, Setttlement, subtropical, tidal
%0 Journal Article
%T The movement of phosphorus through the salt marsh cord grass, Spartina alterniflora Loisel
%D 1972
%V 17
%P 606-611
%B Limnology and Oceanography
%9 Article
%! The movement of phosphorus through the salt marsh cord grass, Spartina alterniflora Loisel
%Z 9-231
%M UGAMI.241
%A Reimold, R.J.
%K alterniflora, cord, grass, Loisel, marsh, movement, phosphorus, salt, Spartina
%0 Book Section
%T Mathematical modelling Spartina
%D 1974
%P 393-406
%I Academic Press, Inc.
%C New York
%B Ecology of Halophytes
%9 Article
%! Mathematical modelling Spartina
%Z 10-257
%M UGAMI.267
%A Reimold, R.J.
%E Reimold, R.J.
%E Queen, W.H.
%K Mathematical, modelling, Spartina
%0 Journal Article
%T Chlorinated hydrocarbon pesticides and mercury in coastal biota from Puerto Rico and the U. S. Virgin Islands, 1972-1974
%D 1975
%V 9
%P 39-43
%B Pesticides Monitoring Journal
%9 Article
%! Chlorinated hydrocarbon pesticides and mercury in coastal biota from Puerto Rico and the U. S. Virgin Islands, 1972-1974
%Z 11-286A
%M UGAMI.297
%A Reimold, R.J.
%K biota, Chlorinated, coastal, hydrocarbon, Islands, mercury, pesticides, Puerto, Rico, Virgin
%0 Journal Article
%T Dissolved phosphorus concentrations in a natural salt marsh of Delaware
%D 1970
%V 36
%P 361-371
%B Hydrobiologia
%9 Article
%! Dissolved phosphorus concentrations in a natural salt marsh of Delaware
%Z 8-207
%M UGAMI.217
%A Reimold, R.J.
%A Daiber, F.C.
%K concentrations, Delaware, Dissolved, marsh, natural, phosphorus, salt
%0 Journal Article
%T Toxaphene content of estuarine fauna and flora before, during, and after dredging toxaphene-contaminated sediments
%D 1974
%V 44
%P 44-49
%B Pesticides Monitoring Journal
%9 Article
%! Toxaphene content of estuarine fauna and flora before, during, and after dredging toxaphene-contaminated sediments
%Z 11-300
%M UGAMI.312
%A Reimold, R.J.
%A Durant, C.J.
%K content, dredging, during, estuarine, fauna, flora, sediments, Toxaphene, toxaphene-contaminated
%0 Conference Proceedings
%T Ecological importance of wetlands
%D 1973
%P 200-204
%B Proceedings of the American Congress on Surveying and Mapping Fall Convention
%9 Presentation
%! Ecological importance of wetlands
%Z 277*
%M UGAMI.288
%A Reimold, R.J.
%A Linthurst, R.A.
%K Ecological, importance, wetlands
%0 Conference Proceedings
%T Remote sensing - wetlands
%D 1975
%P 1-19
%B Preprint from ASCE National Meeting on Water Resources Eng., Jan. 21-25, 1975, Los Angeles, California
%9 Presentation
%! Remote sensing - wetlands
%Z 11-301
%M UGAMI.313
%A Reimold, R.J.
%A Linthurst, R.A.
%K Remote, sensing, wetlands
%0 Book Section
%T Coastal mapping with remote sensors
%D 1972
%P 99-112
%I Amer. Soc. Photogrammetry
%C Washington, D. C.
%B Proc. Coastal Mapping Symposium
%9 Article
%! Coastal mapping with remote sensors
%Z 9-228
%M UGAMI.238
%A Reimold, R.J.
%A Gallagher, J.L.
%A Thompson, D.E.
%K Coastal, mapping, remote, sensors
%0 Journal Article
%T Remote sensing of tidal marsh
%D 1973
%V 39
%P 477-488
%B Photogrammetric Engineering
%9 Article
%! Remote sensing of tidal marsh
%Z 10-262
%M UGAMI.272
%A Reimold, R.J.
%A Gallagher, J.L.
%A Thompson, D.E.
%K marsh, Remote, sensing, tidal
%0 Book Section
%T Detritus production in coastal Georgia salt marshes
%D 1973
%P 217-228
%I Academic Press, Inc.
%C New York
%B Estuarine Research
%9 Article
%! Detritus production in coastal Georgia salt marshes
%Z 10-275
%M UGAMI.286
%A Reimold, R.J.
%A Gallagher, J.L.
%A Linthurst, R.A.
%A Pfeiffer, W.J.
%E Cronin, L.E.
%K coastal, Detritus, Georgia, marshes, production, salt
%0 Journal Article
%T Effects of grazing on a salt marsh
%D 1975
%V 8
%P 105-125
%B Biological Conservation
%9 Article
%! Effects of grazing on a salt marsh
%Z 303*
%M UGAMI.315
%A Reimold, R.J.
%A Linthurst, R.A.
%A Wolf, P.L.
%K Effects, grazing, marsh, salt
%0 Journal Article
%T Further observations on effects of cations on enzyme induction in marine bacteria
%D 1962
%V 28
%P 302-314
%B Antonie van Leeuwenhoek
%9 Article
%! Further observations on effects of cations on enzyme induction in marine bacteria
%Z 3-35
%M UGAMI.41
%A Rhodes, M.E.
%A Payne, W.J.
%K bacteria, cations, effects, enzyme, Further, induction, marine, observations
%0 Journal Article
%T Habitat range and phenotypic variation in salt marsh plants
%D 2005
%V 176
%N 2
%P 263-273
%B Plant Ecology
%9 Article
%! Habitat range and phenotypic variation in salt marsh plants
%Z 936
%M UGAMI.969
%A Richards, C.L.
%A Donovan, L.A.
%A Pennings, S.C.
%K AMPLITUDE, CONTRASTING ECOLOGICAL BREADTH, GENETIC-BASIS, GRASS, GROWTH, HALOPHYTES, PATENS, PLASTICITY, SALINITY, SPARTINA-ALTERNIFLORA
%0 Journal Article
%T Unexpectedly high clonal diversity of two salt marsh perennials across a severe environmental gradient
%D 2004
%V 7
%N 12
%P 1155-1162
%B Ecology Letters
%9 Article
%! Unexpectedly high clonal diversity of two salt marsh perennials across a severe environmental gradient
%Z 937
%M UGAMI.970
%A Richards, C.L.
%A Hamrick, J.L.
%A Donovan, L.A.
%A Mauricio, R.
%K allozymes, Borrichia frutescens, clonal structure, fine-scale differentiation, salt marsh plants, Sapelo Island, sea ox-eye daisy, smooth cord grass, Spartina alterniflora
%0 Journal Article
%T Plasticity, not adaptation to salt level, explains variation along a salinity gradient in a salt marsh perennial
%D 2010
%V 33
%N 4
%P 840-852
%B Estuaries and Coasts
%8 July 2010
%7 18 June 2009
%9 Article
%! Plasticity, not adaptation to salt level, explains variation along a salinity gradient in a salt marsh perennial
%Z #983
%M UGAMI.1022
%A Richards, Christina L.
%A White, S.N.
%A McGuire, M.A.
%A Franks, S.J.
%A Donovan, L.A.
%A Maurico, R.
%K Boron . Sodium . Adaptive plasticity ., Local adaptation . Optimal reaction norm .
%0 Journal Article
%T Additions to the marine macroalgal flora of coastal Georgia
%D 1986
%V 44
%P 131-135
%B Georgia Journal of Science
%9 Article
%! Additions to the marine macroalgal flora of coastal Georgia
%Z 20-585
%M UGAMI.598
%A Richardson, J.P.
%K Additions, coastal, flora, Georgia, macroalgal, marine
%0 Journal Article
%T Floristic and seasonal characteristics of inshore Georgia macroalgae
%D 1987
%V 40
%P 210-219
%B Bulletin of Marine Science
%9 Article
%! Floristic and seasonal characteristics of inshore Georgia macroalgae
%Z 599
%M UGAMI.612
%A Richardson, J.P.
%K characteristics, Floristic, Georgia, inshore, macroalgae, seasonal
%0 Journal Article
%T Ecology and growth of juvenile tarpon Megalops atlanticus, in a Georgia salt marsh
%D 1968
%V 18
%P 220-239
%B Bulletin of Marine Science
%9 Article
%! Ecology and growth of juvenile tarpon Megalops atlanticus, in a Georgia salt marsh
%Z 6-148
%M UGAMI.159
%A Rickards, W.L.
%K atlanticus, Ecology, Georgia, growth, juvenile, marsh, Megalops, salt, tarpon
%0 Journal Article
%T Calculation of cell production of coastal marine bacteria based on measured incorporation of [3H]thymidine
%D 1987
%V 32
%P 471-476
%B Limnology and Oceanography
%9 Article
%! Calculation of cell production of coastal marine bacteria based on measured incorporation of [3H]thymidine
%Z 559
%M UGAMI.572
%A Riemann, B.
%A Bjornsen, P.K.
%A Newell, S.Y.
%A Fallon, R.D.
%K [3H]thymidine, bacteria, based, Calculation, cell, coastal, incorporation, marine, measured, production
%0 Journal Article
%T Summer birds of Sapelo Island, Georgia: A preliminary list
%D 1956
%V 21
%P 37-48
%B The Oriole
%9 Article
%! Summer birds of Sapelo Island, Georgia: A preliminary list
%Z 1-6
%M UGAMI.7
%A Robert, H.C.
%A Teal, J.M.
%A Odum, E.P.
%K birds, Georgia, Island, list, preliminary, Sapelo, Summer
%0 Journal Article
%T Evidence for tidally correlated feeding rhythms in the eastern mud snail, Ilyanassa obsoleta
%D 1979
%V 93
%P 38-40
%B Nautilus
%9 Article
%! Evidence for tidally correlated feeding rhythms in the eastern mud snail, Ilyanassa obsoleta
%Z 14-380
%M UGAMI.392
%A Robertson, J.R.
%K correlated, eastern, Evidence, feeding, Ilyanassa, mud, obsoleta, rhythms, snail, tidally
%0 Journal Article
%T Predation by estuarine zooplankton on tintinnid ciliates
%D 1983
%V 16
%P 27-36
%B Estuarine, Coastal and Shelf Science
%9 Article
%! Predation by estuarine zooplankton on tintinnid ciliates
%Z 16-465
%M UGAMI.477
%A Robertson, J.R.
%K ciliates, estuarine, Predation, tintinnid, zooplankton
%0 Journal Article
%T A study of particle ingestion by three fiddler crab species foraging on sandy sediments
%D 1982
%V 65
%P 11-17
%B Journal Experimental Marine Biology and Ecology
%9 Article
%! A study of particle ingestion by three fiddler crab species foraging on sandy sediments
%Z 16-460
%M UGAMI.472
%A Robertson, J.R.
%A Newell, S.Y.
%K crab, fiddler, foraging, ingestion, particle, sandy, sediments, species, study
%0 Journal Article
%T Experimental studies of particle ingestion by the sand fiddler crab Uca pugilator (Bosc)
%D 1982
%V 59
%P 1-21
%B Journal Experimental Marine Biology and Ecology
%9 Article
%! Experimental studies of particle ingestion by the sand fiddler crab Uca pugilator (Bosc)
%Z 16-448
%M UGAMI.460
%A Robertson, J.R.
%A Newell, S.Y.
%K Bosc, crab, Experimental, fiddler, ingestion, particle, pugilator, sand, studies, Uca
%0 Journal Article
%T Deposit feeding by the ghost crab Ocypode quadrata
%D 1982
%V 56
%P 165-177
%B Journal Experimental Marine Biology and Ecology
%9 Article
%! Deposit feeding by the ghost crab Ocypode quadrata
%Z 15-438
%M UGAMI.450
%A Robertson, J.R.
%A Pfeiffer, W.J.
%K crab, Deposit, feeding, ghost, Ocypode, quadrata
%0 Journal Article
%T Experimental studies on the foraging behavior of the sand fiddler crab Uca pugilator (Bosc, 1802)
%D 1980
%V 44
%P 67-83
%B Journal Experimental Marine Biology and Ecology
%9 Article
%! Experimental studies on the foraging behavior of the sand fiddler crab Uca pugilator (Bosc, 1802)
%Z 15-404
%M UGAMI.416
%A Robertson, J.R.
%A Bancroft, K.
%A Vermeer, G.
%A Plaisier, K.
%K behavior, Bosc, crab, Experimental, fiddler, foraging, pugilator, sand, studies, Uca
%0 Journal Article
%T Chemical and live feeding stimulants of the sand fiddler crab Uca pugilator (Bosc)
%D 1981
%V 52
%P 47-64
%B Journal Experimental Marine Biology and Ecology
%9 Article
%! Chemical and live feeding stimulants of the sand fiddler crab Uca pugilator (Bosc)
%Z 15-421
%M UGAMI.433
%A Robertson, J.R.
%A Fudge, J.A.
%A Vermeer, G.
%K Bosc, Chemical, crab, feeding, fiddler, live, pugilator, sand, stimulants, Uca
%0 Journal Article
%T Multiscale Diversity in the Marshes of the Georgia Coastal Ecosystems LTER
%D 2010
%V 33
%N 4
%P 865-877
%B Estuaries and Coasts
%8 Jul
%9 Article
%! Multiscale Diversity in the Marshes of the Georgia Coastal Ecosystems LTER
%Z #985 ISI Document Delivery No.: 606ZP Times Cited: 3 Cited Reference Count: 60 Robinson, John D. Diaz-Ferguson, Edgardo Poelchau, Monica F. Pennings, Steven Bishop, Thomas Dale Wares, John Pennings, Steven/A-8326-2013 Pennings, Steven/0000-0003-4757-7125 National Science Foundation [OCE-9982133, OCE-0620959]; University of Georgia; National Geographic Society (NGS) [8351-07] This material is based upon work supported by the National Science Foundation under grant numbers OCE-9982133 and OCE-0620959. Additional funding was provided by the University of Georgia and the National Geographic Society (NGS grant #8351-07). Thanks to R. Miller, M. Cozad, D. Saucedo, M. S. Pankey, the GCE-LTER Schoolyard program, and field researchers at the University of Georgia Marine Institute (UGAMI) for help with field collections. D. Patel helped with DNA amplification and sequencing. Special thanks to T. Bell, S. Small, and C. Zakas for help in the lab and comments on the manuscript. K. F. Robinson was a great help in data analysis and also provided comments on the paper. Additional helpful comments were graciously provided by two anonymous reviewers. This is a contribution of the Georgia Coastal Ecosystems Long-Term Ecological Research program, and contribution number 985 of the University of Georgia Marine Institute. 3 SPRINGER NEW YORK ESTUAR COAST
%M UGAMI.1024
%A Robinson, J.D.
%A Diaz-Ferguson, E.
%A Poelchau, M.F.
%A Pennings, S.
%A Bishop, T.D.
%A Wares, J.
%K COMMUNITY, ENGLAND SALT-MARSH, Environmental Sciences, GCE-LTER, Genetic diversity, ISLAND, Marine & Freshwater Biology, marsh, METAPOPULATION, MITOCHONDRIAL-DNA, MODEL, PATTERNS, POPULATION, Salt, Settlement rate, SGDC, SPECIES-DIVERSITY, Species-genetic diversity correlation
%0 Journal Article
%T Biogeography of Triatoma sanguisuga (Hemiptera: Reduviidae) on Two Barrier Islands off the Coast of Georgia, United States
%D 2011
%V 48
%N 4
%P 806-812
%B Journal of Medical Entomology
%8 Jul
%9 Article
%! Biogeography of Triatoma sanguisuga (Hemiptera: Reduviidae) on Two Barrier Islands off the Coast of Georgia, United States
%Z #1022 ISI Document Delivery No.: 810KJ Times Cited: 0 Cited Reference Count: 18 Roden, Ashley E. Champagne, Don E. Forschler, Brian T. 0 ENTOMOLOGICAL SOC AMER LANHAM J MED ENTOMOL
%M UGAMI.1055
%A Roden, A.E.
%A Champagne, D.E.
%A Forschler, B.T.
%K biogeography, CHAGAS-DISEASE, cytochrome oxidase II, DNA, Entomology, Georgia, MEGA, SEQUENCE, SOFTWARE, Triatoma sanguisuga, TRYPANOSOMA-CRUZI, USA, Veterinary Sciences
%0 Journal Article
%T The core root microbiome of Spartina alterniflora is predominated by sulfur-oxidating and sulfate-reducing bacteria in Georgia salt marshes, USA
%D 2020
%9 Article
%! The core root microbiome of Spartina alterniflora is predominated by sulfur-oxidating and sulfate-reducing bacteria in Georgia salt marshes, USA
%Z published
%M UGAMI.1119
%A Rolando, Jose L.
%A Kolton, Max
%A Song, Tianze
%A Kostka, J.E.
%K alterniflora, bacteria, core, Georgia, marshes, microbiome, predominated, root, salt, Spartina, sulfate-reducing, sulfur-oxidating, USA
%0 Journal Article
%T Concavity orientations of bivalve shells in estuarine and nearshore shelf sediments
%D 1982
%V 52
%P 565-586
%B Journal of Sedimentary Petrology
%9 Article
%! Concavity orientations of bivalve shells in estuarine and nearshore shelf sediments
%Z 16-443
%M UGAMI.455
%A Salazar-Jiminez, A.
%A Frey, R.W.
%A Howard, J.D.
%K bivalve, Concavity, estuarine, nearshore, orientations, sediments, shelf, shells
%0 Journal Article
%T Latitudinal variation in palatability of salt marsh plants: are differences constitutive?
%D 2005
%V 86
%N 6
%P 1571-1579
%B Ecology
%9 Article
%! Latitudinal variation in palatability of salt marsh plants: are differences constitutive?
%Z 943
%M UGAMI.976
%A Salgado, C.S.
%A Pennings, S.C.
%K AVAILABILITY, COMMUNITIES, CONSEQUENCES, DEFENSES, HERBIVORY, PATTERNS, RESISTANCE, SPARTINA-ALTERNIFLORA, TEMPERATE, UNITED-STATES
%0 Journal Article
%T Koorchaloma spartinicola sp. nov., a new marine sporodochial fungus from Spartina alterniflora
%D 2001
%V 44
%P 321-326
%B Botanica Marina
%9 Article
%! Koorchaloma spartinicola sp. nov., a new marine sporodochial fungus from Spartina alterniflora
%Z 887
%M UGAMI.915
%A Sarma, V.V.
%A Newell, S.Y.
%A Hyde, K.D.
%K alterniflora, fungus, Koorchaloma, marine, new, nov, sp, Spartina, spartinicola, sporodochial
%0 Journal Article
%T Respiration and phosphorus excretion in some marine populations
%D 1965
%V 46
%P 877-881
%B Ecology
%9 Article
%! Respiration and phosphorus excretion in some marine populations
%Z 5-79
%M UGAMI.90
%A Satomi, M.
%A Pomeroy, L.R.
%K excretion, marine, phosphorus, populations, Respiration, some
%0 Book Section
%T Optical Remote Sensing techniques to estimate phytoplankton chlorophyll aconcentrations in coastal waters with varying suspended matter and CDOM concentrations
%D 2006
%P 27-79
%I Springer
%C The Netherlands
%B Remote Sensing of Aquatic Coastal Ecosystem Processes: Science and Management Applications
%9 Article
%! Optical Remote Sensing techniques to estimate phytoplankton chlorophyll aconcentrations in coastal waters with varying suspended matter and CDOM concentrations
%Z 949
%M UGAMI.980
%A Schalles, J.
%E Richardson, L.L.
%E LeDrew, E.F.
%K aconcentrations, CDOM, chlorophyll, coastal, concentrations, estimate, matter, Optical, phytoplankton, Remote, Sensing, suspended, techniques, varying, waters
%0 Journal Article
%T Mapping phytoplankton chlorophyll in turbid, Case 2 estuarine and coastal waters
%D 2012
%V 60
%N 1-2
%P 169-191
%B Israel Journal of Plant Sciences
%9 Article
%! Mapping phytoplankton chlorophyll in turbid, Case 2 estuarine and coastal waters
%Z #1025 Times Cited: 0 Cited Reference Count: 47 1
%M UGAMI.1058
%A Schalles, John F.
%A Hladik, Christine M.
%K Computational Biology, dinoflagellate, phytoplankton Algae, Algae, algorithm, America, Biochemistry and Molecular Biophysics, Biochemistry studies - General, Biochemistry studies - Proteins, coastal management, coastal water, Ecology:, environmental biology - General and methods, environmental biology - Plant, estuarine water, imaging and microscopy techniques, laboratory techniques, laboratory techniques/semianalytic, Maryland, Mathematical Biology, Mathematical biology and statistical methods, Microorganisms, near-infrared spectroscopy, Nearctic, Nearctic region, Nearctic region/Corpus Christi Bay, Nearctic region/Georgia, Nearctic region/Mississippi, Nearctic region/Nueces River, Nonvascular Plants, North, North America, peptides and amino acids, Plant physiology - Chemical constituents, Plantae, Plants, Pyrrophyta [14500], region/Delaware, spectrum analysis, techniques/spectroradiometer, Texas, USA, Wildlife Management (Conservation)
%0 Journal Article
%T Landscape Estimates of Habitat Types, Plant Biomass, and Invertebrate Densities in a Georgia Salt Marsh
%D 2013
%V 26
%N 3
%P 88-97
%B Oceanography
%8 Sep
%9 Article
%! Landscape Estimates of Habitat Types, Plant Biomass, and Invertebrate Densities in a Georgia Salt Marsh
%Z #1029 ISI Document Delivery No.: 210DD Times Cited: 2 Cited Reference Count: 39 Schalles, John F. Hladik, Christine M. Lynes, Alana A. Pennings, Steven C. National Science Foundation [0620959, OCE-1237140]; National Oceanic and Atmospheric Administration (NOAA) [NA17AE1624, NA060AR4810164]; Nebraska Space Grant Office of the National Aeronautics and Space Administration National College; NOAA NERR Graduate Research Fellowship [NA09NOS4200046]; University of Georgia Marine Institute; Georgia Department of Natural Resources; Sapelo Island National Estuarine Research Reserve This material is based upon work supported by the National Science Foundation under grants 0620959 and OCE-1237140 to the GCE LTER program, National Oceanic and Atmospheric Administration (NOAA) awards NA17AE1624 and NA060AR4810164 to the National Ocean Service-Environmental Science Cooperative Center, the Nebraska Space Grant Office of the National Aeronautics and Space Administration National College and Fellowship Program, and NOAA NERR Graduate Research Fellowship Award NA09NOS4200046 to C. Hladik. We thank K. Anstead, C. Conor, H. Guo, K. Helm, G. Hemenway, T. Kenemer, M. Machmuller, P. Merani, E. Milton, D. Saucedo, N. Scoville, J. Schalles, J. Shalack, M. Volkmer-Steele, and K. Wieski for field assistance. We also thank R. Perk, D. Rundquist, and M. Steele for planning and undertaking the University of Nebraska-CALMIT AISA Eagle imagery acquisition and data processing, M. Santori for assistance with lidar data acquisition, J. Carpenter for assistance with geospatial data analysis, and two anonymous reviewers whose work assisted in the improvement of our paper. We are grateful for support from the University of Georgia Marine Institute, the Georgia Department of Natural Resources, and the Sapelo Island National Estuarine Research Reserve. This is contribution number 1029 from the University of Georgia Marine Institute. 2 OCEANOGRAPHY SOC ROCKVILLE OCEANOGRAPHY SI
%M UGAMI.1061
%A Schalles, J.F.
%A Hladik, C.M.
%A Lynes, A.A.
%A Pennings, S.C.
%K ECOSYSTEM, Oceanography, PATTERNS, REMOTE ESTIMATION
%0 Conference Proceedings
%T Detection of chlorophyll, seston, and dissolved organic matter in the estuarine mixing zone of Georgia coastal plain rivers
%D 1998
%V 2
%P 315-324
%I University of Michigan Press, Ann Arbor, MI
%C San Diego, California
%B Fifth International Conference on Remote Sensing for Marine and Coastal Environments
%8 October 5-7, 1998
%9 Presentation
%! Detection of chlorophyll, seston, and dissolved organic matter in the estuarine mixing zone of Georgia coastal plain rivers
%Z 818
%M UGAMI.838
%A Schalles, John F.
%A Sheil, Amy T.
%A Tycast, James F.
%A Alberts, James J.
%A Yacobi, Yosef Z.
%K chlorophyll, coastal, Detection, dissolved, estuarine, Georgia, matter, mixing, organic, plain, rivers, seston, zone
%0 Journal Article
%T Crab:snail size-structured interactions and salt marsh predation gradients
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%B Oecologia
%9 Article
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%Z 733
%M UGAMI.765
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%A Johnson, B.M.
%A MacKay, N.A.
%A Bouwes, N.
%A Kitchell, J.F.
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%B Applied and Environmental Microbiology
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%M UGAMI.666
%A Schonberg, S.A.
%A Benner, R.
%A Armstrong, A.
%A Sobecky, P.
%A Hodson, R.E.
%K acid, aerobic, algal, aquatic, assay, comparison, decomposition, detritus, direct, Effects, macrophyte, radiocarbon, stress
%0 Journal Article
%T Above- and belowground emergent macrophyte production and turnover in a coastal marsh ecosystem, Georgia
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%B Limnology and Oceanography
%9 Article
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%Z 18-519
%M UGAMI.531
%A Schubauer, J.P.
%A Hopkinson, C.S.
%K belowground, coastal, ecosystem, emergent, Georgia, macrophyte, marsh, production, turnover
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%T Drivers of litter mass loss and faunal composition of detritus patches change over time
%D 2021
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%B Ecology and Evolution
%8 Jul
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%! Drivers of litter mass loss and faunal composition of detritus patches change over time
%Z ISI Document Delivery No.: TL6OC; Times Cited: 0; Cited Reference Count: 41; Seer, Franziska K. Putze, Gregor Pennings, Steven C. Zimmer, Martin; Zimmer, Martin/0000-0002-1549-8871; Seer, Franziska Katrin/0000-0002-8993-762X; Pennings, Steven/0000-0003-4757-7125; National Science Foundation through the Georgia Coastal Ecosystems Long-Term Ecological Research program [OCE-0620959]; FS and GP are indebted to the team of the University of Georgia Marine Institute for their helping hands in the field on Sapelo Island. Aline F. Quadros, Porto Alegre (Brazil) and Salzburg (Austria), helped with regression tree analysis in R. This material is based upon work supported by the National Science Foundation through the Georgia Coastal Ecosystems Long-Term Ecological Research program under Grant No. OCE-0620959. This is contribution number 1095 from the University of Georgia Marine Institute.; 0; 13; Wiley; Hoboken
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%A Putze, G.
%A Pennings, S.C.
%A Zimmer, M.
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%A Sherr, E.B.
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%K Decomposition, detritus, microflagellate, organic, protozoa, role, selective
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%B Applied and Environmental Microbiology
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%A Sherr, B.F.
%A Sherr, E.B.
%A Berman, T.
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%A Sherr, E.B.
%A Fallon, R.D.
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%A Sherr, E.B.
%A McDaniel, J.
%K assemblages, bacterioplankton, cells, dividing, Effects, frequency, grazing, protistan
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%T Abundance and productivity of heterotrophic nanoplankton in Georgia coastal waters
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%B Journal of Plankton Research
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%A Sherr, E.B.
%A Newell, S.Y.
%K Abundance, coastal, Georgia, heterotrophic, nanoplankton, productivity, waters
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%T Bacterivory by pelagic choreotrichous ciliates in coastal waters of the NW Mediterranean sea
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%Z 633
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%A Sherr, E.B.
%A Rassoulzadgen, F.
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%A Sherr, E.B.
%A Andrew, T.L.
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%A Sherr, E.B.
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%K ammonia, components, Differences, nitrate, phytoplankton, population, uptake
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%T Carbon isotope composition of organic seston and sediments in a Georgia salt marsh estuary
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%T Direct use of high molecular weight polysaccharide by heterotrophic flagellates
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%! Double-staining epifluorescence technique to assess frequency of dividing cells and bacteriovory in natural populations of heterotrophic microprotozoa
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%K abundance, ciliates, during, fall, High, Israel, Kinneret, Lake, late, picoplankton-ingesting
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%T The occurrence and food habits of two species of hake, Urophycis reqius and U. floridanus in Georgia estuaries
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%! The occurrence and food habits of two species of hake, Urophycis reqius and U. floridanus in Georgia estuaries
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%M UGAMI.255
%A Sikora, W.B.
%A Heard, R.W.III
%A Dahlberg, M.D.
%K estuaries, floridanus, food, Georgia, habits, hake, occurrence, reqius, species, Urophycis
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%T Atrophic cascade regulates salt marsh primary production
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%B Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences
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%! Atrophic cascade regulates salt marsh primary production
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%K Atrophic, cascade, marsh, primary, production, regulates, salt
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%T Fungal farming in a snail
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%B Proceedings of the National Academy of Science
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%! Fungal farming in a snail
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%K fungi-animal interactions, salt marshes, top-down control
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%T Top-down control of Spartina alterniflora production by periwinkle grazing in a Virginia salt marsh
%D 2001
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%B Ecology
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%! Top-down control of Spartina alterniflora production by periwinkle grazing in a Virginia salt marsh
%Z 892
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%A Silliman, B.R.
%A Zieman, J.C.
%K cordgrass, grazing, Littoraria irrorata, mesograzers, nitrogen enrichment, periwinkles, plant-herbivore interactions, salt marsh, Spartina alterniflora, top-down vs. bottom-up control, trophic cascade
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%T Drought, snails, and large-scale die-off of southern U.S. salt marshes.
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%! Drought, snails, and large-scale die-off of southern U.S. salt marshes.
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%A Silliman, B.R.
%A van de Koppel, J.
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%A Stanton, L.E.
%A Mendelssohn, I.A.
%K die-off, Drought, large-scale, marshes, salt, snails, southern
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%T Insights into Salt Marsh Plant Community Distributions Through Computer Vision and Structural Equation Modeling
%D 2022
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%B Estuaries and Coasts
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%M UGAMI.1139
%R 10.1007/s12237-022-01147-w
%U https://link.springer.com/article/10.1007/s12237-022-01147-w
%A Simon, Jacob
%A Hopkinson, Brian M.
%A Pennings, Steven C.
%K Salt marsh, Computer vision, Community ecology, Structural equation modeling, Deep learning, Methodological pipeline, UGAMI Publication
%0 Journal Article
%T A reviewal of Odhneria odhneri Travassos, 1921 (Trematoda:Microphallidae)
%D 1971
%V 57
%P 980-982
%B Journal of Parasitology
%9 Article
%! A reviewal of Odhneria odhneri Travassos, 1921 (Trematoda:Microphallidae)
%Z 9-243
%M UGAMI.253
%A Sinclair, N.R.
%K Microphallidae, odhneri, Odhneria, reviewal, Travassos, Trematoda
%0 Journal Article
%T Parapronocephalum Beloposkaia, 1952 (Trematoda): Notocotylid or pronocephalid? A description of Parapronocephalum reversum sp. no. in shorebirds
%D 1972
%V 39
%P 87-94
%B Proceedings of the Helminthological Soiety of Washington
%9 Article
%! Parapronocephalum Beloposkaia, 1952 (Trematoda): Notocotylid or pronocephalid? A description of Parapronocephalum reversum sp. no. in shorebirds
%Z 252*
%M UGAMI.262
%A Sinclair, N.R.
%K Beloposkaia, description, no, Notocotylid, or, Parapronocephalum, pronocephalid, reversum, shorebirds, sp, Trematoda
%0 Journal Article
%T Studies on the heterophyid trematode Apophallus brevis, the "sand-grain grub" of yellow perch (Perca flavescens). I. Redescription and resolution of synonymic conflict with Apophallus imperator Lyster, 1940 and other designations
%D 1972
%V 50
%P 357-364
%B Canadian Journal of Zoology
%9 Article
%! Studies on the heterophyid trematode Apophallus brevis, the "sand-grain grub" of yellow perch (Perca flavescens). I. Redescription and resolution of synonymic conflict with Apophallus imperator Lyster, 1940 and other designations
%Z 9-253
%M UGAMI.263
%A Sinclair, N.R.
%K Apophallus, brevis, conflict, designations, flavescens, grub, heterophyid, imperator, Lyster, other, Perca, perch, Redescription, resolution, sand-grain, Studies, synonymic, trematode, yellow
%0 Journal Article
%T Studies on the heterophyid trematode Apophallus brevis, the "sand-grain grub" of yellow perch (Perca flavescens). II. The metacercaria: position, structure, and composition of the cyst; hosts; geographical distribution and variation
%D 1972
%V 50
%P 577-584
%B Canadian Journal of Zoology
%9 Article
%! Studies on the heterophyid trematode Apophallus brevis, the "sand-grain grub" of yellow perch (Perca flavescens). II. The metacercaria: position, structure, and composition of the cyst; hosts; geographical distribution and variation
%Z 9-254
%M UGAMI.264
%A Sinclair, N.R.
%K Apophallus, brevis, composition, cyst, distribution, flavescens, geographical, grub, heterophyid, hosts, metacercaria, Perca, perch, position, sand-grain, structure, Studies, trematode, variation, yellow
%0 Journal Article
%T The Stomachicola rubea:Tubulovesicula pinquis enigma
%D 1972
%V 39
%P 253-258
%B Proceedings of the Helminthological Soiety of Washington
%9 Article
%! The Stomachicola rubea:Tubulovesicula pinquis enigma
%Z 255*
%M UGAMI.265
%A Sinclair, N.R.
%A Smith, F.G.
%A Sullivan, J.J.
%K enigma, pinquis, rubea, Stomachicola, Tubulovesicula
%0 Journal Article
%T Latitudinal variation in palatability of salt-marsh plants: which traits are responsible?
%D 2002
%V 83
%N 12
%P 3369-3381
%B Ecology
%9 Article
%! Latitudinal variation in palatability of salt-marsh plants: which traits are responsible?
%Z 903
%M UGAMI.936
%A Siska, E.L.
%A Pennings, S.C.
%A Buck, T.L.
%A Hanisak, M.D.
%K affected by multiple plant traits, Atlantic coast (USA) salt-marsh plants, biogeographic theory, chemical defense, herbivory, latitude and plant variation, latitudinal variation, palatability, plant chemical defenses, plant variation across latitude, plant-herbivore interactions.
%0 Journal Article
%T Sulfate reduction rates in Georgia marshland soils
%D 1978
%V 1
%P 389-400
%B Geomicrobiology Journal
%9 Article
%! Sulfate reduction rates in Georgia marshland soils
%Z 14-381
%M UGAMI.393
%A Skyring, G.W.
%A Oshrain, R.L.
%A Wiebe, W.J.
%K Georgia, marshland, rates, reduction, soils, Sulfate
%0 Journal Article
%T Pigmy sperm whale in Georgia
%D 1959
%V 40
%P 452
%B Journal of Mammalogy
%9 Article
%! Pigmy sperm whale in Georgia
%Z 2-10
%M UGAMI.14
%A Smalley, A.E.
%K Georgia, Pigmy, sperm, whale
%0 Journal Article
%T Energy flow of a salt marsh grasshopper population
%D 1960
%V 41
%P 785-790
%B Ecology
%9 Article
%! Energy flow of a salt marsh grasshopper population
%Z 2-24
%M UGAMI.30
%A Smalley, A.E.
%K Energy, flow, grasshopper, marsh, population, salt
%0 Journal Article
%T The effects of selected heavy metals (As, Cd, Ni, Zn) on experimentally grown foraminiferal assemblages from Sapelo Island, Georgia and Little Duck Key, Florida, U.S.A.
%D 2019
%B Journal of Foraminiferal Research
%9 Article
%! The effects of selected heavy metals (As, Cd, Ni, Zn) on experimentally grown foraminiferal assemblages from Sapelo Island, Georgia and Little Duck Key, Florida, U.S.A.
%Z published
%M UGAMI.1110
%A Smith, Christopher W.
%A Goldstein, Susan T.
%K assemblages, Cd, Duck, effects, experimentally, Florida, foraminiferal, Georgia, grown, heavy, Island, Key, Little, metals, Ni, Sapelo, selected, Zn
%0 Journal Article
%T EFFECTS OF VARIED TEMPERATURE AND SALINITY ON ASSEMBLAGES OF FORAMINIFERA GROWN WITH EXPOSURE TO HEAVY-METAL POLLUTANTS (NICKEL AND ZINC)
%D 2021
%V 51
%N 3
%P 99-114
%B Journal of Foraminiferal Research
%8 Jul
%9 Article
%! EFFECTS OF VARIED TEMPERATURE AND SALINITY ON ASSEMBLAGES OF FORAMINIFERA GROWN WITH EXPOSURE TO HEAVY-METAL POLLUTANTS (NICKEL AND ZINC)
%Z ISI Document Delivery No.: UY8SM; Times Cited: 0; Cited Reference Count: 63; Smith, Christopher W. Goldstein, Susan T.; Joseph A. Cushman Award for Student Research (Cushman Foundation for Foraminiferal Research); Bernold M. "Bruno" Hanson Memorial Environmental Grant (American Association of Petroleum Geologists Foundation); Garry Jones and Brian O''Neill Memorial Grant (North American Micropaleontology Section); Levy Award for Marine Geology; Watts Wheeler Fund (Department of Geology, University of Georgia); We thank Dr. John Shields and Dr. Eric Formo of the University of Georgia ElectronMicroscopy Lab for their aid in electron microscopy; Dr. Sayed Hassan of the University of Georgia Center for Applied Isotope Studies (CAIS) for aid in ICP-MS analysis of residual water samples; Dr. Steven Holland, Dr. Paul Schroeder, and Dr. Anthony Rathburn for advice; andWayne Smith for aid in sediment collection. This research was funded by the Joseph A. Cushman Award for Student Research (Cushman Foundation for Foraminiferal Research), the Bernold M. "Bruno" Hanson Memorial EnvironmentalGrant (American Association of Petroleum Geologists Foundation), the Garry Jones and Brian O''Neill Memorial Grant (North American Micropaleontology Section), the Levy Award for Marine Geology, and the Watts Wheeler Fund (Department of Geology, University of Georgia). This is contribution 1097 of the University of Georgia Marine Institute on Sapelo Island.; 0; Cushman foundation foraminiferal research; Lawrence
%M UGAMI.1129
%A Smith, C.W.
%A Goldstein, S.T.
%K benthic foraminifera, bioindicators, dispersal, diversity, ecotoxicology, florida, key, morphological abnormalities, Paleontology, pollution, tests
%0 Journal Article
%T Incorporation of heavy metals in experimentally grown foraminifera from Sapelo Island, Georgia and Little Duck Key, Florida, USA
%D 2020
%V 156
%P 13
%B Marine Micropaleontology
%8 Apr
%9 Article
%! Incorporation of heavy metals in experimentally grown foraminifera from Sapelo Island, Georgia and Little Duck Key, Florida, USA
%Z ISI Document Delivery No.: LG4GW; Times Cited: 2; Cited Reference Count: 86; Smith, Christopher W. Fehrenbacher, Jennifer S. Goldstein, Susan T.; Cushman Foundation for Foraminiferal Research; AAPG; NAMS; Levy Award for Marine Geology; Watts-Wheeler Fund (Department of Geology, University of Georgia); We thank Dr. Chris Russo of the Keck Collaboratory at Oregon State University for his extensive aid in LA-ICP-MS analysis; Theresa FritzEndres for her help with LA-ICP-MS data analysis and management; Dr. John Shields and Dr. Eric Formo of the Georgia Electron Microscopy (GEM) Lab for their aid in electron microscopy; Dr. Sayed Hassan of the University of Georgia Center for Applied Isotope Studies (CAIS) for aid in ICP-MS analysis of residual water samples; Dr. Steven Holland, Dr. Paul Schroeder, and Dr. Anthony Rathburn for advice; Wayne Smith for aid in sediment collection. This research was funded by student research grants from the Cushman Foundation for Foraminiferal Research, AAPG, NAMS, the Levy Award for Marine Geology, and the Watts-Wheeler Fund (Department of Geology, University of Georgia). This is contribution 1084 of the University of Georgia Marine Institute on Sapelo Island.; 2; 0; 7; Elsevier; Amsterdam; 1872-6186
%M UGAMI.1116
%A Smith, C.W.
%A Fehrenbacher, J.S.
%A Goldstein, S.T.
%K Benthic foraminifera, biomineralization, cadmium, calcification, element incorporation, Heavy metal, Incorporation, LA-ICP-MS, magnesium, Paleontology, pollution, Propagule, tests, toxic elements, trace-metals
%0 Journal Article
%T A preliminary report on the incidence of lymphocystis disease in the fish of the Sapelo Island, Georgia, area
%D 1970
%V 6
%P 469-471
%B Journal Wildlife Disease
%9 Article
%! A preliminary report on the incidence of lymphocystis disease in the fish of the Sapelo Island, Georgia, area
%Z 8-206
%M UGAMI.216
%A Smith, F.G.
%K area, disease, fish, Georgia, incidence, Island, lymphocystis, preliminary, report, Sapelo
%0 Journal Article
%T Biodeposition by the ribbed mussel Geukensia demissa in a salt marsh, Sapelo Island, Georgia
%D 1985
%V 55
%P 817-828
%B Journal of Sedimentary Petrology
%9 Article
%! Biodeposition by the ribbed mussel Geukensia demissa in a salt marsh, Sapelo Island, Georgia
%Z 19-531
%M UGAMI.543
%A Smith, J.M.
%A Frey, R.W.
%K Biodeposition, demissa, Georgia, Geukensia, Island, marsh, mussel, ribbed, salt, Sapelo
%0 Journal Article
%T Abstracts-Research reports presented to the University of Georgia Marine Institute by summer-research participants, 1980-1982
%D 1983
%V 41
%P 93-96
%B Georgia Journal of Science
%9 Article
%! Abstracts-Research reports presented to the University of Georgia Marine Institute by summer-research participants, 1980-1982
%Z 17-492
%M UGAMI.504
%A Smith, J.M.
%A Arnold, W.S.
%A Stites, D.L.
%A Donavan, L.A.
%A Trott, T.J.
%A Jansma, P.L.
%K Abstracts-Research, Georgia, Institute, Marine, participants, presented, reports, summer-research, University
%0 Journal Article
%T A device for sampling immediately above the sediment-water interface
%D 1971
%V 16
%P 675-677
%B Limnology and Oceanography
%9 Article
%! A device for sampling immediately above the sediment-water interface
%Z 8-214
%M UGAMI.224
%A Smith, K.L.
%K device, immediately, interface, sampling, sediment-water
%0 Book Section
%T Vulnerability of marine sedimentary ecosystem services to human activities
%D 2004
%V 64
%P 314
%I Island Press
%C Washington, DC
%B Sustaining Biodiversity and Ecosystem Services in Soils and Sediments
%S SCOPE Series
%7 Chapter 7
%9 Article
%! Vulnerability of marine sedimentary ecosystem services to human activities
%Z 932
%M UGAMI.965
%A Snelgrove, P.V.R.
%A Austen, M.C.
%A Hawkins, S.J.
%A Iliffe, T.M.
%A Kneib, R.T.
%A Levin, L.A.
%A Weslawski, J.M.
%A Whitlach, R.B.
%A Garey, J.R.
%E Wall, Diana H.
%K activities, ecosystem, human, marine, sedimentary, services, Vulnerability
%0 Journal Article
%T Impact of a genetically engineered bacterium with enhanced alkaline phosphatase activity on marine phytoplankton communitites
%D 1996
%V 62
%N no. 1
%P 6-12
%B Applied and Environmental Microbiology
%9 Article
%! Impact of a genetically engineered bacterium with enhanced alkaline phosphatase activity on marine phytoplankton communitites
%Z 775
%M UGAMI.793
%A Sobecky, Patricia A.
%A Schell, Mark A.
%A Moran, Mary Ann
%A Hodson, Robert E.
%K activity, alkaline, bacterium, communitites, engineered, enhanced, genetically, Impact, marine, phosphatase, phytoplankton
%0 Journal Article
%T The effect of changing water chemistry on rates of manganese oxidation in surface sediments of a temperate saltmarsh and a tropical mangrove estuary
%D 1994
%V 38
%P 119-135
%B Estuarine, Coastal and Shelf Science
%9 Article
%! The effect of changing water chemistry on rates of manganese oxidation in surface sediments of a temperate saltmarsh and a tropical mangrove estuary
%Z 740
%M UGAMI.756
%A Spratt, H.G.Jr.
%A Hodson, R.E.
%K changing, chemistry, estuary, manganese, mangrove, oxidation, rates, saltmarsh, sediments, surface, temperate, tropical, water
%0 Journal Article
%T Microbial manganese oxidation in saltmarsh surface sediments using a leuco crystal violent manganese oxide detection technique
%D 1994
%V 38
%P 91-112
%B Estuarine, Coastal and Shelf Science
%9 Article
%! Microbial manganese oxidation in saltmarsh surface sediments using a leuco crystal violent manganese oxide detection technique
%Z 739
%M UGAMI.755
%A Spratt, H.G.Jr.
%A Siekmann, E.C.
%A Hodson, R.E.
%K crystal, detection, leuco, manganese, Microbial, oxidation, oxide, saltmarsh, sediments, surface, technique, violent
%0 Journal Article
%T Home range and survival of breeding painted buntings on Sapelo Island, Georgia
%D 2005
%V 33
%N 4
%P 1432-1439
%B Wildlife Society Bulletin
%9 Article
%! Home range and survival of breeding painted buntings on Sapelo Island, Georgia
%Z 888
%M UGAMI.902
%A Springborn, E.G.
%A Meyers, J.M.
%K Georgia, home range, maritime shrub, movement, painted bunting, Passerina ciris, pine-oak forest, Sapelo Island, wetlands
%0 Journal Article
%T A fine structure study of the anthocodium in Renilla mulleri
%D 1975
%V 64
%P 15-28
%B The Journal of Cell Biology
%9 Article
%! A fine structure study of the anthocodium in Renilla mulleri
%Z 11-279
%M UGAMI.290
%A Spurlock, B.O.
%A Cormier, M.J.
%K anthocodium, fine, mulleri, Renilla, structure, study
%0 Journal Article
%T Tidal freshwater forests: Sentinels for climate change
%D 2018
%V 116
%P 6
%B Ecological Engineering
%7 In progress
%9 Article
%! Tidal freshwater forests: Sentinels for climate change
%Z published
%M UGAMI.1094
%U https://www.sciencedirect.com/journal/ecological-engineering/vol/116/suppl/C
%A Stahl, M.E.
%A Widney, S.E.
%A Craft, C.B.
%K Climate change, Nutrient cycling, Sea level rise, Tidal forest
%0 Journal Article
%T Soil and vegetation patterns in barrier island dune environments
%D 2001
%V 22
%N 1
%P 79-98
%B Physical Geography
%9 Article
%! Soil and vegetation patterns in barrier island dune environments
%Z 907
%M UGAMI.940
%A Stallins, J.A.
%K barrier, dune, environments, island, patterns, Soil, vegetation
%0 Journal Article
%T Relative amounts of vitamin B12 in detritus from oceanic and estuarine environments near Sapelo Island, Georgia
%D 1956
%V 37
%P 658-664
%B Ecology
%9 Article
%! Relative amounts of vitamin B12 in detritus from oceanic and estuarine environments near Sapelo Island, Georgia
%Z 1-2
%M UGAMI.2
%A Starr, T.J.
%K amounts, B12, detritus, environments, estuarine, Georgia, Island, near, oceanic, Relative, Sapelo, vitamin
%0 Book Section
%T Sources of new N in a tropical sea grass system, Laguna de Terminos, Mexico
%D 1988
%P 159-170
%I Springer-Verlag.
%B Ecology of the Southern Gulf of Mexico Coastal Zone
%9 Article
%! Sources of new N in a tropical sea grass system, Laguna de Terminos, Mexico
%Z 573
%M UGAMI.586
%A Stevenson, J.C.
%A Madden, C.
%A Hopkinson, C.S.
%E Yanez-Arancibia, A.
%0 Journal Article
%T Sediments of the northern Arabian Sea
%D 1966
%V 28 p.
%B U. S. Naval Oceanogr. Office Tech. Rept. 186
%9 Article
%! Sediments of the northern Arabian Sea
%Z 5-99
%M UGAMI.110
%A Stewart, R.A.
%A Pilkey, O.H.
%K Arabian, northern, Sea, Sediments
%0 Journal Article
%T Sediments of the northern Arabian Sea
%D 1965
%V 3
%P 411-427
%B Marine Geology
%9 Article
%! Sediments of the northern Arabian Sea
%Z 5-98
%M UGAMI.109
%A Stewart, R.A.
%A Pilkey, O.H.
%A Nelson, B.W.
%K Arabian, northern, Sea, Sediments
%0 Journal Article
%T Ecosystem Development on a Coastal Barrier Island Dune Chronosequence
%D 2010
%V 26
%N 4
%P 736-742
%B Journal of Coastal Research
%8 Jul
%9 Article
%! Ecosystem Development on a Coastal Barrier Island Dune Chronosequence
%Z #981 ISI Document Delivery No.: 629OW Times Cited: 3 Cited Reference Count: 44 Tackett, Nicholas W. Craft, Christopher B. U.S. Environmental Protection Agency [RD 83222001-0]; National Science Foundation [OCE-9982133] Thanks to Ross Brittain, Mark Loomis, Erin Lish, and Kristen Wardlaw for assisting with soil processing. Also, thanks to Erika Elswick for measuring the concentration of NO3- in soils via ion chromatography. This research was supported by grant RD 83222001-0 from the U.S. Environmental Protection Agency''s Science to Achieve Results (STAR) program and grant OCE-9982133 from the National Science Foundation to the Georgia Coastal Ecosystem LTER program. This is contribution 981 of the University of Georgia Marine Institute. 3 COASTAL EDUCATION & RESEARCH FOUNDATION LAWRENCE J COASTAL RES
%M UGAMI.1014
%A Tackett, N.W.
%A Craft, C.B.
%K carbon, DIGESTION, Environmental Sciences, FOREST, Geography, Geosciences, Morella cerifera, Multidisciplinary, NITRATE, nitrogen, phosphorus, PHOSPHORUS TRANSFORMATIONS, Physical, SOILS, Succession, VEGETATION, WIND-BLOWN SAND, ZEALAND
%0 Book Section
%T Changes in chemical composition, FTIR and fluorescence spectral characteristics of humic acids in peats profiles
%D 1999
%I Royal Society of Chemistry
%C London
%B Understanding Humic Substances: Advanced Methods, Properties and Applications
%9 Article
%! Changes in chemical composition, FTIR and fluorescence spectral characteristics of humic acids in peats profiles
%Z 791
%M UGAMI.809
%A Takacs, M.
%A Alberts, J.J.
%E Ghabbour, Elham A.
%E Davies, Geoffrey
%K acids, Changes, characteristics, chemical, composition, fluorescence, FTIR, humic, peats, profiles, spectral
%0 Conference Proceedings
%T Fluorescence, total luminescence and FTIR spectral characteristics of soil and peat humic substances
%D 2000
%P 13-25
%I EMBRAPA
%C Sao Carlos, Brazil
%B Proceedings'' 98, 2nd National Symposium on Agricultural Instrumentation (II SIAGRO)
%S Anais do II Siagro (Simposio Nacional de Instrumentacao Agropecuaria)
%9 Presentation
%! Fluorescence, total luminescence and FTIR spectral characteristics of soil and peat humic substances
%Z 832
%M UGAMI.832
%A Takacs, M.
%A Alberts, J.J.
%E Cruvinel, P.E.
%E Colnago, L.A.
%E Torre-Neto, A.
%K characteristics, Fluorescence, FTIR, humic, luminescence, peat, soil, spectral, substances, total
%0 Journal Article
%T Characterization of natural organic matter from eight Norwegian surface waters: Proton and copper binding
%D 1999
%V 25
%N 2/3
%P 315-323
%B Environment International
%9 Article
%! Characterization of natural organic matter from eight Norwegian surface waters: Proton and copper binding
%Z 821
%M UGAMI.841
%A Takacs, M.
%A Egeberg, P.K.
%A Alberts, J.J.
%K binding, Characterization, copper, matter, natural, Norwegian, organic, Proton, surface, waters
%0 Book Section
%T Microbial metabolism of dimethyl sulfide
%D 1989
%P 203-221
%I ACS Symposium Series, American Chemical Society
%C Washington, D.C.
%B Biogenic Sulfur in the Environment
%9 Article
%! Microbial metabolism of dimethyl sulfide
%Z 623
%M UGAMI.636
%A Taylor, B.F.
%A Kiene, R.P.
%E Saltzman, E.S.
%E Cooper, W.J.
%K dimethyl, metabolism, Microbial, sulfide
%0 Journal Article
%T Environmental and endocrine influences on reproduction of Fundulus heteroclitus
%D 1986
%V 26
%P 159-171
%B American Zoologist
%9 Article
%! Environmental and endocrine influences on reproduction of Fundulus heteroclitus
%Z 17-508
%M UGAMI.520
%A Taylor, M.H.
%K endocrine, Environmental, Fundulus, heteroclitus, influences, reproduction
%0 Journal Article
%T The cattle egret in Georgia
%D 1956
%V 21
%P 33
%B The Oriole
%9 Article
%! The cattle egret in Georgia
%Z 7E
%M UGAMI.873
%A Teal, J.M.
%K cattle, egret, Georgia
%0 Journal Article
%T Community metabolism in a temperate cold spring
%D 1957
%V 27
%P 283-302
%B Ecological Monographs
%9 Article
%! Community metabolism in a temperate cold spring
%Z 1-7C
%M UGAMI.11
%A Teal, J.M.
%K cold, Community, metabolism, spring, temperate
%0 Journal Article
%T Distribution of fiddler crabs in Georgia salt marshes
%D 1958
%V 39
%P 185-193
%B Ecology
%9 Article
%! Distribution of fiddler crabs in Georgia salt marshes
%Z 1-7
%M UGAMI.8
%A Teal, J.M.
%K crabs, Distribution, fiddler, Georgia, marshes, salt
%0 Journal Article
%T Further notes on the cattle egret in Georgia. Additions to the breeding birds of Sapelo Island
%D 1958
%V 23
%P 8
%B The Oriole
%9 Article
%! Further notes on the cattle egret in Georgia. Additions to the breeding birds of Sapelo Island
%Z 7F
%M UGAMI.874
%A Teal, J.M.
%K Additions, birds, breeding, cattle, egret, Further, Georgia, Island, notes, Sapelo
%0 Journal Article
%T Birds of Sapelo Island and vicinity
%D 1959
%V 24
%P 1-14, 17-20
%B The Oriole
%9 Article
%! Birds of Sapelo Island and vicinity
%Z 2-12
%M UGAMI.16
%A Teal, J.M.
%K Birds, Island, Sapelo, vicinity
%0 Journal Article
%T Respiration of crabs in Georgia salt marshes and its relation to their ecology
%D 1959
%V 32
%P 1-14
%B Physiological Zoology
%9 Article
%! Respiration of crabs in Georgia salt marshes and its relation to their ecology
%Z 1-11
%M UGAMI.15
%A Teal, J.M.
%K crabs, ecology, Georgia, marshes, relation, Respiration, salt
%0 Journal Article
%T A technique for separating nematodes and small arthropods from marine muds
%D 1960
%V 5
%P 341-342
%B Limnology and Oceanography
%9 Article
%! A technique for separating nematodes and small arthropods from marine muds
%Z 2-13
%M UGAMI.17
%A Teal, J.M.
%K arthropods, marine, muds, nematodes, separating, small, technique
%0 Journal Article
%T Energy flow in the salt marsh ecosystem of Georgia
%D 1962
%V 43
%P 614-624
%B Ecology
%9 Article
%! Energy flow in the salt marsh ecosystem of Georgia
%Z 3-38
%M UGAMI.45
%A Teal, J.M.
%K ecosystem, Energy, flow, Georgia, marsh, salt
%0 Journal Article
%T Gas exchange in a Georgia salt marsh
%D 1961
%V 6
%P 388-399
%B Limnology and Oceanography
%9 Article
%! Gas exchange in a Georgia salt marsh
%Z 2-30
%M UGAMI.36
%A Teal, J.M.
%A Kanwisher, J.
%K exchange, Gas, Georgia, marsh, salt
%0 Journal Article
%T Release of dissolved organic matter from natural populations of marine phytoplankton
%D 1971
%V 11
%P 311-323
%B Marine Biology
%9 Article
%! Release of dissolved organic matter from natural populations of marine phytoplankton
%Z 9-224
%M UGAMI.234
%A Thomas, J.
%K dissolved, marine, matter, natural, organic, phytoplankton, populations, Release
%0 Book Section
%T Seasonal aspects of remote sensing coastal resources
%D 1973
%P 1201-1249
%I U. of Tenn. Press
%B Remote Sensing of Earth Resources
%9 Article
%! Seasonal aspects of remote sensing coastal resources
%Z 10-263
%M UGAMI.273
%A Thompson, D.E.
%A Ragsdale, J.
%A Reimold, R.J.
%A Gallagher, J.L.
%E Shahrokhi, F.
%K aspects, coastal, remote, resources, Seasonal, sensing
%0 Journal Article
%T The Sapelo Shell Rings Site: shallow geophysics on a Georgia sea island
%D 2004
%V 23
%N 2
%P 192-201
%B Southeastern Archaeology
%9 Article
%! The Sapelo Shell Rings Site: shallow geophysics on a Georgia sea island
%Z 918
%M UGAMI.951
%A Thompson, V.
%A Reynolds, M.
%A Haley, B.
%A Jefferies, R.
%A Johnson, J.
%A Humphries, C.
%K geophysics, Georgia, island, Rings, Sapelo, sea, shallow, Shell, Site
%0 Journal Article
%T Short-term variability of ammonia oxidizer populations in a SE USA salt marsh environment
%D 2015
%B ISME Journal
%9 Article
%! Short-term variability of ammonia oxidizer populations in a SE USA salt marsh environment
%Z #1040
%M UGAMI.1071
%A Tolar, B.B.
%A Bratcher, A.
%A Liu, Q.
%A Ross, M .J.
%A Hagan, P.
%A Hollibaugh, J.T.
%K ammonia, environment, marsh, oxidizer, populations, salt, SE, Short-term, USA, variability
%0 Journal Article
%T Ammonia Oxidation in the Ocean Can Be Inhibited by Nanomolar Concentrations of Hydrogen Peroxide
%D 2016
%V 3
%N 237
%B Frontiers in Marine Science
%8 2016-November-18
%9 Article
%! Hydrogen Peroxide can Inhibit Ammonia Oxidation
%Z published
%M UGAMI.1084
%U http://journal.frontiersin.org/article/10.3389/fmars.2016.00237
%A Tolar, Bradley B.
%A Powers, Leanne C.
%A Miller, William L.
%A Wallsgrove, Natalie J.
%A Popp, Brian N.
%A Hollibaugh, James T.
%K Ammonia, ammonia oxidation, Hydrogen Peroxide, Nitrification, Nitrogen, Reactive Oxygen Species, thaumarchaeota
%0 Journal Article
%T Oxidation of urea-derived nitrogen by thaumarchaeota-dominated marine nitrifying communities
%D 2016
%P n/a-n/a
%B Environmental Microbiology
%9 Article
%! Oxidation of urea-derived nitrogen by thaumarchaeota-dominated marine nitrifying communities
%Z published
%M UGAMI.1079
%U http://dx.doi.org/10.1111/1462-2920.13457
%A Tolar, Bradley B.
%A Wallsgrove, Natalie J.
%A Popp, Brian N.
%A Hollibaugh, James T.
%K communities, marine, nitrifying, nitrogen, Oxidation, thaumarchaeota-dominated, urea-derived
%0 Journal Article
%T Decomposition of Leaf Litter in a U.S. Saltmarsh is Driven by Dominant Species, Not Species Complementarity
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%V 33
%N 1
%P 83-89
%B Wetlands
%8 Feb
%9 Article
%! Decomposition of Leaf Litter in a U.S. Saltmarsh is Driven by Dominant Species, Not Species Complementarity
%Z #1026 Times Cited: 1 Cited Reference Count: 45 1
%M UGAMI.1059
%A Treplin, Malte
%A Pennings, Steven C.
%A Zimmer, Martin
%K Armases, Juncus roemerianus, Littoraria, Quercus virginiana, Spartina alterniflora, Angiospermae, Angiosperms, Animalia, Animals, Arthropoda, Arthropods, Biodiversity, biology - Animal, cinereum, coffee-bean, complementarity, cordgrass]/Monocotyledones, Crustaceans, Dicots, Dicotyledones, Ecology: environmental, Ecology: environmental biology - Plant, Environmental Sciences), experimental, experimental morphology, Fagaceae [26070], Gastropoda [61200], Georgia, Gramineae [25305], Invertebrata, Invertebrata: comparative, Invertebrata:comparative, Invertebrates, irrorata, Juncaceae [25330], leaf litter decomposition, live oak]/Mollusca, Malacostraca [75112], Mollusks, Monocots, morphology, Nearctic region, needle rush]/Crustacea, North America, pathology - Arthropoda: crustacea, periwinkle] [Melampus bidentatus, physiology and, physiology and pathology - Mollusca, plant decomposition rate, plant mass, Plantae, Plants, snail]/Monocotyledones, species, species dominance, Spermatophyta, Spermatophytes, Terrestrial Ecology (Ecology, USA, Vascular Plants, wharf crab]
%0 Journal Article
%T Chemical stimulants of cheliped flexion behavior by the Western Atlantic ghost crab Ocypode quadrata (Fabricius)
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%9 Article
%! Chemical stimulants of cheliped flexion behavior by the Western Atlantic ghost crab Ocypode quadrata (Fabricius)
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%M UGAMI.503
%A Trott, T.J.
%A Robertson, J.R.
%K Atlantic, behavior, cheliped, Chemical, crab, Fabricius, flexion, ghost, Ocypode, quadrata, stimulants, Western
%0 Journal Article
%T Tidal induced regulation of nitrogen fixation activity (C2H4 production) in a Georgia salt marsh
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%9 Article
%! Tidal induced regulation of nitrogen fixation activity (C2H4 production) in a Georgia salt marsh
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%M UGAMI.408
%A Ubben, M.S.
%A Hanson, R.B.
%K activity, C2H4, fixation, Georgia, induced, marsh, nitrogen, production, regulation, salt, Tidal
%0 Journal Article
%T Influence of white shrimp (Penaeus setiferus) on benthic metabolism and nutrient flux in a coastal marine ecosystem: measurements in situ
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%B Contributions in Marine Science
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%! Influence of white shrimp (Penaeus setiferus) on benthic metabolism and nutrient flux in a coastal marine ecosystem: measurements in situ
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%M UGAMI.565
%A Vetter, E.F.
%A Hopkinson, C.S.
%K benthic, coastal, ecosystem, flux, Influence, marine, measurements, metabolism, nutrient, Penaeus, setiferus, shrimp, situ, white
%0 Book Section
%T Metabolic indicators of sublethal stress: Changes in adenine nucleotides, glycogen and lipid
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%P 471-498
%I University of Maryland Sea Grant College
%B Concepts in marine pollution measurements
%9 Article
%! Metabolic indicators of sublethal stress: Changes in adenine nucleotides, glycogen and lipid
%Z 17-480
%M UGAMI.492
%A Vetter, R.
%A Hodson, R.E.
%E White, H.
%K adenine, Changes, glycogen, indicators, lipid, Metabolic, nucleotides, stress, sublethal
%0 Journal Article
%T Energy metabolism in a rapidly developing marine fish egg, the red drum (Sciaenops ocellata)
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%B Canadian Journal of Fisheries and Aquatic Sciences
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%! Energy metabolism in a rapidly developing marine fish egg, the red drum (Sciaenops ocellata)
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%M UGAMI.490
%A Vetter, R.D.
%A Hodson, R.E.
%K developing, drum, egg, Energy, fish, marine, metabolism, ocellata, rapidly, red, Sciaenops
%0 Journal Article
%T The effect of dietary fat on the bioavailability of DDT, a PCB, and benzo(a)pyrene in the killifish
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%B TEXT CURRENTLY UNAVAILABLE - American Journal of Physiology
%9 Article
%! The effect of dietary fat on the bioavailability of DDT, a PCB, and benzo(a)pyrene in the killifish
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%M UGAMI.528
%A Vetter, R.D.
%A Patton, J.S.
%K benzo, bioavailability, DDT, dietary, fat, killifish, PCB, pyrene
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%T Coassimilation of dietary fat and benzo(a)pyrene in the small intestine: an absorption model using the killifish
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%! Coassimilation of dietary fat and benzo(a)pyrene in the small intestine: an absorption model using the killifish
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%M UGAMI.529
%A Vetter, R.D.
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%M UGAMI.561
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%T Depositional processes and the Navajo Sandstone
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%9 Article
%! Depositional processes and the Navajo Sandstone
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%T Vertebrate fossils of coastal Georgia: A field geologist''s guide
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%P 81-102
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%B The Neogene of the Georgia Coast
%9 Article
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%M UGAMI.282
%A Voorhies, M.R.
%E Frey, R.W.
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%0 Journal Article
%T Identifying labile DOM components in a coastal ocean through depleted bacterial transcripts and chemical signals
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%V 20
%N 8
%P 3012-3030
%B Environmental Microbiology
%8 Aug
%9 Article
%! Identifying labile DOM components in a coastal ocean through depleted bacterial transcripts and chemical signals
%Z ISI Document Delivery No.: GU3NA Times Cited: 0 Cited Reference Count: 75 Vorobev, Alexey Sharma, Shalabh Yu, Mengyun Lee, Juhyung Washington, Benjamin J. Whitman, William B. Ballantyne, Ford Medeiros, Patricia M. Moran, Mary Ann Moran, Mary Ann/0000-0002-0702-8167 National Science Foundation [DMR-1157490]; State of Florida; Roger Nilsen at the Georgia Genomics and Bioinformatics Core; University of Georgia''s Georgia Advanced Computing Resource Centre; NSF [OCE-1356010, OCE-1237140, IOS-1656311]; Gordon and Betty Moore Foundation [5503] We appreciate the assistance of A. McKenna, H. Chen and Y. Corilo at the Ion Cyclotron Resonance Mass Spectrometry Users'' Facility at the National High Magnetic Field Laboratory, supported by National Science Foundation Cooperative Agreement No. DMR-1157490 and the State of Florida; Roger Nilsen at the Georgia Genomics and Bioinformatics Core; and the University of Georgia''s Georgia Advanced Computing Resource Centre. This research was funded by NSF grants OCE-1356010, OCE-1237140 and IOS-1656311, and by The Gordon and Betty Moore Foundation grant 5503. This is contribution 1070 of the University of Georgia Marine Institute. 0 11 15 Wiley Hoboken 1462-2920 Si
%M UGAMI.1100
%A Vorobev, A.
%A Sharma, S.
%A Yu, M.Y.
%A Lee, J.
%A Washington, B.J.
%A Whitman, W.B.
%A Ballantyne, F.
%A Medeiros, P.M.
%A Moran, M.A.
%K amazon river plume, carbon-cycle, deep-ocean, degradation, dissolved organic-matter, escherichia-coli, expression patterns, Microbiology, sea, solid-phase extraction, water-column
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%T Predators mediate above- vs. belowground herbivory in a salt marsh crab
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%N 2
%P 10
%B Ecosphere
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%! Predators mediate above- vs. belowground herbivory in a salt marsh crab
%Z ISI Document Delivery No.: FY8CT Times Cited: 0 Cited Reference Count: 54 Vu, Huy D. Pennings, Steven C. University of Houston Coastal Center; NSF [EAR-1130808] S.C.P. was supported by the University of Houston Coastal Center and NSF (EAR-1130808). We thank Kazik Wiez ski, Erin Wilkenson, Brittany DeLong, Lu-Ting Wu, and the Georgia Coastal Ecosystem LTER Schoolyard teachers for help in the field. This paper is a product of the GCE-LTER program. This manuscript is contribution number 1063 from the University of Georgia Marine Institute. H.D.V. and S.C.P. conceived the ideas and designed methodology; H.D.V collected and analyzed the data; H.D.V. led the writing of the manuscript; and H.D.V and S.C.P contributed critically to drafts and gave final approval for publication. 0 1 Wiley Hoboken
%M UGAMI.1093
%A Vu, H.D.
%A Pennings, S.C.
%K aboveground herbivory, belowground herbivory, crab herbivory, ecosystem, Environmental Sciences & Ecology, Eurytium, eurytium-limosum, evolutionary, growth-rates, intimidation, invertebrate herbivory, new-england, non-consumptive effects, Panopeus, plants, predator-prey interactions, Sesarma, Spartina, trophic cascade, yellowstone-national-park
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%T Directional movement of consumer fronts associated with creek heads in salt marshes
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%! Directional movement of consumer fronts associated with creek heads in salt marshes
%Z ISI Document Delivery No.: UK0LT; Times Cited: 0; Cited Reference Count: 58; Vu, Huy D. Pennings, Steven C.; Pennings, Steven/0000-0003-4757-7125; U.S. Department of Energy''s Office of Science (BER) through the Coastal Center of the National Institute for Climatic Change Research at Tulane UniversityUnited States Department of Energy (DOE) [47118]; National Science Foundation (NSF)National Science Foundation (NSF) [EAR-1130808, OCE12-37140]; We thank U.S. Department of Energy''s Office of Science (BER) through the Coastal Center of the National Institute for Climatic Change Research at Tulane University (47118), and the National Science Foundation (NSF; EAR-1130808, OCE12-37140) for funding. We thank C. Wilson, Z. Hughes, B. Schulman, A. Fund, K. Tran, J. Manly, E. Poole, E. Resetarits, S. Dastidar, F. Li, Z. Chejanovski, B. Peck, A. Peck, G. Wheeler, D. Krup, C. Kilgore, S. Shaw, C. Reddy, Q. He, S. Shalack, and the LTER Schoolyard teachers for help in the field, and E. Grosholz and anonymous reviewers for their constructive comments that improved the manuscript. This work is a product of the Georgia Coastal Ecosystems Long-Term Ecological Research program. This manuscript is contribution number 1099 from the University of Georgia Marine Institute.; 0; 1; Wiley; Hoboken; 1939-9170
%M UGAMI.1131
%A Vu, H.D.
%A Pennings, S.C.
%K behavioral-responses, consumer front, die-off, england, Environmental Sciences & Ecology, evolution, geomorphology, hydrology, hypoxia, metabolism, population-dynamics, sea-urchin, Sesarma, sulfide, tidal creeks, vegetation
%0 Journal Article
%T Ecosystem engineers drive creek formation in salt marshes
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%P 162-174
%B Ecology
%9 Article
%! Ecosystem engineers drive creek formation in salt marshes
%Z published
%M UGAMI.1085
%U http:https://doi.org/10.1002/ecy.1628
%A Vu, Huy D.
%A Wieski, Kazimierz
%A Pennings, Steven C.
%K creek, drive, Ecosystem, engineers, formation, marshes, salt
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%T Effect of mercury and PCBs on organisms from lower trophic levels of a Georgia salt marsh
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%A Alberts, J.J.
%A Moore, D.J.
%A Newell, S.Y.
%A Pattanayek, M.
%A Pennings, S.C.
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%T The effects of complex trophic interaction on a marine microbenthic community
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%T Experimental studies of predation on metazoans inhabiting Spartina alterniflora stems
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%T Structured bioluminescence. Two emitters during both the in vitro and the in vivo bioluminescence of the sea pansy, Renilla
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%T Inorganic carbon and oxygen dynamics in a marsh-dominated estuary
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%! Inorganic carbon and oxygen dynamics in a marsh-dominated estuary
%Z ISI Document Delivery No.: FT3EG Times Cited: 0 Cited Reference Count: 82 Wang, Shiyu Rachel Di Iorio, Daniela Cai, Wei-Jun Hopkinson, Charles S. National Aeronautics and Space Administration [NNX14AM37G]; National Science Foundation, GCE-LTER program [NSF-OCE-1237140] We thank Caroline Reddy, Joel Craig, Jacob Shalack, Emily Davenport, Kim Hunter, Baoshan Chen, and Liang Wang for their field and laboratory assistance and companionship. This is also Contribution # 1053 by the University of Georgia, Marine Institute on Sapelo Island. Cai also acknowledges the National Aeronautics and Space Administration (NNX14AM37G) for supporting his research. This study was funded by National Science Foundation, GCE-LTER program (NSF-OCE-1237140). 0 5 Wiley Hoboken 1939-5590
%M UGAMI.1083
%A Wang, S.R.
%A Di Iorio, D.
%A Cai, W.J.
%A Hopkinson, C.S.
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%T Energy transfer via protein-protein interaction in Renilla bioluminescence
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%T An energy transfer protein in coelenterate bioluminescence. Characterization of the Renilla green-fluorescent protein
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%A Ward, W.W.
%A Cormier, M.J.
%K bioluminescence, Characterization, coelenterate, energy, green-fluorescent, protein, Renilla, transfer
%0 Journal Article
%T Grasshopper (Orthoptera: Tettigoniidae) species composition and size across latitude in Atlantic Coast salt marshes
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%A Wason, E.
%A Pennings, S.C.
%K Biogeography . Latitude ., Orthoptera . Spartina alterniflora . Salt marsh
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%T NaCl effects on growth and transpiration in Salicornia bigelovii, a salt marsh halophyte
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%K bigelovii, effects, growth, halophyte, marsh, NaCl, Salicornia, salt, transpiration
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%T Dark fixation of 14CO2 by obligate and facultative salt marsh halophytes
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%T Studies of the release of dissolved free amino acids by marine zooplankton
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%A Johannes, R.E.
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%T Individual growth rates and movement of juvenile white shrimp (Litopenaeus setiferus) in a tidal marsh nursery
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%A Webb, S.
%A Kneib, R.T.
%K growth, Individual, juvenile, Litopenaeus, marsh, movement, nursery, rates, setiferus, shrimp, tidal, white
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%T Abundance and distribution of juvenile white shrimp Litopenaeus setiferus within a tidal marsh landscape
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%A Webb, S.C
%A Kneib, R.T.
%K crustacean, edge, essential fish habitat, estuarine nursery, intertidal, penaeid shrimp, Sapelo Island
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%T Methylation of Sn(IV) by hydroponically incubated Spartina alterniflora
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%A Weber, J.H.
%A Alberts, J.A.
%K alterniflora, hydroponically, incubated, Methylation, Sn, Spartina
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%T Burrows of Callianassa major Say, geologic indicators of littoral and shallow neritic environments
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%A Weimer, R.J.
%A Hoyt, J.H.
%K Burrows, Callianassa, environments, geologic, indicators, littoral, major, neritic, Say, shallow
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%T Integrated resource databases for coastal management
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%A Remillard, M.
%A Alberts, J.J.
%K coastal, databases, Integrated, management, resource
%0 Journal Article
%T Integration of GPS, Remote sensing & GIS techniques for coastal resource management
%D 1992
%V 58
%P 1571-1578
%B Photogrammetric Engineering and Remote Sensing
%9 Article
%! Integration of GPS, Remote sensing & GIS techniques for coastal resource management
%Z 706
%M UGAMI.722
%A Welch, R.
%A Remillard, M.
%A Alberts, J.J.
%K coastal, GIS, GPS, Integration, management, Remote, resource, sensing, techniques
%0 Book Section
%T Marine sedimentary biota as providers of ecosystem goods and services
%D 2004
%V 64
%P 139
%I Island Press
%C Washington, DC
%B Sustaining Biodiversity and Ecosystem Services in Soils and Sediments
%S SCOPE Series
%7 Chapter 4
%9 Article
%! Marine sedimentary biota as providers of ecosystem goods and services
%Z 931
%M UGAMI.964
%A Weslawski, J.M.
%A Snelgrove, P.V.R.
%A Levin, L.A.
%A Austen, M.C.V.
%A Kneib, R.T.
%A Iliffe, T.M.
%A Garey, J.R.
%A Hawkins, S.J.
%A Whitlach, R.B
%E Wall, Diana H.
%K biota, ecosystem, goods, Marine, providers, sedimentary, services
%0 Book Section
%T Carbon resources of a benthic salt marsh invertebrate Nassarius obsoletus Say (Mollusca:Nassariidae)
%D 1975
%V 2
%P 293-308
%I Academic Press, Inc.
%C New York
%B Estuarine Processes: Circulation, Sediments and Transfer of Material in the Estuary
%9 Article
%! Carbon resources of a benthic salt marsh invertebrate Nassarius obsoletus Say (Mollusca:Nassariidae)
%Z 11-309
%M UGAMI.321
%A Wetzel, R.L.
%E Wiley, Martin
%K benthic, Carbon, invertebrate, marsh, Mollusca, Nassariidae, Nassarius, obsoletus, resources, salt, Say
%0 Book Section
%T Ecosystem simulation models: Tools for the investigation and analysis of nitrogen dynamics in coastal and marine ecosystems
%D 1983
%P 869-892
%I Academic Press
%B Nitrogen in the Marine Environment
%9 Article
%! Ecosystem simulation models: Tools for the investigation and analysis of nitrogen dynamics in coastal and marine ecosystems
%Z 16-445
%M UGAMI.457
%A Wetzel, R.L.
%A Wiegert, R.G.
%E Carpenter, E.J.
%E Capone, C.G.
%K analysis, coastal, dynamics, Ecosystem, ecosystems, investigation, marine, models, nitrogen, simulation, Tools
%0 Journal Article
%T Fractionation by molecular weight of organic substances in Georgia coastal water
%D 1976
%V 21
%P 846-852
%B Limnology and Oceanography
%9 Article
%! Fractionation by molecular weight of organic substances in Georgia coastal water
%Z 11-299
%M UGAMI.311
%A Wheeler, J.R.
%K coastal, Fractionation, Georgia, molecular, organic, substances, water, weight
%0 Journal Article
%T Dissolved organic carbon: Spectral relationships in coastal waters
%D 1977
%V 22
%P 573-575
%B Limnology and Oceanography
%9 Article
%! Dissolved organic carbon: Spectral relationships in coastal waters
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%M UGAMI.323
%A Wheeler, J.R.
%K carbon, coastal, Dissolved, organic, relationships, Spectral, waters
%0 Journal Article
%T Utilization of inorganic and organic nitrogen by bacteria in marine systems
%D 1986
%V 31
%P 998-1009
%B Limnology and Oceanography
%9 Article
%! Utilization of inorganic and organic nitrogen by bacteria in marine systems
%Z 591
%M UGAMI.604
%A Wheeler, P.A.
%A Kirchman, D.L.
%K bacteria, inorganic, marine, nitrogen, organic, systems, Utilization
%0 Book Section
%T Phenolic and lignin pyrolysis products of plants, seston, and sediment in a Georgia estuary
%D 1986
%P 62-75
%I ACS Symposium Series 305, American Chemical Society
%C Washington, D. C.
%B Organic Marine Geochemistry
%9 Article
%! Phenolic and lignin pyrolysis products of plants, seston, and sediment in a Georgia estuary
%Z 19-546
%M UGAMI.558
%A Whelan, J.K.
%A Tarafa, M.E.
%A Sherr, E.B.
%E Sohn, M.L.
%K estuary, Georgia, lignin, Phenolic, plants, products, pyrolysis, sediment, seston
%0 Journal Article
%T Distribution of long-lived radionuclides in an abandoned reactor cooling reservoir
%D 1990
%V 60
%P 471-496
%B Ecological Monographs
%9 Article
%! Distribution of long-lived radionuclides in an abandoned reactor cooling reservoir
%Z 778
%M UGAMI.796
%A Whicker, F.W.
%A Pinder, J.E.
%A Bowling, J.W.
%A Alberts, J.J.
%A Brisbin, I.L.
%K abandoned, cooling, Distribution, long-lived, radionuclides, reactor, reservoir
%0 Journal Article
%T Identity of marine copper-binding ligands resolved: L1 and L2 are thiols and humic substances
%D 2015
%V PENDING
%9 Article
%! Identity of marine copper-binding ligands resolved: L1 and L2 are thiols and humic substances
%Z #1042
%M UGAMI.1072
%A Whitby, Hannah
%A Hollibaugh, James Timothy
%A van den Berg, Constant M.G.
%K copper-binding, humic, Identity, L1, L2, ligands, marine, resolved, substances, thiols
%0 Journal Article
%T Chemical Speciation of Copper in a Salt Marsh Estuary and Bioavailability to Thaumarchaeota
%D 2017
%V 4
%N 178
%B Frontiers in Marine Science
%8 2017-June-13
%9 Article
%! Speciation of copper in a salt marsh estuary
%Z published
%M UGAMI.1078
%U https://www.frontiersin.org/article/10.3389/fmars.2017.00178
%A Whitby, Hannah
%A Hollibaugh, James T.
%A van den Berg, Constant M.G.
%K Ammonia oxidising archaea, Cathodic stripping voltammetry, Copper speciation, Humic Substances, organic ligands, thaumarchaeota, thiols, Thiourea
%0 Journal Article
%T A method for the determination of chlorophyll a in samples containing degradation products
%D 1979
%V 24
%P 183-186
%B Limnology and Oceanography
%9 Article
%! A method for the determination of chlorophyll a in samples containing degradation products
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%M UGAMI.361
%A Whitney, D.E.
%A Darley, W.M.
%K chlorophyll, containing, degradation, determination, method, products, samples
%0 Journal Article
%T Effect of light intensity upon salt marsh benthic microalgal photosynthesis
%D 1983
%V 75
%P 249-252
%B Marine Biology
%9 Article
%! Effect of light intensity upon salt marsh benthic microalgal photosynthesis
%Z 17-481
%M UGAMI.493
%A Whitney, D.E.
%A Darley, W.M.
%K benthic, intensity, light, marsh, microalgal, photosynthesis, salt, upon
%0 Journal Article
%T Carbohydrate signatures of aquatic macrophytes and their dissolved degradation products as determined by a sensitive high-performance ion chromatography
%D 1991
%V 57
%P 3135-3143
%B Applied and Environmental Microbiology
%9 Article
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%M UGAMI.706
%A Wicks, R.J.
%A Moran, M.A.
%A Pittman, L.J.
%A Hodson, R.E.
%K aquatic, Carbohydrate, chromatography, degradation, determined, dissolved, high-performance, ion, macrophytes, products, sensitive, signatures
%0 Journal Article
%T Chronic but not acute saltwater intrusion leads to large release of inorganic N in a tidal freshwater marsh
%D 2019
%V 695
%P 133779
%B Sci Total Environ
%8 Aug 6
%7 2019/08/15
%9 Article
%! Chronic but not acute saltwater intrusion leads to large release of inorganic N in a tidal freshwater marsh
%Z Widney, Sarah E; Smith, Dontrece; Herbert, Ellen R; Schubauer-Berigan, Joseph P; Li, Fan; Pennings, Steven C; Craft, Christopher B; eng; Netherlands; Sci Total Environ. 2019 Aug 6;695:133779. doi: 10.1016/j.scitotenv.2019.133779.
%M UGAMI.1114
%U https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/31412302
%A Widney, S.E.
%A Smith, D.
%A Herbert, E.R.
%A Schubauer-Berigan, J.P.
%A Li, F.
%A Pennings, S.C.
%A Craft, C.B.
%K Ammonium, N cycle, Nitrate, Sea level rise, Soil carbon, Sulfate
%0 Journal Article
%T Use of the adenylate energy charge ratio to measure growth state of natural microbial communities
%D 1975
%V 72
%P 2112-2115
%B Proceedings of the National Academy of Science of the USA
%9 Article
%! Use of the adenylate energy charge ratio to measure growth state of natural microbial communities
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%M UGAMI.302
%A Wiebe, W.
%A Bancroft, K.
%K adenylate, charge, communities, energy, growth, measure, microbial, natural, ratio, state
%0 Conference Proceedings
%T Microorganisms and their association with aggregates and detritus in the sea: A microscopic study
%D 1972
%P 325-352
%C Pallanza, Italy
%B IBP-UNESCO Symposium on Detritus and its Role in Aquatic Ecosysterms.
%9 Presentation
%! Microorganisms and their association with aggregates and detritus in the sea: A microscopic study
%Z 9-234
%M UGAMI.244
%A Wiebe, W.
%A Pomeroy, L.R.
%E Melchiorri-Santolini, U.
%E Hopton, J.W.
%K aggregates, association, detritus, Microorganisms, microscopic, sea, study
%0 Book Section
%T Anaerobic benthic microbial processes: Changes from the estuary to the Continental Shelf
%D 1979
%P 469-485
%I Plenum Press
%C New York
%B Ecological Processes in Coastal and Marine Systems
%9 Article
%! Anaerobic benthic microbial processes: Changes from the estuary to the Continental Shelf
%Z 14-392
%M UGAMI.404
%A Wiebe, W.J.
%E Livingston, R.J.
%K Anaerobic, benthic, Changes, Continental, estuary, microbial, processes, Shelf
%0 Book Section
%T Aquatic microbial ecology--research questions and opportunities
%D 1985
%P 35-49
%I Plenum Press
%B Trends in Ecological Research for the 1980s
%9 Article
%! Aquatic microbial ecology--research questions and opportunities
%Z 18-507
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%A Wiebe, W.J.
%E Cooley, J.H.
%E Golley, F.B.
%K Aquatic, ecology, microbial, opportunities, questions, research
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%T Nitrogen fixation in aquatic environments
%D 1979
%P 193-240
%B Environmental Nitrogen Fixation
%9 Article
%! Nitrogen fixation in aquatic environments
%Z 394*
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%A Wiebe, W.J.
%A Paerl, H.
%A Webb, K.L.
%E Brougham, W.F.
%K aquatic, environments, fixation, Nitrogen
%0 Journal Article
%T Shell deposits and shell preservation in Quaternary and Tertiary estuarine sediments in Georgia, U.S.A.
%D 1971
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%B Sedimentary Geology
%9 Article
%! Shell deposits and shell preservation in Quaternary and Tertiary estuarine sediments in Georgia, U.S.A.
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%M UGAMI.219
%A Wiedemann, H.
%K deposits, estuarine, Georgia, preservation, Quaternary, sediments, shell, Tertiary
%0 Book Section
%T Ecological processes characteristic of coastal Spartina marshes of the southeastern U.S.A.
%D 1979
%P 467-490
%I Blackwells
%C London
%B Ecological Processes in Coastal Environments
%9 Article
%! Ecological processes characteristic of coastal Spartina marshes of the southeastern U.S.A.
%Z 13-344
%M UGAMI.356
%A Wiegert, R.G.
%E Davey, T.
%E Jeffries, R.
%K characteristic, coastal, Ecological, marshes, processes, southeastern, Spartina
%0 Book Section
%T Modeling coastal, estuarine and marsh ecosystems: State-of-the-art
%D 1979
%P 319-341
%I International Cooperative Publ. House,
%C Fairland, MD
%B Contemporary Quantitative Ecology and Related Ecometrics
%9 Article
%! Modeling coastal, estuarine and marsh ecosystems: State-of-the-art
%Z 14-393
%M UGAMI.405
%A Wiegert, R.G.
%E Patil, G.P.
%E Rosenzweig, M.
%K coastal, ecosystems, estuarine, marsh, Modeling, State-of-the-art
%0 Book Section
%T Modelling salt marshes and estuaries: Progress and problems
%D 1980
%P 527-540
%B Estuarine and Wetland Processes with Emphasis on Modelling
%9 Article
%! Modelling salt marshes and estuaries: Progress and problems
%Z 15-434
%M UGAMI.446
%A Wiegert, R.G.
%E Hamilton, P.
%E McDonald, K.B.
%K estuaries, marshes, Modelling, problems, Progress, salt
%0 Book Section
%T Modeling spatial and temporal variability in a salt marsh: sensitivity to rates of primary production, tidal migration and microbial degradation
%D 1986
%P 405-426
%I Academic Press
%C New York
%B Estuarine Variability
%9 Article
%! Modeling spatial and temporal variability in a salt marsh: sensitivity to rates of primary production, tidal migration and microbial degradation
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%M UGAMI.562
%A Wiegert, R.G.
%E Wolfe, D.A.
%K degradation, marsh, microbial, migration, Modeling, primary, production, rates, salt, sensitivity, spatial, temporal, tidal, variability
%0 Book Section
%T Simulation experiments with a 14-compartment model of a Spartina salt marsh
%D 1978
%P 7-39
%I Univ. South Carolina Press
%C Columbia, SC
%B Marsh-Estuarine Systems Simulation
%9 Article
%! Simulation experiments with a 14-compartment model of a Spartina salt marsh
%Z 13-347
%M UGAMI.359
%A Wiegert, R.G.
%A Wetzel, R.L.
%E Dame, R.
%K 14-compartment, experiments, marsh, model, salt, Simulation, Spartina
%0 Journal Article
%T Productivity gradients in salt marshes: the response of Spartina alterniflora to experimentally manipulated soil water movement
%D 1983
%V 41
%P 1-6
%B Oikos
%9 Article
%! Productivity gradients in salt marshes: the response of Spartina alterniflora to experimentally manipulated soil water movement
%Z 16-469
%M UGAMI.481
%A Wiegert, R.G.
%A Chalmers, A.G.
%A Randerson, P.F.
%K alterniflora, experimentally, gradients, manipulated, marshes, movement, Productivity, response, salt, soil, Spartina, water
%0 Book Section
%T A preliminary ecosystem model of coastal Georgia Spartina marsh
%D 1975
%P 583-601
%I Academic Press, Inc.
%C New York
%B Estuarine Research, Vol. I
%9 Article
%! A preliminary ecosystem model of coastal Georgia Spartina marsh
%Z 11-288
%M UGAMI.300
%A Wiegert, R.G.
%A Christian, R.R.
%A Gallagher, J.L.
%A Hall, J.R.
%A Jones, R.D.H.
%A Wetzel, R.L.
%E Cronin, L.E.
%K coastal, ecosystem, Georgia, marsh, model, preliminary, Spartina
%0 Journal Article
%T Latitudinal variation in resistance and tolerance to herbivory of a salt marsh shrub
%D 2014
%V 37
%N 8
%P 763-769
%B Ecography
%8 Aug
%9 Article
%! Latitudinal variation in resistance and tolerance to herbivory of a salt marsh shrub
%Z #1036 ISI Document Delivery No.: AN2HQ Times Cited: 0 Cited Reference Count: 50 Wieski, Kazimierz Pennings, Steven National Science Foundation [DEB-0638796, OCE06-20959] We thank Hongyu Guo, Alana Lynes, Juan Jimenez, Jane Buck, Daniel Saucedo and Alison Hennigan for help in the field and lab. We thank Doug Levey, Johan Ehrlen, and Hongyu Guo for their helpful comments. We thank the National Science Foundation (DEB-0638796 and OCE06-20959) for funding. This work is a product of the Georgia Coastal Ecosystems Long-Term Ecological Research program. This is contribution number 1036 of the Univ. of Georgia Marine Inst. 0 WILEY-BLACKWELL HOBOKEN ECOGRAPHY
%M UGAMI.1067
%A Wieski, K.
%A Pennings, S.
%K Biodiversity Conservation, DAMAGE, Ecology, EVOLUTION, GEOGRAPHIC-VARIATION, PALATABILITY, PATTERNS, PLANT DEFENSE, PREDATION, SELECTION, STRATEGIES, TRAITS
%0 Journal Article
%T Climate Drivers of Spartina alterniflora Saltmarsh Production in Georgia, USA
%D 2014
%V 17
%N 3
%P 473-484
%B Ecosystems
%8 Apr
%9 Article
%! Climate Drivers of Spartina alterniflora Saltmarsh Production in Georgia, USA
%Z #1035 ISI Document Delivery No.: AD3ID Times Cited: 0 Cited Reference Count: 42 Wieski, Kazimierz Pennings, Steven C. NSF [OCE06-20959] We thank NSF (OCE06-20959) for funding. Hongyu Guo, Alana Lynes, Amy Kunza, Chuan-Kai Ho, Huy Vu, Jacob Shalack, Daniel Saucedo, Ken Helm, Jane Buck, and many others helped with this project. We thank Christine Angelini, Adrian Burd, Matt Kirwan, Jim Morris, Joan Sheldon, Marylin C. Ball, and two anonymous reviewers for comments on the manuscript, Joseph Craine for assistance with the critical climate period analysis, and Adam Sapp for the Altamaha River estuary figure. This is Contribution Number 1035 of the University of Georgia Marine Institute. This work is a contribution of the Georgia Coastal Ecosystems Long-Term Ecological Research program. 0 SPRINGER NEW YORK ECOSYSTEMS
%M UGAMI.1066
%A Wieski, K.
%A Pennings, S.C.
%K ANPP, CARBON, Ecology, estuary, GRASSLAND PRODUCTIVITY, GROWTH, PLANTS, river discharge, SALINITY, sea level, smooth cordgrass, SYSTEM, TALLGRASS PRAIRIE, tidal marsh, VARIABILITY, WATER
%0 Journal Article
%T Ecosystem Functions of Tidal Fresh, Brackish, and Salt Marshes on the Georgia Coast
%D 2010
%V 33
%N 1
%P 161-169
%B Estuaries and Coasts
%8 Jan
%9 Article
%! Ecosystem Functions of Tidal Fresh, Brackish, and Salt Marshes on the Georgia Coast
%Z #990 ISI Document Delivery No.: 567CU Times Cited: 15 Cited Reference Count: 36 Wieski, Kazimierz Guo, Hongyu Craft, Christopher B. Pennings, Steven C. Pennings, Steven/A-8326-2013; sasmito, sigit/E-8715-2013 Pennings, Steven/0000-0003-4757-7125; sasmito, sigit/0000-0001-5864-8596 US EPA STAR program [RD 83222001-0]; NSF [OCE99-82133, OCE0620959]; University of Georgia Marine Institute [990] We thank Ken Helm, Daniel Saucedo, and Alana Lynes for help in the field, and the US EPA STAR program (RD 83222001-0 to C. Craft) and NSF (OCE99-82133, OCE0620959) for funding. This is contribution number 990 of the University of Georgia Marine Institute. This work is a contribution of the Georgia Coastal Ecosystems LTER program. 16 SPRINGER NEW YORK ESTUAR COAST
%M UGAMI.1015
%A Wieski, K.
%A Guo, H.Y.
%A Craft, C.B.
%A Pennings, S.C.
%K Biodiversity, Carbon, DECOMPOSITION, Ecosystem services, Environmental Sciences, ESTUARINE SALINITY GRADIENTS, functions, JUNCUS-ROEMERIANUS, LIMITATION, Macrophytes, Marine & Freshwater Biology, Nitrogen, NUTRIENT ACCUMULATION, Phosphorus, PRODUCTIVITY, RIO-GRANDE DELTA, Salinity, Sea level rise, SERVICES, Soils, SPARTINA-ALTERNIFLORA, Tidal marshes, WATER, Wetland
%0 Journal Article
%T Studies on the alginase of Agarbacterium alginicum
%D 1962
%V 8
%P 649-654
%B Canadian Journal of Microbiology
%9 Article
%! Studies on the alginase of Agarbacterium alginicum
%Z 3-40
%M UGAMI.48
%A Williams, A.K.
%A Eagon, R.G.
%K Agarbacterium, alginase, alginicum, Studies
%0 Journal Article
%T Use of netting to collect motile benthic algae
%D 1963
%V 8
%P 360-361
%B Limnology and Oceanography
%9 Article
%! Use of netting to collect motile benthic algae
%Z 4-52
%M UGAMI.62
%A Williams, R.B.
%K algae, benthic, collect, motile, netting
%0 Journal Article
%T Division rates of salt marsh diatoms in relation to salinity and cell size
%D 1964
%V 45
%P 877-880
%B Ecology
%9 Article
%! Division rates of salt marsh diatoms in relation to salinity and cell size
%Z 4-69
%M UGAMI.80
%A Williams, R.B.
%K cell, diatoms, Division, marsh, rates, relation, salinity, salt, size
%0 Journal Article
%T Unusual motility of tube-dwelling pennate diatoms
%D 1966
%V 1
%P 145-156
%B Journal of Phycology
%9 Article
%! Unusual motility of tube-dwelling pennate diatoms
%Z 100*
%M UGAMI.111
%A Williams, R.B.
%K diatoms, motility, pennate, tube-dwelling, Unusual
%0 Journal Article
%T Plio-Pleistocene paleogeography of the Florida Gulf coast interpreted from relict shorelines
%D 1977
%V 27
%P 409-420
%B Transactions-Gulf Coast Association of Geological Societies
%9 Article
%! Plio-Pleistocene paleogeography of the Florida Gulf coast interpreted from relict shorelines
%Z 13-335
%M UGAMI.347
%A Winker, C.D.
%A Howard, J.D.
%K coast, Florida, Gulf, interpreted, paleogeography, Plio-Pleistocene, relict, shorelines
%0 Journal Article
%T First occurrence of the violet goby in Georgia
%D 1972
%V 35
%P 81-84
%B Quarterly Journal of the Florida Academy of Sciences
%9 Article
%! First occurrence of the violet goby in Georgia
%Z 9-229
%M UGAMI.239
%A Wolf, P.L.
%A Shanholtzer, S.A.
%A Reimold, R.J.
%K First, Georgia, goby, occurrence, violet
%0 Journal Article
%T Population estimates for Uca pugnax (Smith, 1870) on the Duplin estuary marsh, Georgia, U.S.A. (Decapoda Brachyura, Ocypodidae)
%D 1975
%V 29
%P 79-91
%B Crustaceana
%9 Article
%! Population estimates for Uca pugnax (Smith, 1870) on the Duplin estuary marsh, Georgia, U.S.A. (Decapoda Brachyura, Ocypodidae)
%Z 11-304
%M UGAMI.316
%A Wolf, P.L.
%A Shanholtzer, S.F.
%A Reimold, R.J.
%K Brachyura, Decapoda, Duplin, estimates, estuary, Georgia, marsh, Ocypodidae, Population, pugnax, Smith, Uca
%0 Journal Article
%T Effects of methylated, organic, and inorganic substrates on microbial consumption of dimethyl sulfide in estuarine waters
%D 1993
%V 59
%P 2723-2726
%B Applied and Environmental Microbiology
%9 Article
%! Effects of methylated, organic, and inorganic substrates on microbial consumption of dimethyl sulfide in estuarine waters
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%M UGAMI.750
%A Wolfe, G.V.
%A Kiene, R.P.
%K consumption, dimethyl, Effects, estuarine, inorganic, methylated, microbial, organic, substrates, sulfide, waters
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%T Radioisotope and chemical inhibitor measurements of dimethyl sulfide consumption rates and kinetics in estuarine waters
%D 1993
%V 99
%P 261-269
%B Marine Ecology Progress Series
%9 Article
%! Radioisotope and chemical inhibitor measurements of dimethyl sulfide consumption rates and kinetics in estuarine waters
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%M UGAMI.757
%A Wolfe, G.V.
%A Kiene, R.P.
%K chemical, consumption, dimethyl, estuarine, inhibitor, kinetics, measurements, Radioisotope, rates, sulfide, waters
%0 Journal Article
%T Backshore heavy-mineral concentration on Sapelo Island, Georgia
%D 1975
%V 45
%P 280-284
%B Journal of Sedimentary Petrology
%9 Article
%! Backshore heavy-mineral concentration on Sapelo Island, Georgia
%Z 11-291
%M UGAMI.303
%A Woolsey, R.
%A Henry, V.J.
%A Hunt, J.
%K Backshore, concentration, Georgia, heavy-mineral, Island, Sapelo
%0 Journal Article
%T Disturbance is complicated: Headward-eroding saltmarsh creeks produce multiple responses and recovery trajectories
%D 2021
%P 15
%B Limnology and Oceanography
%9 Article
%! Disturbance is complicated: Headward-eroding saltmarsh creeks produce multiple responses and recovery trajectories
%Z ISI Document Delivery No.: TA0MC; Times Cited: 1; Cited Reference Count: 52; Wu, Fengrun Pennings, Steven C. Ortals, Collin Ruiz, Jennifer Farrell, W. Reilly McNichol, Samuel M. Angelini, Christine Spivak, Amanda C. Alber, Merryl Tong, Chunfu; National Science Foundation through the Georgia Coastal Ecosystems Long-Term Ecological Research program [OCE-1832178]; Shanghai Science and Technology CommitteeShanghai Science & Technology Committee [19DZ1203801]; National Natural Science Foundation of ChinaNational Natural Science Foundation of China (NSFC) [42030411, U2040202]; This material is based upon work supported by the National Science Foundation through the Georgia Coastal Ecosystems Long-Term Ecological Research program under Grant No. OCE-1832178. Fengrun Wu and Chunfu Tong thank the funds from the Shanghai Science and Technology Committee (19DZ1203801) and the National Natural Science Foundation of China (42030411, U2040202). We thank Clark Alexander for assembling the high-resolution aerial imagery, and Dontrece Smith for collecting RTK data. We appreciate helpful comments from the Associate Editor and reviewers that greatly improved the manuscript. This is contribution number 1096 from the University of Georgia Marine Institute.; 1; 2; Wiley; Hoboken; 1939-5590
%M UGAMI.1128
%A Wu, F.R.
%A Pennings, S.C.
%A Ortals, C.
%A Ruiz, J.
%A Farrell, W.R.
%A McNichol, S.M.
%A Angelini, C.
%A Spivak, A.C.
%A Alber, M.
%A Tong, C.F.
%K complexity, crab, ecology, erosion, georgia, Marine Freshwater Biology, Oceanography, resilience, spartina, stability, strategy, wetlands
%0 Journal Article
%T Absorption spectroscopy of colored dissolved organic carbon in Georgia (USA) rivers: the impact of molecular size distribution
%D 2003
%V 62
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%P 41-46
%B Journal of Limnology
%9 Article
%! Absorption spectroscopy of colored dissolved organic carbon in Georgia (USA) rivers: the impact of molecular size distribution
%Z 856
%M UGAMI.875
%A Yacobi, Y.Z.
%A Alberts, J.J.
%A Takacs, M.
%A McElvaine, M.
%K absorption coefficient of DOC, humic substances, size fractions of DOC
%0 Journal Article
%T Ecological application of antibiotics as respiratory inhibitors of bacterial populations
%D 1974
%V 28
%P 1033-1039
%B Applied Microbiology
%9 Article
%! Ecological application of antibiotics as respiratory inhibitors of bacterial populations
%Z 11-284
%M UGAMI.295
%A Yetka, J.
%A Wiebe, W.J.
%K antibiotics, application, bacterial, Ecological, inhibitors, populations, respiratory
%0 Journal Article
%T Mapping salt marsh soil properties using imaging spectroscopy
%D 2019
%V 148
%P 221-234
%B Isprs Journal of Photogrammetry and Remote Sensing
%8 Feb
%9 Article
%! Mapping salt marsh soil properties using imaging spectroscopy
%Z Zhang, Caiyun Mishra, Deepak R. Pennings, Steven C. 1872-8235
%M UGAMI.1108
%A Zhang, C.Y.
%A Mishra, D.R.
%A Pennings, S.C.
%K imaging, Mapping, marsh, properties, salt, soil, spectroscopy
%0 Journal Article
%T Contrasting latitudinal clines of nematode diversity in Spartina alterniflora salt marshes between native and introduced ranges
%D 2020
%B Diversity and Distributions
%9 Article
%! Contrasting latitudinal clines of nematode diversity in Spartina alterniflora salt marshes between native and introduced ranges
%Z published
%M UGAMI.1117
%A Zhang, Youzheng
%A Li, Bo
%A Wu, Jihua
%A Pennings, Steven C.
%A Lambrinos, John
%K Latitudinal clines, native range, nematodes diversity, non-parallel pattern, plant invasion, salt marshes, Spartina alterniflora
%0 Journal Article
%T Hemolymph ion composition and volume changes in the supralittoral isopod Ligia pallasii Brandt, during molt
%D 2000
%V 170
%P 329-336
%B Journal of Comparative Physiology, A
%9 Article
%! Hemolymph ion composition and volume changes in the supralittoral isopod Ligia pallasii Brandt, during molt
%Z 840
%M UGAMI.860
%A Ziegler, A.
%A Grospietsch, T.
%A Carefoot, T.H.
%A Danko, J.P.
%A Zimmer, M.
%A Zerbst-Boroffka, I.
%A Pennings, S.C.
%K calcium, capillary electrophoresis, hemolymph volume, isopod, molting
%0 Journal Article
%T Cellulose digestion and phenol oxidation in coastal isopods (Crustacea: Isopoda)
%D 2002
%V 140
%P 1207-1213
%B Marine Biology
%9 Article
%! Cellulose digestion and phenol oxidation in coastal isopods (Crustacea: Isopoda)
%Z 894
%M UGAMI.925
%A Zimmer, M.
%A Danko, J.P.
%A Pennings, S.C.
%A Danford, A.R.
%A Carefoot, T.H.
%A Ziegler, A.
%A Uglow, R.F.
%K Cellulose, coastal, Crustacea, digestion, Isopoda, isopods, oxidation, phenol
%0 Journal Article
%T Hepatopancreatic endosymbionts in coastal isopods (Crustacea: Isopoda), and their contribution to digestion
%D 2001
%V 138
%P 955-963
%B Marine Biology
%9 Article
%! Hepatopancreatic endosymbionts in coastal isopods (Crustacea: Isopoda), and their contribution to digestion
%Z 866
%M UGAMI.889
%A Zimmer, M.
%A Danko, J.P.
%A Pennings, S.C.
%A Danford, A.R.
%A Ziegler, A.
%A Uglow, R.F.
%A Carefoot, T.H.
%K coastal, contribution, Crustacea, digestion, endosymbionts, Hepatopancreatic, Isopoda, isopods
%0 Journal Article
%T Species-specific patterns of litter processing by terrestrial isopods (Isopoda: Oniscidea) in high intertidal salt marshes and coastal forests
%D 2002
%V 16
%P 596-607
%B Functional Ecology
%9 Article
%! Species-specific patterns of litter processing by terrestrial isopods (Isopoda: Oniscidea) in high intertidal salt marshes and coastal forests
%Z 905
%M UGAMI.938
%A Zimmer, M.
%A Pennings, S.C.
%A Buck, T.L.
%A Carefoot, T.H.
%K biodiversity, decomposition, digestion, microbial respiration, phenolics
%0 Journal Article
%T Salt marsh litter and detritivores: a closer look at redundancy
%D 2004
%V 27
%N 5
%P 753-769
%B Estuaries
%9 Article
%! Salt marsh litter and detritivores: a closer look at redundancy
%Z 934
%M UGAMI.967
%A Zimmer, M.
%A Pennings, S.C.
%A Buck, T.L.
%A Carefoot, T.H.
%K amphipod uhlorchestia-spartinophila, community structure, competitive-exclusion, ecosystem function, faunal diversity, feeding strategies, functional redundancy, habitat patchiness, littorina-irrorata, species richness