The metabolic regimes of flowing waters
暂无分享,去创建一个
William H. McDowell | Jordan S. Read | Alison P. Appling | Brian J. Roberts | Charles B. Yackulic | Nancy B. Grimm | Emily H. Stanley | Judson W. Harvey | Edward G. Stets | Emily S. Bernhardt | J. Read | W. McDowell | E. Stanley | N. Grimm | E. Bernhardt | C. Yackulic | A. Appling | M. Cohen | J. Heffernan | J. Harvey | R. Hall | B. J. Roberts | E. Stets | M. Arroita | James B. Heffernan | Matthew J. Cohen | Robert O. Hall | Maite Arroita | W. McDowell | Matthew J. Cohen
[1] G. Likens,et al. In-stream uptake dampens effects of major forest disturbance on watershed nitrogen export , 2003, Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences of the United States of America.
[2] P. Mulholland,et al. Long‐term data reveal patterns and controls on stream water chemistry in a forested stream: Walker Branch, Tennessee , 2012 .
[3] E. Bertuzzo,et al. Climate-Induced Changes in Spring Snowmelt Impact Ecosystem Metabolism and Carbon Fluxes in an Alpine Stream Network , 2018, Ecosystems.
[4] D. Lytle,et al. Adaptation to natural flow regimes. , 2004, Trends in ecology & evolution.
[5] T. Kennedy,et al. Turbidity, light, temperature, and hydropeaking control primary productivity in the Colorado River, Grand Canyon , 2015 .
[6] U. Uehlinger. Annual cycle and inter-annual variability of gross primary production and ecosystem respiration in a floodprone river during a 15-year period , 2006 .
[7] G. Poole,et al. An Ecological Perspective on In-Stream Temperature: Natural Heat Dynamics and Mechanisms of Human-CausedThermal Degradation , 2001, Environmental management.
[8] K. Bencala,et al. Response characteristics of DOC flushing in an alpine catchment , 1997 .
[9] A. V. Vecchia,et al. Global pattern of trends in streamflow and water availability in a changing climate , 2005, Nature.
[10] J. Finlay,et al. Stream size and human influences on ecosystem production in river networks , 2011 .
[11] W. McDowell,et al. Merging aquatic and terrestrial perspectives of nutrient biogeochemistry , 2003, Oecologia.
[12] W. Dodds,et al. Nutrient limitation of epilithic and epixylic biofilms in ten North American streams , 2003 .
[13] G. Minshall,et al. Stream Ecosystem Dynamics of the Salmon River, Idaho: An 8th-Order System , 1992, Journal of the North American Benthological Society.
[14] W. McDowell. NEON and STREON: opportunities and challenges for the aquatic sciences , 2014, Freshwater Science.
[15] C. Tate,et al. Reactivation of a cryptobiotic stream ecosystem in the McMurdo Dry Valleys, Antarctica: A long-term geomorphological experiment , 2007 .
[16] F. Sabater,et al. Drought and postdrought recovery cycles in an intermittent Mediterranean stream: structural and functional aspects , 2005, Journal of the North American Benthological Society.
[17] K. Tockner,et al. A global boom in hydropower dam construction , 2014, Aquatic Sciences.
[18] U. Uehlinger. Resistance and resilience of ecosystem metabolism in a flood-prone river system , 2000 .
[19] N. Fierer,et al. A Proposed Mechanism for the Pulse in Carbon Dioxide Production Commonly Observed Following the Rapid Rewetting of a Dry Soil , 2003 .
[20] M. Pace,et al. Terrestrial support of lake food webs: Synthesis reveals controls over cross-ecosystem resource use , 2017, Science Advances.
[21] D. Post,et al. Food Chains in Freshwaters , 2009, Annals of the New York Academy of Sciences.
[22] R. Naiman,et al. Benthic community metabolism in four temperate stream systems: An inter-biome comparison and evaluation of the river continuum concept , 1985, Hydrobiologia.
[23] D. Post,et al. Detritus, trophic dynamics and biodiversity , 2004 .
[24] J. R. Manson,et al. Temperature and the metabolic balance of streams , 2011 .
[25] B. O’Connor,et al. Thresholds of flow‐induced bed disturbances and their effects on stream metabolism in an agricultural river , 2012 .
[26] S. Diehl,et al. Water temperature and stratification depth independently shift cardinal events during plankton spring succession , 2010 .
[27] J. Meyer,et al. Streams in the Urban Landscape , 2001 .
[28] Stuart E. Bunn,et al. Benthic Metabolism as an Indicator of Stream Ecosystem Health , 2006, Hydrobiologia.
[29] J. Harvey. Hydrologic Exchange Flows and Their Ecological Consequences in River Corridors , 2016 .
[30] Beth Stauffer,et al. Emerging Tools for Continuous Nutrient Monitoring Networks: Sensors Advancing Science and Water Resources Protection , 2016 .
[31] T. Cuffney,et al. Long-Term Dynamics of Coarse Particulate Organic Matter in Three Appalachian Mountain Streams , 1995, Journal of the North American Benthological Society.
[32] Samuel T. Christel,et al. The ecology of methane in streams and rivers: patterns, controls, and global significance , 2016 .
[33] D. G. Smith,et al. TURBIDITY SUSPENI)ED SEDIMENT, AND WATER CLARITY: A REVIEW 1 , 2001 .
[34] A. Elosegi,et al. Environmental controls of whole-stream metabolism identified from continuous monitoring of Basque streams , 2008, Journal of the North American Benthological Society.
[35] L. Gray. Species Composition and Life Histories of Aquatic Insects in a Lowland Sonoran Desert Stream , 1981 .
[36] H. Odum. Primary Production in Flowing Waters1 , 1956 .
[37] D. Lytle,et al. Evolution of aquatic insect behaviours across a gradient of disturbance predictability , 2008, Proceedings of the Royal Society B: Biological Sciences.
[38] F. Sabater,et al. Green light: gross primary production influences seasonal stream N export by controlling fine-scale N dynamics. , 2016, Ecology.
[39] Gene E. Likens,et al. Energy Flow in Bear Brook, New Hampshire: An Integrative Approach to Stream Ecosystem Metabolism , 1973 .
[40] D. Strayer,et al. Freshwater biodiversity conservation: recent progress and future challenges , 2010, Journal of the North American Benthological Society.
[41] A. St‐Hilaire,et al. A Classification of Stream Water Temperature Regimes in the Conterminous USA , 2016 .
[42] Walter K. Dodds,et al. Nitrogen, phosphorus, and eutrophication in streams , 2016 .
[43] Andreas Richter,et al. The boundless carbon cycle , 2009 .
[44] P. Mulholland,et al. Multiple Scales of Temporal Variability in Ecosystem Metabolism Rates: Results from 2 Years of Continuous Monitoring in a Forested Headwater Stream , 2007, Ecosystems.
[45] Richard A. Smith,et al. Trends in the nutrient enrichment of U.S. rivers during the late 20th century and their relation to changes in probable stream trophic conditions , 2006 .
[46] C. Dahm,et al. Extreme water quality degradation following a catastrophic forest fire , 2015 .
[47] W. Hill,et al. Effects of riparian leaf dynamics on periphyton photosynthesis and light utilisation efficiency , 2002 .
[48] W. Hill,et al. 5 – Effects of Light , 1996 .
[49] David P. Hamilton,et al. Ecosystem respiration: Drivers of daily variability and background respiration in lakes around the globe , 2013 .
[50] A. Huryn,et al. Seasonal changes in light availability modify the temperature dependence of ecosystem metabolism in an arctic stream , 2014 .
[51] J. Meyer,et al. Leaf Litter as a Source of Dissolved Organic Carbon in Streams , 1998, Ecosystems.
[52] J. Kirchner,et al. Catchment-scale advection and dispersion as a mechanism for fractal scaling in stream tracer concentrations , 2001 .
[53] P. Döll,et al. High‐resolution mapping of the world's reservoirs and dams for sustainable river‐flow management , 2011 .
[54] William H. McDowell,et al. Inter‐biome comparison of factors controlling stream metabolism , 2001 .
[55] P. McIntyre,et al. Global threats to human water security and river biodiversity , 2010, Nature.
[56] S. Fisher,et al. Nitrogen Limitation in a Sonoran Desert Stream , 1986, Journal of the North American Benthological Society.
[57] William H. McDowell,et al. Inter-regional comparison of land-use effects on stream metabolism , 2010 .
[58] W. McDowell,et al. Ecosystem metabolism and nutrient uptake in an urban, piped headwater stream , 2014, Biogeochemistry.
[59] J. Randerson,et al. Primary production of the biosphere: integrating terrestrial and oceanic components , 1998, Science.
[60] A. Rosemond,et al. Experimental nitrogen and phosphorus additions increase rates of stream ecosystem respiration and carbon loss , 2018 .
[61] S. Kanae,et al. Global Hydrological Cycles and World Water Resources , 2006, Science.
[62] Asko Noormets,et al. Phenology of ecosystem processes : applications in global change research , 2009 .
[63] David W. Schindler,et al. Factors regulating phytoplankton production and standing crop in the world's freshwaters , 1978 .
[64] J. Olden,et al. Incorporating thermal regimes into environmental flows assessments: modifying dam operations to restore freshwater ecosystem integrity , 2010 .
[65] W. Lewis,et al. Use of Shields stress to reconstruct and forecast changes in river metabolism , 2007 .
[66] M. R. Anis,et al. Continuous In-Stream Assimilatory Nitrate Uptake from High-Frequency Sensor Measurements. , 2016, Environmental science & technology.
[67] N. Grimm,et al. Responses of macroinvertebrate communities to long‐term flow variability in a Sonoran Desert stream , 2010 .
[68] H. Paerl,et al. Rationale for control of anthropogenic nitrogen and phosphorus to reduce eutrophication of inland waters. , 2011, Environmental science & technology.
[69] S. Fisher,et al. Stability of Periphyton and Macroinvertebrates to Disturbance by Flash Floods in a Desert Stream , 1989, Journal of the North American Benthological Society.
[70] Jennifer L. Tank,et al. � 2003, by the American Society of Limnology and Oceanography, Inc. Ecosystem metabolism controls nitrogen uptake in streams in Grand Teton National , 2022 .
[71] C. Kendall,et al. Assessing the sources and magnitude of diurnal nitrate variability in the San Joaquin River (California) with an in situ optical nitrate sensor and dual nitrate isotopes , 2009 .
[72] N. LeRoy Poff,et al. Implications of Streamflow Variability and Predictability for Lotic Community Structure: A Regional Analysis of Streamflow Patterns , 1989 .
[73] Chad R. Foster,et al. Influence of diel biogeochemical cycles on carbonate equilibrium in a karst river , 2011 .
[74] Chad R. Foster,et al. Diel phosphorus variation and the stoichiometry of ecosystem metabolism in a large spring-fed river , 2013 .
[75] J. Allan. Landscapes and Riverscapes: The Influence of Land Use on Stream Ecosystems , 2004 .
[76] W. Hill,et al. Quantifying phosphorus and light effects in stream algae , 2009 .
[77] M. Power,et al. Disturbance and Food Chain Length in Rivers , 1996 .
[78] M. Cohen,et al. On the emergence of diel solute signals in flowing waters , 2016 .
[79] Paul C Hanson,et al. Staying afloat in the sensor data deluge. , 2012, Trends in ecology & evolution.
[80] C. Vörösmarty,et al. Anthropogenic Disturbance of the Terrestrial Water Cycle , 2000 .
[81] U. Uehlinger,et al. Ecosystem Metabolism, Disturbance, and Stability in a Prealpine Gravel Bed River , 1998, Journal of the North American Benthological Society.
[82] N. Grimm. Nitrogen Dynamics During Succession in a Desert Stream , 1987 .
[83] W. Hill,et al. Resource synergy in stream periphyton communities , 2011 .
[84] E. Stanley,et al. Optical water quality in rivers , 2008 .
[85] D. Moorhead,et al. Increasing risk of great floods in a changing climate , 2002, Nature.
[86] S. Francoeur,et al. Nutrient Limitation of Algal Biomass Accrual in Streams: Seasonal Patterns and a Comparison of Methods , 1999, Journal of the North American Benthological Society.
[87] Daniel E. Schindler,et al. Simultaneous quantification of aquatic ecosystem metabolism and reaeration using a Bayesian statistical model of oxygen dynamics , 2010 .
[88] B. Hart,et al. Sediment instability affects the rate and location of primary production and respiration in a sand-bed stream , 2008, Journal of the North American Benthological Society.
[89] L. Breuer,et al. New Seasonal Shift in In-Stream Diurnal Nitrate Cycles Identified by Mining High-Frequency Data , 2016, PloS one.
[90] P. Mulholland,et al. In‐stream biotic control on nutrient biogeochemistry in a forested stream, West Fork of Walker Branch , 2007 .
[91] M. Power,et al. Effects of Disturbance on River Food Webs , 1996, Science.
[92] A. Steinman,et al. A Comparison of Primary Production in Stream Ecosystems , 1997, Journal of the North American Benthological Society.
[93] G. Minshall,et al. The River Continuum Concept , 1980 .
[94] D. Post,et al. The Role of Discharge Variation in Scaling of Drainage Area and Food Chain Length in Rivers , 2010, Science.
[95] A. Helton,et al. Scaling flow path processes to fluvial landscapes: An integrated field and model assessment of temperature and dissolved oxygen dynamics in a river‐floodplain‐aquifer system , 2012 .
[96] J. Olden,et al. Placing global stream flow variability in geographic and geomorphic contexts , 2006 .
[97] Denise A. Bruesewitz,et al. Revisiting Odum (1956): A synthesis of aquatic ecosystem metabolism , 2013 .
[98] J. Meyer,et al. Multiple Trophic Levels of a Forest Stream Linked to Terrestrial Litter Inputs , 1997 .
[99] T. Kennedy,et al. Ecosystem ecology meets adaptive management: food web response to a controlled flood on the Colorado River, Glen Canyon. , 2011, Ecological applications : a publication of the Ecological Society of America.
[100] P. Raymond,et al. Event controlled DOC export from forested watersheds , 2010 .
[101] P. Ciais,et al. Global carbon dioxide emissions from inland waters , 2013, Nature.
[102] R. Sparks,et al. THE NATURAL FLOW REGIME. A PARADIGM FOR RIVER CONSERVATION AND RESTORATION , 1997 .
[103] M. Cohen,et al. Direct and indirect coupling of primary production and diel nitrate dynamics in a subtropical spring‐fed river , 2010 .
[104] Stephen R. Parker,et al. Diel biogeochemical processes and their effect on the aqueous chemistry of streams: A review , 2011 .
[105] P. Groffman,et al. The urban stream syndrome: current knowledge and the search for a cure , 2005, Journal of the North American Benthological Society.
[106] M. Gordon Wolman,et al. Fluvial Processes in Geomorphology , 1965 .
[107] Robert T. Davis,et al. The Influence of Floodplain Restoration on Whole-Stream Metabolism in an Agricultural Stream: Insights fa 5-yrom ear Continuous Data Set , 2014, Freshwater Science.
[108] A. Appling,et al. Nutrient Limitation and Physiology Mediate the Fine-Scale (De)coupling of Biogeochemical Cycles , 2014, The American Naturalist.
[109] Clifford A. Ochs,et al. Darkness at the break of noon: Phytoplankton production in the Lower Mississippi River , 2013 .
[110] S. Fisher,et al. A heterotrophic desert stream? The role of sediment stability , 2002 .
[111] J. Newbold,et al. Phosphorus Spiralling in a Woodland Stream: Seasonal Variations , 1985 .
[112] S. Fisher,et al. Secondary Production and Organic Matter Processing by Collector Macroinvetebrates in a Desert Stream , 1983 .
[113] E. Casamayor,et al. Stream drying drives microbial ammonia oxidation and first-flush nitrate export. , 2016, Ecology.
[114] J. Meyer,et al. Dynamics of phosphorus and organic matter during leaf decomposition in a forest stream , 1980 .
[115] R. Hall. Metabolism of Streams and Rivers , 2016 .
[116] U. Uehlinger,et al. Flow extremes and benthic organic matter shape the metabolism of a headwater Mediterranean stream , 2004 .
[117] J. Meyer,et al. EFFECTS OF RESOURCE LIMITATION ON A DETRITAL‐BASED ECOSYSTEM , 1999 .
[118] William B. Rossow,et al. Ganga-Brahmaputra river discharge from Jason-2 radar altimetry: An update to the long-term satellite-derived estimates of continental freshwater forcing flux into the Bay of Bengal , 2012 .
[119] A. Hershey,et al. Transformation of a Tundra River from Heterotrophy to Autotrophy by Addition of Phosphorus , 1985, Science.
[120] J. Downing,et al. Plumbing the Global Carbon Cycle: Integrating Inland Waters into the Terrestrial Carbon Budget , 2007, Ecosystems.
[121] F. Chapin,et al. The impacts of climate change on ecosystem structure and function , 2013 .
[122] N. Poff,et al. Ecological responses to altered flow regimes: a literature review to inform the science and management of environmental flows , 2010 .
[123] Judson W. Harvey,et al. A hydrogeomorphic river network model predicts where and why hyporheic exchange is important in large basins , 2014 .
[124] J. Webster,et al. Longitudinal patterns of metabolism in a southern Appalachian river , 2003, Journal of the North American Benthological Society.
[125] Robert A. Smith,et al. Velocity and Sediment Disturbance of Periphyton in Headwater Streams: Biomass and Metabolism , 1999, Journal of the North American Benthological Society.
[126] J. Meyer,et al. Organic Matter Dynamics in the Ogeechee River, a Blackwater River in Georgia, USA , 1997, Journal of the North American Benthological Society.
[127] Robert H. Whittaker,et al. Classification of natural communities , 2008, The Botanical Review.
[128] R. Oliver,et al. Partitioning of river metabolism identifies phytoplankton as a major contributor in the regulated Murray River (Australia) , 2006 .
[129] C. Vörösmarty,et al. Global water resources: vulnerability from climate change and population growth. , 2000, Science.
[130] Stream hydraulics and temperature determine the metabolism of geothermal Icelandic streams , 2011 .
[131] James W. Kirchner,et al. The fine structure of water‐quality dynamics: the (high‐frequency) wave of the future , 2004 .
[132] A. Huryn,et al. Interannual variation in discharge controls ecosystem metabolism along a grassland river continuum , 1996 .
[133] V. Acuña,et al. As productive and slow as a stream can be—the metabolism of a Pampean stream , 2010, Journal of the North American Benthological Society.
[134] J. Meyer,et al. Organic Matter Budgets for Streams: A Synthesis , 1997, Journal of the North American Benthological Society.
[135] H. Lieth. Modeling the Primary Productivity of the World , 1975 .
[136] R. Gilliom,et al. Mississippi River nitrate loads from high frequency sensor measurements and regression-based load estimation. , 2014, Environmental science & technology.
[137] William H. McDowell,et al. Stream denitrification across biomes and its response to anthropogenic nitrate loading , 2008, Nature.
[138] H. Odum. Primary Production Measurements in Eleven Florida Springs and a Marine Turtle-Grass Community1 , 1957 .
[139] E. Stanley,et al. Ecosystem Expansion and Contraction in Streams Desert streams vary in both space and time and fluctuate dramatically in size , 1997 .
[140] W. Dietrich,et al. SEASONAL REASSEMBLY OF A RIVER FOOD WEB: FLOODS, DROUGHTS, AND IMPACTS OF FISH , 2008 .
[141] D. Blinn,et al. Effects of wildfire ash on water chemistry and biota in South-Western U.S.A. streams , 2003 .
[142] W. Shuster,et al. Continuous monitoring reveals multiple controls on ecosystem metabolism in a suburban stream , 2013 .
[143] Hakumat Rai,et al. Phytoplankton control by grazing zooplankton: A study on the spring clear‐water phase1 , 1986 .