Hydrogeologic setting overrides any influence of wildfire on pore water dissolved organic carbon concentration and quality at a boreal fen
暂无分享,去创建一个
[1] R. Petrone,et al. Postfire Soil Carbon Accumulation Does Not Recover Boreal Peatland Combustion Loss in Some Hydrogeological Settings , 2019, Journal of Geophysical Research: Biogeosciences.
[2] J. Price,et al. Hydrologic function of a moderate-rich fen watershed in the Athabasca Oil Sands Region of the Western Boreal Plain, northern Alberta , 2019, Journal of Hydrology.
[3] E. Scott,et al. Burning increases post-fire carbon emissions in a heathland and a raised bog, but experimental manipulation of fire severity has no effect. , 2019, Journal of environmental management.
[4] Piyush Jain,et al. Fire-regime changes in Canada over the last half century , 2019, Canadian Journal of Forest Research.
[5] P. Moore,et al. Delineating boreal plains bog margin ecotones across hydrogeological settings for wildfire risk management , 2018, Wetlands Ecology and Management.
[6] A. Tanentzap,et al. Seasonal shifts in export of DOC and nutrients from burned and unburned peatland-rich catchments, Northwest Territories, Canada , 2018, Hydrology and Earth System Sciences.
[7] M. Flannigan,et al. Did enhanced afforestation cause high severity peat burn in the Fort McMurray Horse River wildfire? , 2018 .
[8] T. Scanlon,et al. Emerging investigator series: the effect of wildfire on streamwater mercury and organic carbon in a forested watershed in the southeastern United States. , 2017, Environmental science. Processes & impacts.
[9] Dan K. Thompson,et al. Hydrometeorological conditions preceding wildfire, and the subsequent burning of a fen watershed in Fort McMurray, Alberta, Canada , 2017 .
[10] Alex J. Cannon,et al. Attributing extreme fire risk in Western Canada to human emissions , 2017, Climatic Change.
[11] D. Monteith,et al. Sustained Biogeochemical Impacts of Wildfire in a Mountain Lake Catchment , 2017, Ecosystems.
[12] Jonathan S. Price,et al. Hydrology of a wetland-dominated headwater basin in the Boreal Plain, Alberta, Canada , 2017 .
[13] M. Strack,et al. Dissolved organic carbon in a constructed and natural fens in the Athabasca oil sands region, Alberta, Canada. , 2016, The Science of the total environment.
[14] D. Vitt,et al. Linkages between spatio‐temporal patterns of environmental factors and distribution of plant assemblages across a boreal peatland complex , 2016 .
[15] M. Strack,et al. Effect of environmental factors on production and bioavailability of dissolved organic carbon from substrates available in a constructed and reference fens in the Athabasca oil sands development region , 2015 .
[16] M. Turetsky,et al. Moderate drop in water table increases peatland vulnerability to post-fire regime shift , 2015, Scientific Reports.
[17] G. Kiely,et al. Spatial and Seasonal Variation of Dissolved Organic Carbon (DOC) Concentrations in Irish Streams: Importance of Soil and Topography Characteristics , 2014, Environmental Management.
[18] M. Turetsky,et al. Sources and fate of terrestrial dissolved organic carbon in lakes of a Boreal Plains region recently affected by wildfire , 2013 .
[19] M. Flannigan,et al. Global wildland fire season severity in the 21st century , 2013 .
[20] R. Artz. Microbial Community Structure and Carbon Substrate use in Northern Peatlands , 2013 .
[21] Shinichi Nakagawa,et al. A general and simple method for obtaining R2 from generalized linear mixed‐effects models , 2013 .
[22] J. Holden,et al. Multi-scale relationship between peatland vegetation type and dissolved organic carbon concentration , 2012 .
[23] J. Holden,et al. The impacts of prescribed moorland burning on water colour and dissolved organic carbon: a critical synthesis. , 2012, Journal of environmental management.
[24] Q. Hua,et al. Response of coral reefs to climate change: Expansion and demise of the southernmost Pacific coral reef , 2010 .
[25] J. Loisel,et al. Global peatland dynamics since the Last Glacial Maximum , 2010 .
[26] Y. Prairie,et al. Linking forest fires to lake metabolism and carbon dioxide emissions in the boreal region of Northern Québec , 2009 .
[27] Jeremy B. Jones,et al. Impact of Wildfire on Stream Nutrient Chemistry and Ecosystem Metabolism in Boreal Forest Catchments of Interior Alaska , 2009 .
[28] M. Turetsky,et al. Impacts of climate change on fire activity and fire management in the circumboreal forest , 2009 .
[29] M. Wilmking,et al. The influence of summer seasonal extremes on dissolved organic carbon export from a boreal peatland catchment: evidence from one dry and one wet growing season. , 2009, The Science of the total environment.
[30] Charles Tarnocai,et al. The Impact of Climate Change on Canadian Peatlands , 2009 .
[31] Detlef P. van Vuuren,et al. Contribution of N2O to the greenhouse gas balance of first‐generation biofuels , 2009 .
[32] M. Mast,et al. Effects of 2003 wildfires on stream chemistry in Glacier National Park, Montana , 2008 .
[33] David Johnson,et al. Contribution of plant photosynthate to soil respiration and dissolved organic carbon in a naturally recolonising cutover peatland , 2008 .
[34] T. Hothorn,et al. Simultaneous Inference in General Parametric Models , 2008, Biometrical journal. Biometrische Zeitschrift.
[35] K. Devito,et al. Transient peat properties in two pond-peatland complexes in the sub-humid Western Boreal Plain, Canada. , 2008 .
[36] J. Neff,et al. Dissolved Organic Carbon in Alaskan Boreal Forest: Sources, Chemical Characteristics, and Biodegradability , 2007, Ecosystems.
[37] Cordy Tymstra,et al. Impact of climate change on area burned in Alberta’s boreal forest , 2007 .
[38] L. Hinzman,et al. The influence of fire and permafrost on sub‐arctic stream chemistry during storms , 2007 .
[39] Joseph Holden,et al. Peatland hydrology and carbon release: why small-scale process matters , 2005, Philosophical Transactions of the Royal Society A: Mathematical, Physical and Engineering Sciences.
[40] J. Neff,et al. Fire effects on soil organic matter content, composition, and nutrients in boreal interior Alaska , 2005 .
[41] Stuart N. Lane,et al. Influence of drought‐induced acidification on the mobility of dissolved organic carbon in peat soils , 2005 .
[42] E. Raffaele,et al. Wildfires in NW Patagonia: long-term effects on a Nothofagus forest soil , 2004 .
[43] M. Billett,et al. Linking land‐atmosphere‐stream carbon fluxes in a lowland peatland system , 2004 .
[44] N. Ostle,et al. Peatland carbon efflux partitioning reveals that Sphagnum photosynthate contributes to the DOC pool , 2004, Plant and Soil.
[45] Tim R. Moore,et al. Carbon turnover in peatland mesocosms exposed to different water table levels , 2004 .
[46] Alain Pietroniro,et al. Connectivity and storage functions of channel fens and flat bogs in northern basins , 2003 .
[47] B. Bergamaschi,et al. Evaluation of specific ultraviolet absorbance as an indicator of the chemical composition and reactivity of dissolved organic carbon. , 2003, Environmental science & technology.
[48] M. Apps,et al. Understanding Holocene peat accumulation pattern of continental fens in western Canada , 2003 .
[49] S. Bridgham,et al. Global warming and the export of dissolved organic carbon from boreal peatlands , 2003 .
[50] Merritt R. Turetsky,et al. Current disturbance and the diminishing peatland carbon sink , 2002 .
[51] Tim R. Moore,et al. Hydrology and dissolved organic carbon biogeochemistry in an ombrotrophic bog , 2001 .
[52] E. Prepas,et al. Forest fire induced impacts on phosphorus, nitrogen, and chlorophyll a concentrations in boreal subarctic lakes of northern Alberta , 2000 .
[53] D. Paré,et al. Element export in runoff from eastern Canadian Boreal Shield drainage basins following forest harvesting and wildfires. , 2000 .
[54] R. Carignan,et al. Comparative impacts of fire and forest harvesting on water quality in Boreal Shield lakes , 2000 .
[55] D. Vitt,et al. Spatial and temporal trends in carbon storage of peatlands of continental western Canada through the Holocene , 2000 .
[56] S. Robinson,et al. The Influence of Permafrost and Fire upon Carbon Accumulation in High Boreal Peatlands, Northwest Territories, Canada , 2000 .
[57] Carlos García,et al. Short-term effect of wildfire on the chemical, biochemical and microbiological properties of Mediterranean pine forest soils , 1997, Biology and Fertility of Soils.
[58] Mike D. Flannigan,et al. Length of the fire season in a changing climate , 1993 .
[59] E. Gorham. Northern Peatlands: Role in the Carbon Cycle and Probable Responses to Climatic Warming. , 1991, Ecological applications : a publication of the Ecological Society of America.
[60] D. Vitt,et al. The relationships of vegetation to surface water chemistry and peat chemistry in fens of Alberta, Canada , 1990, Vegetatio.
[61] D. Vitt,et al. The vegatation, surface water chemistry and peat chemistry of moderate-rich fens in central Alberta, Canada , 1989, Wetlands.
[62] J. Price,et al. Groundwater storage – streamflow relations during winter in a subarctic wetland, Saskatchewan , 1987 .
[63] M. Kimberley,et al. Fungi decaying the wood of fallen beech (Nothofagus) trees in the South Island of New Zealand , 2019, Canadian Journal of Forest Research.
[64] D. Dey,et al. Effect of fire severity on physical and biochemical soil properties in Zagros oak (Quercus brantii Lindl.) forests in Iran , 2016, Journal of Forestry Research.
[65] J. Price. The Influence of Wetland and Mineral Terrain Types on Snowmelt Runoff in the Subarctic , 1987 .
[66] E. M. Thurman,et al. Organic Geochemistry of Natural Waters , 1985, Developments in Biogeochemistry.
[67] H. Vitt,et al. THE VEGETATION, SURFACE WATER CHEMISTRY AND PEAT CHEMISTRY OF MODERATE-RICH FENS IN CENTRAL ALBERTA, CANADA , 2022 .