Simple Machine Learning with Aerial Imagery Reveals Severe Loss of a Salt Marsh Foundation Species
暂无分享,去创建一个
[1] G. Wimp,et al. Habitat edges alter arthropod community composition , 2021, Landscape Ecology.
[2] E. Watson,et al. The status and future of tidal marshes in New Jersey faced with sea level rise , 2021, Anthropocene Coasts.
[3] Huiyu Liu,et al. Mapping an Invasive Plant Spartina alterniflora by Combining an Ensemble One-Class Classification Algorithm with a Phenological NDVI Time-Series Analysis Approach in Middle Coast of Jiangsu, China , 2020, Remote. Sens..
[4] S. Hilt,et al. Shallow lakes at risk: Nutrient enrichment enhances top‐down control of macrophytes by invasive herbivorous snails , 2020 .
[5] Lillian R. Aoki,et al. Plant species determine tidal wetland methane response to sea level rise , 2020, Nature Communications.
[6] R. Brooks,et al. Quantifying Vegetation and Landscape Metrics with Hyperspatial Unmanned Aircraft System Imagery in a Coastal Oligohaline Marsh , 2020, Estuaries and Coasts.
[7] G. Wimp,et al. Habitat edge effects decrease litter accumulation and increase litter decomposition in coastal salt marshes , 2020, Landscape Ecology.
[8] John M. Harris,et al. Use of Remote Sensing and Field Data to Quantify the Performance and Resilience of Restored Louisiana Wetlands , 2020, Wetlands.
[9] Whitney A. Wiest,et al. Detection of local-scale population declines through optimized tidal marsh bird monitoring design , 2020 .
[10] J. Kirkpatrick,et al. A systematic review of methods used to study fish in saltmarsh flats , 2020, Marine and Freshwater Research.
[11] Yeqiao Wang,et al. Salt marsh monitoring along the mid-Atlantic coast by Google Earth Engine enabled time series , 2020, PloS one.
[12] E. Watson,et al. Are Tidal Salt Marshes Exposed to Nutrient Pollution more Vulnerable to Sea Level Rise? , 2019, Wetlands.
[13] E. Watson,et al. Are Tidal Salt Marshes Exposed to Nutrient Pollution more Vulnerable to Sea Level Rise? , 2019, Wetlands.
[14] Jakub Nowosad,et al. landscapemetrics : an open‐source R tool to calculate landscape metrics , 2019, Ecography.
[15] B. Saragiotto,et al. Understanding and interpreting confidence and credible intervals around effect estimates. , 2019, Brazilian journal of physical therapy.
[16] J. Day,et al. Mississippi river sediment diversions and coastal wetland sustainability: Synthesis of responses to freshwater, sediment, and nutrient inputs , 2019, Estuarine, Coastal and Shelf Science.
[17] D. FitzGerald,et al. Marsh Processes and Their Response to Climate Change and Sea-Level Rise , 2019, Annual Review of Earth and Planetary Sciences.
[18] Paul-Christian Bürkner,et al. Bayesian Item Response Modeling in R with brms and Stan , 2019, J. Stat. Softw..
[19] Yeqiao Wang,et al. High Spatial Resolution Remote Sensing for Salt Marsh Mapping and Change Analysis at Fire Island National Seashore , 2019, Remote. Sens..
[20] L. Ries,et al. Habitat edge responses of generalist predators are predicted by prey and structural resources. , 2019, Ecology.
[21] Onisimo Mutanga,et al. Google Earth Engine Applications , 2019, Remote. Sens..
[22] A. Ellison. Foundation Species, Non-trophic Interactions, and the Value of Being Common , 2019, iScience.
[23] Jennifer J. Swenson,et al. Integrating Drone Imagery into High Resolution Satellite Remote Sensing Assessments of Estuarine Environments , 2018, Remote. Sens..
[24] L. Deegan,et al. Discontinuities in soil strength contribute to destabilization of nutrient-enriched creeks , 2018, Ecosphere.
[25] Michael Dixon,et al. Google Earth Engine: Planetary-scale geospatial analysis for everyone , 2017 .
[26] Laura J. Falkenberg,et al. Testing for thresholds of ecosystem collapse in seagrass meadows , 2017, Conservation biology : the journal of the Society for Conservation Biology.
[27] D. S. Johnson,et al. Sea level rise may increase extinction risk of a saltmarsh ontogenetic habitat specialist , 2017, Ecology and evolution.
[28] Martin Krzywinski,et al. Points of Significance: Classification and regression trees , 2017, Nature Methods.
[29] Elizabeth Burke Watson,et al. Wetland Loss Patterns and Inundation-Productivity Relationships Prognosticate Widespread Salt Marsh Loss for Southern New England , 2017, Estuaries and Coasts.
[30] J. Carey,et al. Contrasting Decadal-Scale Changes in Elevation and Vegetation in Two Long Island Sound Salt Marshes , 2017, Estuaries and Coasts.
[31] R. Zajac,et al. Population ecology of the snail Melampus bidentatus in changing salt marsh landscapes , 2017 .
[32] D. Alonso,et al. Immanent conditions determine imminent collapses: nutrient regimes define the resilience of macroalgal communities , 2017, Proceedings of the Royal Society B: Biological Sciences.
[33] Lauren V. Weatherdon,et al. A global map of saltmarshes , 2017, Biodiversity data journal.
[34] S. Temmerman,et al. Spatio‐temporal development of vegetation die‐off in a submerging coastal marsh , 2017 .
[35] M. Bertness,et al. Salt marsh persistence is threatened by predicted sea-level rise , 2016 .
[36] E. Watson,et al. Sea level rise, drought and the decline of Spartina patens in New England marshes , 2016 .
[37] G. Snedden,et al. Inundation and salinity impacts to above- and belowground productivity in Spartina patens and Spartina alterniflora in the Mississippi River Deltaic Plain: implications for using river diversions as restoration tools , 2015 .
[38] Aki Vehtari,et al. Practical Bayesian model evaluation using leave-one-out cross-validation and WAIC , 2015, Statistics and Computing.
[39] T. Dahl,et al. Status and Trends of Wetlands in the Coastal Watersheds of the Eastern United States,1998 to 2004 , 2013 .
[40] M. Kirwan,et al. The impact of sea-level rise on organic matter decay rates in Chesapeake Bay brackish tidal marshes , 2012 .
[41] L. Deegan,et al. Coastal eutrophication as a driver of salt marsh loss , 2012, Nature.
[42] Simon M. Mudd,et al. Response of salt-marsh carbon accumulation to climate change , 2012, Nature.
[43] L. Ries,et al. Do edge responses cascade up or down a multi-trophic food web? , 2011, Ecology letters.
[44] C. Elphick,et al. Planning for Sea-Level Rise: Quantifying Patterns of Saltmarsh Sparrow (Ammodramus Caudacutus) Nest Flooding Under Current Sea-Level Conditions , 2011 .
[45] Chris J. Kennedy,et al. The value of estuarine and coastal ecosystem services , 2011 .
[46] E. Barbier,et al. The present and future role of coastal wetland vegetation in protecting shorelines: answering recent challenges to the paradigm , 2011 .
[47] J. L. Gallagher,et al. Salt Marsh Carbon Pool Distribution in a Mid-Atlantic Lagoon, USA: Sea Level Rise Implications , 2011, Wetlands.
[48] J. Megonigal,et al. Ecosystem response to elevated CO2 levels limited by nitrogen-induced plant species shift , 2010, Nature.
[49] M. Bertness,et al. How will warming affect the salt marsh foundation species Spartina patens and its ecological role? , 2010, Oecologia.
[50] Francisco Artigas,et al. Balloon imagery verification of remotely sensed Phragmites australis expansion in an urban estuary of New Jersey, USA , 2010 .
[51] M. Bertness,et al. Centuries of human-driven change in salt marsh ecosystems. , 2009, Annual review of marine science.
[52] D. Civco,et al. Integrating multi-temporal spectral and structural information to map wetland vegetation in a lower Connecticut River tidal marsh , 2008 .
[53] Merryl Alber,et al. Salt Marsh Dieback : An overview of recent events in the US , 2008 .
[54] Rob J Hyndman,et al. Automatic Time Series Forecasting: The forecast Package for R , 2008 .
[55] Francisco J. Artigas,et al. Spectral discrimination of marsh vegetation types in the New Jersey Meadowlands, USA , 2006, Wetlands.
[56] D. Cahoon,et al. Global carbon sequestration in tidal, saline wetland soils , 2003 .
[57] R. Askins,et al. RELATIONSHIP BETWEEN HABITAT AREA AND THE DISTRIBUTION OF TIDAL MARSH BIRDS , 2002 .
[58] A. Kolker,et al. Anthropogenic and climate-change impacts on salt marshes of Jamaica Bay, New York City , 2002, Wetlands.
[59] M. Bertness,et al. Rapid shoreward encroachment of salt marsh cordgrass in response to accelerated sea-level rise , 2001, Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences of the United States of America.
[60] T. Simas,et al. Effects of global climate change on coastal salt marshes , 2001 .
[61] T. Minello,et al. Comparison of physical characteristics between created and natural estuarine marshes in Galveston Bay, Texas , 2000, Wetlands Ecology and Management.
[62] M. Bertness. Zonation of Spartina Patens and Spartina Alterniflora in New England Salt Marsh , 1991 .
[63] M. F. Gross,et al. Remote sensing of coastal wetlands , 1986 .
[64] R. Denno. Comparison of the Assemblages of Sap-Feeding Insects (Homoptera-Hemiptera) Inhabiting Two Structurally Different Salt Marsh Grasses in the Genus Spartina , 1977 .
[65] M. Kennish,et al. Tuckerton Peninsula Salt Marsh System: A Sentinel Site for Assessing Climate Change Effects , 2018 .
[66] S. Raghukumar. Fungi in Coastal and Oceanic Marine Ecosystems , 2017 .
[67] Robert Fildes,et al. Simple versus complex forecasting : The evidence , 2015 .
[68] R Core Team,et al. R: A language and environment for statistical computing. , 2014 .
[69] W. Niering,et al. Vegetation Change on a Northeast Tidal Marsh: Interaction of Sea‐Level Rise and Marsh Accretion , 1993 .
[70] R. Denno,et al. Influence of patch size, vegetation texture, and host plant architecture on the diversity, abundance, and life history styles of sapfeeding herbivores , 1991 .