Publications

The Institute communicates its scientific and educational information in a number of ways. One major outlet is peer-reviewed publications and reports.  Cary Institute staff regularly publish in the best-rated journals in their respective fields.

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M. B. Goldman, P. M. Groffman, R. V. Pouyat, M. J. McDonnell, and S. T. A. Pickett, “CH4 uptake and N availability in forest soils along an urban to rural gradient”, Soil Biol. Biochem., vol. 27, p. 281-286, 1995.
C. G. Jones, R. S. Ostfeld, M. P. Richard, E. M. Schauber, and J. O. Wolff, “Chain reactions linking acorns to gypsy moth outbreaks and Lyme disease risk”, Science, vol. 279, p. 1023-1026, 1998.
M. J. McDonnell, “The challenge of preserving urban natural areas: a forest for New York”, The Public Garden (J. Am. Assoc. Bot. Gard. Arbor.), vol. 3, p. 28-31, 1988.
D. L. Strayer, “Challenges for freshwater invertebrate conservation”, J. N. Am. Benthol. Soc., vol. 25, p. 271-287, 2006.
J. Lewis, W.M., et al., “Challenges for Limnology in the United States and Canada: An Assessment of the Discipline in the 1990's”, Report of the American Society of Limnology and Oceanography Challenges for Limnology Committee, vol. 4. p. 20, 1995.
D. L. Strayer, “Challenges in understanding the functions of ecological heterogeneity.”, in G. M. Lovett, C. G. Jones, M. G. Turner, and K. C. Weathers (eds.). Ecosystem Function in Heterogeneous Landscapes, 2005, p. 411-425.
M. Pressley, K. Hogan, R. Wharton-McDonald, J. Mistretta, and S. Ettenberger, “The challenges of instructional scaffolding. . .the challenges of instruction that supports student thinking”, Learn. Disabil. Res. Pract, vol. 11, p. 138-146, 1996.
P. M. Groffman, et al., “Challenges to incorporating spatially and temporally explicit phenomena (hotspots and hot moments) in denitrification models”, Biogeochemistry, vol. 93, p. 49-77, 2009.
J. G. Hubbell and G. M. Lovett, “A chamber for ozone exposure and misting of branches on mature trees”, in W. E. Winner and L. B. Phelps (eds.). Response of Trees to Air Pollution: The Role of Branch Studies, 1988, p. 120-129.
M. Havas and G. E. Likens, “Changes in 22Na influx and outflux in Daphnia magna (Straus) as a function of elevated Al concentrations in soft water at low pH (acidic deposition)”, Proc. Nat. Acad. Sci. USA, vol. 82, p. 7345-7349, 1985.
D. L. Kirchman, A. Dittel, S. E. G. Findlay, and D. T. Fischer, “Changes in bacterial activity and community structure in response to dissolved organic matter in the Hudson River, New York”, Aquat. Microb. Ecol., vol. 35, p. 243-257, 2004.
S. J. Meiners and S. T. A. Pickett, “Changes in community and population responses across a forest-field gradient”, Ecography, vol. 22, p. 261-267, 1999.
S. H. Fernald, N. F. Caraco, and J. J. Cole, “Changes in cyanobacterial dominance following the invasion of the zebra mussel Dreissena polymorpha: Long-term results from the Hudson River estuary”, Estuaries and Coasts, vol. 30, p. 163-170, 2007.
R. A. Daniels, K. E. Limburg, R. E. Schmidt, D. L. Strayer, and R. C. Chambers, “Changes in fish assemblages in the tidal Hudson River, New York”, in J. N. Rinne, R. M. Hughes, and B. Calamusso (eds.). Historical Changes in Large River Fish Assemblages of America, vol. 45, 2005, p. 471-503.
D. S. W. Katz, “Changes in forest composition over 22 years in southeastern New York”, Undergraduate Ecology Research Reports. 2006.
K. Gould and S. E. G. Findlay, “Changes in interstitial water chemistry along a salinity gradient in the Hudson River”, J. Waldman and E. A. Blair (eds.). Polgar Fellowship Reports of the Hudson River National Estuarine Research Reserve Program, 1990. 1991.
C. E. Johnson, T. G. Siccama, C. T. Driscoll, G. E. Likens, and R. E. Moeller, “Changes in lead biogeochemistry in response to decreasing atmospheric inputs”, Ecol. Appl., vol. 5, p. 813-822, 1995.
K. K. McLauchlan, J. M. Craine, W. W. Oswald, P. R. Leavitt, and G. E. Likens, “Changes in nitrogen cycling during the past century in a northern hardwood forest”, Proc. Nat. Acad. Sci., vol. 104, p. 7466-7470, 2007.
T. E. Smith, R. J. Stevenson, N. F. Caraco, and J. J. Cole, “Changes in phytoplankton community structure during the zebra mussel (Dreissena polymorpha) invasion of the Hudson River (New York)”, J. Plank. Res., vol. 20, p. 1567-1579, 1998.
P. A. Bukaveckas, “Changes in primary productivity associated with liming and reacidification of an Adirondack lake”, Environ. Pollut., vol. 79, p. 127-133, 1992.
Y. Zhang, M. J. Mitchell, C. T. Driscoll, and G. E. Likens, “Changes in soil sulfur constituents in a forested watershed eight years after whole-tree harvesting”, Can. J. For. Res., vol. 29, p. 356-364, 1999.
G. P. Lewis and G. E. Likens, “Changes in stream chemistry associated with insect defoliation in an old-growth hemlock-hardwood forest”, For. Ecol. Manage., vol. 238, p. 199-211, 2007.
R. B. Romanowicz, C. T. Driscoll, T. J. Fahey, C. E. Johnson, G. E. Likens, and T. G. Siccama, “Changes in the biogeochemistry of potassium following a whole-tree harvest”, Soil Sci. Soc. Am. J., vol. 60, p. 1664-1674, 1996.
C. T. Driscoll, G. E. Likens, L. O. Hedin, J. S. Eaton, and F. H. Bormann, “Changes in the chemistry of surface waters: 25-year results at the Hubbard Brook Experimental Forest, New Hampshire”, Environ. Sci. Technol., vol. 23, p. 137-143, 1989.
D. L. Strayer and A. R. Fetterman, “Changes in the distribution of freshwater mussels (Unionidae) in the upper Susquehanna River basin, 1955-1965 to 1996-1997”, Am. Midl. Nat., vol. 142, p. 328-339, 1999.

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