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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2008
W. C. Nieder, S. Hoskins, S. D. Smith, and S. E. G. Findlay, “Distribution and spatial change of Hudson River Estuary submerged aquatic vegetation: Implications for coastal management and natural resource protection”, in X. Yang (ed.) Remote Sensing and GIS for Coastal Ecosystem Assessment and Management: Principles and Applications, 2008, p. 259-277.
C. Evans, et al., “Does elevated nitrogen deposition or ecosystem recovery from acidification drive increased dissolved organic carbon loss from upland soil? A review of evidence from field nitrogen addition experiments”, Biogeochemistry, vol. 91, p. 13-35, 2008.
D. L. Strayer, M. L. Pace, N. F. Caraco, J. J. Cole, and S. E. G. Findlay, “Hydrology and grazing jointly control a large-river food web”, Ecology, vol. 89, p. 12-18, 2008.
S. S. Kaushal, et al., “Interaction between urbanization and climate variability amplifies watershed nitrate export in Maryland”, Environ. Sci. Technol., vol. 42, p. 5872-5878, 2008.
V. R. Kelly, et al., “Long-term sodium chloride retention in a rural watershed: Legacy effects of road salt on stream water concentrations”, Environ. Sci. Technol., vol. 42, p. 410-415, 2008.
A. Arrigoni, S. E. G. Findlay, D. T. Fischer, and K. Tockner, “Predicting carbon and nutrient transformations in tidal freshwater wetlands of the Hudson River”, Ecosystems, vol. 11, p. 790-802, 2008.
P. J. Mulholland, et al., “Stream denitrification across biomes and its response to anthropogenic nitrate loading”, Nature, vol. 452, p. 202-206, 2008.
2010
R. L. Sinsabaugh, D. J. Van Horn, J. J. Follstad-Shah, and S. E. G. Findlay, “Ecoenzymatic stoichiometry in relation to productivity for freshwater biofilm and plankton communities”, Microb. Ecol., vol. 60, p. 885-893, 2010.
D. L. Strayer and S. E. G. Findlay, “Ecology of freshwater shore zones”, Aquat. Sci., vol. 72, p. 127-163, 2010.
S. M. Clinton, R. T. Edwards, and S. E. G. Findlay, “Exoenzyme activities as indicators of dissolved organic matter composition in the hyporheic zone of a floodplain river”, Freshwater Biol., vol. 55, p. 1603-1615, 2010.
V. R. Kelly, S. E. G. Findlay, W. H. Schlesinger, K. Menking, and A. M. Chatrchyan, Road Salt, Moving Toward the Solution. 2010, p. 16.
R. V. Pouyat, et al., “The role of federal agencies in the application of scientific knowledge”, Front. Ecol. Environ., vol. 8, p. 322-328, 2010.
S. E. G. Findlay, “Stream microbial ecology”, J. N. Am. Benthol. Soc., vol. 29, p. 170-181, 2010.
S. E. G. Findlay, et al., “Total carbon analysis may overestimate organic carbon content of fresh waters in the presence of high dissolved inorganic carbon”, Limnol. Oceanogr. Methods, vol. 8, p. 196-201, 2010.
G. B. Hunsinger, S. Mitra, S. E. G. Findlay, and D. T. Fischer, “Wetland-driven shifts in suspended particulate organic matter composition of the Hudson River estuary, New York”, Limnol. Oceanogr., vol. 55, p. 1653-1667, 2010.

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