Stuart Findlay
Roman, C., N.A. Jaworski, F. Short, Stuart E. G. Findlay, and S. Warren. 2000. “Estuaries of the Northeastern United States: Habitat and Land Use Signatures”. Estuaries 23: 743-64.
Strayer, David L., Nina F. Caraco, Jonathan J. Cole, Stuart E. G. Findlay, and Michael L. Pace. 1999. “Transformation of Freshwater Ecosystems by Bivalves: A Case Study of Zebra Mussels in the Hudson River”. BioScience 49: 19-27. http://sgnis.org/publicat/papers/b2_1.pdf.
Findlay, Stuart E. G., and Robert L. Sinsabaugh. 1999. “Unravelling the Sources and Bioavailability of Dissolved Organic Matter in Lotic Aquatic Ecosystems”. Mar. Freshwat. Res. 50: 781-90.
Wehr, J. D., J. Petersen, and Stuart E. G. Findlay. 1999. “Influence of Three Contrasting Detrital Carbon Sources on Planktonic Bacterial Metabolism in a Mesotrophic Lake”. Microb. Ecol. 37: 23-35.
Otto, S., Peter M. Groffman, Stuart E. G. Findlay, and A. Arreola. 1999. “Invasive Plant Species and Microbial Processes in a Tidal Freshwater Marsh”. J. Environ. Qual. 28: 1252-57.
Berkowitz, Alan R., Stuart E. G. Findlay, and Steward T. A. Pickett. 1999. “Undergraduate Research Reports -- 1996 and 1997”. Occasional Publication of the Institute of Ecosystem Studies.
Templer, Pamela H., Stuart E. G. Findlay, and C. Wigand. 1998. “Sediment Chemistry Associated With Native and Non-Native Emergent Macrophytes of a Hudson River Marsh Ecosystem”. Wetlands 18: 70-78.
Findlay, Stuart E. G., Robert L. Sinsabaugh, David T. Fischer, and P. Franchini. 1998. “Sources of Dissolved Organic Carbon Supporting Planktonic Bacterial Production in the Tidal Freshwater Hudson River”. Ecosystems 1: 227-39.
Hopkinson, C.S., I. Buffam, J.E. Hobbie, J. Vallino, R. Hodson, M.A. Moran, J. Covert, et al. 1998. “Terrestrial Inputs of Organic Matter to Coastal Ecosystems: An Intercomparison of Chemical Characteristics and Bioavailability”. Biogeochemistry 43: 211-34.
Findlay, Stuart E. G., Michael L. Pace, and David T. Fischer. 1998. “Response of Heterotrophic Planktonic Bacteria to the Zebra Mussel Invasion of the Tidal Freshwater Hudson River”. Microb. Ecol. 36: 131-40.