نتایج جستجو برای: wetlands

تعداد نتایج: 10083  

2005
John M. Mulhouse Diane De Steven Robert F. Lide Rebecca R. Sharitz

MULHOUSE, J. M. (University of Georgia, Savannah River Ecology Laboratory, Drawer E, Aiken, SC 29802), D. DE STEVEN (USDA Forest Service, Southern Research Station, Center for Bottomland Hardwoods Research, P.O. Box 227, Stoneville, MS 38776), R. F. LIDE (Northwest Florida Water Management District, 81 Water Management Dr., Havana, FL, 32333), AND R. R. SHARITZ (University of Georgia, Savannah ...

2016
Houston C. Chandler Andrew L. Rypel Yan Jiao Carola A. Haas Thomas A. Gorman Robert F. Baldwin

The hydroperiod of ephemeral wetlands is often the most important characteristic determining amphibian breeding success, especially for species with long development times. In mesic and wet pine flatwoods of the southeastern United States, ephemeral wetlands were a common landscape feature. Reticulated flatwoods salamanders (Ambystoma bishopi), a federally endangered species, depend exclusively...

Journal: :Journal of environmental quality 2014
John M Marton M Siobhan Fennessy Christopher B Craft

We measured soil properties, carbon and nutrient (nitrogen, phosphorus) pools, ambient and potential denitrification, and phosphorus sorption index (PSI) in natural depressional wetlands and depressional wetlands restored through the U.S. Department of Agriculture (USDA) Wetland Reserve Program. We measured the same suite of variables in natural and USDA Conservation Reserve Program-restored ri...

2014
Anson R. Main John V. Headley Kerry M. Peru Nicole L. Michel Allan J. Cessna Christy A. Morrissey

Neonicotinoids currently dominate the insecticide market as seed treatments on Canada's major Prairie crops (e.g., canola). The potential impact to ecologically significant wetlands in this dominantly agro-environment has largely been overlooked while the distribution of use, incidence and level of contamination remains unreported. We modelled the spatial distribution of neonicotinoid use acros...

Journal: :The Science of the total environment 2015
Kelly L Smalling Rebecca Reeves Erin Muths Mark Vandever William A Battaglin Michelle L Hladik Clay L Pierce

Habitat loss and exposure to pesticides are likely primary factors contributing to amphibian decline in agricultural landscapes. Conservation efforts have attempted to restore wetlands lost through landscape modifications to reduce contaminant loads in surface waters and providing quality habitat to wildlife. The benefits of this increased wetland area, perhaps especially for amphibians, may be...

2005
E. Smith R. Gordon A. Madani G. Stratton

Constructed treatment wetlands have been found to remove fecal coliform (FC) through a variety of mechanisms. This research evaluated the removal of FC in both warm and cold seasons from surface flow treatment wetlands in Bible Hill, Nova Scotia. Two wetlands (100 m), of differing depths were monitored over a 17 month period. The wetlands were loaded with dairy wastewater (average inlet FC conc...

1998

PURPOSE: This technical note provides a procedural framework for evaluating the economic values of wetlands. Important economic concepts on supply/demand and valuation are presented as they relate to the economic valuea supported or provided by wetlands. The framework presented here can be used to evaluate economic values within the Section 404 process, while recognizhg the difficulties of wetl...

2000
Gayatri Acharya

This paper investigates the role of the production function approach in capturing the value of hydrological services of wetland ecosystems. Hydrological research in the Hadejia-Nguru wetlands in northern Nigeria suggests that the major role of the wet season inundation of the wetlands is in recharging the underlying aquifers. This paper shows that the hydrological services extend beyond direct ...

2015
JOHN M. MARTON IRENA F. CREED

Wetlands provide many ecosystem services, including sediment and carbon retention, nutrient transformation, and water quality improvement. Although all wetlands are biogeochemical hotspots, geographically isolated wetlands (GIWs) receive fewer legal protections compared with other types of wetlands because of their apparent isolation from jurisdictional waters. Here, we consider controls on bio...

Journal: :Current biology : CB 2017
Hui Yu Xin Wang Lei Cao Lu Zhang Qiang Jia Hansoo Lee Zhenggang Xu Guanhua Liu Wenbin Xu Binhua Hu Anthony D Fox

While wild goose populations wintering in North America and Europe are mostly flourishing by exploiting farmland, those in China (which seem confined to natural wetlands) are generally declining. Telemetry devices were attached to 67 wintering wild geese of five different species at three important wetlands in the Yangtze River Floodplain (YRF), China to determine habitat use. 50 individuals of...

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