91 results on '"Rosemond, Amy D."'
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2. Pathways, Mechanisms, and Consequences of Nutrient-Stimulated Plant Litter Decomposition in Streams
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3. Water supply, waste assimilation, and low‐flow issues facing the Southeast Piedmont Interstate‐85 urban archipelago
4. Temperature and interspecific interactions drive differences in carbon use efficiencies and biomass stoichiometry among aquatic fungi
5. Long‐term comparison of invertebrate communities in a blackwater river reveals taxon‐specific biomass change
6. Contrasting activation energies of litter-associated respiration and P uptake drive lower cumulative P uptake at higher temperatures
7. Nitrogen and Phosphorus Uptake Stoichiometry Tracks Supply Ratio During 2-year Whole-Ecosystem Nutrient Additions
8. Differences in respiration rates and abrasion losses may muddle attribution of breakdown to macroinvertebrates versus microbes in litterbag experiments
9. Thermal traits of freshwater macroinvertebrates vary with feeding group and phylogeny
10. Elemental Composition and Potential Toxicity of the Riverine Macrophyte Podostemum Ceratophyllum Michx. Reflects Land Use in Eastern North America
11. Ecosystem modification and network position impact insect-mediated contaminant fluxes from a mountaintop mining-impacted river network
12. Distinctive Connectivities of Near-Stream and Watershed-Wide Land Uses Differentially Degrade Rural Aquatic Ecosystems
13. Combined carbon flows through detritus, microbes, and animals in reference and experimentally enriched stream ecosystems
14. Experimental nitrogen and phosphorus enrichment stimulates multiple trophic levels of algal and detrital‐based food webs: a global meta‐analysis from streams and rivers
15. Distorting science, putting water at risk
16. Differential responses of macroinvertebrate ionomes across experimental N:P gradients in detritus-based headwater streams
17. Transport of N and P in U.S. streams and rivers differs with land use and between dissolved and particulate forms
18. Experimental N and P additions relieve stoichiometric constraints on organic matter flows through five stream food webs
19. Fatty acids elucidate sub-Antarctic stream benthic food web dynamics invaded by the North American beaver (Castor canadensis)
20. Streamwater nutrients stimulate respiration and breakdown of standardized detrital substrates across a landscape gradient: Effects of nitrogen, phosphorus, and carbon quality
21. Ignoring temperature variation leads to underestimation of the temperature sensitivity of plant litter decomposition
22. DIFFERENTIAL EFFECTS OF CONSUMERS ON C, N, AND P DYNAMICS
23. CONTRIBUTORS
24. Indirect Effects of Herbivores Modify Predicted Effects of Resources and Consumption on Plant Biomass
25. Interaction of Productivity and Consumption
26. Experimental N and P additions alter stream macroinvertebrate community composition via taxon‐level responses to shifts in detrital resource stoichiometry
27. Anthropogenic versus fish‐derived nutrient effects on seagrass community structure and function
28. Continental-scale decrease in net primary productivity in streams due to climate warming
29. Variation in Detrital Resource Stoichiometry Signals Differential Carbon to Nutrient Limitation for Stream Consumers Across Biomes
30. Litter P content drives consumer production in detritus‐based streams spanning an experimental N:P gradient
31. Nutrients and temperature additively increase stream microbial respiration
32. Experimental nutrient enrichment of forest streams increases energy flow to predators along greener food‐web pathways
33. Changes in nutrient stoichiometry, elemental homeostasis and growth rate of aquatic litter-associated fungi in response to inorganic nutrient supply
34. Experimental nitrogen and phosphorus additions increase rates of stream ecosystem respiration and carbon loss
35. Global synthesis of the temperature sensitivity of leaf litter breakdown in streams and rivers
36. Convergence of detrital stoichiometry predicts thresholds of nutrient‐stimulated breakdown in streams
37. Nutrient enrichment alters the magnitude and timing of fungal, bacterial, and detritivore contributions to litter breakdown
38. Salamander growth rates increase along an experimental stream phosphorus gradient
39. Baseflow physical characteristics differ at multiple spatial scales in stream networks across diverse biomes
40. Diet composition of two larval headwater stream salamanders and spatial distribution of prey
41. Detrital stoichiometry as a critical nexus for the effects of streamwater nutrients on leaf litter breakdown rates
42. The role of aquatic fungi in transformations of organic matter mediated by nutrients
43. Metabolic theory and taxonomic identity predict nutrient recycling in a diverse food web
44. Low-to-moderate nitrogen and phosphorus concentrations accelerate microbially driven litter breakdown rates
45. Stoichiometry and estimates of nutrient standing stocks of larval salamanders in Appalachian headwater streams
46. Experimental nutrient additions accelerate terrestrial carbon loss from stream ecosystems
47. Biogeochemical implications of biodiversity and community structure across multiple coastal ecosystems
48. Leaf litter nutrient uptake in an intermittent blackwater river: influence of tree species and associated biotic and abiotic drivers
49. Hot moments in spawning aggregations: implications for ecosystem-scale nutrient cycling
50. Consistent nutrient storage and supply mediated by diverse fish communities in coral reef ecosystems
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