Search

Your search keyword '"Saleska, Scott"' showing total 38 results

Search Constraints

Start Over You searched for: Author "Saleska, Scott" Remove constraint Author: "Saleska, Scott" Publisher escholarship, university of california Remove constraint Publisher: escholarship, university of california
38 results on '"Saleska, Scott"'

Search Results

1. Soil incubation methods lead to large differences in inferred methane production temperature sensitivity

2. Tree hydrological niche acclimation through ontogeny in a seasonal Amazon forest

3. Asymmetric response of Amazon forest water and energy fluxes to wet and dry hydrological extremes reveals onset of a local drought‐induced tipping point

4. Plant organic matter inputs exert a strong control on soil organic matter decomposition in a thawing permafrost peatland

5. Coupling plant litter quantity to a novel metric for litter quality explains C storage changes in a thawing permafrost peatland

6. Diverse sediment microbiota shape methane emission temperature sensitivity in Arctic lakes.

7. Ecology and molecular targets of hypermutation in the global microbiome.

8. Understanding water and energy fluxes in the Amazonia: Lessons from an observation‐model intercomparison

9. Rainforest-to-pasture conversion stimulates soil methanogenesis across the Brazilian Amazon

10. Belowground changes to community structure alter methane-cycling dynamics in Amazonia

11. Impacts of Degradation on Water, Energy, and Carbon Cycling of the Amazon Tropical Forests.

12. Ecology and molecular targets of hypermutation in the global microbiome

13. Hysteretic temperature sensitivity of wetland CH4 fluxes explained by substrate availability and microbial activity

14. The pantropical response of soil moisture to El Niño

15. The IsoGenie database: an interdisciplinary data management solution for ecosystems biology and environmental research

16. The biophysics, ecology, and biogeochemistry of functionally diverse, vertically and horizontally heterogeneous ecosystems: the Ecosystem Demography model, version 2.2 – Part 2: Model evaluation for tropical South America

17. Hydraulic traits explain differential responses of Amazonian forests to the 2015 El Niño‐induced drought

18. Seasonal and drought‐related changes in leaf area profiles depend on height and light environment in an Amazon forest

19. The biophysics, ecology, and biogeochemistry of functionally diverse, vertically- and horizontally-heterogeneous ecosystems: the Ecosystem Demography Model, version 2.2 – Part 2: Model evaluation

20. Hydrological niche segregation defines forest structure and drought tolerance strategies in a seasonal Amazon forest

21. Large carbon cycle sensitivities to climate across a permafrost thaw gradient in subarctic Sweden

22. Soil Viruses Are Underexplored Players in Ecosystem Carbon Processing

23. Carbon exchange in an Amazon forest: from hours to years

24. Host-linked soil viral ecology along a permafrost thaw gradient

25. Ecosystem heterogeneity and diversity mitigate Amazon forest resilience to frequent extreme droughts.

26. Reviews and syntheses: Carbonyl sulfide as a multi-scale tracer for carbon and water cycles

27. A novel correction for biases in forest eddy covariance carbon balance

28. Reviews and Syntheses: Carbonyl Sulfide as a Multi-scale Tracer for Carbon and Water Cycles

29. Differences in xylem and leaf hydraulic traits explain differences in drought tolerance among mature Amazon rainforest trees

30. Convergence in relationships between leaf traits, spectra and age across diverse canopy environments and two contrasting tropical forests

31. Leaf aging of Amazonian canopy trees as revealed by spectral and physiochemical measurements

32. Permafrost Meta-Omics and Climate Change

33. What drives the seasonality of photosynthesis across the Amazon basin? A cross-site analysis of eddy flux tower measurements from the Brasil flux network

34. Sources and properties of Amazonian aerosol particles

35. The land–atmosphere water flux in the tropics

36. Patterns of water and heat flux across a biome gradient from tropical forest to savanna in Brazil

37. Understanding water and energy fluxes in the Amazonia: Lessons from an observation-model intercomparison.

38. Leaf aging of Amazonian canopy trees as revealed by spectral and physiochemical measurements.

Catalog

Books, media, physical & digital resources