Works (71)

Updated: April 9th, 2024 05:01

2023 journal article

Consequences of climate-induced range expansions on multiple ecosystem functions

Communications Biology, 6(1).

By: J. Balik n, H. Greig*, B. Taylor n & S. Wissinger*

MeSH headings : Animals; Ecosystem; Insecta / physiology; Larva / physiology; Nitrogen; Phosphorus
UN Sustainable Development Goal Categories
15. Life on Land (Web of Science)
Sources: ORCID, Web Of Science, Crossref
Added: April 11, 2023

2023 dataset

Data and code for: Facilitating the recovery of insect communities in restored streams by increasing oviposition habitat

Dryad.

Contributors: S. Dilworth & B. Taylor

Source: ORCID
Added: April 8, 2024

2023 journal article

Dissolved free amino acids could be odorants for imprinting and homing by Atlantic Salmon

Freshwater Science, 42(4), 375–391.

By: D. Minkoff*, W. Ardren*, K. Kaiser*, A. Dittman*, T. Quinn*, J. Atema*, B. Taylor n

author keywords: natal; migratory; diadromous; pheromone; olfactory; porewater; hyporheic; odorant
TL;DR: DFAAs may fulfill some of the hypothesized prerequisites as salmon imprinting and homing odor cues, but a lack of understanding of salmon discriminatory abilities and limited DFAA data preclude definitive conclusions about the sufficiency of DFAAs alone as homing cues. (via Semantic Scholar)
UN Sustainable Development Goal Categories
14. Life Below Water (OpenAlex)
Sources: Web Of Science, ORCID, Crossref
Added: December 11, 2023

2023 journal article

Facilitating the recovery of insect communities in restored streams by increasing oviposition habitat

Ecological Applications, 12.

By: S. Dilworth n & B. Taylor n

author keywords: egg mass; egg-laying habitat; protruding rocks; recruitment limitation; stream restoration
UN Sustainable Development Goal Categories
15. Life on Land (OpenAlex)
Sources: ORCID, Web Of Science, Crossref
Added: January 16, 2024

2023 journal article

Nature's chefs: Uniting the hidden diversity of food making and preparing species across the tree of life

BioScience, 73(6), 408–421.

By: B. Taylor n, B. Allf n, S. Hopkins n, R. Irwin n, M. Jewell n, O. Nevo*, L. Nichols n, N. Rodríguez Valerón* ...

author keywords: drink; food; fruit; mimic; mutualism; nectar; nuptial gift; plating
TL;DR: This article identifies three ways that species can produce or prepare meals—as food, drinks, or lures—and further distinguish between those providing an honest meal and those deceiving consumers with food mimics. (via Semantic Scholar)
Sources: Web Of Science, ORCID, Crossref
Added: May 22, 2023

2023 journal article

Nature’s chefs: Uniting the hidden diversity of food making and preparing species across the tree of life

BioScience.

By: B. Taylor n

Contributors: B. Taylor n

Ed(s): B. Taylor n

Source: ORCID
Added: March 30, 2023

2022 journal article

Characterizing the role of phosphorus availability and periphytic algae in the food choice and performance of detritivorous caddisflies (Trichoptera:Limnephilidae)

Freshwater Science, 41(1), 18–32.

By: L. Demi n, D. Hughes* & B. Taylor n

author keywords: feeding preference; selective foraging; detritivore; detritus; phosphorus; Trichoptera
TL;DR: These findings provide an initial step toward characterizing the feeding preferences and performance responses of aquatic detritivores to 2 potentially common nutritional constraints: detrital P and algal supply. (via Semantic Scholar)
UN Sustainable Development Goal Categories
2. Zero Hunger (OpenAlex)
15. Life on Land (Web of Science)
Sources: Web Of Science, ORCID, Crossref
Added: December 6, 2021

2022 journal article

Species-specific traits predict whole-assemblage detritus processing by pond invertebrates

Oecologia, 199(4), 951–963.

By: J. Balik n, C. Leitz*, S. Washko*, B. Cleveland*, D. Krejsa*, M. Perchik*, A. Stogsdill*, M. Vlah* ...

Contributors: B. Taylor n

author keywords: Caddisflies; Chironomidae; Detritus processing; Diversity; Ecosystem function; Functional traits; Trichoptera; Whole-assemblage
MeSH headings : Animals; Diptera; Ecosystem; Insecta; Invertebrates; Ponds; Species Specificity
UN Sustainable Development Goal Categories
15. Life on Land (Web of Science)
Sources: Web Of Science, ORCID, Crossref
Added: August 29, 2022

2021 journal article

A rolling stone gathers no eggs: the importance of stream insect egg laying natural history for stream restoration

Ecology, 102(7).

By: S. Jordt n & B. Taylor n

author keywords: natural channel design; oviposition; particle size; recruitment; substrate stability
MeSH headings : Animals; Insecta; Oviposition; Ovum; Rivers
TL;DR: The degradation of waterways has led to the widespread practice of stream restoration aimed at accelerating recovery from damage by land-use change and other disturbances, but the biological recovery of restored streams often lags behind their physical and chemical recovery. (via Semantic Scholar)
UN Sustainable Development Goal Categories
15. Life on Land (Web of Science)
Sources: ORCID, Web Of Science, Crossref
Added: March 14, 2021

2021 journal article

Animal-Driven Nutrient Supply Declines Relative to Ecosystem Nutrient Demand Along a Pond Hydroperiod Gradient

Ecosystems, 25(3), 678–696.

By: J. Balik n, E. Jameson*, S. Wissinger*, H. Whiteman* & B. Taylor n

author keywords: Animal effects; Biogeochemistry; Climate change; Drying; Ponds; Wetlands
UN Sustainable Development Goal Categories
13. Climate Action (Web of Science)
15. Life on Land (Web of Science)
Sources: Web Of Science, ORCID, Crossref
Added: August 30, 2021

2021 journal article

High-discharge disturbance does not alter the seasonal trajectory of nutrient uptake in a montane stream

Hydrobiologia, 848(19), 4535–4550.

By: J. Balik n, D. West n & B. Taylor n

author keywords: Nutrient uptake; Ammonium; Phosphorus; Disturbance; Floods; Biofilm; Algae; Succession; Seasonality
Sources: Web Of Science, ORCID, Crossref
Added: July 26, 2021

2021 journal article

No Rock Left Unturned: Insect Egg‐Laying Habitat is Limited in Restored Streams

The Bulletin of the Ecological Society of America, 102(3).

By: S. Jordt & B. Taylor*

Sources: ORCID, Crossref
Added: July 2, 2021

2021 content posted

Understanding the Evolution of Nutritive Taste in Animals: Insights from Biological Stoichiometry and Nutritional Geometry

UN Sustainable Development Goal Categories
2. Zero Hunger (OpenAlex)
Sources: ORCID, Crossref
Added: March 17, 2021

2021 article

Understanding the evolution of nutritive taste in animals: Insights from biological stoichiometry and nutritional geometry

Demi, L. M., Taylor, B. W., Reading, B. J., Tordoff, M. G., & Dunn, R. R. (2021, June 4). ECOLOGY AND EVOLUTION, Vol. 6.

By: L. Demi n, B. Taylor n, B. Reading n, M. Tordoff* & R. Dunn n

author keywords: chemoreception; gustation; homeostasis; nutritional ecology; optimal foraging
TL;DR: It is suggested that the evolution of multiple nutritive taste modalities can be predicted by identifying individual elements that are typically more concentrated in the tissues of animals than plants. (via Semantic Scholar)
UN Sustainable Development Goal Categories
2. Zero Hunger (OpenAlex)
Sources: Web Of Science, ORCID
Added: June 14, 2021

2020 journal article

Biogeochemical characteristics and hydroperiod affect carbon dioxide flux rates from exposed high‐elevation pond sediments

Limnology and Oceanography, 66(4), 1050–1067.

By: A. DelVecchia, S. Gougherty n, B. Taylor n & S. Wissinger*

UN Sustainable Development Goal Categories
13. Climate Action (Web of Science)
Sources: ORCID, Crossref
Added: December 20, 2020

2020 journal article

Didymosphenia geminata blooms are not exclusively driven by low phosphorus under experimental conditions

Hydrobiologia, 847(4), 1057–1069.

By: D. West n, J. Balik n, M. Owens* & B. Taylor n

author keywords: Phosphate; Algae; Diatoms; Regrowth; Stalks
Sources: Web Of Science, ORCID, Crossref
Added: January 13, 2020

2019 journal article

Carbon Dioxide Concentrations and Efflux from Permanent, Semi-Permanent, and Temporary Subalpine Ponds

WETLANDS, 39(5), 955–969.

By: A. DelVecchia, J. Balik n, S. Campbell*, B. Taylor n, D. West n & S. Wissinger*

author keywords: Carbon dioxide; Temporary ponds; Greenhouse gas efflux; Pond hydroperiod
UN Sustainable Development Goal Categories
13. Climate Action (Web of Science)
Sources: Web Of Science, ORCID
Added: March 10, 2020

2018 journal article

High interspecific variation in nutrient excretion within a guild of closely related caddisfly species

Ecosphere, 9(5).

By: J. Balik n, B. Taylor n, S. Washko* & S. Wissinger*

author keywords: caddisflies; climate change; consumer-driven nutrient regeneration; ecological redundancy; ecological stoichiometry; excretion; functional traits; guilds; macroinvertebrates; trait-based variation; wetlands
TL;DR: The considerable variation within guilds revealed by the metaanalysis suggests that functional redundancy among guild members is difficult to predict, and some natural or human-caused species gains or losses within biological groupings such as guilds and trophic levels could have little or no effect on ecosystem processes, whereas others could have very large effects. (via Semantic Scholar)
UN Sustainable Development Goal Categories
15. Life on Land (Web of Science; OpenAlex)
Sources: Web Of Science, ORCID, Crossref
Added: August 6, 2018

2018 journal article

Using ecological stoichiometry to understand and predict infectious diseases

Oikos, 127(10), 1399–1409.

By: A. Sanders n & B. Taylor n

author keywords: stoichiometry; parasitism; infectious disease
UN Sustainable Development Goal Categories
2. Zero Hunger (OpenAlex)
13. Climate Action (Web of Science)
15. Life on Land (Web of Science)
Sources: Web Of Science, ORCID, Crossref
Added: October 19, 2018

2017 journal article

Blooms of benthic diatoms in phosphorus‐poor streams

Frontiers in Ecology and the Environment, 15(2), 110–111.

By: M. Bothwell* & B. Taylor n

Sources: Web Of Science, ORCID, Crossref
Added: August 6, 2018

2016 journal article

Dissolved organic carbon modulates mercury concentrations in insect subsidies from streams to terrestrial consumers

Ecological Applications, 26(6), 1771–1784.

By: R. Chaves‐Ulloa*, B. Taylor*, H. Broadley*, K. Cottingham*, N. Baer*, K. Weathers*, H. Ewing*, C. Chen*

author keywords: aquatic insects; aquatic-terrestrial linkages; bioaccumulation; dissolved organic carbon; emergence; food web; mercury; nonlinearity; resource subsidy; spiders; streams; threshold
MeSH headings : Animals; Carbon / chemistry; Hydrogen-Ion Concentration; Insecta / chemistry; Insecta / physiology; Mercury / chemistry; Rivers / chemistry; Spiders / chemistry; Spiders / physiology; Temperature
TL;DR: Investigation of streams spanning a broad DOC gradient in the Lake Sunapee watershed in New Hampshire, USA found that streamwater MeHg concentration increased linearly with DOC concentration, and found that streams with the highest DOC concentrations had emerging stream prey and spiders with lower MeHG concentrations than streams with intermediate DOC concentrations. (via Semantic Scholar)
Sources: Web Of Science, ORCID, Crossref
Added: August 6, 2018

2016 journal article

Writing an effective response to a manuscript review

Freshwater Science, 35(4), 1082–1087.

By: B. Taylor n

author keywords: peer review; response to reviews; revisions; publishing
TL;DR: Advice on how to write a response to manuscript reviews is lacking from the instructions for authors of most journals and from science writing manuals, but can be implemented easily to enhance the publishing and reviewing process for authors, referees, and editors. (via Semantic Scholar)
UN Sustainable Development Goal Categories
4. Quality Education (OpenAlex)
Sources: Web Of Science, ORCID, Crossref
Added: August 6, 2018

2015 journal article

Didymosphenia: It's More Complicated Response

BIOSCIENCE, 65(3), 226–226.

By: B. Taylor & M. Bothwell

Source: ORCID
Added: January 18, 2022

2015 journal article

Response to Bergey and spaulding

BioScience, 65(3), 226–226.

By: B. Taylor & M. Bothwell

Source: ORCID
Added: January 18, 2022

2014 journal article

The Didymo story: the role of low dissolved phosphorus in the formation of Didymosphenia geminata blooms

Diatom Research, 29(3), 229–236.

By: M. Bothwell*, B. Taylor* & C. Kilroy*

author keywords: river diatom blooms; rock snot; Didymo; phosphorus limitation; global change; atmospheric N-deposition; N-enrichment of landscapes; dissolved phosphorus
TL;DR: The identification of very low soluble reactive phosphorus (SRP; below ∼2 ppb) as the proximate cause of bloom formation, has led to the more likely explanation that D. geminata blooms are the result of large-scale human intervention in climatic, atmospheric and edaphic processes that favour this ultra-oligotrophic species. (via Semantic Scholar)
Sources: Crossref, ORCID
Added: February 21, 2020

2014 journal article

The Origin of Invasive Microorganisms Matters for Science, Policy, and Management: The Case of Didymosphenia geminata

BioScience, 64(6), 531–538.

By: B. Taylor* & M. Bothwell*

TL;DR: Evidence indicates that blooms of the stalk-producing diatom Didymosphenia geminata are probably not caused by introductions but, rather, by environmental conditions that promote excessive stalk production by this historically rare species. (via Semantic Scholar)
UN Sustainable Development Goal Categories
15. Life on Land (OpenAlex)
Sources: Crossref, ORCID
Added: January 18, 2022

2013 journal article

Using economic instruments to develop effective management of invasive species: insights from a bioeconomic model

Ecological Applications, 23(5), 1086–1100.

By: S. McDermott, R. Irwin & B. Taylor

Source: ORCID
Added: January 18, 2022

2012 chapter

9. Understanding the Role of Predation in Open Systems: The Value of Place-Based Research

In The ecology of place (pp. 185–206). University of Chicago Press.

By: B. Peckarsky, J. Allan, A. McIntosh & B. Taylor

Source: ORCID
Added: January 18, 2022

2012 journal article

Iron is not responsible for Didymosphenia geminata bloom formation in phosphorus-poor rivers

Canadian Journal of Fisheries and Aquatic Sciences, 69(11), 1723–1727.

By: M. Bothwell, C. Kilroy, B. Taylor, E. Ellison, D. James, C. Gillis, K. Bladon, U. Silins

Source: ORCID
Added: January 18, 2022

2012 conference paper

Tritrophic effects of nuisance algal blooms on top predators in rivers

Conference proceedings: Ecological Society of America.

By: B. Taylor

Source: ORCID
Added: January 18, 2022

2011 journal article

Detritivorous fish indirectly reduce insect secondary production in a tropical river

Ecosphere, 2(12), 1–13.

Brad Taylor

Source: ORCID
Added: January 18, 2022

2010 conference paper

Migratory fishes as material and process subsidies in riverine ecosystems

American Fisheries Society Symposium, 73(2), 559–592.

Brad Taylor

Source: ORCID
Added: January 18, 2022

2009 journal article

Influence of handling stress and fasting on estimates of ammonium excretion by tadpoles and fish: recommendations for designing excretion experiments

Limnology and Oceanography: Methods, 7(1), 1–7.

By: M. Whiles, A. Huryn, B. Taylor & J. Reeve

Source: ORCID
Added: January 18, 2022

2009 conference paper

SYMP 16-3: Understanding the role of predation in open systems: The value of place-based research

The 94th ESA Annual Meeting.

By: B. Peckarsky, D. Allan, A. McIntosh & B. Taylor

Source: ORCID
Added: January 18, 2022

2008 journal article

Fish distributions and nutrient cycling in streams: can fish create biogeochemical hotspots

Ecology, 89(8), 2335–2346.

By: P. McIntyre, A. Flecker, M. Vanni, J. Hood, B. Taylor & S. Thomas

Source: ORCID
Added: January 18, 2022

2008 journal article

Hydraulic and geomorphic effects on mayfly drift in high-gradient streams at moderate discharges

Ecohydrology, 1(2), 176–186.

By: A. Wilcox*, B. Peckarsky*, B. Taylor* & A. Encalada*

author keywords: drift; mayfly; ecogeomorphology; Reynolds number; Shields number; high-gradient streams; fluvial geomorphology; Baetis
UN Sustainable Development Goal Categories
14. Life Below Water (OpenAlex)
Sources: Crossref, ORCID
Added: September 10, 2020

2008 conference paper

PS 35-13: How scour disturbance affects Didymosphenia geminata abundance and the associated epiphytic diatom community

The 93rd ESA Annual Meeting.

By: P. Lee, M. Megan, C. Brown, B. Taylor & T. Wellnitz

Source: ORCID
Added: January 18, 2022

2008 journal article

Predator effects on prey population dynamics in open systems

Oecologia, 156(2), 431–440.

By: B. Peckarsky*, B. Kerans*, B. Taylor* & A. McIntosh*

author keywords: mortality; non-consumptive effects; open systems; predation; recruitment
MeSH headings : Animals; Colorado; Food Chain; Insecta / physiology; Models, Theoretical; Population Density; Population Dynamics; Rivers; Species Specificity; Trout / physiology
TL;DR: It is concluded that predation alone cannot explain variation in population dynamics of either mayfly species; and the relative importance of predation is species- and environment-specific compared to non-predatory losses, such as other agents of mortality and non-consumptive effects of predators. (via Semantic Scholar)
Sources: Crossref, ORCID
Added: September 10, 2020

2007 journal article

How body size mediates the role of animals in nutrient cycling in aquatic ecosystems

Body Size: the Structure and Function of Aquatic Ecosystems, 286–305.

By: R. Hall, B. Koch, M. Marshall, B. Taylor & L. Tronstad

Source: ORCID
Added: January 18, 2022

2007 journal article

Improving the fluorometric ammonium method: matrix effects, background fluorescence, and standard additions

Journal of the North American Benthological Society, 26(2), 167–177.

Brad Taylor

Source: ORCID
Added: January 18, 2022

2006 journal article

Loss of a harvested fish species disrupts carbon flow in a diverse tropical river

Science, 313(5788), 833–836.

By: B. Taylor, A. Flecker & R. Hall

Source: ORCID
Added: January 18, 2022

2006 thesis

The functional importance of a migratory detritivorous fish on carbon flow and nitrogen cycling in a neotropical stream

University of Wyoming.

By: B. Taylor

Source: ORCID
Added: January 18, 2022

2005 conference paper

Alteration of the Fates and Fluxes of Nitrogen by Detritivorous Fish: a Whole-Stream Manipulation and a 15N-tracer Addition

AGU Spring Meeting Abstracts, 2005, NB21B–02.

By: B. Taylor, R. Hall, A. Flecker, C. Fisher, M. Grant, L. Jeffs, E. Richmond, S. Thomas

Source: ORCID
Added: January 18, 2022

2005 conference paper

Detritivorous Fish Increase N-fixation in a Tropical Stream.

AGU Spring Meeting Abstracts, 2005, NB21D–01.

By: A. Ulseth, A. Flecker, B. Taylor, R. Hall, G. Gettel, R. Marino, S. Juice

Source: ORCID
Added: January 18, 2022

2005 conference paper

Linking Invertebrates With Ecosystem Nitogen Cycling in a Tropical Stream

AGU Spring Meeting Abstracts, 2005, NB21B–03.

By: R. Hall, K. Behn, B. Taylor & A. Flecker

Source: ORCID
Added: January 18, 2022

2005 journal article

Overfishing of inland waters

BioScience, 55(12), 1041–1051.

By: J. Allan, R. Abell, Z. Hogan, C. Revenga, B. Taylor, R. Welcomme, K. Winemiller

Source: ORCID
Added: January 18, 2022

2004 journal article

Linking economic activities to the distribution of exotic plants

Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences, 101(51), 17725–17730.

By: B. Taylor* & R. Irwin*

author keywords: human population; invasion biology; real estate; species distributions; structural equation model
MeSH headings : Ecosystem; Models, Economic; Plant Development; Population Dynamics
TL;DR: A hypothesis that links ecology and economics to provide a causal framework for the distribution of exotic plants in the United States shows that economics matter for resolving the exotic-species problem because the underlying causes, and some of the solutions, may lie in human-economic behaviors. (via Semantic Scholar)
UN Sustainable Development Goal Categories
15. Life on Land (OpenAlex)
Sources: Crossref, ORCID
Added: September 10, 2020

2004 journal article

Predator-induced resource heterogeneity in a stream food web

Ecology, 85(8), 2279–2290.

By: A. McIntosh, B. Peckarsky & B. Taylor

Source: ORCID
Added: January 18, 2022

2004 journal article

Testing the role of sediment-mediated interactions between tadpoles and armored catfish in a Neotropical stream

Copeia, 2004(3), 610–616.

By: C. Solomon, A. Flecker & B. Taylor

Source: ORCID
Added: January 18, 2022

2004 journal article

Tropical fishes as biological bulldozers: density effects on resource heterogeneity and species diversity

Ecology, 85(8), 2267–2278.

By: A. Flecker & B. Taylor

Source: ORCID
Added: January 18, 2022

2002 journal article

Interactions between herbivorous fishes and limiting nutrients in a tropical stream ecosystem

Ecology, 83(7), 1831–1844.

By: A. Flecker, B. Taylor, E. Bernhardt, J. Hood, W. Cornwell, S. Cassatt, M. Vanni, N. Altman

Source: ORCID
Added: January 18, 2022

2002 journal article

Predator chemicals induce changes in mayfly life history traits: a whole-stream manipulation

Ecology, 83(3), 612–618.

By: B. Peckarsky, A. McIntosh, B. Taylor & J. Dahl

Source: ORCID
Added: January 18, 2022

2002 journal article

Reach-scale manipulations show invertebrate grazers depress algal resources in streams

Limnology and Oceanography, 47(3), 893–899.

By: B. Taylor, A. McIntosh & B. Peckarsky

Source: ORCID
Added: January 18, 2022

2002 journal article

The influence of predatory fish on mayfly drift: extrapolating from experiments to nature

Freshwater Biology, 47(8), 1497–1513.

By: A. Mcintosh, B. Peckarsky & B. Taylor

Source: ORCID
Added: January 18, 2022

2001 journal article

Sampling stream invertebrates using electroshocking techniques: implications for basic and applied research

Canadian Journal of Fisheries and Aquatic Sciences, 58(3), 437–445.

By: B. Taylor, A. McIntosh & B. Peckarsky

Source: ORCID
Added: January 18, 2022

2001 journal article

Variation in mayfly size at metamorphosis as a developmental response to risk of predation

Ecology, 82(3), 740–757.

By: B. Peckarsky, B. Taylor, A. McIntosh, M. McPeek & D. Lytle

Source: ORCID
Added: January 18, 2022

2000 journal article

Hydrologic and behavioral constraints on oviposition of stream insects: implications for adult dispersal

Oecologia, 125(2), 186–200.

By: B. Peckarsky, B. Taylor & C. Caudill

Source: ORCID
Added: January 18, 2022

1999 journal article

Delayed egg hatching and semivoltinism in the Nearctic stonefly Megarcys signata (Plecoptera: Perlodidae)

Aquatic Insects, 21(3), 179–185.

By: B. Taylor, C. Anderson & B. Peckarsky

Source: ORCID
Added: January 18, 2022

1999 journal article

Ecosystem engineering by a tropical tadpole: density-dependent effects on habitat structure and larval growth rates

Copeia, 495–500.

By: A. Flecker, B. Feifarek & B. Taylor

Source: ORCID
Added: January 18, 2022

1999 chapter

Forested limesink wetlands of southwest Georgia: invertebrate habitat and hydrologic variation

In D. P. Batzer, R. A. Rader, & S. A. Wissinger (Eds.), Invertebrates in freshwater wetlands of North America: ecology and management. New York: John Wiley & Sons.

By: S. Golladay, S. Entrekin & B. Taylor

Ed(s): D. Batzer, R. Rader & S. Wissinger

Source: NC State University Libraries
Added: February 24, 2024

1999 journal article

Rapid size-specific changes in the drift of Baetis bicaudatus (Ephemeroptera) caused by alterations in fish odour concentration

Oecologia, 118(2), 256–264.

By: A. McIntosh, B. Peckarsky & B. Taylor

Source: ORCID
Added: January 18, 2022

1998 journal article

Effects of size at metamorphosis on stonefly fecundity, longevity, and reproductive success

Oecologia, 114(4), 494–502.

By: B. Taylor, C. Anderson & B. Peckarsky

Source: ORCID
Added: January 18, 2022

1998 journal article

Geomorphic variation in riparian tree mortality and stream coarse woody debris recruitment from record flooding in a coastal plain stream

Ecoscience, 5(4), 551–560.

By: B. Palik, S. Golladay, C. Goebel & B. Taylor

Source: ORCID
Added: January 18, 2022

1997 conference paper

Influence of Riparian Landform on Large Woody Debris Input and Movement in a Blackwater Coastal Plain Stream

Presented at the Georgia Institute of Technology.

By: S. Golladay, B. Palik, P. Goebel & B. Taylor

Event: Georgia Institute of Technology

Source: ORCID
Added: January 18, 2022

1997 journal article

Invertebrate communities of forested limesink wetlands in southwest Georgia, USA: habitat use and influence of extended inundation

Wetlands, 17(3), 383–393.

By: S. Golladay, B. Taylor & B. Palik

Source: ORCID
Added: January 18, 2022

1997 journal article

JW Jones Ecological Research Center, Rte 2, Box 2324, Newton, GA 31770 USA 1 Current address: Forestry Sciences Laboratory, USDA Forest Service, 1831 Highway 169 E Grand Rapids, MN 55744

WETLANDS, 17(3).

By: S. Golladay, B. Taylor & B. Palik

Source: ORCID
Added: January 18, 2022

1995 conference paper

Characteristics of Suspended Particulate Matter in Ichawaynochaway Creek: A Brown-water Coastal Plain Stream

Presented at the Georgia Institute of Technology.

By: S. Golladay & B. Taylor

Event: Georgia Institute of Technology

Source: ORCID
Added: January 18, 2022

journal article

1Department of Applied Ecology, North Carolina State University; Raleigh, NC 27695, USA 2Rocky Mountain Biological Laboratory, Crested Butte, CO 81224, USA 3Departments of Biology and Environmental Science, Allegheny College, Meadville, PA 16335, USA

Balik, J. A., Greig, H. S., Taylor, B. W., & Wissinger, S. A.

By: J. Balik, H. Greig, B. Taylor & S. Wissinger

Source: ORCID
Added: January 18, 2022

journal article

Animal-Driven Nutrient Supply Declines Relative to Ecosystem Nutrient Demand Along a Pond Hydroperiod Gradient

Jameson, E. E., Wissinger, S. A., & Taylor, B. W.

By: E. Jameson, S. Wissinger & B. Taylor

Source: ORCID
Added: January 18, 2022

journal article

Geomorphic variation in riparian tree mortality and stream coarse woody debris recruitment from

Stephen, W., GOEBEL, P. C., TAYLOR, B. W., & others.

By: W. Stephen, P. Goebel, B. Taylor & others

Source: ORCID
Added: January 18, 2022

journal article

Movement of mercury from streams to terrestrial consumers by aquatic insects across a gradient of land cover types and dissolved organic carbon

Chaves-Ulloa, R., Baer, N. A., Chen, C. Y., Cottingham, K. L., Ewing, H. A., Roebuck, H. J., … Weathers, K. C.

By: R. Chaves-Ulloa, N. Baer, C. Chen, K. Cottingham, H. Ewing, H. Roebuck, B. Taylor, K. Weathers

Source: ORCID
Added: January 18, 2022

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