PS 64
Latebreaking: Climate Change

Friday, August 15, 2014: 8:30 AM-10:30 AM
Exhibit Hall, Sacramento Convention Center
Net ecosystem productivity of US forests and carbon losses from the potential forest sink
Yude Pan, Forest Service; James E. Smith, US Forest Service, Northern Research Station; Kevin McCullough, Forest Service; Richard Birdsey, Forest Service
Climate change expected to increase pathogen invasibility in Asia
Laurence Cyril Henson, San Francisco State University; Vance T. Vredenburg, San Francisco State University
Assessing desert aquatic habitat under varying management and climate scenarios
Mark B. Hausner, Desert Research Institute; Kevin P. Wilson, Death Valley National Park; D. Bailey Gaines, Death Valley National Park; Francisco Suárez, Pontificia Universidad Católica de Chile; Gayton G. Scoppettone, United States Geological Survey Biological Resources Division; Scott W. Tyler, University of Nevada Reno
Elevated spring temperatures induce abnormal late-season phenology in New England Viburnum
Laura M. Garrison, Brown University; David Chatelet, Brown University; Michael Donoghue, Yale University; Erika J. Edwards, Brown University
Functional traits of lianas differ from those of trees in a lowland tropical forest
Courtney G. Collins, University of California, Riverside; Joseph S. Wright, Smithsonian Tropical Research Institute; Nina Wurzburger, University of Georgia
High temperatures, evaporative water loss, and desert avifauna: Mapping dehydration in the Cactus Wren
Thomas P. Albright, University of Nevada, Reno; Denis Mutiibwa, University of Nevada, Reno; Blair O. Wolf, University of New Mexico; Andrew E. Mckechnie, University of Pretoria; EK Smith, University of New Mexico; Alexander R. Gerson, University of New Mexico; William A. Talbot, University of New Mexico; JJ O'Neill, University of New Mexico; Giancarlo Sadoti, University of Nevada, Reno
Forest productivity under climate change - projections across species and forest types in a coastal British Columbia landscape
Dunbar N. Carpenter, University of Wisconsin-Madison; David J. Mladenoff, University of Wisconsin-Madison; Caren C. Dymond, British Columbia Minstry of Forests, Lands, and Natural Resource Operations; David L. Spittlehouse, British Columbia Minstry of Forests, Lands, and Natural Resource Operations
Foundations of an ongoing citizen science monitoring plant phenology at Pepperwood in Sonoma Couny, California
Prahlada D. Papper, Santa Rosa Junior College; Susan J. Mazer, University of California, Santa Barbara
Relative importance of clonal and sexual reproduction for Avicennia germinans expansion
Cori Speights, Texas A&M-Corpus Christi; David J. Grisé, Texas A&M University-Corpus Christi; R. Deborah Overath, Texas A&M University - Corpus Christi
Predicting climate change impacts on the potential distribution of 12 endemic Skinks (Genus:Plestiodon) of Mexico
Mayra Oyervides, University of Texas-Pan American; T. Patricia Feria, The University of Texas-Pan American; Manuel Feria, Universidad Nacional Autónoma de México
Arbuscular mycorrhizal fungi markedly reduce N2O emissions from an organic soil
Xuelin Zhang, Henan Agricultural University; Shuijin Hu, North Carolina State University; Cong Tu, North Carolina State University; S. Chris Reberg-Horton, North Carolina State University; Yunpeng Qiu, North Carolina State University, Raleigh, NC 27695, USA
The eco-physiology of marcescence in dominant oak species in Missouri
Sandra Pitcher, Missouri Western State University; Derek Payne, Missouri Western State University; Dawn Drake, Missouri Western State University; Csengele Barta, Missouri Western State University
Predicting growth responses to climate change in the barnacle Balanus glandula:  a test of temperature sensitivity using a Dynamic Energy Budget model
E.F.R. Hazelton, Harvey Mudd College; S. E. Gilman, The Claremont Colleges; Michael Nishizaki, Friday Harbor Laboratories; Emily Carrington, Friday Harbor Laboratories
Does accounting for adaptation to local climate reduce the gap between models and observations in predicting future isoprene emission loads into the atmosphere?
Csengele Barta, Missouri Western State University; Sandra Pitcher, Missouri Western State University; Phillip Mueller, Missouri Western State University; Jesse Campbell, Missouri Western State University
Differential seed size and maternal effects in Quercus douglasii affects drought stress in seedlings
Lynn C. Sweet, University of California, Santa Barbara; Elizabeth H. Hiroyasu, Bren School of Environmental Science & Management, University of California, Santa Barbara; Stephanie E. Steele, University of California, Los Angeles
Predicting present and future suitable habitat of Ixodes scapularis, vector of Lyme disease, in the Texas-Mexico border
T. Patricia Feria, The University of Texas-Pan American; Guadalupe Gordillo Sr., Unidad de Investigación en Enfermedades Infecciosas, Centro Médico Nacional SXXI, IMSS; Ana L. Cavazos Jr., The University of Texas-Pan American; Margarita Vargas-Sandoval, Universidad Michoacana de San Nicolas de Hidalgo; Alexandra Brown, College of Veterinary Medicine and Biomedical Sciences, Texas A&M University,; Abha Grover, The University of Texas-Pan American; Javier Torres, Unidad de Investigación en Enfermedades Infecciosas, Centro Médico Nacional SXXI, IMSS; Raul F. Medina, College of Agriculture and Life Sciences, Texas A&M University; Ivan Castro-Arellano, College of Science and Engineering, Texas State University-San Marcos; Adalberto Pérez de León, . Livestock Insects Research Laboratory; Maria D. Esteve-Gassent, College of Veterinary Medicine and Biomedical Sciences, Texas A&M University,
Soil organic carbon and total nitrogen storage in two restored tallgrass prairies at Emiquon in Illinois: The potential for C sequestration
Hua Chen, University of Illinois at Springfield; Sophia Pham, University of Illinois at Springfield
See more of: Latebreaking Posters