PS 101
Latebreaking: Modeling

Friday, August 14, 2015: 8:30 AM-10:30 AM
Exhibit Hall, Baltimore Convention Center
Modeling the impacts of  drought-fire relationship in carbon stocks in the Xingu basin
Bruno Lopes Faria, Woods Hole Research Center; Michael T. Coe, Woods Hole Research Center; Marcia N. Macedo, Woods Hole Research Center
Modeling biodiversity of the New York coastal urban fringe
Marcia S. Meixler, Rutgers University; Eric W. Sanderson, Wildlife Conservation Society; Kim Fisher, Wildlife Conservation Society; Elizabeth Newton, Rutgers University; Rachael Sacatelli, Rutgers University
Novel methods for inferring species interaction strengths from microbial time series data
Zachary Cohen, University of Illinois; Philippe Doucet Beaupré, University of Illinois; James O'Dwyer, University of Illinois
Non-native mammals are homogenizing island faunas worldwide
Emily K. Longman, Brown University; Kyle Rosenblad, University of California, Berkeley; Dov F. Sax, Brown University
Marginal utility of conditional sensitivity analyses for dynamic models
S. Thomas Purucker, U.S. Environmental Protection Agency; Tao Hong, Oak Ridge Institute for Science and Education
Ecological red-line delineation of Beijing-Tianjin-Hebei Area
Kaipeng Xu, Chinese Academy for Environmental Planning; Jun Lu, Chinese Academy for Environmental Planning; Xiahui Wang, Chinese Academy for Environmental Planning; Jingjing Wang, Chinese Academy for Environmental Planning
Modeling urban host tree distributions for invasive forest insects using a two-step approach
Mark Ambrose, North Carolina State University; Frank H. Koch, US Forest Service; Denys Yemshanov, Natural Resources Canada
Ecohydrological dynamics of tropical watersheds in response to land use and climate changes
Mei Yu, University of Puerto Rico, Rio Piedras; Qiong Gao, University of Puerto Rico, Rio Piedras
Utilizing stable hydrogen isotopes to understand range changes using the Magnolia warbler (Setophaga magnolia)
Elizabeth C. Abraham, Youngstown State University; Colleen E. McLean, Youngstown State University; Lucas W. DeGroote, Carnegie Museum of Natural History; Peter Kimosop, Youngstown State University; Ian J. Renne, Youngstown State University
3D modeling of tree morphological plasticity using photogram-metry and small unmanned aerial vehicles
Nikolay Strigul, Washington State University Vancouver; Demetrios Gatziolis, USDA Forest Service Pacific Northwest Research Station; Jean Lienard, Washington State University Vancouver; Andre Vogs, N/A
A time-inhomogeneous Markov chain approach to predict forest biomass under dynamic disturbance regimes
Jean Lienard, Washington State University Vancouver; Nikolay Strigul, Washington State University Vancouver
Effects of model complexity and priors on prediction using sequential importance sampling/resampling for conservation of species
Kylee D. Dunham, Alabama Cooperative Fish and Wildlife Research Unit, Auburn University; James B. Grand, Alabama Cooperative Fish and Wildlife Research Unit, Auburn University
Role of white-tailed deer as a host for the cattle fever tick (Rhipicephalus (Boophilus) microplus) in south Texas, USA: A spatially-explicit model
Hsiao-Hsuan Wang, Texas A&M University; Pete D. Teel, Texas A&M University; William E. Grant, Texas A&M University
Employing statistical models and Geographic Information Systems (GIS) to investigate the effect of changing marsh edge on the biomass of estuarine nekton in Barataria Bay, Louisiana, USA
Kristy A. Lewis, George Mason University; Kim de Mutsert, George Mason University; James H. Cowan Jr., Louisiana State University
Evaluating the congruence between distance-based and Bayesian multivariate models to predict oyster-reef community response to environmental stressors
Y. Stacy Zhang, Duke University; James Clark, Duke University; F. Joel Fodrie, University of North Carolina at Chapel Hill; Maxwell L. Tice-Lewis, University of North Carolina at Chapel Hill; S. Gray Redding, University of North Carolina at Chapel Hill
See more of: Latebreaking Posters