COS 55 - Wetlands

Wednesday, August 14, 2019: 8:00 AM-11:30 AM
M112, Kentucky International Convention Center
Presider:
Martha L Carlson Mazur
8:00 AM
Assessing mode of reproduction in Vallisneria americana of the Hudson River, NY and the Chesapeake Bay, MD
Carrie Perkins, University of Maryland College Park; Maile C. Neel, University of Maryland
8:20 AM
Riparian vegetation and hydrologic routing affect water quality and habitat viability in two restored urban wetlands
Martha L Carlson Mazur, Bellarmine University; Nicholas M Goebel, Bellarmine University; Suraj Neupane, Bellarmine University; Catherine G Gomez, Bellarmine University
8:40 AM
Impacts of human land use on plant community composition in Alberta Oil Sands wetlands
Cari D. Ficken, University of Waterloo; Rebecca Rooney, University of Waterloo
9:20 AM
Biotic homogenization of wetland nematode communities by exotic Spartina alterniflora in China
Youzheng Zhang, Fudan University; Steven Pennings, University of Houston; Bo Li, Fudan University; Jihua Wu, Fudan University
9:40 AM
9:50 AM
Plant functional traits, community composition, and environmental conditions combine to produce ecosystem-level N cycling dynamics in an individual-based model of wetlands
William S. Currie, University of Michigan; Kenneth J. Elgersma, University of Northern Iowa; Jason P. Martina, Texas A&M University; Sean Sharp, University of Michigan; Deborah Goldberg, University of Michigan
10:10 AM
Ignoring the impact of burrowing crabs causes an underestimation of the salt marsh carbon flux
Laura Elisabeth Agusto, The Swire institute of Marine Science, The University of Hong Kong, The University of Hong Kong; Benoit Thibodeau, The Swire institute of Marine Science, The University of Hong Kong, The University of Hong Kong; Jianwu Tang, Marine Biological Laboratory, The University of Chicago; Faming Wang, Marine Biological Laboratory, The University of Chicago; Stefano Cannicci, The Swire institute of Marine Science, The University of Hong Kong, The University of Hong Kong
10:30 AM
Disentangling interactions of Phragmites invasion, hydrology and nutrient loading helps predict N-removal in freshwater coastal wetlands
Sean Joseph Sharp, University of Michigan; Kenneth J. Elgersma, University of Northern Iowa; Jason P. Martina, Texas A&M University; Deborah Goldberg, University of Michigan; William S. Currie, University of Michigan
10:50 AM
Propagule pressure and clonal branching architecture interact along a nitrogen gradient to influence invasion outcomes in a simulated wetland system
Jason P. Martina, Texas A&M University; Kenneth J. Elgersma, University of Northern Iowa; Sean S. Sharp, University of Michigan; Deborah Goldberg, University of Michigan; William S. Currie, University of Michigan
11:10 AM
CO2 and CH4 gas fluxes from different vegetation communities in tidally restricted and unrestricted wetlands
Faming Wang, South China Botanical Garden, CAS, Marine Biological Lab; Jianwu Tang, Marine Biological Laboratory, The University of Chicago; Kevin D. Kroeger, US Geological Survey; Meagan Eagle Gonneea, U.S. Geological Survey
See more of: Contributed Talks