2022 ESA Annual Meeting (August 14 - 19)

COS 169 Communities: Disturbance And Recovery 3

1:30 PM-3:00 PM
513F
1:30 PM
Skeletal Density Shifts in Corals Exposed to Hurricane Irma on the Florida Keys Reef Tract
Aliyah Griffith, B.S. Marine and Environmental Science, M.S. Marine Science, University of North Carolina Chapel Hill;Jose A. Sanchez Gomez, B.S. Mathematics, University of North Carolina Chapel Hill;Karl Castillo, Ph.D. Marine Sciences, University of North Carolina Chapel Hill;
1:45 PM
Speed in which communities recover function and composition after disturbance varies across latitude and community age
Mariana Bonfim, Ph.D. Temple University, Bonfim 2021, Temple Ambler Field Station & Department of Biology;Diana P. López, Ph.D. Temple University, López 2021, Department of Biological Science, Florida State University;MIchele R. Repetto, Ph.D. Temple University, Repetto 2021, Moss Landing Marine Laboratories;Amy L. Freestone, Ph.D. University of California, Davis 2005, Temple Ambler Field Station & Department of Biology;
2:00 PM
How Fire, Canopy Gaps, and Deer Interact to Change the Temperate Forest Seed Bank
Samuel P. Reed, n/a, University of Minnesota;Alejandro A. Royo, PhD, Northern Research Station, USDA Forest Service;Walter P. Carson, University of Pittsburgh, Department of Biological Sciences;Castilleja F. Olmsted, University of Pittsburgh, Department of Biological Sciences;Lee E. Frelich, University of Minnesota;Peter B. Reich, Ph.D., University of Minnesota; Institute for Global Change Biology, University of Michigan;
2:15 PM
Interactions between wildfire and recreation influence plant community trajectories
Jenny L. McCune, n/a, University of Lethbridge;Jed Lloren, University of Lethbridge;
2:30 PM
Pine encroachment and the absence of fire suppress nitrogen effects on grassland community composition
George R. Wheeler, University of Nebraska-Lincoln;Chad Brassil, University of Nebraska, Lincoln;Johannes Knops, Xián Jiaotong Liverpool University;
2:45 PM
Varied long-term responses to climate change among steady states in a historical grazing gradient in southeast Utah
Rebecca Finger-Higgens, USGS-Southwest Biological Research Station;Jayne Belnap, U.S. Geological Survey;Anna Knight, MS, US Geological Survey Southwest Biological Science Center;Erika Geiger, U.S. Geological Survey;Mike C. Duniway, US Geological Survey;