Zobrazeno 1 - 10
of 36
pro vyhledávání: '"James O. Luken"'
Autor:
James O. Luken
Publikováno v:
Natural Areas Journal. 40:45
Marginal land now devoted to growing harvested crops may be better suited to other land uses such as biodiversity enhancement and carbon sequestration. However, farmers are not encouraged to explore the development of these opportunities due largely
Publikováno v:
Freshwater Science. 33:159-167
The ecological effects of water hyacinth (Eichhornia crassipes), an introduced macrophyte, in freshwater systems depend on the growth and extent of floating mats. We studied macroinvertebrates associated with roots of water hyacinth in the Waccamaw R
Autor:
Keith Walters, John J. Hutchens, Zofia Noe, Kevin S. Godwin, James O. Luken, Jennifer Jackson
Publikováno v:
Estuaries and Coasts. 37:56-66
Increased freshwater and nutrient runoff associated with coastal development is implicated in dramatically altering estuarine communities along eastern US shorelines. We examined effects of three categories of shoreline development on high-marsh envi
Autor:
James O. Luken
Publikováno v:
Castanea. 77:327-334
The high marsh in southeast Atlantic coast salt marshes forms a relatively small but ecologically important transition zone between low marsh and the terrestrial shoreline. However, long-term trend data from high marshes are limited to a few studies.
Autor:
James O. Luken, Amanda R. Rotella
Publikováno v:
Southeastern Naturalist. 11:361-374
Eichhornia crassipes (Waterhyacinth) occurs in isolated populations along the Waccamaw River in northeast South Carolina. Although actively managed with herbicides, plant biomass and growth in this coastal, blackwater river have not been measured. We
Autor:
Amanda R. Rotella, Morgan D. Marsh, Laura L. Canton, Julie W. Murphy, Rachel A. Connelly, Caitlin C. Wessel, James O. Luken
Publikováno v:
Bulletin of the Ecological Society of America. 91:438-441
Autor:
John J. Hutchens, James O. Luken
Publikováno v:
Botany. 87:1007-1010
Charles Darwin first proposed that the Venus flytrap ( Dionaea muscipula Ellis) functions optimally by capturing and digesting large prey, the small prey escaping through openings at the trap margins. This hypothesis, although intuitively sound in th
Publikováno v:
Wetlands. 27:873-883
Community and environmental gradients within the ecological boundaries of Carolina bay wetlands may provide important information on the interaction between Carolina bays and associated uplands, and may also provide guidance for improved management.
Autor:
James O. Luken
Publikováno v:
The Journal of the Torrey Botanical Society. 134:45-52
Demography, growth, and flowering of Dionaea muscipula (Venus' fly trap) were studied during three years (2003–2005) following prescribed fire. Data were collected in permanent quadrats where the developing vegetation was either repeatedly clipped
Autor:
James O. Luken
Publikováno v:
Southeastern Naturalist. 4:573-584
Dionaea muscipula (Venus' fly trap) is endemic to a restricted area of the Carolina's Coastal Plain, including southeastern North Carolina and northeast- ern South Carolina. Our understanding of Venus' fly trap habitats is based largely on a single p