Bryospheres in oligotrophic headwater streams provide nutrient-dense habitats and dominate stream nutrient cycling

Abstract

Department

Description

Provenance

Subjects

bryophyte, aquatic moss, Hubbard Brook, biomass, disturbance, anchor ice, nitrate, phosphate, detritus

Citation

Published Version (Please cite this version)

10.1086/733067

Publication Info

Steele, Jessee JB, Audrey N Thellman, Olivia K Vought, Emma J Rosi, Tammy Wooster, Christopher T Solomon and Emily S Bernhardt (2024). Bryospheres in oligotrophic headwater streams provide nutrient-dense habitats and dominate stream nutrient cycling. Freshwater Science. pp. 000–000. 10.1086/733067 Retrieved from https://hdl.handle.net/10161/31617.

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Scholars@Duke

Bernhardt

Emily S. Bernhardt

James B. Duke Distinguished Professor of Biology

Emily Bernhardt is an ecosystem ecologist and biogeochemist whose research is principally concerned with tracking the movement of elements through ecological systems. Dr. Bernhardt's research aims to document the extent to which the structure and function of aquatic ecosystems is being altered by land use change (urbanization, agriculture, mining) global change (rising CO2, rising sea levels) and chemical pollution. Ultimately this information is necessary to determine whether and how ecosystem change can be mitigated or prevented through active ecosystem management.


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