Publications by authors named "Emily A Santos"

Millions of people depend on ecosystem services provided by Tropical Dry Forests (TDFs), yet their proximity to population centers, seasonally dry climate, and the ease at which they are converted to agriculture has left only 10 % of their original extent globally. As more TDFs become protected, basic information relating TDF age to subsurface water resources will help guide forest recovery. Severe deforestation and recent reforestation around Bahía de Caráquez, Ecuador produced a mosaic of different successional stages ideal for exploring relationships between TDF age, subsurface water availability and species-specific responses to seasonal drought.

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Tropical urban estuaries are severely understudied. Little is known about the basic biogeochemical cycles and dominant ecosystem processes in these waterbodies, which are often low-lying and heavily modified. The San Juan Bay Estuary (SJBE) in San Juan, Puerto Rico is an example of such a system.

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Article Synopsis
  • The text presents four datasets related to primary production and nitrogen uptake in salt marsh grasses from a stable isotope tracer study conducted in Rhode Island.
  • These datasets include plant mass and height measurements, weekly stem height tracking, detailed data on plant compartments and sediment, and microbial removal estimates from denitrification enzyme assays.
  • All datasets and their analysis source code are compiled in the NitrogenUptake2016 R package, accessible through the Comprehensive R Archive Network.
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Salt marshes have the potential to intercept nitrogen that could otherwise impact coastal water quality. Salt marsh plants play a central role in nutrient interception by retaining N in above- and belowground tissues. We examine N uptake and allocation in two dominant salt marsh plants, short-form and .

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