4 results match your criteria: "J. W. Jones Ecological Research Center[Affiliation]"
PLoS One
March 2013
J. W. Jones Ecological Research Center, Newton, Georgia, United States of America.
Facilitative interactions between neighboring plants can influence community composition, especially in locations where environmental stress is a factor limiting competitive effects. The longleaf pine savanna of the southeastern United States is a threatened and diverse system where seedling recruitment success and understory species richness levels are regulated by the availability of moist microsites. We hypothesized that the dominant bunch grass species (Aristida stricta Michx.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFJ Environ Qual
December 2006
J.W. Jones Ecological Research Center, Route 2 Box 2324, Newton, GA 39870, USA.
To determine useful metrics for assessing stream water quality in the Southeastern Coastal Plain, we examined differences among two buffered and three unbuffered streams in an agricultural landscape in southwestern Georgia. Potential indicators included amphibian diversity and abundance, aquatic macroinvertebrate populations, riparian vegetative structure, water quality, and stream physical parameters. Variability among sites and treatments (buffered vs.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFJ Environ Qual
November 2003
J.W. Jones Ecological Research Center, Route 2, Box 2324, Newton, GA 31770, USA.
Little attention has been given to the ecology of intermittent coastal plain streams in the southeastern United States, and it is not known whether available macroinvertebrate biomonitoring methods reliably detect degradation in these streams. This study compared differences in biomonitoring metrics between reference and agricultural streams, and between the flow period (January-April) and the intermittent flow period (May-December). Percentages of crustaceans, isopods, and Ephemeroptera-Plecoptera-Trichoptera (EPT) were significantly higher at the reference site than the two most impacted sites during the flow period, probably resulting from the abundance of leaf litter and lower temperatures.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFJ Environ Qual
January 2003
J.W. Jones Ecological Research Center, Newton, GA 31770, USA.
Since 1994, water-quality constituents have been measured monthly in three adjacent Coastal Plain watersheds in southwestern Georgia. During 1994, rainfall was 650 mm above annual average and the highest flows on record were observed. From November 1998 through November 2000, 19 months had below average rainfall.
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