The Everglades experiments [electronic resource] : lessons for ecosystem restoration / Curtis J. Richardson.

Covering more than 4,300 square miles in Southern Florida, the Everglades are the largest subtropical wilderness in the United States. It has been designated an International Biosphere Reserve, a World Heritage Site, and a Wetland of International Importance, in recognition of its significance to al...

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Bibliographic Details
Online Access: Full Text (via Springer)
Main Author: Richardson, Curtis J.
Format: Electronic eBook
Language:English
Published: New York : Springer, ©2008.
Series:Ecological studies ; v. 201.
Subjects:
Table of Contents:
  • Everglades Ecosystem
  • Overview of Gradient Studies and Experiments
  • Ecological Status of the Everglades: Environmental and Human Factors that Control the Peatland Complex on the Landscape
  • Soil Characteristics of the Everglades Peatland
  • Vegetation and Algae of the Everglades Fen
  • Nutrient and Hydrologic Gradient Studies
  • to the Gradient Studies
  • Enrichment Gradients in WCA-2A and Northern WCA-3A: Water, Soil, Plant Biomass, and Nutrient Storage Responses
  • Geologic Settings and Hydrology Gradients in the Everglades
  • Effects of Hydrologic Management Decisions on Everglades Tree Islands
  • Macrophyte Community Responses in the Everglades with an Emphasis on Cattail (Typha domingensis) and Sawgrass (Cladium jamaicense) Interactions along a Gradient of Long-Term Nutrient Additions, Altered Hydroperiod, and Fire
  • Algal Responses to Long-Term Nutrient Additions
  • Macroinvertebrate Responses to a Gradient of Long-Term Nutrient Additions, Altered Hydroperiod, and Fire
  • Historical Changes in Water Quality and Vegetation in WCA-2A Determined by Paleoecological Analyses
  • Carbon Cycling and Dissolved Organic Matter Export in the Northern Everglades
  • Everglades Experiments
  • to a Mesocosm Approach for Establishment of Phosphorus Gradient Experiments
  • Water Quality, Soil Chemistry, and Ecosystem Responses to P Dosing
  • Macrophyte Slough Community Response to Experimental Phosphorus Enrichment and Periphyton Removal
  • Decomposition of Litter and Peat in the Everglades: The Influence of P Concentrations
  • Experimental Assessment of Phosphorus Effects on Algal Assemblages in Dosing Mesocosms
  • Macroinvertebrate and Fish Responses to Experimental P Additions in Everglades Sloughs
  • Plant Community Response to Long-Term N and P Fertilization
  • The Effects of Disturbance, Phosphorus, and Water Level on Plant Succession in the Everglades
  • Establishment and Seedling Growth of Sawgrass and Cattail from the Everglades
  • Modeling Ecosystem Responses to Phosphorus Additions
  • Long-Term Phosphorus Assimilative Capacity (PAC) in the Everglades
  • Spatial Distributions of Total Phosphorus and Phosphorus Accretion Rates in Everglades Soils
  • An Ecological Basis for Establishment of a Phosphorus Threshold for the Everglades Ecosystem
  • Lessons for Restoration of the Everglades
  • An Ecological Approach for Restoration of the Everglades Fen.