COS 20 - Aquatic-terrestrial linkages: Behavior to biogeochemistry

Tuesday, August 7, 2007: 8:00 AM-11:30 AM
J1, San Jose McEnery Convention Center
8:00 AM
 When your mates get the munchies: Cannibalism as a consequence of flood regime
Michelle J. Greenwood, University of Canterbury; Angus R. McIntosh, University of Canterbury
8:20 AM
 Distributions of amphibian assemblages of zero-order basins and their relationships to the landscape mosaic in the Mill Creek Watershed, Del Norte County, California
Hartwell H. Welsh, USDA Forest Service, Pacific Southwest Research station; Garth R. Hodgson, USDA Forest Service, Pacific Southwest Research station
8:40 AM
 Recovery of sub-alpine lake basin fauna following removal of introduced trout
Karen L. Pope, USDA Forest Service, Pacific Southwest Research station; Sharon P. Lawler, University of California, Davis
9:00 AM
 Recognizing ditches as globally important interface ecosystems: An evaluation of their potential for mitigating anthropogenic impacts to receiving water bodies
Lynn V. Saunders, University of Florida; Thomas J. Saunders, University of Florida; Mark T. Brown, University of Florida
9:20 AM
 Old-growth riparian forest structure, the understory light environment, and periphyton production in low-order streams, Adirondack Mountains, NY
Jeremy P. Stovall, University of Vermont; William S. Keeton, University of Vermont; Clifford E. Kraft, Cornell University
9:40 AM
9:50 AM
 Effects of landscape structure and prey availability on insectivorous bat foraging ecology
Elizabeth M. Hagen, Arizona State University; John L. Sabo, Arizona State University
10:10 AM
 When bears sit in the woods: Brown bear (Ursus arctos) feeding on salmon alters N cycling in riparian soils
Gordon W. Holtgrieve, University of Washington; Daniel E. Schindler, University of Washington; Peter K. Jewett, Stanford University
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