Conserving and restoring submerged aquatic vegetation (SAV) are key management goals for estuaries worldwide because SAV integrates many aspects of water quality and provides a wide range of ecosystem services. Management strategies are typically focused on aggregated abundance of several SAV species, because species cannot be easily distinguished in remotely sensed data. Human land use and shoreline alteration have been shown to negatively impact SAV abundance, but the effects have varied with study, spatial scale, and location. The differences in reported effects may be partly due to the focus on abundance, which overlooks within-community and among-community dynamics that generate total SAV abundance. We analyzed long-term SAV aerial sur...
The state of North Carolina is concerned about the loss of submerged aquatic vegetation (SAV), which...
Great effort continues to focus on ecosystem restoration and reduction of nutrient inputs thought to...
Seagrass is an incredibly valuable habitat in the Chesapeake Bay. Students will use mock seagrass pa...
Conserving and restoring submerged aquatic vegetation (SAV) are key management goals for estuaries w...
Aerial surveys of coastal habitats can uniquely inform the science and management of shallow, coasta...
Seagrasses along with many other species of freshwater rooted submerged macrophytes in Chesapeake Ba...
Beds of submerged aquatic vegetation (SAV) are important natural resources which are critical habita...
Chesapeake Bay has undergone profound changes since European settlement. Increases in human and live...
The Chesapeake Bay, with its extensive littoral zone and broad salinity regime of Oto 25 ppt, suppor...
Submerged Aquatic Vegetation (SAV) in Chesapeake Bay has received significant attention in recent de...
Submerged aquatic vegetation (SAV) is an important living resource in many coastal areas throughout ...
In 1978, a program was initiated in the Chesapeake Bay region to investigate the decline of submerge...
Humans strongly impact the dynamics of coastal systems, yet surprisingly few studies mechanistically...
The rapid loss of Submerged Aquatic Vegetation (SAV) across the globe has prompted state and federal...
Information provided in existing field biomass and ground truth surveys of Chesapeake Bay submerged ...
The state of North Carolina is concerned about the loss of submerged aquatic vegetation (SAV), which...
Great effort continues to focus on ecosystem restoration and reduction of nutrient inputs thought to...
Seagrass is an incredibly valuable habitat in the Chesapeake Bay. Students will use mock seagrass pa...
Conserving and restoring submerged aquatic vegetation (SAV) are key management goals for estuaries w...
Aerial surveys of coastal habitats can uniquely inform the science and management of shallow, coasta...
Seagrasses along with many other species of freshwater rooted submerged macrophytes in Chesapeake Ba...
Beds of submerged aquatic vegetation (SAV) are important natural resources which are critical habita...
Chesapeake Bay has undergone profound changes since European settlement. Increases in human and live...
The Chesapeake Bay, with its extensive littoral zone and broad salinity regime of Oto 25 ppt, suppor...
Submerged Aquatic Vegetation (SAV) in Chesapeake Bay has received significant attention in recent de...
Submerged aquatic vegetation (SAV) is an important living resource in many coastal areas throughout ...
In 1978, a program was initiated in the Chesapeake Bay region to investigate the decline of submerge...
Humans strongly impact the dynamics of coastal systems, yet surprisingly few studies mechanistically...
The rapid loss of Submerged Aquatic Vegetation (SAV) across the globe has prompted state and federal...
Information provided in existing field biomass and ground truth surveys of Chesapeake Bay submerged ...
The state of North Carolina is concerned about the loss of submerged aquatic vegetation (SAV), which...
Great effort continues to focus on ecosystem restoration and reduction of nutrient inputs thought to...
Seagrass is an incredibly valuable habitat in the Chesapeake Bay. Students will use mock seagrass pa...