Successfully rehabilitating drained wetlands through hydrologic restoration is dependent on defining restoration targets, a process that is informed by pre-drainage conditions, as well as understanding linkages between hydrology and ecosystem structure. Paleoecological records can inform restoration goals by revealing long-term patterns of change, but are dependent on preservation of biomarkers that provide meaningful interpretations of environmental change. In the Florida Everglades, paleohydrological hind-casting could improve restoration forecasting, but frequent drying of marsh soils leads to poor preservation of many biomarkers. To determine the effectiveness of employing siliceous subfossils in paleohydrological reconstructions, we ex...
Despite their sensitivity to climate variability, few of the abundant sinkhole lakes of Florida have...
Sea level rise and the associated inland shift of the marsh-mangrove ecotone in south Florida have r...
We developed diatom-based prediction models of hydrology and periphyton abundance to inform assessme...
Successfully rehabilitating drained wetlands through hydrologic restoration is dependent on defining...
The Everglades, the largest Ramsar wetland in the USA, is a spatially complex mosaic of freshwater h...
Analysis of siliceous microfossils of a 79 cm long peat sediment core from Highlands Hammock State P...
Paleoecological reconstructions of environmental changes provide important information for Everglade...
Despite lake sensitivity to climate change, few Florida paleolimnological studies have focused on ch...
In this special issue, we report on efforts to reconstruct paleoclimate/paleolimnology of the Florid...
An 8.81 m sediment core from the fresh marsh area of the Pearl River delta was examined for pollen, ...
Long-term persistence of coastal wetlands depends on maintenance of surface elevations relative to s...
Available proxy records from the Florida peninsula give a varying view on hydrological changes durin...
Despite their sensitivity to climate variability, few of the abundant sinkhole lakes of Florida have...
Sea level rise and the associated inland shift of the marsh-mangrove ecotone in south Florida have r...
We developed diatom-based prediction models of hydrology and periphyton abundance to inform assessme...
Successfully rehabilitating drained wetlands through hydrologic restoration is dependent on defining...
The Everglades, the largest Ramsar wetland in the USA, is a spatially complex mosaic of freshwater h...
Analysis of siliceous microfossils of a 79 cm long peat sediment core from Highlands Hammock State P...
Paleoecological reconstructions of environmental changes provide important information for Everglade...
Despite lake sensitivity to climate change, few Florida paleolimnological studies have focused on ch...
In this special issue, we report on efforts to reconstruct paleoclimate/paleolimnology of the Florid...
An 8.81 m sediment core from the fresh marsh area of the Pearl River delta was examined for pollen, ...
Long-term persistence of coastal wetlands depends on maintenance of surface elevations relative to s...
Available proxy records from the Florida peninsula give a varying view on hydrological changes durin...
Despite their sensitivity to climate variability, few of the abundant sinkhole lakes of Florida have...
Sea level rise and the associated inland shift of the marsh-mangrove ecotone in south Florida have r...
We developed diatom-based prediction models of hydrology and periphyton abundance to inform assessme...