A
Albert J. Parker
Researcher at University of Georgia
Publications - 40
Citations - 1439
Albert J. Parker is an academic researcher from University of Georgia. The author has contributed to research in topics: Pinus clausa & Population. The author has an hindex of 22, co-authored 39 publications receiving 1362 citations.
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The topographic relative moisture index: an approach to soil-moisture assessment in mountain terrain
TL;DR: The Topographic Relative Moisture Index (TRMI) as mentioned in this paper is designed to indicate the relative soil moisture availability among sites in mountain terrain, which is a summed scalar index of four slope parameters: topographic position, slope aspect, steepness, and slope configuration.
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Variation of surficial soil hydraulic properties across land uses in the southern Blue Ridge Mountains, North Carolina, USA
TL;DR: In this article, the authors characterize soil physical properties under three land-use classes (forest, pasture, and managed lawn) in the southern Blue Ridge Mountains of southwestern North Carolina, and a total of 90 points were sampled (30 in each land use class) throughout a 983 km 2 study area.
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Effects of watershed land use and geomorphology on stream low flows during severe drought conditions in the southern Blue Ridge Mountains, Georgia and North Carolina, United States
TL;DR: In this article, the influence of land use and watershed geomorphic characteristics on low-flow variability in the southern Blue Ridge Mountains of North Carolina and Georgia was assessed, and watershed forest cover demonstrated a consistent, significant positive relationship with low flows, despite the higher evapotranspiration rates associated with forest compared with other land covers and despite the relatively small range of disturbance in this study area.
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Climate remains an important driver of post-European vegetation change in the eastern United States.
Neil Pederson,Anthony W. D'Amato,James M. Dyer,David R. Foster,David Goldblum,Justin L. Hart,Amy E. Hessl,Louis R. Iverson,Stephen T. Jackson,Stephen T. Jackson,Dario Martin-Benito,Brian C. McCarthy,Ryan W. McEwan,David J. Mladenoff,Albert J. Parker,Bryan N. Shuman,John W. Williams +16 more
TL;DR: It is concluded that climate change has not contributed sig-nificantly to observed changes in forest composition, and the authors restrict their focus to a single element of climate: increasing temperature since the end of the Little Ice Age ca.
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Fine-scale genetic structure in Pinus clausa (Pinaceae) populations: effects of disturbance history.
TL;DR: Interannual variability in allele frequencies of surviving seedlings may account for the absence of genetic structure in populations of two varieties of Pinus clausa.