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Jane C. Marks

Researcher at Northern Arizona University

Publications -  86
Citations -  4461

Jane C. Marks is an academic researcher from Northern Arizona University. The author has contributed to research in topics: Plant litter & Ecosystem. The author has an hindex of 32, co-authored 85 publications receiving 3877 citations. Previous affiliations of Jane C. Marks include Royal Victoria Infirmary & Bowling Green State University.

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Plastic responses to hot temperatures homogenize riparian leaf litter, speed decomposition, and reduce detritivores.

TL;DR: This paper investigated plasticity in cottonwood (Populus fremontii) leaf litter traits as well as the consequences of plasticity for riparian ecosystems and found that plastic responses to climate stress may constrict the expression of genetic variation in predictable ways that impact communities and ecosystems.
Journal Article

Itch following photochemotherapy for psoriasis.

TL;DR: Itch was measured quantitatively as nocturnal scratch in 12 patients with psoriasis treated with 8-methoxypsoralen and UVA and in 7 treated with dithranol and three of those treated with PUVA showed an increase inNocturnal limb movement which was mostly due to itch but partly due to restlessness.
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Dermatoglyphics in dermatitis herpetiformis.

TL;DR: In a dermatoglyphic study of 101 patients with dermatitis herpetiformis, comparison was made with their normal relatives and several random normal series, suggesting the involvement of genetic factors in the aetiology, and possibly intrauterine environmental influences as well.
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Ecosystem responses to restored flow in a travertine river

TL;DR: In this article, the authors quantified responses of ecosystem metabolism and N dynamics to the decommissioning and removal of a 100-y-old diversion dam in a desert stream, Fossil Creek, Arizona.
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The Influence of Leaf Type on Carbon and Nitrogen Assimilation by Aquatic Invertebrate Communities: A New Perspective on Trophic Efficiency

TL;DR: These results challenge traditional views of litter quality by demonstrating that trophic efficiency is negatively associated with decomposition rate across these four leaf types.