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Robert R. Lane
Researcher at Louisiana State University
Publications - 66
Citations - 2894
Robert R. Lane is an academic researcher from Louisiana State University. The author has contributed to research in topics: Wetland & River delta. The author has an hindex of 28, co-authored 62 publications receiving 2452 citations.
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Nitrate-nitrogen retention in wetlands in the Mississippi River Basin
TL;DR: In this paper, the authors compared the average nitrate-nitrogen retention as a result of river water diversions in experimental wetland basins in Ohio for 18 wetland-years and a large wetland complex in Louisiana for 4 years.
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Water Quality Analysis of a Freshwater Diversion at Caernarvon, Louisiana
TL;DR: In this paper, the authors investigated the impact of the diversion of water from the Mississippi River into the Breton Sound estuary on water quality and salinity in the Gulf of Mexico.
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Implications of global climatic change and energy cost and availability for the restoration of the Mississippi delta
John W. Day,John A. Barras,Ellis J. Clairain,James B. Johnston,Dubravko Justic,G. Paul Kemp,Jae-Young Ko,Robert R. Lane,William J. Mitsch,Gregory D. Steyer,Paul H. Templet,Alejandro Yáñez-Arancibia +11 more
TL;DR: The main causes of this loss are the near complete isolation of the Mississippi River from the delta, mostly due to the construction of flood control levees, and pervasive hydrological disruption of the deltaic plain this article.
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The Use of Wetlands in the Mississippi Delta for Wastewater Assimilation: A Review
John W. Day,Jae-Young Ko,John M. Rybczyk,Dugan Sabins,R. Bean,G. Berthelot,Christopher G. Brantley,Christopher G. Brantley,L. Cardoch,William H. Conner,Jason N. Day,Andrew J. Englande,Sam E. Feagley,Emily Hyfield,Robert R. Lane,Joel Lindsey,J. Mistich,Enrique Reyes,Robert R. Twilley +18 more
TL;DR: In this article, the use of wetlands for treatment of wastewaters has a number of important ecological and economic benefits, such as improved effluent water quality, increased accretion rates to help offset subsidence, increased productivity of vegetation, and financial and energy savings of capital not invested in conventional tertiary treatment systems.
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The effects of riverine discharge on temperature, salinity, suspended sediment and chlorophyll a in a Mississippi delta estuary measured using a flow-through system
TL;DR: The impact of diverted Mississippi River water on temperature, salinity, total suspended sediment (TSS) and chlorophyll a were monitored in the Breton Sound estuary from September 7, 2000, to August 28, 2002 as mentioned in this paper.