Institution
Southern Illinois University Carbondale
Education•Carbondale, Illinois, United States•
About: Southern Illinois University Carbondale is a education organization based out in Carbondale, Illinois, United States. It is known for research contribution in the topics: Population & Poison control. The organization has 13570 authors who have published 24819 publications receiving 667385 citations. The organization is also known as: SIU Carbondale & SIUC.
Papers published on a yearly basis
Papers
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TL;DR: In this article, the effects of plant species controls on decomposition rates from environmental controls in northern peatlands using a full factorial, reciprocal transplant experiment of eight dominant bryophytes in four distinct peatland types in boreal Alberta, Canada.
Abstract: Summary 1. We separated the effects of plant species controls on decomposition rates from environmental controls in northern peatlands using a full factorial, reciprocal transplant experiment of eight dominant bryophytes in four distinct peatland types in boreal Alberta, Canada. Standard fractionation techniques as well as compound-specific pyrolysis molecular beam mass spectrometry were used to identify a biochemical mechanism underlying any interspecific differences in decomposition rates. 2. We found that over a 3-year field incubation, individual moss species and not micro-environmental conditions controlled early stages of decomposition. Across species, Sphagnum mosses exhibited a trade-off in resource partitioning into metabolic and structural carbohydrates, a pattern that served as a strong predictor of litter decomposition. 3. Decomposition rates showed a negative co-variation between species and their microtopographic position, as species that live in hummocks decomposed slowly but hummock microhabitats themselves corresponded to rapid decomposition rates. By forming litter that degrades slowly, hummock mosses appear to promote the maintenance of macropore structure in surface peat hummocks that aid in water retention. 4. Synthesis . Many northern regions are experiencing rapid climate warming that is expected to accelerate the decomposition of large soil carbon pools stored within peatlands. However, our results suggest that some common peatland moss species form tissue that resists decomposition across a range of peatland environments, suggesting that moss resource allocation could stabilize peatland carbon losses under a changing climate.
204 citations
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TL;DR: It is proposed that the usefulness of this soil ecological knowledge for restoration is best considered in the context of the severity of the original perturbation, the goals of the project, and the resilience of the ecosystem to disturbance.
Abstract: The variability in the type of ecosystem degradation and the specificity of restoration goals can challenge restorationists’ ability to generalize about approaches that lead to restoration success. The discipline of soil ecology, which emphasizes both soil organisms and ecosystem processes, has generated a body of knowledge that can be generally useful in improving the outcomes of restoration despite this variability. Here, we propose that the usefulness of this soil ecological knowledge (SEK) for restoration is best considered in the context of the severity of the original perturbation, the goals of the project, and the resilience of the ecosystem to disturbance. A straightforward manipulation of single physical, chemical, or biological components of the soil system can be useful in the restoration of a site, especially when the restoration goal is loosely defined in terms of the species and processes that management seeks to achieve. These single-factor manipulations may in fact produce cascading effects on several ecosystem attributes and can result in unintended recovery trajectories. When complex outcomes are desired, intentional and holistic integration of all aspects of the soil knowledge is necessary. We provide a short roster of examples to illustrate that SEK benefits management and restoration of ecosystems and suggest areas for future research.
204 citations
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TL;DR: Differences in the magnitude of maternal vs. biparental genetic differentiation support female philopatry to northwestern Atlantic, Gulf of Mexico, and Caribbean Sea natal nursery regions with higher levels of male‐mediated gene flow.
Abstract: We investigated the genetic structure of blacktip shark (Carcharhinus limbatus) continental nurseries in the northwestern Atlantic Ocean, Gulf of Mexico, and Caribbean Sea using mitochondrial DNA control region sequences and eight nuclear microsatellite loci scored in neonate and young-of-the-year sharks. Significant structure was detected with both markers among nine nurseries (mitochondrial PhiST = 0.350, P < 0.001; nuclear PhiST = 0.007, P < 0.001) and sharks from the northwestern Atlantic, eastern Gulf of Mexico, western Gulf of Mexico, northern Yucatan, and Belize possessed significantly different mitochondrial DNA haplotype frequencies. Microsatellite differentiation was limited to comparisons involving northern Yucatan and Belize sharks with nuclear genetic homogeneity throughout the eastern Gulf of Mexico, western Gulf of Mexico, and northwestern Atlantic. Differences in the magnitude of maternal vs. biparental genetic differentiation support female philopatry to northwestern Atlantic, Gulf of Mexico, and Caribbean Sea natal nursery regions with higher levels of male-mediated gene flow. Philopatry has produced multiple reproductive stocks of this commercially important shark species throughout the range of this study.
203 citations
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01 Jan 1979TL;DR: This chapter discusses the development ofEstimation Theory for Detection of Signals in Noise and Applications to Communication and Radar Systems, and its applications in Signals and Systems.
Abstract: 1 Introduction 2 Signals and Systems 3 Detection Theory 4 Detection of Signals in Noise 5 Estimation Theory 6 Estimation of Waveforms 7 Further Topics in Detection and Estimation 8 Applications to Communication and Radar Systems 9 Miscellaneous Applications Appendix A: Bilateral Transforms Appendix B: Calculus of Extrema Appendix C: Vectors and Matrices Subject Index Author Index
203 citations
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TL;DR: In this paper, a careful reading of Krasnoselskii's fixed-point theorem reveals that a convex set M and a mapping Pz = Bz + Az such that: 1. (i) Bx + Ay ∈ M for each x, y ∈ m 2. (ii) A is continuous and compact 3. (iii) B is a contraction.
203 citations
Authors
Showing all 13607 results
Name | H-index | Papers | Citations |
---|---|---|---|
Pulickel M. Ajayan | 176 | 1223 | 136241 |
Russel J. Reiter | 169 | 1646 | 121010 |
Derek R. Lovley | 168 | 582 | 95315 |
Martin B. Keller | 131 | 541 | 65069 |
Kurunthachalam Kannan | 126 | 820 | 59886 |
John P. Giesy | 114 | 1162 | 62790 |
Michael L. Blute | 112 | 527 | 45296 |
Jianjun Liu | 112 | 1040 | 71032 |
Janusz Pawliszyn | 109 | 788 | 52082 |
Wei Zhang | 104 | 2911 | 64923 |
Horst Zincke | 101 | 375 | 30818 |
Janet R. Daling | 100 | 354 | 31957 |
Eric Lam | 99 | 492 | 34893 |
Sergei V. Kalinin | 95 | 999 | 37022 |
John C. Cheville | 90 | 433 | 32806 |