Luquillo Bibliography
Filters: First Letter Of Last Name is C [Clear All Filters]
(2009). Controls on long-term root and leaf litter decomposition in Neotropical forests.
Global Change Biology. 15, 1339-1355.
(2010). The Response of Heterotrophic Activity and Carbon Cycling to Nitrogen Additions and Warming in Two Tropical Soils.
Global Change Biology. 16, 2555-2572..
(2009). Biological Nitrogen Fixation in Two Tropical Forests: Ecosystem-Level Patterns and Effects of Nitrogen Fertilization.
Ecosystems. 12, 1299-1315.
(2010). Effects of chronic nitrogen additions on above- and belowground carbon dynamics in two tropical forests.
Biogeochemistry. 104, 203-225.
(2011). Changes in microbial community characteristics and soil organic matter with nitrogen additions in two tropical forests.
Ecology. 92, 621-632.
(2010). Cross-biome transplants of plant litter show decomposition models extend to a broader climatic range but lose predictability at the decadal time scale.
Global Change Biology. 16, 1744-1761.
(1991). Above and below ground organic matter storage and production in a tropical pine plantation and a paired broadleaf secondary forest.
Plant and Soil. 135, 257-268.
(1999). Dynamics of organic matter and nutrient return from litterfall in stands of ten tropical tree plantation species.
Forest Ecology and Management. 112, 263-279.
(1994). Responses of a fresh water shrimp to chemical and tactile stimuli from a large decapod predator.
Journal of the North American Benthological Society. 13, 291-298.
(2001). Freshwater shrimp effects on detrital processing and nutrients in a tropical headwater stream.
Ecology. 82, 775-783.
(2000). Estimating the potential role of freshwater shrimp on an aquatic insect assemblage in a tropical headwater stream: a bioenergetic approach.
Verhandlungen InternationaleVereinigung fur Theoretische undAngewandte Limnologie. 27, 2403-2407.
(1994). Non-visual cues in benthic predator-preysystems: introduction to a symposium.
Journal of the North American Benthological Society. 13, 266-267.
(2006). Effects of different types of conditioning on rates of leaf-litter shredding by Xiphocaris elongata, a neotropical freshwater shrimp.
Jornal of North American Benthological Society. 25(1), 198-208.
(2012). When and Where Biota Matter: Linking Disturbance Regimes, Species Characteristics, and Dynamics of Communities and Ecosystems.
(, Ed.).A Caribbean Forest Tapestry: The Multidimensional Nature of Disturbance and Response. Abstract
(1997). Scales and causes of patchiness in stream invertebratecommunities: top down predator effects?.
Journal of the North American Benthological Society. 16, 277-285.
(2006). The Role of Shrimp as Shredders and Litter Source on Leaf Breakdown Rates in Tropical Montane Streams.
Journal of the North American Benthological Society. 25, 196-206.
(2002). Particulate organic matter dynamics in tropical headwater streams: A comparison of biotic and abiotic factors.
Verhandlungen der Internationale Vereinigung fur Theorestische und Angewandte Limnologie. 28, 923-927.
(1995). Food web dynamics and applied problems.
(, Ed.).Food Webs: integration of patterns and dynamics. 327-455.
(2008). Toward Separating the Relative Importance of Invertebrate Consumption and Bioturbation in Puerto Rican Streams.
Biotropica. 40(4), 477–484.
(2008). Secondary production, longevity and resource consumption rates of freshwater shrimps in two tropical streams with contrasting geomorphology and food web structure.
Freshwater Biology. 53, 2504-2519.
(2009). A method to assess longitudinal riverine connectivity in tropical streams dominated by migratory biota.
Aquatic Conservation. 19, 714-723.
(2005). A water budget for the Caribbean National Forest with special emphasis on bi-directional riverine connectivity.
Institute of Ecology.
(2009). Forest recovery in a tropical landscape: what is the relative importance of biophysical, socioeconomic, and landscape variables?.
Landscape Ecol. 24, 629-642.
(2007). A New Species for a Bromeliad Phytotelm-Dwelling Tanytarsus (Diptera: Chironomidae)..
Annals of the Entomological Society of America. 100(5), 617-622.
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