Luquillo Bibliography
Filters: Author is Zou, X. M. [Clear All Filters]
(1994). Mapping a long-term ecological research area in Puerto Rico.
Soil Survey Horizons. 35, 111-121.
(1995). Effects of dinitrogen-fixing trees on phosphorus biogeochemical cycling in contrasting forests.
Soil Science Society of America Journal. 59(5), 1452-1458.
(1996). Earthworm abundance and species composition in abandoned tropical crop lands: comparisons of tree plantations and secondary forests.
Pedobiologia. 40, 385-391.
(1997). Changes in earthworm densityand community structure in abandoned tropical pastures.
Soil Biology Biochemistry. 29, 627-629.
(1998). Denitrification.
(, Ed.).Standard soil methods forlong-term ecological research. 272-288.
(1998). Soil carbon accretion and earthworm recoveryfollowing revegetation in abandoned sugarcane fields.
Soil Biology and Biochemistry. 3, 825-830.
(1998). Soil micro arthropod community structure and litter decomposition dynamics: a site study of tropical and temperate sites.
Applied Soil Ecology. 9, 33-38.
(1998). Soil micro arthropod contributions to decomposition dynamics: tropical-temperate comparisons of a single substrate.
Ecology. 80(6), 1873-1882.
(1999). Earthworm abundance and distribution pattern in contrasting plant communities within a tropical wet forest in Puerto Rico.
Caribbean Journal of Science. 35(1), 93-100.
(1999). Earthworms influence on N availability and the growth of Cecropia schreberiana in tropical pasture and forest soils.
Pedobiologia. 43, 1-6.
(1999). Nitrogen dynamics in decomposing chestnut oak (Quercusprinus L) in mesic temperate and tropical forest.
Applied Soil Ecology. 131, 69-175.
(1999). Plant and litter influences on earthworm abundance and community structure in a tropical wet forest.
Biotropica. 31(3), 486-493.
(1999). Stable isotopic studies of earth worm feeding ecology in tropical ecosystems of Puerto Rico.
Rapid Communications in Mass Spectrometry. 13, 1295-1299.
(2001). Earthworms in tropical tree plantations: effects of managment and relations with soil carbon and nutrient use efficiency.
(, Ed.).Management of Tropical Plantations Forests and their Soil Litter System. 289-301.
(2001). Soil fauna and microbial interactions:comparisons between tropical and subalpine forests.
Oecologia. 128, 549-556.
(2002). Exotic earthworms accelerate plant litter decomposition in a Puerto Rican pasture and a wet forest.
Ecological Applications. 12, 1406-1417.
(2002). Retention of nitrogen by N-fixing species in tropical tree plantations.
Soil Science Society of America Journal. 66, 612-619.
(2002). Stratification in resource use and mineralization between native and exotic earthworms in a tropical wet forest of Puerto Rico.
Biology and Fertility of Soils. 36, 43-52.
(2002). Tree species effects on soil Macrofauna in tropical tree plantations of Puerto Rico.
Forest Ecology and Management. 170(1), 161-171.
(2002). Interactive effects of native and exotic earthworms on resource use and nutrient mineralization in a tropical wet forest soil of Puerto Rico.
Biology and Fertility of Soils. 36, 43-52. Abstract
(2003). Nitrogen retention in temperate hardwood forests: the vernal dam hypothesis.
Acta Phytoecologica Sinica. 27, 11-15.
(2003). Recovery of native earthworms in abandoned tropical pastures.
Conservation Biology. 17, 999-1006.
(2004). Asynchronous fluctuation of soil microbial biomass and plant litterfall in a tropical wet forest.
Plant and Soil. 260, 147-154.
(2004). A comprehensive evaluation on sustainable management of a mountain community: A case study on Daka village, Yunnan.
Acta Ecologica Sinica. 24(12), 2915-2919.
(2004). Plant influences on native and exotic earthworms during secondary succession in old tropical pastures.
Pedobiologia. 48, 215-226.
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