Luquillo Bibliography
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(2002). A walk in through the Amazon from a biogeochemical perspective.
Ecology. 83, 3237.
(1996). Waste not, want not: toe-clips as a source of DNA.
Journal of Herpetology. 30, 445-447.
(2005). A water budget for the Caribbean National Forest with special emphasis on bi-directional riverine connectivity.
Institute of Ecology.
(1998). Water budgets of small forested and agriculturally-developed montane watershed in eastern Puerto Rico.
(, Ed.).Proceedings of the Tropical Hydrology and Caribbean Water Resources, American Water Resources Association. 199-204.
(2009). Water-soluble organic and nitrogen levels in cloud and rainwater in a background marine environment under influence of different air masses.
Journal of Atmospheric Chemistry. DOI, 10.1007/s10874-009-9125-6.
(2009). Water-soluble organic and nitrogen levels in cloud and rainwater in a background marine environment under influence of different air masses.
Journal of Atmospheric Chemistry. 61, 85-99. Abstract
(2000). Watershed processes: fluxes of water, dissolved constituents, sediment.
(, Ed.). 26-41.
(1990). Watershed scale rainfall interception on two forested watersheds in the Luquillo Mountains of Puerto Rico.
Journal of Hydrology. 113, 89-102.
(2008). Weathering of the Rio Blanco quartz diorite, Luquillo Mountains, Puerto Rico: Coupling oxidation, dissolution, and fracturing.
Geochim Cosmochim Acta. 72, 4488-4507.
(2001). What is ecosystem structure.
Journal of Science Caribbean. 37, 132-134.
(2004). What is hydrologic connectivity and why is it ecologically important?.
Hydrological Processes. 17, 2685-2689.
(2001). What is the observed relationship between species richness and productivity?.
Ecology. 82(9), 2381-2396.
(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
(2008). Why Are Predators More Sensitive to Habitat Size than Their Prey? Insights from Bromeliad Insect Food Webs..
The American Naturalist. 761-771 [DOI: 10.1086/592868]. Abstract
(1999). Will concern for biodiversity spell doom to tropical forest management?.
The Science of the total environment. 240(1999), 123-131.
(2005). Wood decomposition of Cyrilla Racemiflora (Cyrillaceae) in Puerto Rican dry and wet forests: a 13-year case study.
Biotropica. 37(3), 452-456.
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