Showing 1 - 20 results of 28 for search '"Great Smoky Mountains National Park"', query time: 0.49s Refine Results
  1. 1

    Spatial and temporal patterns of ozone at Great Smoky Mountains National Park and implications for plant responses by Howard S. Neufeld, Alyssa Sullins, Barkley C. Sive, Allen S. Lefohn

    Published 2019-04-01
    “…Great Smoky Mountains National Park (GRSM) is the most visited National Park in the United States and has the highest levels of biodiversity of any park unit. …”
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    Measurement of ambient aerosol hydration state at Great Smoky Mountains National Park in the southeastern United States by N. F. Taylor, D. R. Collins, C. W. Spencer, D. H. Lowenthal, B. Zielinska, V. Samburova, N. Kumar

    Published 2011-12-01
    “…The AS-TDMA was installed at a site in eastern Tennessee on the border of Great Smoky Mountains National Park for projects during the summer of 2006 and winter of 2007–2008. …”
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    An evaluation of species richness estimators for tardigrades of the Great Smoky Mountains National Park, Tennessee and North Carolina, USA by Diane R. NELSON, Paul J. BARTELS

    Published 2007-09-01
    “…For the past 5 years we have been conducting a large-scale, multi-habitat inventory of the tardigrades in the Great Smoky Mountains National Park (U.S.A.) as part of the All Taxa Biodiversity Inventory (ATBI) (see www.dlia.org). …”
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    Short-Term Effects of Recent Fire on the Production and Translocation of Pyrogenic Carbon in Great Smoky Mountains National Park by Lauren M. Matosziuk, Adrian Gallo, Jeff Hatten, Kevin D. Bladon, Danica Ruud, Maggie Bowman, Jessica Egan, Kate Heckman, Michael SanClements, Michael SanClements, Brian Strahm, Tyler Weiglein

    Published 2020-02-01
    “…We overcame those limitations by examining the Chimney Tops 2 Fire which burned 4,617 ha of the Great Smoky Mountains National Park (GRSMNP), including a National Ecological Observatory Network (NEON) site, in November 2016. …”
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    Species richness of soil and leaf litter tardigrades in the Great Smoky Mountains National Park (North Carolina/Tennessee, USA) by Diane R. Nelson, Paul J. Bartels

    Published 2013-05-01
    “…A large database now exists for tardigrades in the Great Smoky Mountains National Park (GSMNP) consisting of 780 samples, 15,618 specimens, and 80 species including 14 new to science. …”
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    Soil Collected in the Great Smoky Mountains National Park Yielded a Novel Listeria sensu stricto Species, L. swaminathanii by Catharine R. Carlin, Jingqiu Liao, Lauren K. Hudson, Tracey L. Peters, Thomas G. Denes, Renato H. Orsi, Xiaodong Guo, Martin Wiedmann

    Published 2022-06-01
    “…ABSTRACT Soil samples collected in the Great Smoky Mountains National Park yielded a Listeria isolate that could not be classified to the species level. …”
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  8. 8

    APPLIED GEOSPATIAL EDUCATION: ACQUISITION AND PROCESSING OF HIGH RESOLUTION AIRBORNE LIDAR AND ORTHOIMAGES FOR THE GREAT SMOKY MOUNTAINS NATIONAL PARK, SOUTHEASTERN UNITED STATES by T. R. Jordan, M. Madden, J. B. Sharma, S. S. Panda

    Published 2012-07-01
    “…Leaf-off lidar data were acquired at 1-m resolution of the Tennessee portion of the Great Smoky Mountain National Park (GRSM) and adjacent Foothills Parkway. …”
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    Myxomycetes associated with pipevine, a temperate liana by Coelho IL, Stephenson SL

    Published 2012-04-01
    Subjects: “…Great Smoky Mountains National Park…”
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    Retrospective investigation of Echinococcus canadensis emergence in translocated elk (Cervus canadensis) in Tennessee, USA, and examination of canid definitive hosts by BreeAnna Dell, Shelley J. Newman, Kathryn Purple, Brad Miller, Edward Ramsay, Robert Donnell, Richard W. Gerhold

    Published 2020-06-01
    “…In the early 2000’s, 253 elk (Cervus canadensis) originating from Alberta, Canada were released into the Great Smoky Mountains National Park and North Cumberland Wildlife Management Area in an effort to re-establish their historical range. …”
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    Estimating the Potential for Forest Degradation in the Eastern United States Woodlands from an Introduction of Sudden Oak Death by Dillon J. Haller, Michael C. Wimberly

    Published 2020-12-01
    “…Connectivity analysis in the Great Smoky Mountains National Park identified patches likely to be particularly important to <i>P. ramorum</i> spread. …”
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    Assessing impacts of sulfur deposition on aquatic ecosystems: A decision support system for the Southern Appalachians by Keith M. Reynolds, Paul F. Hessburg, Milena Lakicevic, Nicholas A. Povak, R. Brion Salter, Timothy J. Sullivan, Todd C. McDonnell, Bernard J. Cosby, William Jackson

    Published 2023-05-01
    “…Within the Great Smoky Mountains National Park, evidence for S CL exceedance based on an ANC criterion of 50 μeq · L−1 was strong at locations where ambient S deposition was at least two times the CL. …”
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    Past and Ongoing Field-Based Studies of Myxomycetes by Steven L. Stephenson

    Published 2023-09-01
    “…The most notable of these were the All Taxa Biodiversity Inventory (ATBI) project carried out in the Great Smoky Mountains National Park, the Planetary Biodiversity Inventory Project (PBI) carried out in localities throughout the world, and the Myxotropic project being carried out throughout the Neotropics. …”
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    Vegetation structural complexity and biodiversity in the Great Smoky Mountains by Jonathan A. Walter, Atticus E. L. Stovall, Jeff W. Atkins

    Published 2021-03-01
    “…We developed new metrics for quantifying internal vegetation structural complexity using terrestrial LiDAR scanning and applied them to 12 NEON forest plots across an elevational gradient in Great Smoky Mountains National Park, USA. We asked (1) How do our newly developed structure metrics compare to traditional metrics? …”
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    Trends in concentrations of atmospheric gaseous and particulate species in rural eastern Tennessee as related to primary emission reductions by R. L. Tanner, S. T. Bairai, S. F. Mueller

    Published 2015-09-01
    “…Air quality measurements at Look Rock, Tennessee – on the western edge of the Great Smoky Mountains National Park – were begun in 1980 and expanded during the 1980s to a National Park Service (NPS) IMPROVE network station. …”
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