project description
Soil Carbon Dynamics
Soil Carbon Budget During Establishment of Short Rotation Woody Crops
Edaphic Controls of Fine-Root Turnover Differ Between Pine and Poplar
Temporal Patterns of Fine-Root Production and Mortality During Forest Plantation Development
Aubrey, D.P., D.R. Coyle and M.D. Coleman. 2007. Ice damage in loblolly pine: understanding the factors that influence susceptibility. Forest Science. 53(5):580-589.
Sanchez, F.G., M.D. Coleman, C.T. Garten Jr., R.J. Luxmoore, J.A. Stanturf, C. Trettin, and S.D. Wullschleger. 2007. Soil carbon, after 3 years, under short-rotation woody crops grown under varying nutrient and water availability. Biomass and Bioenergy. (in press)
Samuelson, L.J., T.A. Stokes and M.D. Coleman. 2007. Influence of irrigation and fertilization on transpiration and hydraulic properties of Populus deltoides. Tree Physiol. 27:765-774.
Allen, C.B., R.E. Will, R.C. McGarvey, D.R. Coyle and M.D. Coleman. 2005. Radiation-use efficiency and gas exchange responses to water and nutrient availability in irrigated and fertilized stands of sweetgum and sycamore. Tree Physiol. 25:191-200.
Coleman, M.D., D.R. Coyle, J. Blake, K. Britton, M. Buford, R.G. Campbell, J. Cox, B. Cregg, D. Daniels, M.A. Jacobson, K. Johnson, T. McDonald, K. McLeod, E. Nelson, D. Robison, R. Rummer, F. Sanchez, J. Stanturf, B. Stokes, C. Trettin, J. Tuskan, L. Wright and S. Wullschleger 2004. Production of Short Rotation Woody Crops Grown with a Range of Nutrient and Water Availability: Establishment Report and First-Year Responses. USDA Forest Service, Southern Research Station, Asheville, NC, USA. General Technical Report, SRS- 72.
Coyle, D.R. 2002. Effects of clone, silvicultural, and miticide treatments on cottonwood leafcurl mite (Acari : Eriophyidae) damage in plantation Populus. Environ. Entomol. 31:1000-1008.
Coyle, D.R. and J.W. Amrine. 2004. New collection records and host range of the cottonwood leafcurl mite, Tetra lobulifera (Keifer) (Acari : Eriophyidae), in the USA.
30:3-8.
Coyle, D.R. and M.D. Coleman. 2005. Forest production responses to irrigation and fertilization are not explained by shifts in allocation. Forest Ecology and Management.
in press. (pdf)
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