You have Guest access.
Log In
Volume 1 / 1984 - Volume 107 / 2012
New approaches to modeling denitrification
1-5
Peter M. Groffman, Eric A. Davidson and Sybil Seitzinger
7-30
Modeling denitrification in a tile-drained, corn and soybean agroecosystem of Illinois, USA
Mark B. David, Stephen J. Del Grosso, Xuetao Hu, Elizabeth P. Marshall and Gregory F. McIsaac, et al.
31-48
Modeling N2O flux from an Illinois agroecosystem using Monte Carlo sampling of field observations
Christina Tonitto, Mark B. David and Laurie E. Drinkwater
49-77
Challenges to incorporating spatially and temporally explicit phenomena (hotspots and hot moments) in denitrification models
Peter M. Groffman, Klaus Butterbach-Bahl, Robinson W. Fulweiler, Arthur J. Gold and Jennifer L. Morse, et al.
79-90
Modeling hydrologic controls on denitrification: sensitivity to parameter uncertainty and landscape representation
Christina Tague
91-116
Dynamic modeling of nitrogen losses in river networks unravels the coupled effects of hydrological and biogeochemical processes
Richard B. Alexander, John Karl Böhlke, Elizabeth W. Boyer, Mark B. David and Judson W. Harvey, et al.
117-141
Multi-scale measurements and modeling of denitrification in streams with varying flow and nitrate concentration in the upper Mississippi River basin, USA
John Karl Böhlke, Ronald C. Antweiler, Judson W. Harvey, Andrew E. Laursen and Lesley K. Smith, et al.
143-157
The regional and global significance of nitrogen removal in lakes and reservoirs
John A. Harrison, Roxane J. Maranger, Richard B. Alexander, Anne E. Giblin and Pierre-Andre Jacinthe, et al.
159-178
Modeling denitrification in aquatic sediments
Katja Fennel, Damian Brady, Dominic DiToro, Robinson W. Fulweiler and Wayne S. Gardner, et al.
Frequently asked questions General info on journals and books Send us your feedback Impressum Contact us
© Springer, Part of Springer Science+Business Media Privacy, Disclaimer, Terms & Conditions, and Copyright Info