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Featured researches published by Carlos E. Ramos-Scharrón.


BioScience | 2009

Landsliding and Its Multiscale Influence on Mountainscapes

Carla Restrepo; Lawrence R. Walker; Aaron B. Shiels; Rainer W. Bussmann; L. Claessens; Simey Thury Vieira Fisch; Pablo Lozano; Girish Negi; Leonardo Paolini; Germán Poveda; Carlos E. Ramos-Scharrón; Michael Richter; Eduardo Velázquez

Landsliding is a complex process that modifies mountainscapes worldwide. Its severe and sometimes long-lasting negative effects contrast with the less-documented positive effects on ecosystems, raising numerous questions about the dual role of landsliding, the feedbacks between biotic and geomorphic processes, and, ultimately, the ecological and evolutionary responses of organisms. We present a conceptual model in which feedbacks between biotic and geomorphic processes, landslides, and ecosystem attributes are hypothesized to drive the dynamics of mountain ecosystems at multiple scales. This model is used to integrate and synthesize a rich, but fragmented, body of literature generated in different disciplines, and to highlight the need for profitable collaborations between biologists and geoscientists. Such efforts should help identify attributes that contribute to the resilience of mountain ecosystems, and also should help in conservation, restoration, and hazard assessment. Given the sensitivity of mountains to land-use and global climate change, these endeavors are both relevant and timely.


Science of The Total Environment | 2015

Watershed- and island wide-scale land cover changes in Puerto Rico (1930s–2004) and their potential effects on coral reef ecosystems

Carlos E. Ramos-Scharrón; Damaris Torres-Pulliza; Edwin A. Hernández-Delgado

Anthropogenically enhanced delivery of sediments and other land-based sources of pollution represent well-recognized threats to nearshore coral reef communities worldwide. Land cover change is commonly used as a proxy to document human-induced alterations to sediment and pollutant delivery rates to coral reef bearing waters. In this article, land cover change was assessed for a 69-km(2) watershed in Puerto Rico between 1936 and 2004 by aerial photograph interpretation. Forests and sugar cane fields predominated from 1936 through the late 1970s, but while cropland dipped to negligible levels by 2004, net forest cover doubled and built-up areas increased tenfold. The watershed-scale land cover changes documented here mimicked those of the entire Puerto Rican landmass. Sediment yield predictions that rely on the sort of land cover changes reported here inevitably result in declining trends, but anecdotal and scientific evidence in the study watershed and throughout Puerto Rico suggests that sediment and pollutant loading rates still remain high and at potentially threatening levels. The simultaneous reduction in living coral cover that accompanied reforestation and urbanization patterns since the 1970s in our study region is discussed here within the context of the following non-mutually exclusive potential explanations: (a) the inability of land cover change-based assessments to discern spatially-focused, yet highly influential sources of sediment; (b) the potentially secondary role of cropland and forest cover changes in influencing nearshore coral reef conditions relative to other types of stressors like those related to climate change; and (c) the potentially dominant role that urban development may have had in altering marine water quality to the extent of reducing live coral cover. Since identification of the causes for coral reef degradation has proven elusive here and elsewhere, we infer that coral reef management may only be effective when numerous land- and marine-based stressors are simultaneously mitigated.


Archive | 2012

An Interdisciplinary Erosion Mitigation Approach for Coral Reef Protection – A Case Study from the Eastern Caribbean

Carlos E. Ramos-Scharrón; Juan M. Amador; Edwin A. Hernández-Delgado

Carlos E. Ramos-Scharron1,2, Juan M. Amador3 and Edwin A. Hernandez-Delgado4,5 1Island Resources Foundation, 2Department of Geography & the Environment, the University of Texas-Austin, 3Greg L. Morris Engineering COOP, 4Center for Applied Tropical Ecology and Conservation, University of Puerto Rico-Rio Piedras, 5Caribbean Coral Reefs Institute, University of Puerto Rico-Mayaguez, 1US Virgin Islands 2USA 3,4,5Puerto Rico


Hydrological Processes | 2007

Runoff and suspended sediment yields from an unpaved road segment, St John, US Virgin Islands

Carlos E. Ramos-Scharrón; Lee H. MacDonald


Catena | 2007

Measurement and prediction of natural and anthropogenic sediment sources, St. John, U.S. Virgin Islands

Carlos E. Ramos-Scharrón; Lee H. MacDonald


Journal of Environmental Management | 2007

Development and application of a GIS-based sediment budget model

Carlos E. Ramos-Scharrón; Lee H. MacDonald


Journal of Hydrology | 2016

The role of unpaved roads as active source areas of precipitation excess in small watersheds drained by ephemeral streams in the Northeastern Caribbean

Carlos E. Ramos-Scharrón; Matthew C. LaFevor


Earth surface processes and landforms: The journal of the British Geomorphological Research Group | 2005

Measurement and Prediction of Sediment Production from Unpaved Roads, St. John, U.S. Virgin Islands

Carlos E. Ramos-Scharrón


Earth Surface Processes and Landforms | 2014

Quantification and modeling of foot trail surface erosion in a dry sub-tropical setting

Carlos E. Ramos-Scharrón; Kynoch Reale-Munroe; Scott Atkinson


Earth Surface Processes and Landforms | 2015

Rill length and plot-scale effects on the hydrogeomorphologic response of gravelly roadbeds

Edivaldo L. Thomaz; Carlos E. Ramos-Scharrón

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Aaron B. Shiels

United States Department of Agriculture

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Scott Atkinson

University of Queensland

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L. Claessens

International Crops Research Institute for the Semi-Arid Tropics

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Michael Richter

University of Erlangen-Nuremberg

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