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Dive into the research topics where Kristine T. Nemec is active.

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Featured researches published by Kristine T. Nemec.


Biodiversity and Conservation | 2013

The use of geographic information systems to map and assess ecosystem services

Kristine T. Nemec; Ciara Raudsepp-Hearne

In recent years, geographic information systems (GIS) have become a powerful tool for mapping and assessing the provision of ecosystem services within a landscape. GIS can help land managers and conservationists visualize spatial and temporal patterns and changes in ecosystem services and estimate the potential impact from projected changes in land use or management or climatic conditions on the provision of these services. The end-goal of ecosystem service assessment is usually to estimate marginal values of ecosystem services to inform decisions where trade-offs in ecosystem service provision will affect human well-being. Because our ability to estimate the provision of ecosystem services underlies our ability to estimate their societal values, the theoretical bases of GIS approaches and models for assessing ecosystem services need to be well understood before they are employed for decision-making purposes. This paper reviews GIS approaches and software developed for the assessment of ecosystem services and highlights their strengths and weaknesses in the context of different end uses.


Ecology and Society | 2014

Assessing Resilience in Stressed Watersheds

Kristine T. Nemec; Joana Chan; Christina Hoffman; Trisha L. Spanbauer; Joseph A. Hamm; Craig R. Allen; Trevor J. Hefley; Donald Pan; Prabhakar Shrestha

Although several frameworks for assessing the resilience of social-ecological systems (SESs) have been developed, some practitioners may not have sufficient time and information to conduct extensive resilience assessments. We have presented a simplified approach to resilience assessment that reviews the scientific, historical, and social literature to rate the resilience of an SES with respect to nine resilience properties: ecological variability, diversity, modularity, acknowledgement of slow variables, tight feedbacks, social capital, innovation, overlap in governance, and ecosystem services. We evaluated the effects of two large-scale projects, the construction of a major dam and the implementation of an ecosystem recovery program, on the resilience of the central Platte River SES (Nebraska, United States). We used this case study to identify the strengths and weaknesses of applying a simplified approach to resilience assessment. Although social resilience has increased steadily since the predam period for the central Platte River SES, ecological resilience was greatly reduced in the postdam period as compared to the predam and ecosystem recovery program time periods.


Ecological Restoration | 2013

Influence of Richness and Seeding Density on Invasion Resistance in Experimental Tallgrass Prairie Restorations

Kristine T. Nemec; Craig R. Allen; Christopher J. Helzer; David A. Wedin

In recent years, agricultural producers and non-governmental organizations and agencies have restored thousands of hectares of cropland to grassland in the Great Plains of the United States. However, little is known about the relationships between richness and seeding density in these restorations and resistance to invasive plant species. We assessed the effects of richness and seeding density on resistance to invasive and other unseeded plant species in experimental tallgrass prairie plots in central Nebraska. In 2006, twenty-four 55 m × 55 m plots were planted with six replicates in each of four treatments: high richness (97 species typically planted by The Nature Conservancy), at low and high seeding densities, and low richness (15 species representing a typical Conservation Reserve Program mix, CP25), at low and high seeding densities. There was a significant negative relationship between richness and basal cover of unseeded perennial forbs/legumes and unseeded perennial/annual grasses, abundance of bull thistle (Cirsium vulgare), and the number of inflorescences removed from smooth brome (Bromus inermis) transplants. Invasion resistance may have been higher in the high richness treatments because of the characteristics of the dominant species in these plots or because of greater interspecific competition for limiting resources among forbs/legumes with neighboring plants belonging to the same functional group. Seeding density was not important in affecting invasion resistance, except in the cover of unseeded grasses. Increasing seed mix richness may be more effective than increasing the seeding density for decreasing invasion by unseeded perennial species, bull thistle, and smooth brome.


American Midland Naturalist | 2011

Woody Invasions of Urban Trails and the Changing Face of Urban Forests in the Great Plains, USA

Kristine T. Nemec; Craig R. Allen; Aaron L. Alai; Gregory M. Clements; Andrew C. Kessler; Travis C. Kinsell; Annabel Major; Bruce J. Stephen

Abstract Corridors such as roads and trails can facilitate invasions by non-native plant species. The open, disturbed habitat associated with corridors provides favorable growing conditions for many non-native plant species. Bike trails are a corridor system common to many urban areas that have not been studied for their potential role in plant invasions. We sampled five linear segments of urban forest along bike trails in Lincoln, Nebraska to assess the invasion of woody non-native species relative to corridors and to assess the composition of these urban forests. The most abundant plant species were generally native species, but five non-native species were also present: white mulberry (Morus alba), common buckthorn (Rhamnus cathartica), tree-of-heaven (Ailanthus altissima), honeysuckle (Lonicera spp.) and elm (Ulmus spp.). The distribution of two of the woody species sampled, common buckthorn and honeysuckle, significantly decreased with increasing distance from a source patch of vegetation (P  =  0.031 and 0.030). These linear habitats are being invaded by non-native tree and shrub species, which may change the structure of these urban forest corridors. If non-native woody plant species become abundant in the future, they may homogenize the plant community and reduce native biodiversity in these areas.


Ecology and Society | 2017

Regime shifts and panarchies in regional scale social-ecological water systems

Lance Gunderson; Barbara Cosens; Brian C. Chaffin; Craig Anthony Arnold; Alexander K. Fremier; Ahjond S. Garmestani; Robin Kundis Craig; Hannah Gosnell; Hannah E. Birgé; Craig R. Allen; Melinda Harm Benson; Ryan R. Morrison; Mark C. Stone; Joseph A. Hamm; Kristine T. Nemec; Edella Schlager; Dagmar Llewellyn

In this article we summarize histories of nonlinear, complex interactions among societal, legal, and ecosystem dynamics in six North American water basins, as they respond to changing climate. These case studies were chosen to explore the conditions for emergence of adaptive governance in heavily regulated and developed social-ecological systems nested within a hierarchical governmental system. We summarize resilience assessments conducted in each system to provide a synthesis and reference by the other articles in this special feature. We also present a general framework used to evaluate the interactions between society and ecosystem regimes and the governance regimes chosen to mediate those interactions. The case studies show different ways that adaptive governance may be triggered, facilitated, or constrained by ecological and/or legal processes. The resilience assessments indicate that complex interactions among the governance and ecosystem components of these systems can produce different trajectories, which include patterns of (a) development and stabilization, (b) cycles of crisis and recovery, which includes lurches in adaptation and learning, and (3) periods of innovation, novelty, and transformation. Exploration of cross scale (Panarchy) interactions among levels and sectors of government and society illustrate that they may constrain development trajectories, but may also provide stability during crisis or innovation at smaller scales; create crises, but may also facilitate recovery; and constrain system transformation, but may also provide windows of opportunity in which transformation, and the resources to accomplish it, may occur. The framework is the starting point for our exploration of how law might play a role in enhancing the capacity of social-ecological systems to adapt to climate change.


Journal of Freshwater Ecology | 2013

Fecundity of the Chinese mystery snail in a Nebraska reservoir

Bruce J. Stephen; Craig R. Allen; Noelle M. Chaine; Kent A. Fricke; Danielle M. Haak; Michelle L. Hellman; Robert A. Kill; Kristine T. Nemec; Kevin L. Pope; Nicholas A. Smeenk; Daniel R. Uden; Kody M. Unstad; Ashley E. VanderHam; Alec Wong

The Chinese mystery snail (Bellamya chinensis) is a non-indigenous, invasive species in freshwater ecosystems of North America. We provide fecundity estimates for a population of these snails in a Nebraska reservoir. We dissected 70 snails, of which 29 were females. Nearly all female snails contained developing young, with an average of 25 young per female. Annual fecundity was estimated at between 27.2 and 33.3 young per female per year. Based on an estimated adult population and the calculated fecundity, the annual production for this reservoir was between 2.2 and 3.7 million young.


Global Ecology and Biogeography | 2013

Predictors of regional establishment success and spread of introduced non‐indigenous vertebrates

Craig R. Allen; Kristine T. Nemec; Donald A. Wardwell; Justin D. Hoffman; Mathew L. Brust; Karie L. Decker; Daniel Fogell; Jennifer Hogue; Aaron Lotz; Thaddeus Miller; Marcy Pummill; Luis E. Ramirez-Yañez; Daniel R. Uden


BioInvasions Records | 2012

Population estimate of Chinese mystery snail (Bellamya chinensis) in a Nebraska reservoir

Noelle M. Chaine; Craig R. Allen; Kent A. Fricke; Danielle M. Haak; Michelle L. Hellman; Robert A. Kill; Kristine T. Nemec; Kevin L. Pope; Nicholas A. Smeenk; Bruce J. Stephen; Daniel R. Uden; Kody M. Unstad; Ashley E. VanderHam


Agriculture, Ecosystems & Environment | 2014

Responses of predatory invertebrates to seeding density and plant species richness in experimental tallgrass prairie restorations

Kristine T. Nemec; Craig R. Allen; Stephen D. Danielson; Christopher J. Helzer


Idaho Law Review | 2014

Social-ecological resilience and law in the Platte River Basin

Hannah E. Birgé; Craig R. Allen; Robin Kundis Craig; Ahjond S. Garmestani; Joseph A. Hamm; Christina Babbitt; Kristine T. Nemec; Edella Schlager

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Craig R. Allen

University of Nebraska–Lincoln

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Bruce J. Stephen

University of Nebraska–Lincoln

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Daniel R. Uden

University of Nebraska–Lincoln

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Joseph A. Hamm

Michigan State University

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Aaron Lotz

University of Nebraska–Lincoln

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Ahjond S. Garmestani

United States Environmental Protection Agency

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Ashley E. VanderHam

University of Nebraska–Lincoln

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Daniel Fogell

University of Nebraska–Lincoln

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