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Featured researches published by Marisa H. Cox.


Journal of Geophysical Research | 2009

Experimental removal of wetland emergent vegetation leads to decreased methylmercury production in surface sediment

Lisamarie Windham-Myers; Mark Marvin-DiPasquale; David P. Krabbenhoft; Jennifer L. Agee; Marisa H. Cox; Pilar Heredia-Middleton; Carolyn Coates; Evangelos Kakouros

[1] We performed plant removal (devegetation) experiments across a suite of ecologically diverse wetland settings (tidal salt marshes, river floodplain, rotational rice fields, and freshwater wetlands with permanent or seasonal flooding) to determine the extent to which the presence (or absence) of actively growing plants influences the activity of the Hg(II)-methylating microbial community and the availability of Hg(II) to those microbes. Vegetated control plots were paired with neighboring devegetated plots in which photosynthetic input was terminated 4-8 months prior to measurements, through clipping aboveground biomass, severing belowground connections, and shading the sediment surface to prevent regrowth. Across all wetlands, devegetation decreased the activity of the Hg(II)-methylating microbial community (k meth ) by 38%, calculated MeHg production potential (MP) rates by 36%, and pore water acetate concentration by 78%. Decreases in MP were associated with decreases in microbial sulfate reduction in salt marsh settings. In freshwater agricultural wetlands, decreases in MP were related to indices of microbial iron reduction. Sediment MeHg concentrations were also significantly lower in devegetated than in vegetated plots in most wetland settings studied. Devegetation effects were correlated with live root density (percent volume) and were most profound in vegetated sites with higher initial pore water acetate concentrations. Densely rooted wetlands had the highest rates of microbial Hg(II)-methylation activity but often the lowest concentrations of bioavailable reactive Hg(II). We conclude that the exudation of labile organic carbon (e.g., acetate) by plants leads to enhanced microbial sulfate and iron reduction activity in the rhizosphere, which results in high rates of microbial Hg(II)-methyation and high MeHg concentrations in wetland sediment.


Ground Water | 2003

Comparison of Heat and Bromide as Ground Water Tracers Near Streams

Jim Constantz; Marisa H. Cox; Grace W. Su


Ground Water | 2007

Heat, Chloride, and Specific Conductance as Ground Water Tracers near Streams

Marisa H. Cox; Grace W. Su; Jim Constantz


Applied Geochemistry | 2007

Formation of mixed Al-Fe colloidal sorbent and dissolved-colloidal partitioning of Cu and Zn in the Cement Creek - Animas River Confluence, Silverton, Colorado

Laurence E. Schemel; Briant A. Kimball; Robert L. Runkel; Marisa H. Cox


Hydrological Processes | 2006

Multiple injected and natural conservative tracers quantify mixing in a stream confluence affected by acid mine drainage near Silverton, Colorado

Laurence E. Schemel; Marisa H. Cox; Robert L. Runkel; Briant A. Kimball


Open-File Report | 2007

Legacy Mercury in Alviso Slough, South San Francisco Bay, California: Concentration, Speciation and Mobility

Mark Marvin-DiPasquale; Marisa H. Cox


Water-Resources Investigations Report | 2003

Evaluation of tracer tests completed in 1999 and 2000 on the upper Santa Clara River, Los Angeles and Ventura Counties, California

Marisa H. Cox; Gregory O. Mendez; Charles R. Kratzer; Eric G. Reichard


Water-Resources Investigations Report | 2002

Hydrology and chemistry of floodwaters in the Yolo Bypass, Sacramento River system, California, during 2000

Laurence E. Schemel; Marisa H. Cox; Stephen W. Hager; Theodore R. Sommer


Open-File Report | 2007

Chemical and Hydrologic Data From the Cement Creek and Upper Animas River Confluence and Mixing Zone, Silverton, Colorado, September 1997

Laurence E. Schemel; Marisa H. Cox


Open-File Report | 2007

Floodwater Chemistry in the Yolo Bypass during Winter and Spring 1998

Laurence E. Schemel; Marisa H. Cox

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Laurence E. Schemel

United States Geological Survey

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Mark Marvin-DiPasquale

United States Geological Survey

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Evangelos Kakouros

United States Geological Survey

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Lisamarie Windham-Myers

United States Geological Survey

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David P. Krabbenhoft

United States Geological Survey

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Grace W. Su

Lawrence Berkeley National Laboratory

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Jim Constantz

United States Geological Survey

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Briant A. Kimball

United States Geological Survey

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Carolyn Coates

United States Geological Survey

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Charles N. Alpers

United States Geological Survey

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