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Dive into the research topics where Michael Guzy is active.

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Featured researches published by Michael Guzy.


Tellus B | 2003

Effects of land use and fine-scale environmental heterogeneity on net ecosystem production over a temperate coniferous forest landscape

David P. Turner; Michael Guzy; Michael A. Lefsky; Steve Van Tuyl; Osbert J. Sun; Christopher Daly; Beverly E. Law

In temperate coniferous forests, spatial variation in net ecosystem production (NEP) is often associated with variation in stand age and heterogeneity in environmental factors such as soil depth. However, coarse spatial resolution analyses used to evaluate the terrestrial contribution to global NEP do not generally incorporate these effects. In this study, a fine-scale (25 m grid) analysis of NEP over a 164-km2 area of productive coniferous forests in the Pacific Northwest region of the United States was made to evaluate the effects of including fine scale information in landscape-scale NEP assessments. The Enhanced Thematic Mapper (ETM×) sensor resolved five cover classes in the study area and further differentiated between young, mature and old-growth conifer stands. ETM× was also used to map current leaf area index (LAI) based on an empirical relationship of observed LAI to spectral vegetation indices. A daily time step climatology, based on 18 years of meteorological observations, was distributed (1 km resolution) over the mountainous terrain of the study area using the DAYMET model. Estimates of carbon pools and flux associated with soil, litter, coarse woody debris and live trees were then generated by running a carbon cycle model (Biome-BGC) to a state that reflected the current successional status and LAI of each grid cell, as indicated by the remote sensing observations. Estimated annual NEP for 1997 over the complete study area averaged 230 g C m−2, with most of the area acting as a carbon sink. The area-wide NEP is strongly positive because of reduced harvesting in the last decade and the recovery of areas harvested between 1940 and 1990. The average value was greater than would be indicated if the entire area was assumed to be a mature conifer stand, as in a coarse-scale analysis. The mean NEP varied interannually by over a factor of two. This variation was 38% less than the interannual variation for a single point. The integration of process models with ground surface information provided by remote sensing provides a framework for investigating mechanisms regulating NEP and evaluating coarse resolution globally applied NEP scaling efforts.


Philosophical Transactions of the Royal Society B | 2014

Measuring pesticide ecological and health risks in West African agriculture to establish an enabling environment for sustainable intensification

Paul C. Jepson; Michael Guzy; Kathy L. Blaustein; Mariam Sow; Makhfousse Sarr; Pierre Mineau; Susan E Kegley

We outline an approach to pesticide risk assessment that is based upon surveys of pesticide use throughout West Africa. We have developed and used new risk assessment models to provide, to our knowledge, the first detailed, geographically extensive, scientifically based analysis of pesticide risks for this region. Human health risks from dermal exposure to adults and children are severe enough in many crops to require long periods of up to three weeks when entry to fields should be restricted. This is impractical in terms of crop management, and regulatory action is needed to remove these pesticides from the marketplace. We also found widespread risks to terrestrial and aquatic wildlife throughout the region, and if these results were extrapolated to all similar irrigated perimeters in the Senegal and Niger River Basins, they suggest that pesticides could pose a significant threat to regional biodiversity. Our analyses are presented at the regional, national and village levels to promote regulatory advances but also local risk communication and management. Without progress in pesticide risk management, supported by participatory farmer education, West African agriculture provides a weak context for the sustainable intensification of agricultural production or for the adoption of new crop technologies.


Remote Sensing of Environment | 2005

Combining lidar estimates of aboveground biomass and Landsat estimates of stand age for spatially extensive validation of modeled forest productivity

Michael A. Lefsky; David P. Turner; Michael Guzy; Warren B. Cohen


Environmental Management | 2004

Monitoring forest carbon sequestration with remote sensing and carbon cycle modeling

David P. Turner; Michael Guzy; Michael A. Lefsky; William D. Ritts; Steve Van Tuyl; Beverly E. Law


Archive | 2006

CARBON FLUXES ACROSS REGIONS: OBSERVATIONAL CONSTRAINTS AT MULTIPLE SCALES

Beverly E. Law; Dave Turner; John Campbell; Michael A. Lefsky; Michael Guzy; Osbert J. Sun; Steve Van Tuyl; Warren B. Cohen


Landscape Ecology | 2006

A Method to Efficiently Apply a Biogeochemical Model to a Landscape

Robert E. Kennedy; David P. Turner; Warren B. Cohen; Michael Guzy


Urban Forestry & Urban Greening | 2015

A tool for assisting municipalities in developing riparian shade inventories

Michael Guzy; Kris Richardson; John G. Lambrinos


Oil Spill Remediation: Colloid Chemistry-Based Principles and Solutions | 2014

Understanding and Properly Interpreting the 2010 Deepwater Horizon Blowout

Sean S. Anderson; Charles H. Peterson; Gary N. Cherr; Richard F. Ambrose; Shelly Anghera; Steve Bay; Michael J. Blum; Rob Condon; Thomas A. Dean; William M. Graham; Michael Guzy; Stephanie E. Hampton; Samantha B. Joye; John G. Lambrinos; Bruce R. Mate; Douglas Meffert; Sean P. Powers; P. Somasundaran; Robert B. Spies; Caz M. Taylor; Ronald S. Tjeerdema


University of California Press | 2012

A Tale of Two Spills: Novel Science and Policy Implications of an Emerging New Oil Spill Model

E. Eric Adams; Charles H. Peterson; Sean S. Anderson; Gary N. Cherr; Richard F. Ambrose; Shelly Anghera; Steven M. Bay; Michael J. Blum; Caz M. Taylor; Robert H. Condon; Monty Graham; Thomas A. Dean; Michael Guzy; Stephanie E. Hampton; Samantha B. Joye; John G. Lambrinos; Bruce R. Mate; Douglas Meffert; P. Somasundaran; Robert B. Spies; Ronald S. Tjeerdema; Sean P. Powers


Archive | 2008

Next generation pesticide impacts evaluation tool for agriculture

Thomas Green; Paul C. Jepson; Karen Benbrook; Charles Benbrook; Pierre Mineau; Wade Pronschinske; Michael Guzy; Jonathan Kaplan

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Warren B. Cohen

United States Forest Service

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Charles H. Peterson

University of North Carolina at Chapel Hill

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