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Dive into the research topics where Wilfred M. Wollheim is active.

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Featured researches published by Wilfred M. Wollheim.


Journal of The North American Benthological Society | 2002

N uptake as a function of concentration in streams

Walter K. Dodds; Amanda J. López; William B. Bowden; Stan V. Gregory; Nancy B. Grimm; Stephen K. Hamilton; Anne E. Hershey; Eugènia Martí; William H. McDowell; Judy L. Meyer; Donna D'angelo Morrall; Patrick J. Mulholland; Bruce J. Peterson; Jennifer L. Tank; H. Maurice Valett; Jackson R. Webster; Wilfred M. Wollheim

Detailed studies of stream N uptake were conducted in a prairie reach and gallery forest reach of Kings Creek on the Konza Prairie Biological Station. Nutrient uptake rates were measured with multiple short-term enrichments of NO3− and NH4+ at constant addition rates in the spring and summer of 1998. NH4+ uptake was also measured with 15N-NH4+ tracer additions and short-term unlabeled NH4+ additions at 12 stream sites across North America. Concurrent addition of a conservative tracer was used to account for dilution in all experiments. NH4+ uptake rate per unit area (Ut) was positively correlated to nutrient concentration across all sites (r2 = 0.41, log–log relationship). Relationships between concentration and Ut were used to determine whether the uptake was nonlinear (i.e., kinetic uptake primarily limited by the biotic capacity of microorganisms to accumulate nutrients) or linear (e.g., limited by mass transport into stream biofilms). In all systems, Ut was lower at ambient concentrations than at elevated concentrations. Extrapolation from uptake measured from a series of increasing enrichments could be used to estimate ambient Ut. Linear extrapolation of Ut assuming the relationship passes through the origin and rates measured at 1 elevated nutrient concentration underestimated ambient Ut by ∼3-fold. Uptake rates were saturated under some but not all conditions of enrichment; in some cases there was no saturation up to 50 μmol/L. The absolute concentration at which Ut was saturated in Kings Creek varied among reaches and nutrients. Uptake rates of NH4+ at ambient concentrations in all streams were higher than would be expected, assuming Ut does not saturate with increasing concentrations. At ambient nutrient concentrations in unpolluted streams, Ut is probably limited to some degree by the kinetic uptake capacity of stream biota. Mass transfer velocity from the water column is generally greater than would be expected given typical diffusion rates, underscoring the importance of advective transport. Given the short-term spikes in nutrient concentrations that can occur in streams (e.g., in response to storm events), Ut may not saturate, even at high concentrations.


Freshwater Science | 2014

The Lotic Intersite Nitrogen Experiments: an example of successful ecological research collaboration

Walter K. Dodds; Jackson R. Webster; Chelsea L. Crenshaw; Ashley M. Helton; Jonathan M. O'Brien; Eugènia Martí; Anne E. Hershey; Jennifer L. Tank; Amy J. Burgin; Nancy B. Grimm; Stephen K. Hamilton; Daniel J. Sobota; Geoffrey C. Poole; Jake J. Beaulieu; Laura T. Johnson; Linda R. Ashkenas; Robert O. Hall; Spencer Johnson; Wilfred M. Wollheim; William B. Bowden

Collaboration is an essential skill for modern ecologists because it brings together diverse expertise, viewpoints, and study systems. The Lotic Intersite Nitrogen eXperiments (LINX I and II), a 17-y research endeavor involving scores of early- to late-career stream ecologists, is an example of the benefits, challenges, and approaches of successful collaborative research in ecology. The scientific success of LINX reflected tangible attributes including clear scientific goals (hypothesis-driven research), coordinated research methods, a team of cooperative scientists, excellent leadership, extensive communication, and a philosophy of respect for input from all collaborators. Intangible aspects of the collaboration included camaraderie and strong team chemistry. LINX further benefited from being part of a discipline in which collaboration is a tradition, clear data-sharing and authorship guidelines, an approach that melded field experiments and modeling, and a shared collaborative goal in the form of a universal commitment to see the project and resulting data products through to completion.Abstract: n Collaboration is an essential skill for modern ecologists because it brings together diverse expertise, viewpoints, and study systems. The Lotic Intersite Nitrogen eXperiments (LINX I and II), a 17-y research endeavor involving scores of early- to late-career stream ecologists, is an example of the benefits, challenges, and approaches of successful collaborative research in ecology. The scientific success of LINX reflected tangible attributes including clear scientific goals (hypothesis-driven research), coordinated research methods, a team of cooperative scientists, excellent leadership, extensive communication, and a philosophy of respect for input from all collaborators. Intangible aspects of the collaboration included camaraderie and strong team chemistry. LINX further benefited from being part of a discipline in which collaboration is a tradition, clear data-sharing and authorship guidelines, an approach that melded field experiments and modeling, and a shared collaborative goal in the form of a universal commitment to see the project and resulting data products through to completion.


Archive | 2002

Application of Isotopic and Geochemical Hydrograph Separation to a Suburban Basin in the North Shore of Massachusetts

Brian A. Pellerin; Wilfred M. Wollheim; Charles J. Vörösmarty; William H. McDowell


GSA Annual Meeting in Denver, Colorado, USA - 2016 | 2016

THE URBAN EVOLUTION OF GEOCHEMICAL CYCLES

Sujay S. Kaushal; Shuiwang Duan; Thomas R. Doody; Shahan Haq; Rose M. Smith; Paul M. Mayer; Kenneth T. Belt; William H. McDowell; Wilfred M. Wollheim; Tamara A. Newcomer Johnson


Archive | 2013

continental-scale assessment for South America Extreme rainfall, vulnerability and risk: a

Lilybeth Colon; David M. Bjerklie; Manoel Cardoso; Cassiano D'Almeida; Charles J. Vorosmarty; Lelys Guenni; Wilfred M. Wollheim


Archive | 2010

Dynamics of nitrogen saturation in river networks. (Invited)

Wilfred M. Wollheim; Roger Stewart; Michael N. Gooseff; Michael B. Green


Archive | 2010

Modification of suburban carbon and nitrogen fluxes by a coupled channel/floodplain system assessed using in situ sensors

Wilfred M. Wollheim; Brian A. Pellerin; Janet Balog Saraceno; Charles S. Hopkinson; A. Hope; Nathaniel B. Morse


Archive | 2009

Separating in-channel and hyporheic transient storage processes in river networks - A path toward improved understanding of fluvial biogeochemistry

Michael N. Gooseff; Mike Briggs; M. R. Weaver; Wilfred M. Wollheim; Byron J. Peterson; K. Morkeski; Charles S. Hopkinson


Archive | 2009

Patterns in dissolved organic carbon quality in a New England coastal watershed: it's relationship to urban and wetland sources and flow dynamics

Gretchen M. Gettel; Wilfred M. Wollheim; Charles S. Hopkinson; Tamara K. Harms


Archive | 2009

Evolving demand for ecosystem services and their impact in a coastal New England watershed

Wilfred M. Wollheim; Michael B. Green; Brian A. Pellerin; Jonathan M. Duncan; Gretchen M. Gettel; Charles S. Hopkinson; Colin Polsky; Robert Gilmore Pontius

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Brian A. Pellerin

United States Geological Survey

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Charles J. Vorosmarty

National Institute of Advanced Industrial Science and Technology

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B M Fekete

City College of New York

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Anne E. Hershey

Marine Biological Laboratory

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Jennifer L. Tank

Marine Biological Laboratory

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Nancy B. Grimm

Arizona State University

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