News
Learn about the candidates running for SFS leadership positions and then vote on our member site.
This month's featured article: Wildfire and drying legacies and stream invertebrates assemblages
Scott D. Cooper Kristie Klose, David B. Herbst, Jason White, S. Matthew Drenner, and Erika J. Eliason Freshwater Science 40(4): 659-680.
AQUATIC SPECIFIC (32): Aquatic Sciences (1), Canadian Journal of Fisheries and Aquatic Sciences (4), Freshwater Biology (9), Freshwater Science (1), Hydrobiologia (6), Inland Waters (2), Journal of Great Lakes Research (1), Limnology and Oceanography (2), River Research Applications (6)
BROAD-BASED (2): Ecology Letters (1), Global Change Biology (1)
OA = Open Access
AQUATIC SPECIFIC (36): Aquatic Ecology (1), Aquatic Sciences (6), Canadian Journal of Fisheries and Aquatic Sciences (1), Freshwater Biology (8), Freshwater Science (1), Hydrobiologia (7), Journal of Great Lakes Research (7), Limnology and Oceanography (1), River Research Applications (4)
BROAD-BASED (1): Ecology Letters (1)
OA = Open Access
AQUATIC SPECIFIC (26): Aquatic Ecology (4), Canadian Journal of Fisheries and Aquatic Sciences (1), Freshwater Biology (2), Freshwater Science (2), Journal of Great Lakes Research (2), Hydrobiologia (5), Limnology and Oceanography (3), River Research Applications (7)
BROAD-BASED (5): Ecology (1), Ecological Applications (1), Frontiers of Ecology and the Environment (1), Global Change Biology (1), Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences (1)
OA = Open Access
PLEASE SAVE THE DATE TO JOIN THE SIL CONGRESS NEXT SUMMER:
The Centennial of the International Society of Limnology (SIL)
7 – 10 August 2022 in Berlin, Germany
Summary: Listen to Jabari Jones, a PhD student at University of Minnesota, and Lauren Diaz, a PhD student at Oregon State University, tell us how to keep people of all identities safe in the field.
People:
Jabari Jones, PhD student at University of Minnesota
Lauren Diaz, PhD student at Oregon State University
Summary: How do we understand how aquatic ecosystems respond to environmental change? In rare cases we can manipulate whole lakes or streams, but a more tractable approach uses microcosms to study fundamental community and ecosystem processes at a manageable scale. Listen to learn more about how microcosms can be used in aquatic ecology and one particular example from the ecosystems inside the leaves of the purple pitcher plant.
People:
Casey terHorst, Associate Professor at California State University Northridge
http://www.ecoevolab.com/