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Recent papers
Berges, J. A., Y. Jiang, R. W. Sterner, G. S. Bullerjahn, N. A. Ivanikova, and R. M. L. Mckay. 2014. Identification of factors constraining nitrate assimilation in Lake Superior, Laurentian Great Lakes. Hydrobiologia 731: 81-94.
Janke, B. D., J. C. Finlay, S. E. Hobbie, L. A. Baker, R. W. Sterner, D. Nidzgorski, and B. N. Wilson. 2014. Contrasting influences of stormflow and baseflow pathways on nitrogen and phosphorus export from an urban watershed. Biogeochemistry 121:209-228.
Hood, J. M., C. McNeely, J. C. Finlay, and R. W. Sterner. 2014. Selective feeding determines patterns of nutrient release by stream invertebrates. Freshwater Science 33: 1093-1107.
Hood, J. M., and R. W. Sterner. 2014. Carbon and phosphorus linkages in Daphnia growth are determined by growth rate, not species or diet. Functional Ecology 28:1156-1165.
Small, G. E., R. W. Sterner, and J. C. Finlay. 2014. An ecological network analysis of nitrogen cycling in the Laurentian Great Lakes. Ecological Modelling 293:150-160.
Sterner, R. W., J. M. Hood, M. R. Kearney, J. Urabe, and D. Raubenheimer. 2015. Couples that have chemistry: When ecological theories meet. Oikos 124: 917-919.
Phillips, J. C., G. A. McKinley, V. Bennington, H. A. Bootsma, D. J. Pilcher, R. W. Sterner, and N. R. Urban. 2015. The potential for CO2-induced acidification in freshwater: A Great Lakes case study. Oceanography 28(2): 136-145.
Sterner, R. W. 2015. Ocean stoichiometry, global carbon, and climate. Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences 112:8162-8163.