Nigec Header graphic
Reports and Publications header graphic

Reports

Annual Reports   after 2000 can be found at the National Office website

  • Southeast Regional Center 2000 Annual Report
  • Southeast Regional Center 1999 Annual Report
  • Southeast Regional Center 1998 Annual Report
  • Southeast Regional Center 1997 Annual Report
  • Southeast Regional Center 1996 Annual Report
  • Southeast Regional Center 1995 Annual Report
  • Southeast Regional Center 1994 Annual Report
  • Southeast Regional Center National Institute for Global Environmental Change, Annual Report, Fiscal Year 1993.
  • Southeast Regional Center National Institute for Global Environmental Change, Annual Report, Fiscal Year 1992.
  • National Institute for Global Environmental Change, Annual Report, Fiscal Year 1994.
  • National Institute for Global Environmental Change, Annual Report, Fiscal Year 1992.
  • National Institute for Global Environmental Change, Annual Report, Fiscal Year 1991.
  • National Institute for Global Environmental Change, Annual Report Fiscal Year 1990, Vol. 1 &. II.

Publications:

SERC NIGEC Final Technical Reports:

Climate Change Impacts on the Southeastern U.S. Forest and Economy

            Report Number 95 Samuel Addy, Adam Z. Rose

Aircraft-based Assessment of Spatial Representation of Ameriflux Towers Outside Gainesville Florida

   Report Number 94 Derek G. Williamson

Long-term Dynamics of Carbon, Water and Energy Fluxes for Managed and Natural Pine Ecosystems in Florida

    Report Number 93 Henry L. Gholz, Timothy A. Martin

Spatial Variability of CO2 uptake by forests; Defining the relative contributions of biology and meteorology
 

    Report Number 92 John D. Albertson

Free Air Respiratory Carbon Isotope Enrichment Experiment

    Report Number 91 Tara Greaver, Leonel da Silveira Lobo Sternberg, Bruce Schaffer, Tomas Moreno

Strategies for Subterranean Carbon Sequestration

    Report Number 90 Philip W. Johnson, David W. Arnold, Leon Y. Sadler

Measurements and Modeling of Net Carbon Exchange over a Southeastern Loblolly Pine Plantation at the Duke Forest AmeriFlux Site

   Report Number 89 Ram Oren, Gabriel Katul, David Elsworth

Testing and Validation of PnET-II3SL for Use in Integrated Analyses of Global Climatic Change

   Report Number 88 S. Rocky Durrans

Carbon, Water, and Energy Fluxes for Slash Pine Ecosystems in Florida:Effects of Management and Environment

   Report Number 87 Henry L. Ghoz and Kenneth L. Clark

Enhancement and Inter comparison of CO2 and H2O Measurements from Soil and Canopy at Two AmeriFlux sites

   Report Number 86 Monique Leclerc

Isotopic Studies At AmeriFlux Tower Sites: Estimating CO2 Exchange and Anthropogenic CH4

Report Number 85 Jeffery P.Chanton, Florida State University, Tallahassee, Florida

Effects of Global Environmental Change on Native and Exotic Nitrogen-Fixing Trees of Southern Florida

Report Number 84 Richard B.Thomas. Biology Department, West Virginia University, Morgantown, WV 26506.

Plant Consumer Adjustments to Climate-Induced Rainfall Modification

Report Number 83 Donald J.Shure, Peter D.Mooreside, Rebekah E.Chapman, and Allan D. Wilson. Biology Department, Emory University, Atlanta, Georgia 30322.

Consequences of Anticipated Green House Warming in the Southeast: Role of Cloud-Mediated and Direct Effects of Aerosols

Report Number 81 Surabi Menon, V.K.Saxena, AND B.D.Logie.

Multi-Wavelength Measurements of LIght Scattering and Absorption by Aerosols as a Function of their Physical and Chemical Properties Over the Southeastern Region of the United States

Report Number 80, Hal B. Maring and Dennis L. Savoie, University of Miami, Miami, FL.

Analysis of Climate Variability and Its Relationship to Atmospheric Carbon Concentrations

Report Number 79, John R. Christy, Richard McNider, and Anthony W. King.

Phase I Project: Market Component refining and linking PnET and SRTS models and Non-market Component

Report Number 78, Robert Abt.

Interactive Effects of Elevated CO2 and Temperature on Insect Consumers of Forest Trees

Report Number 77, David E. Lincoln.

Responses of Southeastern Forests to Increased CO2 and Climatic Change: Experimental Test of an Ecosystem Model and Its Use for Impact Analysis

Report Number 76, E, Raymond Hunt, Jr., September 2000.

Responses of Southeastern Forest Species to Elevated Atmospheric CO2: Pathology and Related Biotic Interactions Above and Below the Ground

Report Number 75, Hugo Rogers and Michael A. Davis,Sept. 20, 2000.

Isotopic Signatures of Atmospheric CH4 at NIGEC Tower Sites and of Anthropogenic Sources of CH4 to the Atmosphere: SE Landfills, Combustion, and Waste Water Treatment

Report Number 74, Jeffrey P. Chanton.

Carbon Balance and Growth Adaptation of Contrasting C3 and C4 Perennial Forage species to Increased CO2 and Temperature

Report Number 73, K.J. Boote, L.E. Solenberger, L.H. Allen, Jr. and T.R. Sinclair, November 30, 1999.

Spatial Variability of Turbulent Fluxes in the Canopy Sublayer of a Uniform Pine Stand

Report Number 72, Gabriel Katul and Ram Oren, July 1999.

Estimate of Annual Carbon Fluxes in Forests of the Conterminous U.S.

Report Number 71, R. Oren, G.G. Katul, D. Ellsworth, N. Phillips, C.-I. Hsieh, C.-T. Lai, K.V.S. Schaver, B.E. Ewers, and Prasad Kasibhatla, July 1999.

The Role of the Mississippi River in Gulf of Mexico Hypoxia

   Report Number 70: Anne E. Carey, Jonathan R. Pennock, John C. Lehrter,W. Berry Lyons, William W. Schroeder, and Jean-Claude Bonzongo
 

Impact of Electric Vehicles on Electric Power Generation and Global Environmental Change

Report Number 69, Tim A. Haskew and Jay K. Lindly, October 1999.

Assessment of the Consequences to Below-ground Rhizosphere and Non- rhizosphere Associated Microbiota in Terms of Community Composition, Biomass and Activity in Relation to Changes in Atmospheric CO2 Under Varying Nutrient Concentrations and Moisture Contents

Report Number 68, David C. White, July 16, 1998.

Exchanges of Energy and Radiatively-Active Trace Gases Between Slash Pine and Cypress Wetland Ecosystems and the Atmosphere

Report Number 67, Henry L.Gholz, Kenneth L. Clark, Henry Loescher, Stephen M. Smitherman, Eric R. Allen, John B.Moncreiff, Ford Cropley, Changming Fang, Mark S. Castro, and Wendell P. Cropper, July 1998.

Nonhydraulic Signaling of Soil Drying and Stomatal Regulation in a Forest Ecosystem

Report Number 66, Robert M. Auge, Craig D. Green, Jennifer L. Croker, T. Brendon Johnson, Ann J.W. Stodola, Xiangrong Duan, Willard T. Witte, Arnold M. Saxton, Richard M. Evans, Joshua B. Olinick, and Paul J. Hanson, March 1999.

Alabama EPA Climate Change Program: Policy Planning to Reduce Greenhouse Gas Emissions     (Phase 2)

Report Number 64, William J. Herz, Robert A. Griffin, and William D. Gunther, May 12, 1997.

Policy Planning to Reduce Greenhouse Gas Emissions in Alabama

Report Number 63, William J. Herz, Robert A. Griffin and William D. Gunther, December 1997.

Soil Carbon Turnover Times and Inventories for a Native Forest and a Cultivated Site in Indiana

Report Number 61, Forest Ecological Systems, Wilfred M. Post, May 1999.

Enhancement of a Global Soil Pedon Database for Global Change Studies

Report Number 60, Wilfred M. Post, Sandra Brown, Elaine Matthews, Alan Stangenberger, Paul Zinke and Susan Trumbore, May 1999.

Response to Longleaf Pine to Elevated Atmospheric CO2

Report Number 59, Hugo H. Rogers, Robert J. Mitchell, G. Brett Runion, and Stephen A. Prior, May 1997.

Water Use of Managed Southern Pine and Hardwood Forests:  Scaling Ground-Based Measurements to the Ecosystem Level with Climate Data

Report Number 58, Ram Oren, Nathan Phillips, Diane Pataki, and Norman L. Christensen, Jr., June 15, 1997.

Modeling of the Antarctic Katabatic Ocean and Ice Systems With Implications to the Earth’s Climate

Report Number 57, Richard T. McNider, Anthony Davis, Scott R. Goodrick, William Schroeder, and Lawrence Hadji, July 1997.

Climate Model Validation Using MSU Global Temperatures

Report Number 56, John R. Christy, May 1997.

Modeling Patterns of CO2 Flux

Report Number 55, Thomas Smith.

The Effects of Rainfall Modification on Plant-Herbivore Processes

Report Number 54, Donald J. Shure, January 1997.

Meridional Heat Transport in Coupled and Uncoupled Numerical Models of the Atlantic Ocean and Global Atmosphere

Report Number 53, Eric Chassignet and Enda O’Brien, December, 1996.

Temperature  Profiles in Deep Wells for Estimating Historical Ground Surface Temperatures

Report Number 52, S. Rocky Durrans, C. Everett Brett, Charles D. Haynes, and Stanley J. Vitton, November 1996.

Could-Climate Feedback Mechanisms: Impact of Reduction in Fossil-Fuel Emissions

Report Number 51, V.K. Saxena, S. Menon, P.A. Durkee, W.P. Robarge, J. Anderson, B.N. Wenny, C.K. Deninger, B.D. Logie, J.S. Schafer, J.C. Ulman, S.-C. Yu, and C. Bahrmann, June 1997.

Integrated Resource Greenhouse Planning for the Electric Utility Industry in the Southeastern United States

Report Number 50, Lorna A. Greening, Lawrence Berkeley National Laboratory and Robert Underwood, Colorado School of Mines, May 1997.

Biological and Environmental Chemistry of DMSP and Related Sulfonium Compounds

Report Number 49, Ronald P. Kiene. (Book form; price may be greater than $5).

A Satellite Study of Urban Warming for Global Climate Change Research

Report Number 48, Stanley Q. Kidder, July 1996.

Hydrocarbon Emission From Southern Pines And the Potential Effects of Global Climate Change

Report Number 47, Jon D. Johnson and Eric R. All, September 1996.

Project EarthSense: K-12 Environmental Education Based on Remote Sensing and Hydrology

Report Number 44, Gregory N. Cox and Charles A. Laymon,March 1996.

Marine Organohalide Fluxes and Tropospheric Ozone Depletion in the Artic

Report Number 43, Glen Cota.

Production and Sea-Air Flux of Carbonyl Sulfide in the Coastal Environment

Report Number 42, Gregory A. Cutter, December, 1995.

Control of Methane Flux from Vegetated Wetlands

   Report Number 41, Jeffrey P. Chanton and Gary J. Whiting, September 7, 1995.

The Consequences of Continued Global Warming on the Vegetation of the Southeastern U.S.A.:  Evidence from the Last Interglacial

Report Number 39, George A. Brook, July 31, 1995.

Alternative Dielectric Coating Medium for Electric Motor Field Coil Manufacture

Report Number 38, I. Atly Jefcoat, Robert A. Griffin, William J. Herz, and Mohammed Imanuddin, December 31, 1994.

Isotopic Studies of the Biogeochemical Cycle of Carbon: Relationship Between pCO2 and the Abundance of 13C in Sedimentary Organic Matter

Report Number 37, Stuart G. Wakeham, September 30, 1994.

Dissolved Organic Carbon From Wetlands: Rates of Decomposition, Fluxes, and Loss Processes in Recipient Aquatic Ecosystems

Report Number 36, Robert G. Wetzel, Thomas S. Bianchi, and Paul T. Buonora, September 30, 1994.

Analysis of the Effect of Increased CO2 on the Biomass, Community Structure and Nutritional Status of the Rhizosphere Microbiota of White Oaks, Long Leaf Pine and Cottonwood

Report Number 33, David B. Ringelberg and David C. White, February 10, 1994.

General Reports:

Bibliography of Selected References on Katabatic, Ocean and Ice Systems on Antarctica

William W. Schroeder, Technical Report 96-002, Dauphin Island Sea Lab, Marine Environmental Sciences Consortium, Assembled as part of a SoutheastRegional Center of National Institute for Global Environmental Change sponsored research project titled “Mathematical Modeling of the Coupled Katabatic, Ocean and Ice Systems of the Antarctic, 1996.

A U.S. Carbon Cycle Science Plan; A Report on the Carbon and Climate Working Group

Jorge L. Sarmiento and Steven C. Wofsy, Co-Chairs, Prepared at the Request of the Agencies of the U.S. Global Change Research Program, 1999.

Conference Materials:

Oak Ridge Conference on Global Environmental Change

March 28-30, 1994, Oak Ridge Tennessee, Jointly Sponsored by the Midwestern Regional Center and the Southeast Regional Center of the National Institute for Global Environmental Change.

NIGEC Second Annual Research Symposium; April 26-27, Reducing Scientific Uncertainty II

Programs and Abstracts; Sponsored by the Southeast Regional Center, National Institute for Global Environmental Change, Tuscaloosa, Alabama, 1995.

NIGEC Interregional Climate Change Conference, May 29-30, 1996

Program and Abstracts, Bryant Conference Center, Tuscaloosa, Alabama, Hosted by the Southeast Regional Center, NIGEC, The University of Alabama, Co-Sponsored by the Midwestern and South Central Regional Centers, Oak Ridge National Laboratory, and the EPA State and Local Outreach Program.

Program and Abstracts; Annual Symposium and Program Planning Meeting

Southeast Regional Center, National Institute for Global Environmental Change, Bryant Conference Center, The University of Alabama, Tuscaloosa, February 25-26, 1997.

Programs and Abstracts; Annual Symposium and Program Planning Meeting

Southeast Regional Center National Institute for Global Environmental Change, Bryant Conference Center, The University of Alabama, February 25-26, 1998.

Reference Material:

The National Institute for Global Environmental Change, The NIGEC Vision, 1998.

Research Programs of the NIGEC Regional Centers, National Institute for Global Environmental Change

For the Period July 1, 1996 to June 30, 1997, Submitted to the U.S. Department of Energy, NIGEC National Board of Trustees, and the NIGEC National Technical Advisory Committee by the University of California, Davis.

Other:

Please contact the SERC NIGEC for a listing of additional reference materials and publications. 
 

Ordering Information:

All publications are $5.00 plus shipping/handling charge of $1.25 per publication unless otherwise noted.

Send All Correspondence To:

SERC NIGEC
The University of Alabama
Box 870207
Tuscaloosa, AL 35487-0207
 
Phone:  205-348-8401
Fax:  205-348-9569

For additional information, contact: 
Dr. Karen Boykin at kboykin@coe.eng.ua.edu
Or Ms. Denise Nelson at dnelson@coe.eng.ua.edu

 

Mission Statement States &Territories Current Research & Focus Areas Other Sites of Interest Conferences RFP Announcements Contact Information and StaffNIGEC navagational bar
 
spacer gif
SERC NIGEC