Browsing by Author "White, James C."

Browsing by Author "White, James C."

Sort by: Order: Results:

  • Januchowski‐Hartley, Stephanie R.; White, James C.; Pawar, Sayali K.; Januchowski-Hartley, Fraser A.; England, Judy (IOP, 2021-07-01)
    The world's rivers are covered over and fragmented by road infrastructure. Road-river infrastructure result in many socio-environmental questions and documenting where different types occur is challenged by their sheer ...
  • Stubbington, Rachel; Sarremejane, Romain; Laini, Alex; Cid, Núria; Csabai, Zoltán; England, Judy; Munné, Antoni; Aspin, Thomas; Bonada, Núria; Bruno, Daniel; Cauvy-Fraunie, Sophie; Chadd, Richard; Dienstl, Claudia; Fortuño Estrada, Pau; Graf, Wolfram; Gutiérrez-Cánovas, Cayetano; House, Andy; Karaouzas, Ioannis; Kazila, Eleana; Millán, Andrés; Morais, Manuela; Pařil, Petr; Pickwell, Alex; Polášek, Marek; Sánchez-Fernández, David; Tziortzis, Iakovos; Várbíró, Gábor; Voreadou, Catherina; Walker-Holden, Emma; White, James C.; Datry, Thibault (Wiley, 2021-11-01)
    1. Rivers are dynamic ecosystems in which both human impacts and climate-driven drying events are increasingly common. These anthropogenic and natural stressors interact to influence the biodiversity and functioning of ...
  • England, Judy; Hayes, Chloe; White, James C.; Johns, Tim (MDPI, 2021-08-17)
    River ecosystems have been heavily degraded globally due to channel hydromorphological modifications or alterations to catchment-wide processes. Restoration actions aimed at addressing these changes and restoring ecological ...
  • White, James C.; Aspin, Thomas; Picken, Jessica Louise; Ledger, Mark E.; Wilby, Robert L.; Wood, Paul J. (Wiley, 2022-03-29)
    River flow regimes face increasing pressure from human activities including water resource management operations and climate change. Consequently, extreme hydrological events are becoming more severe and commonplace, and ...
  • Krajenbrink, Hendrik J.; White, James C.; Dunbar, Michael J.; Wood, Paul J. (Wiley, 2021-12-29)
    River impoundments have transformed river ecosystems globally due to the modification of various abiotic and biotic factors. This study provides rare evidence quantifying how water supply reservoirs alter water temperature ...
  • Hill, Matthew J.; Greaves, Helen M.; Sayer, Carl D.; Hassall, Christopher; Milin, Melanie; Milner, Victoria S.; Marazzi, Luca; Hall, Ruth; Harper, Lynsey R.; Thornhill, Ian; Walton, Richard; Biggs, Jeremy; Ewald, Naomi; Law, Alan; Willby, Nigel; White, James C.; Briers, Robert A.; Mathers, Kate L.; Jeffries, Michael J.; Wood, Paul J. (Wiley, 2021-12-09)
    Ponds are among the most biodiverse and ecologically important freshwater habitats globally and may provide a significant opportunity to mitigate anthropogenic pressures and reverse the decline of aquatic biodiversity. ...
  • Peralta-Maraver, Ignacio; Stubbington, Rachel; Arnon, Shai; Kratina, Pavel; Krause, Stefan; Mello Cionek, Vivian de; Leite, Nei Kavaguichi; Lemes da Silva, Aurea Luiza; Thomazi, Sidinei Magela; Posselt, Malte; Milner, Victoria Susan; Momblanch, Andrea; Moretti, Marcelo S.; Nóbrega, Rodolfo L. B.; Perkins, Daniel M.; Petrucio, Mauricio M.; Reche, Isabel; Saito, Victor; Sarmento, Hugo; Strange, Emily; Taniwaki, Ricardo Hideo; White, James C.; Alves, Gustavo Henrique Zaia; Robertson, Anne L. (Elsevier, 2021-02-01)
    Riverine ecosystems can be conceptualized as ‘bioreactors’ (the riverine bioreactor) which retain and decompose a wide range of organic substrates. The metabolic performance of the riverine bioreactor is linked to their ...
  • Januchowski‐Hartley, Stephanie R.; Mantel, Sukhmani; Celi, Jorge; Hermoso, Virgilio; White, James C.; Blankenship, Scott; Olden, Julian D. (Wiley, 2020-10-08)
    1. Around the globe, instream infrastructures such as dams, weirs, and culverts associated with roads are wide‐spread and continue to be constructed. There is limited documentation of smaller infrastructure because of mixed ...
  • Fornaroli, Riccardo; White, James C.; Boggero, Angela; Laini, Alex (MDPI, 2020-08-31)
    In the last decade, large scale biomonitoring programs have been implemented to obtain a robust understanding of freshwater in the name of helping to inform and develop effective restoration and management plans. A ...