Publications

 

Langley JA, Mozdzer TJ, *Shepard KA, *Hagerty SB, Megonigal JP. 2013. Elevated CO2, nitrogen pollution and tidal marsh plant response to sea level rise. Global Change Biology  19: 14-95-1503.


Senior JK, Schweitzer JA, O’Reilly-Wapstra J, Chapman SK, Steane D, Langley JA et al. (2013) Phylogenetic Responses of Forest Trees to Global Change. PLoS ONE 8(4): e60088.

Chapman SK, *Palanivel RU, Langley JA. 2012. Soil carbon stability responds to land-use and groundcover management is southern Appalachian agroecosystems. Soil Science Society of America Journal 76: 2221-2229.


Kirwan ML, Langley JA, Guntenspergen GR, Megonigal JP. 2012. The impact of sea-level rise on organic matter decay rates in Chesapeake Bay brackish tidal marshes. Biogeosciences 10, 1869-1876.


Langley JA, Megonigal JP. 2012. Field-based radiometry to estimate tidal marsh plant growth in response to elevated CO2 and nitrogen addition. Wetlands 32: 571-578.


*White KP, Langley JA, Cahoon DR, Megonigal JP, 2012. Contrasting C3 and C4 root-shoot allocation responses to elevated CO2 and nitrogen: implications for tidal marsh elevation. Estuaries and Coasts 35: 1028- 1035.


Langley JA, Megonigal JP. 2010. Ecosystem response to elevated CO2 levels limited by nitrogen-fuelled species shift. Nature 466: 96-99.


Langley JA, McKee KL, Cahoon DR, Cherry JA, Megonigal JP. 2009. Elevated CO2 stimulates marsh elevation gain, counterbalancing sea-level rise. Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences 106: 6182-6186.


Langley JA, Sigrist MV, Duls J, Cahoon DR, Lynch JC, Megonigal JP. 2009. Global change and marsh elevation dynamics: experimenting where land meets sea and biology meets geology. In: Lang, M. A. (ed.) Smithsonian Marine Science Symposium. Smithsonian Contributions to the Marine Sciences, 38.


Langley JA, McKinley D, Wolf AA, Hungate BA, Drake BG, Megonigal JP. 2009. Priming depletes soil carbon and releases nitrogen in a scrub-oak ecosystem exposed to elevated CO2. Soil Biology & Biochemistry 41: 54-60.


Cavagnaro TR, Langley JA, Jackson LE, Smukler S, Koch GW. 2008. Growth, nutrition, and soil respiration of a mycorrhiza-defective tomato mutant and its mycorrhizal wild-type progenitor. Functional Plant Biology 35: 228-235.


Langley JA, Chapman SK, Hungate BA. 2006. Ectomycorrhizal colonization slows root decomposition: the post mortem fungal legacy. Ecology Letters 9: 955-959.


Chapman SK, Langley JA, Koch GW, Hart SC. 2006. Plants actively control nitrogen cycling: uncorking the microbial bottleneck. New Phytologist 169: 27-34.


Langley JA, Johnson NC, Koch GW, 2005. Mycorrhizal status influences the rate but not the temperature sensitivity of soil respiration. Plant and Soil 277: 335-344.


Classen AT, Langley JA, 2005. Data-model integration is not magic: modeling ecosystem responses to global change. New Phytologist 166: 367-379.


Langley JA, Hungate BA, 2003. Mycorrhizal controls on belowground litter quality. Ecology 84: 2302-2312.


Langley JA, Drake BG, Dijkstra P, Hungate BA, 2003. Ectomycorrhizal colonization, biomass and production in a regenerating scrub oak forest in response to elevated CO2. Ecosystems 5: 424-430.


Langley JA, Drake BG, Hungate BA, 2002. Extensive belowground carbon storage supports roots and mycorrhizae in regenerating Florida scrub oak. Oecologia 131: 542.


*undergraduate authors