Publications from the Schreiner Lab

 

*Indicates Schreiner lab student

Ryan, M*, Schreiner, K.M., Swenson, J.*, Kennedy, P.G., & Gagne, J. (in revision). Chemical analysis shows dynamic changes during the degradation of ectomychorrhizal fungal necromass. Fungal Ecology.

Garcia-Tigeros, F., Schreiner, K. M., Sparrow, K., & Kessler, J (in revision). Assessing acidification from the remineralization of dissolved organic carbon and methane in the coastal Beaufort Sea, Alaska. Geophysical Research Letters.

Van Allen, R.*, Schreiner, K., Carlin, J., & Guntenspergen, G (in revision). Effects of sea level rise and coastal marsh transgression on soil organic matter in a Chesapeake Bay salt marsh. Estuarine, Coastal, and Shelf Science.

Peters, C.A., Hendrickson, E., Minor, E.C., Schreiner, K.M., Halbur, J., & Bratton, S.P. (2018). Pyr- GC/MS analysis of microplastics extracted from the stomach content of benthivore fish from the Texas Gulf Coast. Marine Pollution Bulletin, 137, 91-95.

Hendrickson, E.*, Minor, E. C., & Schreiner, K. M. (2018) Microplastic abundance and composition in western Lake Superior as determined by microscopy, Pyr-GCMS, and FTIR. Environmental Science and Technology.

Hanna, A. J.M., Shanahan, T. M., Allison, M. A., Bianchi, T. S., & Schreiner, K. M. (2018). A multi-proxy investigation of Late Holocene temperature change and climate-driven fluctuations in sediment sourcing: Simpson Lagoon, Alaska. Holocene.

Sparrow, K. J., Kessler, J. D., Southon, J. R., Garcia-Tigeros, F., Schreiner, K. M., Leonte, M., . . . Xu, X. (2018). Limited contribution of ancient methane to surface waters of the U.S. Beaufort Sea shelf. Science Advances.

Zhang, X., Bianchi, T. S., Cui, X., Rosenheim, B., Ping, C.-L., Hanna, A. J.M., K.M. Schreiner, Allison, M. A. (2017). Permafrost organic carbon mobilization from the watershed to the Colville River delta: Evidence from 14C ramped pyrolysis and lignin biomarkers. Geophysical Research Letters.

Schreiner, K. M., Katsev, S., Steinman, B., Sterner, R., Williams, J., & Zak, K. (2017). Advancing Graduate Limnology Education Through Active Learning and Community Partnerships: A Pilot Program at the Large Lakes Observatory. Limnology and Oceanography Bulletin.

J. L. Yost, L. Egerton-Warburton, K. M. Schreiner, C.E. Palmer, and A. E. Hartemink (2016). “Impact of restoration and management on aggregation and organic carbon accumulation in urban grasslands” Soil Science Society of America Journal.

T. S. Bianchi, K. M. Schreiner, R. W. Smith, R. Burdige, and S. Woodard (2016). “The effects of human-induced and natural redox changes on organic matter storage in coastal sediments during the Holocene: A biomarker perspective” Annual Reviews in Earth and Planetary Sciences.

K. M. Schreiner, T. S. Bianchi, and B. E. Rosenheim (2014). “Evidence for permafrost thaw and transport from an Alaskan North Slope watershed” Geophysical Research Letters. 10.1002/2014GL059514.

K. M. Schreiner, N. Blair, L. Egerton-Warburton, and W. Levinson (2014). “Contribution of fungal macromolecules to soil carbon sequestration” for Springer special volume Soil Carbon. A.E. Hartemink and K. McSweeney, eds.

K. M. Schreiner, T. S. Bianchi, T. I. Eglinton, M. A. Allison, and A.M. Hanna (2013). “Sources of terrigenous inputs to surface sediments of the Colville River Delta and Simpson’s Lagoon, Beaufort Sea, Alaska.” Journal of Geophysical Research: Biogeosciences. 10.1002/jgrg.20065.

T. Bianchi, L. A. Wysocki, K. M. Schreiner, T. R. Filley, D. R. Corbett, and A. Kolker (2011). “Sources of terrestrial organic carbon in the Mississippi plume region: Evidence for the importance of coastal marsh inputs.” Aquatic Geochemistry, 17: 431-456.

T. Bianchi, S. DiMarco, R. Smith, and K. M. Schreiner (2009). “Export of dissolved lignin from coastal wetlands to the Louisiana shelf.” Marine Chemistry, 117(1-4, special issue), 32-41.

K. M. Schreiner, T. Filley, B. Beitler-Bowen, R. Blanchette, R. Bolskar, W. C. Hockaday, C. A. Masiello, and J. W. Raebiger (2009). “White rot basidiomycete mediated decomposition of C60 fullerol.” Environmental Science and Technology, 43(9), 3162-3168.