Jacob Bendix
Syracuse University
24 Papers
154 Citations
Jacob Bendix is an academic researcher from Syracuse University. The author has contributed to research in topics: Riparian zone & Vegetation. The author has an hindex of 14, co-authored 23 publications. Previous affiliations of Jacob Bendix include University of Georgia.
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Papers
Hydrological and geomorphological impacts on riparian plant communities
Jacob Bendix,Cliff R. Hupp +1 more
TL;DR: The recognition and analysis of hydrogeomorphological influences on riparian vegetation are complicated by multiple scales of environmental interactions, by the covariance of some environmental variables, and by feedbacks between vegetation and flood regimes as mentioned in this paper.
Riparian vegetation research in Mediterranean-climate regions: common patterns, ecological processes, and considerations for management
TL;DR: The authors reviewed 286 riparian-vegetation studies across five Mediterranean-climate regions (med-regions) and identified common themes, including: high levels of plant biodiversity, structural complexity, and cross-region species introductions; strong physical controls on plant demographics and community structure; and intensive human impacts.
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Stream power influence on southern Californian riparian vegetation
TL;DR: In this paper, the authors used detailed estimates of unit stream power (an appropriate measure of the potential for mechanical damage) in conjunction with vegetation cover data to test this relationship at 37 valley-bottom sites in the Transverse Ranges of Southern California.
102
Old-Growth Forests on Network News: News Sources and the Framing of An Environmental Controversy:
Carol M. Liebler,Jacob Bendix +1 more
TL;DR: Examination of four years of coverage of old-growth forest debate on ABC, CBS, and NBC found that while the distribution of visuals was inconclusive, source use and reporter wrap-ups predominantly reflected the procut frame.
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Scale, Direction, and Pattern in Riparian Vegetation-Environment Relationships
TL;DR: In this article, the authors compared the influence of environmental factors at transverse scale and longitudinal scale on the composition of woody riparian vegetation in southern California, using cover data from 37 valley cross sections in the Transverse Ranges, and determined segment values for the longitudinal scale variables of elevation, years since burning, aspect, valley width and lithology.
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