M. C. Eimers
Trent University
7 Papers
25 Citations
M. C. Eimers is an academic researcher from Trent University. The author has contributed to research in topics: Climate change & Snow. The author has an hindex of 7, co-authored 7 publications.
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Papers
Winter Weather Whiplash: Impacts of Meteorological Events Misaligned With Natural and Human Systems in Seasonally Snow-Covered Regions
N. J. Casson,Alexandra R. Contosta,Elizabeth A. Burakowski,John Campbell,Mindy S. Crandall,Irena F. Creed,M. C. Eimers,Sarah Garlick,David A. Lutz,Matthew Q. Morison,Matthew Q. Morison,Anita T. Morzillo,Sarah J. Nelson,Sarah J. Nelson +13 more
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The contribution of rain‐on‐snow events to nitrate export in the forested landscape of south‐central Ontario, Canada
TL;DR: In this paper, the authors assess the importance of rain-on-snow (ROS) events for NO3-N export across 18 catchments in south-central Ontario, Canada, that receive the same annual and seasonal N deposition, but encompass a range of physiographic characteristics.
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Sources of nitrate export during rain-on-snow events at forested catchments
TL;DR: In this paper, high intensity monitoring of throughfall, snow pack and stream water draining two proximal catchments (Harp 3A and Harp 6A) with very different NO3-N export revealed that a very small percentage of ROS-induced stream discharge originates from throughfall and melting snow (new water; average = 6.4 %).
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An assessment of the nutrient status of sugar maple in Ontario: indications of phosphorus limitation
TL;DR: Despite differences in foliar nutrition, there were no significant differences in crown condition or tree growth across the study region, suggesting that low P availability is not yet having a widespread detrimental effect on tree health.
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Sensitivity of physical lake processes to climate change within a large Precambrian Shield catchment.
TL;DR: In this paper, the authors quantified the impacts of climate change and sensitivity of lake physical processes within a large (5100 km2) Precambrian Shield catchment in south-central Ontario.
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