Contents
Keynote Plenary Panel
Expanding the Boundaries of Long-term Atmospheric Monitoring
Session One
Atmospheric Deposition Patterns and Trends
Session Two
Mercury Emissions and Atmospheric Deposition
Session Three
Ecological Effects and Critical Loads I
Session Four
Ecological Effects and Critical Loads II
Session Five
Improving our Understanding of the Reactive Nitrogen Budget
Session Six
Modeling to Understand Emissions and Source Apportionment of Reactive Nitrogen
Session Seven
Measurement of Atmospheric Mercury and Emerging Pollutants
Session 4: Ecological Effects and Critical Loads II
Moderators: Jeff Herrick and Jason LynchChronic and Episodic Acidification of Streams along the Appalachian Trail Corridor, eastern United States
Douglas A Burns, U.S. Geological SurveyAbstract
Linking recovery from acidification and changing climate to shifting zooplankton communities in northeastern lakes
Stephanie Dykema, University of Maine, OronoAbstract
The Key to Park Protection—Cooperative Conservation: monitoring, management, and research in Shenandoah National Park
Jalyn Cummings, Shenandoah National ParkAbstract
Dragonfly Larvae as Biosentinels of Mercury Availability and Ecological Impairment in Aquatic Food Webs of National Parks throughout the United States
Collin Eagles-Smith, US Geological SurveyAbstract
A Transition in Human Manipulation of the Sulfur Cycle
Eve-Lyn Hinckley, University of Colorado, BoulderAbstract