skip to main content


Search for: All records

Creators/Authors contains: "Myles, LaToya"

Note: When clicking on a Digital Object Identifier (DOI) number, you will be taken to an external site maintained by the publisher. Some full text articles may not yet be available without a charge during the embargo (administrative interval).
What is a DOI Number?

Some links on this page may take you to non-federal websites. Their policies may differ from this site.

  1. null (Ed.)
    Abstract. Honours and awards bestowed by professional societiesrecognize and reward members who have advanced the goals and values of thatsociety. All too often, however, awards reflect a small network of peoplewho know about the awards and participate in the process. This network workswonderfully for the people lucky enough to be in it, but typically neglectsthe full range and breadth of scholarship and service within the society. Werepresent a combined 15+ years' experience on the honours' committeefor a large professional society (the American Geophysical Union) and hereoffer strategies to increase the representation of honourees. Womenrepresented less than 20 % of awardees when we first becamecommittee members in 2008; women represented 50 % of awardees in2019. There is still much to do to ensure that members from other typicallyunder-represented groups (non-US members, members from under-representedraces/ethnicities) are truly represented and honoured for outstandingscience and service. We recommend forming canvassing committees that willscour the literature, conferences, and membership lists for appropriate andotherwise overlooked nominees; providing implicit bias training to selectioncommittees; and ensuring selection committees focus on the criteria for theaward rather than non-pertinent, often personal, information, as well as additionalstrategies that allow us to recognize our worthy colleagues. 
    more » « less
  2. Abstract

    Measurements of atmospheric ammonia (NH3) concentrations and fluxes are limited in coastal regions in the eastern U.S. In this study, continuous and high temporal resolution measurements (5s) of atmospheric NH3concentrations were recorded using a cavity ring‐down spectrometer in a temperate tidal salt marsh at the St Jones Reserve (Dover, DE). Micrometeorological variables were measured using an eddy covariance system which is part of the AmeriFlux network (US‐StJ). Soil, plant, and water chemistry were also analyzed to characterize the sources and sinks of atmospheric NH3. A new analytical methodology was used to estimate the average ecosystem‐scale diurnal cycle of NH3fluxes by replicating the characteristics of a chamber experiment. This virtual chamber approach estimates positive surface fluxes in continuing strongly stable conditions when mixing with the air above is minimal. Our findings show that tidal water level may have a significant impact on NH3emissions from the marsh. The largest fluxes were observed at low tide when more soil was exposed. While it is expected that NH3fluxes will peak when the air temperature maximizes, high tide occurred concurrently with midday peaks in solar irradiance led to a decrease in NH3fluxes. Furthermore, soil, plant, and water chemistry measurements underpinning the NH3concentrations and fluxes lead us to conclude that this coastal wetland ecosystem can act as either a sink or a source of NH3. Such measurements provide novel data on which we can base reliable parameterizations to simulate NH3emissions from coastal salt marsh ecosystems using surface‐atmosphere transfer models.

     
    more » « less