Cladophora confounds coastal communities – public perceptions and management dilemmas.
V. Harris, University of Wisconsin Sea Grant
Cladophora – How is it handled?
R. Stauffer, Milwaukee Community Service Corps
Why filamentous green algae dominated benthic habitats after the zebra mussel invasion in Saginaw Bay, Lake Huron.
R. Pillsbury, University of Wisconsin – Oshkosh
Cladophora and the Beach: Implications for Public Health.
G. Kleinheinz and E. Englebert, University of Wisconsin – Oshkosh
The interaction of two nuisance species in Lake Michigan: Cladophora glomerata and Dreissena polymorpha.
W. Stankovich, University of Wisconsin – Plattville
The weakest link and what makes it stink.
S. Davis-Foust and J. Janssen. University of Wisconsin-Milwaukee
Molecular phylogeography and species discrimination of freshwater Cladophora(Cladophorales, Chlorophyta) in North America.
K. Müller, University of Waterloo
Nuisance Cladophora in Milwaukee urban streams - habitats, seasonality, productivity, nutrient trapping, heavy metal sponging - the ultimate foodweb bottleneck.
C. Sandgren, University of Wisconsin-Milwaukee
Modeling Cladophora growth: A review of the Auer-Canale framework.
M. Auer, Michigan Technological University
The contribution of Dreissena to the resurgence of Cladohpora in Lake Erie.
S. Higgins, University of Waterloo
Systematic survey of Cladophora and water quality on the Wisconsin Lake Michigan shoreline.
P. Garrison and S. Greb, Wisconsin Department of Natural Resources
Temporal and spatial patterns of Cladophora biomass and nutrient stoichiometry in Lake Michigan.
H.A. Bootsma, E.B. Young, and J.A. Berges, Wisconsin-Milwaukee
Can activity of enzymes involved in nutrient assimilation be useful as indices of nutrient status in Cladophora?
E.B. Young, J.A. Berges, and H.A. Bootsma, University of Wisconsin-Milwaukee.
Discussion forum: Reaching a consensus on what is known, and setting future research priorities.
E.B. Young and J.A. Berges, University of Wisconsin-Milwaukee