Fecal sterols as a potential tool for conservation paleobiology in East Africa
The meta-gut: community coalescence of animal gut and environmental microbiomes.
Animal legacies lost and found in freshwater ecosystems.
Temporal niche partitioning of scavengers on wildebeest carcasses after mass mortality events.
Hippopotamus are distinct from domestic livestock in their resource subsidies to and effects on aquatic ecosystems.
Alternative biogeochemical states of river pools mediated by hippo use and flow variability.
A river of bones: wildebeest skeletons leave a legacy of mass mortality in the Mara River, Kenya.
Hippos (Hippopotamus amphibius): the animal silica pump.
A 2000-year old sediment record reveals rapidly changing sedimentation and land use since the 1960s in the Upper Mara-Serengeti Ecosystem.
Organic matter and nutrient inputs from large wildlife influence ecosystem function in the Mara River, Africa.
Organic matter loading by hippopotami causes subsidy overload resulting in downstream hypoxia and fish kills.
The influence of a semi-arid sub-catchment on suspended sediments in the Mara River, Kenya.
Annual mass drownings of the Serengeti wildebeest migration influence nutrient cycling and storage in the Mara River.
Carnivory in Hippopotamus amphibius: implications for the ecology and epidemiology of anthrax in African landscapes.
The hippopotamus conveyor belt: vectors of carbon and nutrients from terrestrial grasslands to aquatic systems in sub-Saharan Africa.
Comparing flow regime, channel hydraulics and biological communities to infer flow-ecology relationships in the Mara River of Kenya and Tanzania.
The meta-gut: community coalescence of animal gut and environmental microbiomes.
- Covered by Science Magazine
Animal legacies lost and found in freshwater ecosystems.
Temporal niche partitioning of scavengers on wildebeest carcasses after mass mortality events.
Hippopotamus are distinct from domestic livestock in their resource subsidies to and effects on aquatic ecosystems.
Alternative biogeochemical states of river pools mediated by hippo use and flow variability.
A river of bones: wildebeest skeletons leave a legacy of mass mortality in the Mara River, Kenya.
- Covered by Nature.
Hippos (Hippopotamus amphibius): the animal silica pump.
- Covered by Covered by Science News, Phys.org, Science Daily, and others.
A 2000-year old sediment record reveals rapidly changing sedimentation and land use since the 1960s in the Upper Mara-Serengeti Ecosystem.
Organic matter and nutrient inputs from large wildlife influence ecosystem function in the Mara River, Africa.
Organic matter loading by hippopotami causes subsidy overload resulting in downstream hypoxia and fish kills.
- Covered by Science Magazine, The Atlantic and others.
The influence of a semi-arid sub-catchment on suspended sediments in the Mara River, Kenya.
Annual mass drownings of the Serengeti wildebeest migration influence nutrient cycling and storage in the Mara River.
- Covered by Science Magazine, The Washington Post, Smithsonian Magazine, National Geographic, The Atlantic and others.
Carnivory in Hippopotamus amphibius: implications for the ecology and epidemiology of anthrax in African landscapes.
The hippopotamus conveyor belt: vectors of carbon and nutrients from terrestrial grasslands to aquatic systems in sub-Saharan Africa.
- Covered by Science Magazine.
Comparing flow regime, channel hydraulics and biological communities to infer flow-ecology relationships in the Mara River of Kenya and Tanzania.