Michael Pace
Cyr, H., and Michael L. Pace. 1993. “Magnitude and Patterns of Herbivory in Aquatic and Terrestrial Ecosystems”. Nature 361: 148-50.
Pace, Michael L., Stephen B. Baines, H. Cyr, and J.A. Downing. 1993. “Relationships Among Early Life History Stages of Morone Americana and Morone Saxatilis from Long Term Monitoring of the Hudson River Estuary”. Can. J. Fish. Aquat. Sci. 50: 1976-85.
Cyr, H., and Michael L. Pace. 1993. “Allometric Theory: Extrapolations from Individuals to Communities”. Ecology 74: 1234-45. http://www.caryinstitute.org/reprints/Cyr_and_Pace_Ecology_1993.pdf.
Cole, Jonathan J., Michael L. Pace, Nina F. Caraco, and G.S. Steinhart. 1993. “Bacterial Biomass and Cell Size Distributions in Lakes: More and Larger Cells in Anoxic Waters”. Limnol. Oceanogr. 38: 1627-32. http://www.caryinstitute.org/reprints/Bacterial_biomass_and_cell_size_distributions_in_lakes.pdf.
Pace, Michael L. 1993. “Heterotrophic Microbial Processes”. In S. R. Carpenter and J. F. Kitchell (eds.). The Trophic Cascade in Lake Ecosystems, 252-77. Cambridge University Press, Cambridge.
Cole, Jonathan J., B. L. Peierls, Nina F. Caraco, and Michael L. Pace. 1993. “Nitrogen Loading of Rivers As a Human-Driven Process”. In M. J. McDonnell and S. T. A. Pickett (eds.). Humans As Components of Ecosystems: The Ecology of Subtle Human Effects and Populated Areas, 141-57. Springer-Verlag New York, Inc.
Vaqué, D., Michael L. Pace, Stuart E. G. Findlay, and D. Lints. 1992. “Fate of Bacterial Production in a Heterotrophic Ecosystem: Grazing by Protozoans and Metazoans in the Hudson Estuary”. Mar. Ecol. Prog. Ser. 89: 155-63.
Cyr, H., and Michael L. Pace. 1992. “Grazing by Zooplankton and Its Relationship to Community Structure”. Can. J. Fish. Aquat. Sci. 49: 1455-65.
Vaqué, D., and Michael L. Pace. 1992. “Grazing on Bacteria by Flagellates and Cladocerans in Lakes of Contrasting Food Web Structure”. J. Plank. Res. 14: 307-21.
Cyr, H., J.A. Downing, S. Lalonde, Stephen B. Baines, and Michael L. Pace. 1992. “Sampling Larval Fish Populations: Choice of Sample Number and Size”. Trans. Am. Fish. Soc. 121: 356-68.