Английская Википедия:Hynes Award for New Investigators

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Шаблон:Short description The Hynes Award for New Investigators is awarded by the Society for Freshwater Science and recognizes an excellent academic research paper in the freshwater sciences by a scientist less than five years after their terminal graduate degree (usually, a doctorate).[1] Recipients of the award have gone on to become leading senior researchers, serving as science advisors to various governments and states, and held leadership positions in national and international scientific societies.

The award is named after H.B. Noel Hynes, a British biologist who worked at the University of Liverpool and the University of Waterloo, where he was a world-leading expert on freshwater invertebrates and ecology.[2]

Recipients

Award Year Recipient Paper Title Co-authors Paper Publication Year Journal
2021 Rafael M. Almeida[1] "Reducing greenhouse gas emissions of Amazon hydropower with strategic dam planning"[3] Qinru Shi, Jonathan M. Gomes-Selman, Xiaojian Wu, Yexiang Xue, Hector Angarita, Nathan Barros, Bruce R. Forsberg, Roosevelt García-Villacorta, Stephen K. Hamilton, John M. Melack, Mariana Montoya, Guillaume Perez, Suresh A. Sethi, Carla P. Gomes, Alexander S. Flecker 2019 Nature Communications
2020 Amanda L. Subalusky[1][4] "Annual mass drownings of the Serengeti wildebeest migration influence nutrient cycling and storage in the Mara River"[5] Christopher L. Dutton, Emma J. Rosi, David M. Post 2017 Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences of the United States of America
2019 Daniel Nelson[1][6] "Experimental whole‐stream warming alters community size structure"[7] Jonathan P. Benstead, Alexander D. Huryn, Wyatt F. Cross, James M. Hood, Philip W. Johnson, James R. Junker, Gísli M. Gíslason, Jón S. Ólafsson 2017 Global Change Biology
2018 Amanda G. DelVecchia[1][8] "Ancient and methane-derived carbon subsidizes contemporary food webs"[9] Jack A. Stanford, Xiaomei Xu 2016 Nature Communications
2016 Erin R. Hotchkiss[1][10] "Whole‐stream 13C tracer addition reveals distinct fates of newly fixed carbon" Robert O. Hall Jr. 2015 Ecology
2015 Carla L. Atkinson[1][11] "Tracing Consumer-Derived Nitrogen in Riverine Food Webs"[12] Jeffrey F. Kelly, Caryn C. Vaughn 2014 Ecosystems
2014 Daniel C. Allen[1][13] "Bottom-up biodiversity effects increase resource subsidy flux between ecosystems"[14] Caryn C. Vaughn, Jeffrey F. Kelly, Joshua T. Cooper, Michael H. Engel 2012 Ecology
2013 Michael T. Bogan[1][15] "Severe drought drives novel community trajectories in desert stream pools"[16] David A. Lytle 2011 Freshwater Biology
2012 Ronald D. Bassar[1][17] "Local adaptation in Trinidadian guppies alters ecosystem processes"[18] Michael C. Marshall, Andrés López-Sepulcre, Eugenia Zandonà, Sonya K. Auer, Joseph Travis, Catherine M. Pringle, Alexander S. Flecker, Steven A. Thomas, Douglas F. Fraser, David N. Reznick 2010 Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences of the United States of America
2011 Debra S. Finn[1] "Demographic Stability Metrics for Conservation Prioritization of Isolated Populations"[19] Michael T. Bogan, David A. Lytle 2009 Conservation Biology
2010 John M. Davis[1][20] "Long-term nutrient enrichment decouples predator and prey production"[21] Amy D. Rosemond, Susan L. Eggert, Wyatt F. Cross, J. Bruce Wallace 2010 Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences of the United States of America
2009 Brian J. Roberts[1][22] "Multiple Scales of Temporal Variability in Ecosystem Metabolism Rates: Results from 2 Years of Continuous Monitoring in a Forested Headwater Stream"[23] Patrick J. Mulholland, Walter R. Hill 2007 Ecosystems
2008 Peter B. McIntyre[1][24] "Fish extinctions alter nutrient recycling in

tropical freshwaters"[25]

Laura E. Jones, Alexander S. Flecker, Michael J. Vanni 2007 Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences of the United States of America
2007 Brad W. Taylor[1] "Loss of a Harvested Fish Species Disrupts Carbon Flow in a Diverse Tropical River"[26] Alexander S. Flecker, Robert O. Hall Jr. 2006 Science
2006 Jack Brookshire[1] "Coupled cycling of dissolved organic nitrogen and carbon in a forest stream"[27] H. Maurice Valett, Steven A. Thomas, Jackson R. Webster 2005 Ecology
2005 Colden V. Baxter[1] "Fish invasion restructures stream and forest food webs by interrupting reciprocal prey subsidies"[28] Kurt D. Fausch, Masashi Murakami, Phillip L. Chapman 2004 Ecology
2004 Emily S. Bernhardt[1] "Dissolved Organic Carbon Enrichment Alters Nitrogen Dynamics in a Forest Stream"[29] Gene E. Likens 2002 Ecology
2003 Bradley J. Cardinale[1][30] "Species diversity enhances ecosystem functioning through interspecific facilitation"[31] Margaret A. Palmer, Scott L. Collins 2002 Nature
2002 David A. Lytle[1][32] "Flash floods and aquatic insect life-history evolution: evaluation of multiple models"[33] 2002 Ecology
2001 Michelle A. Baker[1] "Organic Carbon Supply and Metabolism in a Shallow Groundwater Ecosystem"[34] H. Maurice Valett, Clifford N. Dahm 2000 Ecology
2000 Robert O. Hall Jr.[1][35] "The trophic significance of bacteria in a detritus‐based stream food web"[36] Judith L. Meyer 1998 Ecology

References