Swank, WT, and DA Crossley, Jr. (eds.) 1988. . Springer-Verlag, New York, New York.
Section 1 The Coweeta Hydologis Laboratory
Chapter 1: Introduction and site description W.T. Swank, and DA Crossley, Jr.
Chapter 2: History of Coweeta J.E. Douglass and M.D. Hoover
Section 2 Hydrology, Geology, and Water Chemistry
Chapter 3: Climatology and hydrology L.W.Swift Jr., G.B. Cunningham, and J.E. Douglass
Chapter 4: Characterization of baseline precipitation and stream chemistry and nutrient budgets for control watersheds W.T.Swank and J.B. Waide
Chapter 5: Bedrock geology and regional geologic setting of Coweeta Hydrologic Laboratory in the eastern Blue Ridge R.D. Hatcher, Jr
Chapter 6: Weathering and soil-forming processes M.A. Valbel
Chapter 7: Debris avalanches and the origin of first-order streams W.H. Grant
Chapter 8: Streamflow generation by variable source area A.R. Hibbert and C.A. Troendle
Chapter 9: Research on interception losses and soil moisture relationships J.D. Helvey and J.H Patric
Section 3 Forest Dynamics and Nutrient Cycling
Chapter 10: Forest communities and patterns F.P. Day, Jr., D.L. Phillips,and C.D. Monk
Chapter 11: Biomass, primary production, and selected nutrient budgets for an undisturbed hardwood watershed C.D. Monk and F.P. Day, Jr.
Chapter 12: Dynamics of early successional forest structure and processes in the Coweeta basinL.R. Boring, W.T. Swank, and C.D.Monk
Chapter 13: Comparative physiology of successional forest trees L.L. Wallace
Section 4 Canopy Arthropods and Herbivory
Chapter 14: Foliage consumption and nutrient dynamics in canopy insects D.A. Crossley, Jr., C.S. Gist, W.W. Hargrove, L.S. Risley, T.D. Schowalter, and T.R. Seastedt
Chapter 15: Canopy arthropods and their response to forest disturbance T.D. Schowalter, and D.A. Crossley, Jr
Chapter 16: Changes in soil nitrogen pools and transformations following forest clearcutting J.B. Waide, W.H. Caskey, R.L. Todd, and L.R. Boring
Chapter 17: Soil arthropods and their role in decomposition and mineralization processes T.R. Seastedt and D.A. Crossley
Chapter 18: Sulfur pools and transformations in litter and surface soil of a hardwood forest J.W. Fitzgerald, W.T. Swank, T.C. Strickland, J.T. Ash, D.D. Hale, T.L. Andrew, and M.E. Watwood
Section 6 Stream Biota and Nutrient Dynamics
Chapter 19: Aquatic invertebrate research J.B. Wallace
Chapter 20: The trophic significance of dissolved organic carbon in streams J.L.Meyer, C.M. Tate, R.T. Edwards, and M.T. Crocker
Chapter 21: Effects of watershed disturbance on stream seston characteristics J.R. Webster, E.F. Benfield, S.W. Golladay, R.F. Kazmierczak, Jr., W.B> Perry, and G.T. Peters
Section 7 Man and Management of Forested Watersheds
Chapter 22: Streamflow Changes Associated with Forest Cutting, Species Conversions, and Natural Disturbances W.T. Swank, L.W. Swift, Jr., and J.E. Douglass
Chapter 23: Forest access roads: design, maintenance, and soil loss L.W. Swift
Chapter 24: Effects of pesticide applications on forested watersheds D.G. Neary
Chapter 25: Stream chemistry responses to disturbance W.T. Swank
Chapter 26: Acid precipitation effects on forest processes B.L. Haines and W.T. Swank
Chapter 27: Trace metals in the atmosphere, forest floor, soil, and vegetation H.L. Ragsdale and C.W. Berish
Section 8 Perspectives on Forest Hydrology and Long-Term Ecological Research
Chapter 28: Forest ecosystem stability; revision of the resistance-resilience model in relation to observable macroscopic properties of ecosystems J.B. Wade
Chapter 29: European experiences in long-term forest hydrology research H.M. Keller
Chapter 30: Past and future of ecosystem research - contribution of dedicated experimental sites J.F. Franklin