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Ecological Responses at Mount St. Helens
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Table of Contents

Prologue. To Mount St. Helens John Daniel
Preface. Charles M. Crisafulli and Virginia H. Dale 
Chapter 1. Ecological Responses to the 1980 Eruption of Mount St. Helens: Key Lessons and Remaining QuestionsVirginia H. Dale and Charles M. Crisafulli
Chapter 2. Sediment Erosion and Delivery from Toutle River Basin After the 1980 Eruption of Mount St. Helens—A 30-year PerspectiveJon J. Major, Adam R. Mosbrucker, and Kurt R. Spicer
Chapter 3. Geomorphic Response of the Muddy River Basin to the 1980 Eruptions of Mount St. Helens, 1980–2000Thomas E. Lisle, Jon J. Major, and Jasper H. HardisonChapter 4. The New Spirit Lake: Changes to Hydrology, Nutrient Cycling and Biological Productivity James E. Gawel, Charles M. Crisafulli, and Rich Miller
Chapter 5. Soil Carbon and Nitrogen, and Evidence for Formation of Glomalin, a Recalcitrant Pool of Soil Organic matter, in Developing Mount St. Helens Pyroclastic Substrates Jonathan J. Halvorson, Kristine A. Nichols, and Charles M. Crisafulli
Chapter 6. Forest Understory Buried by Volcanic Tephra: Inertia, Resilience, and the Pattern of Community RedevelopmentDonald B. Zobel and Joseph A. Antos
Chapter 7. Primary Succession on Mount St. Helens: Rates, Determinism, and Alternative StatesRoger del Moral and Jonathan H. Titus
Chapter 8. Plant Succession on the Mount St. Helens Debris-Avalanche Deposit and the Role of Non-native SpeciesVirginia H. Dale and Elsie M. Denton
Chapter 9. The Spread of Exotic Plant Species at Mount St. Helens: the Roles of a Road, Disturbance Type, and Post-Disturbance ManagementLindsey L. Karr, Charles M. Crisafulli, and Jeffrey J. Gerwing
Chapter 10. Lichen Community Development along a Volcanic Disturbance Gradient at Mount St. HelensPeter R. Nelson, Bruce McCune, Tim Wheeler, Linda H. Geiser, and Charles M. Crisafulli
Chapter 11. Succession and Mycorrhizae on Mount St. HelensMichael F. Allen, Matthew R. O’Neill, Charles M. Crisafulli, and James A. MacMahon
Chapter 12. Primary Succession on the Mount St. Helens Volcano: Ground Beetle (Coleoptera: Carabidae) Community Assembly and Species Turnover, 1980–2010.Robert R. Parmenter, Charles M. Crisafulli, Tara E. Blackman, Cheryl A. Parmenter, Gary L. Parsons, Danny Shpeley, and James A. MacMahon 
Chapter 13. Diversity of Large-Bodied Macroinvertebrates in Ponds Created on the Debris-Avalanche Deposit Following the 1980 Eruption of Mount St. HelensShannon M. Claeson, Charles M. Crisafulli, William J. Gerth
Chapter 14. Characteristics of a New Rainbow Trout Population: Spirit Lake, Mount St. Helens Volcano, 2000–2015Tara E. Blackman, Charles M. Crisafulli, and Shannon M. Claeson
Chapter 15. Mammal Community Assembly during Primary Succession on the Pumice Plain at the Mount St. Helens Volcano, 1983–2015 Charles M. Crisafulli, Robert R. Parmenter, Tara E. Blackman, and James A. MacMahon
Chapter 16. Volcano Ecology: State of the Field and Contributions of Mount St. Helens Research  Frederick J. Swanson and Charles M. Crisafulli
Coda. Another Weather Ursula K. Le Guin
Coda. Pearly Everlasting Gary Snyder

About the Author

Charles M. Crisafulli is a Research Ecologist with the USDA, Forest Service, Pacific Northwest Research Station. His primary research focuses on initial and longer-term ecological responses of organisms, in aquatic and terrestrial ecosystems, following explosive volcanism. From 1980 to present (2017) he has worked at Mount St. Helens and since 2008 he has annually conducted field research at several other contemporary eruption sites in Patagonia, Chile. His primary research themes are processes of succession and assembly of biological communities, and chiefly focus on small mammals, birds, amphibians and arthropods. He is currently engaged in expanding and testing the generality of lessons drawn from Mount St. Helens to volcanoes in other regions of the world such as South America, Asia, and Alaska, and more broadly to developing a global volcano ecology database to access the current state of the field and to develop science strategies for the future related to investig

ations of volcanically disturbed ecosystems.

Virginia H. Dale is a Corporate Fellow at Oak Ridge National Laboratory (ORNL) in east Tennessee. She was on the first team of biologists who entered the Red Zone at Mount St. Helens after the 1980 eruption and has been studying vegetation reestablishment there ever since. Her primary research interests are disturbance ecology, plant succession, land-use change, sustainability, and environmental decision making. She has served on national scientific advisory boards for five agencies of the United States and several committees of the National Academies of Science. She was among the members of the international science community that contributed to the Intergovernmental Panel on Climate Change Scientific Assessment that in 2007 received the Nobel Peace Prize. In 2013, she was recognized with the Distinguished Landscape Ecologist award by the United States Regional Association of the International

Association for Landscape Ecology. Her current interest is in understanding risk and resilience in a changing world.

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