Dean Horton
Ph.D. Candidate, Earth and Ecosystem Science
Publications
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Mahon, A. R., Jerde, C. L., Learman, D. R., Horton, D. J., Nathan, L. M. (in review). Investigating diversity of pathogenic microbes in commercial bait trade water.
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Horton, D. J., Theis, K. R., Uzarski, D. G., Learman, D. R. (in review). Microbial community structure corresponds to nutrient gradients and human impact within coastal wetlands of the Great Lakes. ​BioRxiv preprint.
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Hengy, M. H., Horton, D. J., Uzarski, D. G., Learman, D. R. (2017). Microbial community diversity patterns are related to physical and chemical differences among temperate lakes near Beaver Island, MI. PeerJ.
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Horton, D. J., Kershner, M. K., Blackwood, C. B. (2017). Suitability of PCR primers for characterizing invertebrate communities from soil and leaf litter targeting metazoan 18S ribosomal or cytochrome oxidase I (COI) genes. European Journal of Soil Biology, 80, 43-48.
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Hackett, R. A., Babos, H. B., Collins, E. E., Horton, D. J., Schock, N. T., & Schoen, L. S. (2017). Researcher disciplines and the assessment techniques used to evaluate Laurentian Great Lakes coastal ecosystems. Journal of Great Lakes Research, 43(1), 9-16.
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Ni, C., Horton, D. J., Rui, J., Henson, M. W., Jiang, Y., Huang, X., & Learman, D. R. (2015). High concentrations of bioavailable heavy metals impact freshwater sediment microbial communities. Annals of Microbiology, 66(3), 1003-1012.
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Horton, D. (2015). Using molecular techniques to investigate soil invertebrate communities in temperate forests. (Electronic Thesis). https://etd.ohiolink.edu/
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