June 2009                 
       Mexican Study Uses Alternate Method to Corroborate Sediment Chronology
       Fringe Benefits: To Provide Critical Services, How Big Does a Marsh Have to Be?
       Climate Can Eclipse Nutrient Loading as a Major Influence on Phytoplankton Communities, Says North Carolina Study
       Unintended Consequences: Dredging Removes Fringing Vegetation Along with Sediments in Brazilian Lagoon
April 2009                 
       Phytoplankton in Massachusetts Bay: Impacts of a Sewage Outfall Relocation
       Study Says Marsh Ditching Leaves Legacy of Water Quality Effects
       Dredged Material Placement May Serve as a Life Preserver for Drowning Marshes
       Watershed Restoration Requires Stronger Science-Management Links, Says Essay
February 2009                 
       Long-term Records Show that for Nitrogen, Losses are as Important as Loads
       Fluorescence and Reflectance Indices are Promising as Early Warning Signals of Effects of Herbicide on Marsh Plants
       For Coastal Ecosystems, Maybe You Can’t Go Home Again
       Invasive Plants Maybe Not Such Bad News for Northern Gulf of Mexico Invertebrates
December 2008                 
       Field Measurements of Oyster Filtration: Convenient, Accurate, and Useful for Restoration Projects
       Introduced Pepper Plant May Invade by Sea
       Boston Harbor: Cleanup Brings Back the Benthos
       Hurricane Impact Depends on Geography and Bathymetry
       The Upper vs. Lower Patuxent River Estuary: Differences in Long-term Water Quality Trends
October 2008                 
       Trouble in Paradise: Multiple Indicators Used to Assess Water Quality in Kaua`i, Hawai`i
       Hypoxia in a Small Estuary: Macroalgae, Rather than Phytoplankton, are Running the Show
       Fifty-Five Years of Fish Kills in Texas: An Examination of Causes and Sources
       Are Open Bays As Important As Salt Marshes for Brown Shrimp Nurseries in Louisiana?
September 2008                 
       Tidal Restrictions Impact Algae to Mammals in Elkhorn Slough
       Before and After Chesapeake Nutrient Reductions: New Patuxent Budget Provides Insights
       Urbanization, Nutrients, and Macroalgae: Links in Waquoit Bay
       Groundwater Contributes Little Nutrient Load to Neuse, But Could be Locally Important
Volume 31 Number 1-2                 
       Coastal Ecosystems Need Better Public Relations, Says Study
       If One Sediment Quality Assay is Good, Are Three Better?
       “Thin Layers” Offer One Solution to the Cryptic Bloom Mystery
       New Guidance for Expanding the Intersection of Management, Science, and Invasive Species
       Florida Bay Nutrients Not to Blame for Florida Keys Reef Losses
       Interactions of Birds, Crabs, and People in an Argentina Estuary
Volume 30 Number 6                 
       ASSETS Recommended for Use in Chinese Estuaries 
       Oceanographic Portrait of Glacier Bay Provides Insights About Fjords 
       Modern Technology Sheds Light on an Ancient Species 
Volume 30 Number 5                 
       Gulf of Mexico Hypoxia: Revisiting the 2001 Action Plan
       Landscape, Land Use, and SAV in the Chesapeake
       Lessons on Marsh Resilience Learned in the Bay of Fundy
Volume 30 Number 4                 
       Critical Tool for American Samoa Mangrove Restoration is Community Support 
       Working “Backward,” Seagrass Depth Limits Can Lead to Nutrient and TSS Loading Limits 
       Ripped to Shreds: Mechanical Shredding Works to Wipe Out Water Hyacinth 
       Listening for Fish in the Shallow Waters of Barataria Bay 
Volume 30 Number 3                 
       Is Nutrient Loading a Smaller Problem Than We Think? 
       Improving Detergent’s Role in Tackling a Messy Problem 
       Australian Study: Weirs Mean Fish Can’t Go with the Flow 
       Development Paves the Way for Phragmites Invasion in the Chesapeake 
Volume 30 Number 2                 
       Can Chesapeake Oysters Be Enlisted in the Eutrophication Battle? 
       Designing Marine Reserve Networks: Connectivity is the Key 
       Perspective: Restoration Ecology is not Equal To Ecological Restoration, But Both are Needed
       Study Provides Preview of Effects of Sea Level Rise on Marsh Plants 
Volume 30 Number 1                 
       Fallout from Sewage Outfall Relocation: Changes in Water Quality and Productivity in Boston Harbor 
       Altered Ecosystem, Altered Fish Assemblage in the Sacramento-San Joaquin Delta 
       Goodbye to Terrapin Bycatch: A Florida Solution 
       Can Natural Reseeding Contribute to Marsh Restoration? 
Volume 29 Number 6B                 
       In Chesapeake, Benthic Community Shows that Where Development is Up, Estuarine Health is Down 
       Telling the Phragmites Twins Apart: Native Prefers No Salt and Little Nitrogen 
       Fish Index Proves Useful in Taking the Pulse of South African Estuaries 
       Bioenergetics Study Reveals Tough Choice for Invasive Crabs: Get Eaten or Use Excess Energy 
Volume 29 Number 5                 
       Look Landward for Sources of Water Body Impairment, Says CA Study 
       Sampling Frequency: What Might You Be Missing? 
       Horseshoe Crab Sex and the City: Restoration Potential in Jamaica Bay 
       Feeding Sediment-Starved Tidal Marshes: Signs of Success in North Carolina 
Volume 29 Number 4                 
       “Compromise” Nutrient Model Produces Advice for Chesapeake Bay 
       Model Results Recommend Easing Up on Horseshoe Crab Harvest 
       Is Food Web Function Restored When Tidal Flow Is? Carbon Isotopes May Provide Clues 
       Southeast Estuaries May Be Joining the Hypoxia Club 
Volume 29 Number 3                 
       An Estuarine Paradox: Introduced Alga Dominates, but Supports Diversity Too 
       Common Reed Too Common for Mummichogs: Invader Provides Poor Habitat 
       Do These Oysters Need Salt? Landings and Salinity in the Gulf of Mexico 
       DOM Dynamics in Denmark 
Volume 29 Number 2                 
       More Fresh Water Brings Long-term Change to New Zealand Estuary 
       Wild Celery Beds Extend Nursery Habitat for Fishery Species 
       Where in the World (Or at Least in the Estuary) is Centropomus undecimalis?
       Viruses Tested as Alternative Sewage Indicator 
Volume 29 Number 1                 
       Can Mid-Atlantic Marshes and Tidal Ponds Keep Their Heads above Water? 
       Shoreline Alterations Turn up the Heat on Puget Sound Beaches 
       A Green Light for Restoration: Transplanted Georgia Marsh Plants Thrive in Dieback Sites 
       What Happens to the Oxygen? Bacteria and Hypoxia in the Potomac River 
January 2006 Volume 28 Number 6                 
       Drainage Networks in Restored Wetlands: Should Nature or a Shovel Introduce Tidal Creeks to Restoration Sites?
Investigation of Nitrogen Dynamics Goes Underground in New England
Salt Marsh Loss in New England: Beyond Aerial Photography
Functional Trajectory Models Transplanted to Eelgrass Bed
November 2005 Volume 28 Number 5                 
       Balancing Venice's Water Budget: Submarine Groundwater's Role
Good News for the New River
Review Takes Stock of Brown Tide Knowledge
Toxaphene-Contaminated Sediment Remediation Pays Off for GA Fish
September 2005 Volume 28 Number 4                 
       By-catch Reduction Device Protects Terps
Sediment Slurry Application Helps Delta Marsh Rise to the Challenge
Poor Water and Sediment Quality: Accessories to the Long Island Lobster Crash?
Of Wakes and Dredging in the Intracoastal Waterway: Compensatory Effects?
August 2005 Volume 28 Number 3                 
       Modern Genetic Techniques Aid in Managing an Ancient Fish
Golf Course Swales May Reduce Water Hazards
Seagrass Mapping Down Under: Challenges of New Technology
A Caution on the Use of Elemental and Stable Isotope Ratios: Do You Know Your Species' Natural Variability?
June 2005 Volume 28 Number 2                 
       Ultraviolet Radiation and Primary Productivity: Effects May Go Beyond the Antarctic
ENSO/SAV Links in Lake Pontchartrain: More than Coincidence
Are Created Marshes Equal, Above the Ground and Below?
Elkhorn Slough's Living History
May 2005 Volume 28 Number 1                 
       Striped Bass Eggs Go with the Flow: Pulsed Events and Transport to the ETM
Better Phytoplankton Identification Through Chemistry?
Role Models for Phytoplankton: Reference Communities Developed for Chesapeake Bay
The Coastal Ocean and CO2: Small Area, Large Flux
January 2005 Volume 27 Number 6                 
       Getting Warmer: An Exercise in Extrapolation Elucidates Effects of Global Warming
More Work Needed on Increasing Light Availability Under Piers for SAV, Study Finds
Sometimes Seagrass Declines are Not Our Fault!
Better, Faster, Cheaper Benthic Sampling
December 2004 Volume 27 Number 5                 
       Archival Data Elucidates the Fishy History of Lake Pontchartrain
Estuarine Sediments: Source or Sink for Heavy Metals?
Gaining Clarity: Model Supports Oyster Restoration to Reduce Turbidity, Encourage Seagrass Growth
Restoration of Seagrass Inhabitants Takes Some Time, Study Finds
September 2004 Volume 27 Number 4                 
       New Lessons from the Hudson River "School"
Hypoxia in the Chesapeake: A Look at History and the Future
Shore Crabs Push Dungeness Out of the Neighborhood in WA Restoration Effort
Sediment Cores Provide Wealth of Information in the Neuse and Pamlico

Note: Beginning in September 2004, CESN will follow the same volume and number as the Federation journal, Estuaries and Coasts.

July 2004 Volume 2 Number 3                 
       Three Models Are Better Than One For Examining Gulf "Dead Zone"
Looong-term Sea Surface Temperature Record Available for New England
Priority-setting for Nutrient Management: Case Study in Waquoit Bay
What is the Fish-Killing Culprit in Dead-end Canals?
May 2004 Volume 2 Number 2                 
       Evidence that Global Climate Change Does Act Locally in San Francisco Bay
Invasion of the Marsh Snatchers: Effectiveness of Invasive Plant Removal in Puget Sound
Study Supports "Thinking Outside the Dike"
Links Between Land Use and Estuarine Health: A Potential Statistical Crystal Ball
April 2004 Volume 2 Number 1                 
       All Estuarine Nutrient Cycles are Not Created Equal: Lessons from a Tropical Estuary
Infection By Viruses May Aid in Brown Tide's Demise
English Sole Study Confirms Concentration Hypothesis
Big Bend Seagrasses Revisited: Region-wide Changes in Species Distributions
December 2003 Volume 1 Number 2                 
       Is The Mangrove Restored? Ask the Crabs
Water Quality Impacts on Fish Hard to Find in a Tidal Creek
Dennis, Floyd and Irene Provide Lessons About Hurricane Impacts
Effects of Nitrogen Loading on NE Marshes Characterized
July 2003 Volume 1 Number 1                 
       Study Shows Blue Crabs Thrive in Restored Salt Marsh
Impounded Marsh Communities May Take a Pounding
Hyacinth, Pennywort Shown to be Functionally Different
Study Documents Sources and Loadings of N to 34 Estuaries
Network Analysis Suggests Longer-Term Nitrogen Monitoring Needed in the Neuse
Changes in Choice of Waterbird Nesting Habitats Documented