108. Farrow, C.R., L-T Lim, and J.D. Ackerman. 2024. Propagules go with the flow: Near field particle dispersion in reaches with different hydrodynamic conditions. Limnology and Oceanography.
107. Lu, A., T.J. Morris and J.D. Ackerman. 2024. Effect of riparian vegetation buffers on unionid mussel habitats. Science of the Total Environment 956: 177121. (14 pages + Supplemental).
106. Mullarney, J., Ackerman, J., Koehl, M.A., Tinoco, R.,Wain, D., and Yamazaki, H. 2024. Life in turbulent waters: unsteady biota-flow interactions across scales. Limnology and Oceanography.
105. Carman, J., Y. Zhao, and J.D. Ackerman. 2024. Relative size matters: Spawning substrate roughness size and spacing affects egg dislodgement and retention in the benthos. Limnology and Oceanography. doi: 10.1002/lno.12715 (14 pages + Supplemental)
104. Goulet, L., W.J.S. Currie, and J.D. Ackerman. Accepted (26Apr24). The effect of vorticity on the feeding of a freshwater grazer. Limnology and Oceanography.
103. Ackerman, J.D., G.J. Smith, L. Boegman, and Y.R. Rao. 2024. Spatial and temporal dynamics of near-bottom dissolved oxygen in the central basin of Lake Erie. Aquatic Ecosystem Health & Management 27:5-18 + Supplemental. doi.org/10.14321/aehm.027.01.05
102. Sewak, K., M. Hassan, and J.D. Ackerman. 2024 Fluid-structure interaction of flexible collectors affects particle capture efficiency at ecologically relevant collector Reynolds numbers. Frontiers in Mechanical Engineering: Fluid Mechanics. 10: 1411361. (13 pages + Supplemental). doi: 10.3389/fmech.2024.1411361.
101. Wang, Q., N. Nakhaei, J. Ackerman and L. Boegman. 2024. Multi-year three-dimensional simulation of seasonal variation in phytoplankton species composition in a large shallow lake Ocean Modelling 189: 102374 (16 pages + Supplemental). doi.org/10.1016/j.ocemod.2024.102374.
100. Shi, W., L. Boegman, S. Shan, Y. Zhao, J.D. Ackerman, Z. Amidon, A. Jabbari, and E. Roseman. 2024. A larval `recruitment kernel’ to predict hatching locations and quantify recruitment patterns. Water Resources Research. 60: e2023WR036099 (17 pages + Supplemental). doi.org/10.1029/2023WR036099.
99. Jabbari, A., R. Valipour, J.D. Ackerman, and Y.R. Rao. 2023. Nearshore-offshore exchanges by enhanced turbulent mixing along the north shore of Lake Ontario. Journal of Great Lakes Research. 49(3):596-607. doi.org/10.1016/j.jglr.2023.03.010
98. Farrow, C.R., L-T Lim, and J.D. Ackerman. 2022. Environmentally friendly microbeads to model the dispersal of particulates in aquatic systems. Science of the Total Environment 842:156680 (12 pages + Supplemental). doi.org/10.1016/j.scitotenv.2022.156680.
97. Luck, J., and J.D. Ackerman. 2022. Threats to freshwater mussels: The interactions of water temperature, velocity and total suspended solids on ecophysiology and growth. Science of the Total Environment. 821: 153101 (10 pages + Supplemental). doi.org/10.1016/j.scitotenv.2022.153101
96. Castañeda,R.A., J.D. Ackerman,L. Chapman, S. Cooke, K. Cuddington, A. Dextrase, D. Jackson, M. Koops, M. Krkošek, K. Loftus, N. Mandrak, A. Martel, P. Molnar, T. Morris, T. Pitcher, M. Poesch, M. Power, T. Prattt, S. Reid, M. Rodriguez, J. Rosenfeld C. Wilson, D. Zanatta, and A. Drake. 2021. Approaches and research needs for advancing the protection and recovery of imperilled freshwater fishes and mussels in Canada. Canadian Journal of Fisheries and Aquatic Sciences. 78: 1356–1370. doi.org/10.1139/cjfas-2020-0374
95. Jabbari, A., K. Yanase, and J.D. Ackerman. 2021. A spanwise oscillating plate in a crossflow: Implication for mass transfer and locomotion. Limnology and Oceanography 66:3393–3407. doi.org: 10.1002/lno.11886
94. Lin, S., L. Boegman, R. Valipour, D. Bouffard, J.D. Ackerman, and Y. Zhao. 2021. Three-dimensional modeling of sediment resuspension in a large shallow lake. Journal of Great Lakes Research 47: 970-984. doi.org: 10.1016/j.jglr.2021.04.014
93. Jabbari, A., J.D. Ackerman, L. Boegman, and Y. Zhao. 2021. Increases in Great Lake winds and extreme events facilitate interbasin coupling and reduce water quality in Lake Erie. Nature Scientific Reports. 11: 5733 doi.org: 10.1038/s41598-021-84961-9
92. Nakhaei, N., J.D. Ackerman, D. Bouffard, Y.R. Rao, and L. Boegman. 2021. Empirical modeling of hypolimnion and sediment oxygen demand in lakes. Inland Waters. 11: 351-367. doi.org: 10.1080/20442041.2021.1880244
91. Tuttle-Raycraft, S. and J.D. Ackerman. 2020. Evidence of phenotypic plasticity in the response of unionid mussels to turbidity. Freshwater Biology. 65: 1989–1996. doi.org/10.1111/fwb.13595
90. Fung, V. and J.D. Ackerman. 2020.The effects of river algae and porewater flow on the feeding of juvenile mussels. Journal of Geophysical Research: Biogeosciences 125: e2019JG005302. doi.org/10.1029/2019JG005302
89. Farrow, C., J.D. Ackerman, R.E.H. Smith, and D. Snider. 2020. Riverine transport and nutrient inputs affect phytoplankton communities in a coastal embayment. Freshwater Biology. 65: 289–303 + 9 supplemental.doi.org/10.1111/fwb.13421
88. Tran, K. and J.D. Ackerman. 2019. Mussels partition resources from natural waters under flowing conditions. Science of the Total Environment 696: 133870 (12 pages). doi.org/10.1016/j.scitotenv.2019.133870.
87. Rowe, M.D., E.J. Anderson, D. Beletsky, C.A. Stow, S.D. Moegling, J.D. Chaffin, J.C. May, P.D. Collingsworth, A. Jabbari and J.D. Ackerman. 2019. Coastal upwelling influences hypoxia spatial patterns and nearshore dynamics in Lake Erie. Journal of GeophysicalResearch: Oceans 124: 6154–6175. 2019JC01519.
86. Tuttle-Raycraft, S., and J.D. Ackerman. 2019. Living the high turbidity life: The effects of TSS, flow and gill morphology on mussel feeding. Limnology and Oceanography 64: 2526 – 2537. doi.org/10.1002/lno.11202.
85. Nishizaki, M.T. and J.D. Ackerman. 2019. Settlement and recruitment of pelagic larvae to benthic habitats. Encyclopedia of Water: Science, Technology, and Society. Wiley, New York. doi.org/10.1002/9781119300762.wsts0228.
84. Hendriks, I.E., van Duren, L.A. and J.D. Ackerman. 2019. Canopy forming ecosystem engineers in aquatic ecosystems. Encyclopedia of Water: Science, Technology, and Society. Wiley, New York. doi.org/10.1002/9781119300762.wsts0200.
83. Jabbari, A. J.D. Ackerman, L. Boegman, and Y. Zhao. 2019. Episodic hypoxia in the western basin of Lake Erie. Limnology and Oceanography 64: 2220–2236 doi.org/10.1002/lno.11180.
82. Mistry, R. and J.D. Ackerman. 2018. Flow, flux and feeding in freshwater mussels. Water Resources Research54:7619–7630.
81. Tuttle-Raycraft, S., and J.D. Ackerman. 2018. Does size matter? Particle size vs. quality in bivalve suspension feeding. Freshwater Biology 63:1560-1568.
80. McCombe, D. and J.D. Ackerman. 2018. Collector motion affects particle capture in physical models and in wind pollination. TheAmerican Naturalist 192:81-93 + 3 suppl.
79. Tuttle-Raycraft, S., T.J. Morris and J.D. Ackerman. 2017. Suspended solid concentration reduces feeding in freshwater mussels. Science of the Total Environment 598: 1160–1168.
78. Nishizaki, M.T. and J.D. Ackerman. 2017. Mussels blow rings: Jet behavior affects local mixing. Limnology and Oceanography 62:125–136. Featured Article in Limnology and Oceanography
77. Mistry, R. and J.D. Ackerman. 2016. Algal flux affects the clearance rates of recently metamorphosed freshwater mussels. Aquatic Sciences 79:139–148
76. Tremblay, M.E., T. Morris, and J.D. Ackerman. 2016. Loss of reproductive output caused by an invasive species. Royal Society Open Science 3: 150481.
75. Gazendam,E., B. Gharabaghi, J.D. Ackerman, and H. Whitely. 2016. Integrative neural networks models for stream assessment in restoration projects. Journal of Hydrology 536: 339–350.
74. Tremblay, M.E.M., T.J. Morris, and J.D. Ackerman. 2015. A multivariate approach to the identification of unionid glochidia with emphasis on Species at Risk in Southern Ontario. Canadian Manuscript Report of Fisheries and Aquatic Sciences. 3057: vii + 52 p.
73. Quinn, N.P. and J.D. Ackerman. 2015. The effect of bottom roughness on scalar transport in aquatic ecosystems: Implications for reproduction and recruitment in the benthos. Journal of Theoretical Biology 369:59-66.
72. Krick, J., and J.D. Ackerman. 2015. Adding ecology to particle capture models: Numerical simulations of capture on a moving cylinder in crossflow. Journal of Theoretical Biology 368:13-26.
71. Timerman,D., D. F. Greene, J. Urzay and J.D. Ackerman. 2014. Turbulence-induced resonance vibrations cause pollen release in Plantago lanceolata L. (Plantaginaceae). Journal of the Royal Society Interface 11: 20140866.
70. Timerman, D., D.F. Greene, J.D. Ackerman, E. Nardone, and P.G. Kevan. 2014. Pollen aggregation in relation to pollination vector. International Journal of Plant Sciences 175:681-687.
69.Bouffard, D., L. Boegman, J.D. Ackerman, R. Valipoura, and Y.R. Rao. 2014. Near-inertial wave driven dissolved oxygen transfer through the thermocline of a large lake. Journal of Great Lakes Research 40: 300-307.
68. Vanden Byllaardt, J. and J.D. Ackerman. 2014. Hydrodynamic habitat influences suspension feeding by unionid mussels in freshwater ecosystems. Freshwater Biology. 59: 1187-1196.
67. French, S.K. and J.D. Ackerman. 2014. Responses of newly settled juvenile mussels to bed shear stress: Implications for dispersal. Freshwater Science 33(1):46-55.
66. Quinn, N.P. and J.D. Ackerman. 2014. Effects of near-bed turbulence on the suspension and settlement of freshwater dreissenid mussel larvae. Freshwater Biology 59: 614–629.
65. Ackerman, J.D. 2014. Role of fluid dynamics in dreissenid mussel biology. pp 471-483 in T.F. Nalepa and D.W. Schloesser (eds). Quagga and Zebra Mussels: Biology, Impact, and Control. Second Edition. CRC Press, Boca Raton, FL. 775 pp.
64. Nishihara, G.N., and J.D. Ackerman. 2013. Mass transport in aquatic environments. pp. 423 – 451 In: C. Gualtieri and D.T. Mihailovic (eds.) Fluid Mechanics of Environmental Interfaces, Second Edition. Taylor & Francis. 500 pp.
63. Bouffard, D., J.D. Ackerman, and L. Boegman. 2013 Factors affecting the development and dynamics of hypoxia in a large shallow stratified lake: Hourly to seasonal patterns. Water Resources Research 49:1-15. doi:10.1002/wrcr.2024
62. Quinn, N.P. and J.D. Ackerman. 2012. Biological and ecological mechanisms for overcoming sperm limitation in invasive dreissenid mussels. Aquatic Sciences 74:415–425. DOI 10.1007/s00027-011-0237-0.
61. Schwalb, A.N., T.J. Morris, and J.D. Ackerman. 2012. The effect of settling velocity on the transport of mussel larvae in a cobble-bed river: Water column and near-bed turbulence. Limnology and Oceanography: Fluids and Environments 2:28-40.
60. Quinn, N.P. and J.D. Ackerman. 2011. The effect of near-bed turbulence on sperm dilution and fertilization success of broadcast spawning bivalves. Limnology and Oceanography: Fluids and Environments. 1:176-193.
59. Hoover, T.N. and J.D. Ackerman. 2011. Microdistribution of a torrential stream invertebrate: Are bottom-up, top-down, or hydrodynamic controls most important? Limnology and Oceanography: Fluids and Environments. 1: 147-162.
58.Brinkhurst, M., P. Rose, G. Maurice, and J.D. Ackerman. 2011. Achieving campus sustainability: Top-down, bottom-up, or neither? International Journal of Sustainability in Higher Education 12(4):338-354.
57. Schwalb, A.N., K. Cottenie, M.S. Poos and J.D. Ackerman. 2011. Dispersal limitation of unionid mussels and implications for their conservation. Freshwater Biology 56(8): 1509–1518. DOI: 10.1111/j.1365-2427.2011.02587.x
56. Schwalb, A.N., and J.D. Ackerman. 2011. Settling velocities of juvenile Lampsilini mussels (Mollusca: Unionidae): The influence of behavior. Journal of the North American Benthological Society 30:702-209
55. Schwalb, A. N., M. S. Poos, and J. D. Ackerman 2011. Movement of logperch – the obligate host fish for endangered snuffbox mussels: Implications for mussel dispersal. Aquatic Sciences 73:223–231. DOI 10.1007/s00027-010-0171-6
54. McNichols, K.A., G.L. Mackie, and J.D. Ackerman. 2011. Host fish quality may explain the status of endangered Epioblasma torulosa rangiana and Lampsilis fasciola (Bivalvia: Unionidae) in Canada. Journal of the North American Benthological Society 30:60-70.
53. Gillis, P.L. J.C. McGeer, G.L. Mackie, M.P. Wilkie, and J.D. Ackerman. 2010. The effect of natural dissolved organic carbon on the acute toxicity of copper to larval freshwater mussels (glochidia). Environmental Toxicology and Chemistry 29: 2519–2528.
52. Schindler, R.J. and J.D. Ackerman. 2010. The environmental hydraulics of turbulent boundary layers. pp 87-126 In: D.T. Mihailovic and C. Gualtieri (eds.) Advances in Environmental Fluid Mechanics. World Scientific, London. 380 pp. Invited.
51. Poos, M., A.J. Dextrase, A.N. Schwalb, and J. Ackerman. 2010. Secondary invasion of the round goby into high diversity Great Lakes tributaries and species at risk hotspots: Potential new concerns for endangered freshwater species. Biological Invasions. 12:1269-1284 DOI 10.1007/s10530-009-9545-x.
50. Schwalb, A.N., M. Garvie, and J.D. Ackerman. 2010. Dispersion of freshwater mussel larvae in a lowland river. Limnology and Oceanography. 55(2):628-638.
49. Nishihara, G.N. and J.D. Ackerman. 2009. Diffusive boundary layers do not limit the photosynthesis of the aquatic macrophyte, Vallisneria americana at moderate flows and saturating light levels. Limnology and Oceanography 54(6):1874-1882.
48. Gillis, P.L., Mitchell, R.J., Schwalb, A.N., McNichols, K.A., Mackie, G.L., Wood C.M., and Ackerman, J.D. 2008. Sensitivity of the glochidia (larvae) of freshwater mussels to copper: Assessing the effect of water hardness and dissolved organic carbon on the sensitivity of endangered species. Aquatic Toxicology 88:137–145.
47. Hoftyzer, E., J.D. Ackerman, T.J. Morris, and G.L. Mackie. 2008. Genetic and environmental implications of reintroducing laboratory-raised unionid mussels to the wild. Canadian Journal of Fisheries and Aquatic Sciences 65:1217-1229.
46. Nishihara, G.N., and J.D. Ackerman. 2008. Mass transport in aquatic environments. pp. 299 – 326 In: C. Gualtieri and D.T. Mihailovic (eds.) Fluid Mechanics of Environmental Interfaces. Taylor & Francis. Invited.
45. Hoover, S.R., L.G. Wilson, and J.D. Ackerman. 2007. The effect of forestry practices on invertebrate drift in mountain streams: Implications for trophic transport. Aquatic Sciences 69(4):544-553.
44. Nishihara, G.N. and J.D. Ackerman. 2007. On the determination of mass transfer in a concentration boundary layer. Limnology and Oceanography: Methods. 5:88-96 + Appendix.
43. Nishizaki, M.T. and J.D. Ackerman. 2007. Juvenile-adult associations in sea urchins (Strongylocentrotus franciscanus and S. droebachiensis): Protection from predation and hydrodynamics in S. franciscanus. Marine Biology 151:135-145(Online version: 2006 DOI 10.1007/s00227-006-0462-6)
42. Nishihara, G.N. and J.D. Ackerman. 2007. The interaction of CO2 concentration and spatial location on O2 flux and mass transport in the freshwater macrophytes Vallisneria spiralis and V. americana. Journal of Experimental Biology. 210(3):522-532. Featured as “A New Twist on Transport” in Inside JEB 210(3):i-ii.
41. Loewen, M.R., Ackerman, J.D., and P.F. Hamblin. 2007. Environmental implications of stratification and turbulent mixing in a shallow lake basin. Canadian Journal of Fisheries and Aquatic Sciences 64(1):43-57.
40. Nishihara, G.N. and J.D. Ackerman. 2006. The effect of hydrodynamics on the mass transfer of dissolved inorganic carbon to the freshwater macrophyte Vallisneria americana. Limnology and Oceanography 51(6):2734-2745.
39. Wang, Y.Q., P. Jackson, and J.D. Ackerman. 2006. Numerical investigation of flow over a sphere using LES and the Spalart-Allmaras turbulence model. Computational Fluid Dynamics Journal 15(1):198-205.
38. Ackerman, J.D. 2006. Sexual reproduction of seagrasses: Pollination in the marine context. pp. 89 – 109.In A.W.D. Larkum, J.J. Orth, and C.M. Duarte (eds.) Seagrasses: Biology, Ecology and Conservation. Springer. 691 pp. (Invited)
37. Koch, E.W., J.D. Ackerman, J. Verduin, and M. van Keulen. 2006. Fluid dynamics in seagrass ecology – from molecule to ecosystems.pp. 193 – 225. In A.W.D. Larkum, J.J. Orth, and C.M. Duarte (eds.) Seagrasses: Biology, Ecology and Conservation. Springer 691 pp. (Invited)
36. Ackerman, J.D. and P. Kevan. 2005. Abiotic Pollination. pp 435-438. In: A. Dafni, P. Kevan, and B. Husband (eds.) Practical Pollination Biology. Enviroquest, Cambridge, Canada. 590 pp. (Invited)
35. Ackerman, J.D. 2005. Water Pollination. pp 465-480. In: A. Dafni, P. Kevan and B. Husband (eds.) Practical Pollination Biology. Enviroquest, Cambridge, Canada. 590 pp. (Invited)
34. Nishizaki, M.T. and J.D. Ackerman. 2005. A secondary chemical cue facilitates juvenile-adult associations in red sea urchins (Strongylocentrotus franciscanus). Limnology and Oceanography 50(1):354-362.
33. Hoover, T.M. and J.D. Ackerman. 2004. Near-bed hydrodynamic measurements above boulders in shallow torrential streams: Implications for stream biota. Journal of Environmental Engineering and Science 3(5):365-378.
32. Ackerman, J.D. and M.T. Nishizaki. 2004. The effect of velocity on the suspension feeding and growth of the marine mussels Mytilus trossulus and M. californianus: Implications for niche separation. Journal of Marine Systems 49:195-207. A Top 25 Hottest Articles (Agricultural and Biological Sciences > Journal of Marine Systems) July – September 2004(21/25)
31. Nishizaki, M.T. and J.D. Ackerman. 2004. Juvenile-adult associations in sea urchins (Strongylocentrotus franciscanus and S. droebachiensis): Is nutrition involved. Marine Ecology Progress Series 268:93-103.
30. Palmer, M.R, H.M. Nepf, T.J.R. Pettersson, and J.D. Ackerman. 2004. Observations of particle capture on a cylindrical collector: Implications for particle accumulation and removal in aquatic systems. Limnology and Oceanography 49: 76-85.
29. Wyllie-Echeverria, S. and J. D. Ackerman. 2003. The seagrasses of the Pacific Coast of North America. pp. 199-206 In: E. P. Green and F. T. Short (eds.) World Atlas of Seagrasses: present status and future conservation. Prepared by the UNEP World Conservation Monitoring Centre. University of California Press, Berkeley. 298 pp. (Invited).
28. Ackerman, J.D. 2002. Diffusivity in a marine macrophyte bed: Implications for submarine pollination and dispersal. American Journal of Botany. 89(7): 1119-1127.
27. Okubo, A., J.D. Ackerman, and D.P. Swaney. 2002. Passive diffusion in ecosystems. pp. 31-106 in A. Okubo and S. Levin (eds.) Diffusion and Ecological Problems: Modern Perspectives. Springer Verlag, New York. 467 pp.
26. Nishizaki, M.T. and J.D. Ackerman. 2001. Gimme shelter: Factors influencing juvenile sheltering in the red sea urchin Strongylocentrotus franciscanus. pp 515-520 in Mike Barker (ed.) Echinoderms 2000. Swets & Zeitlinger, Lisse. 590 pp.
25. Ackerman, J.D. and T. Hoover. 2001. Measurement of local bed shear stress in streams using a Preston-static tube. Limnology and Oceanography 46:2080-2087.
24. Ackerman, J.D., Loewen, M.R., and P.F. Hamblin. 2001. Benthic-pelagic coupling over a zebra mussel bed in the western basin of Lake Erie. Limnology and Oceanography. 46(4): 892-904.
Also published in: 2018. Large Lakes of the World, Limnology and Oceanography Virtual Issue (https://aslopubs.onlinelibrary.wiley.com/doi/toc/10.1002/(ISSN)1939-5590.LAKES-VI).
23. Ackerman, J.D. 2000. Abiotic pollen and pollination: Ecological, functional, and evolutionary perspectives. Plant Systematics and Evolution 222: 167-185.
Also published as: Ackerman, J.D. 2000. Abiotic pollen and pollination: Ecological, functional, and evolutionary perspectives. pp 167-185 In: A. Dafni, E. Pacini, and M. Hesse (eds.). Pollen and Pollination. Springer Verlag, Wein, 336 pp. (Invited)
22. Ackerman, J.D. and M.T. Nishizaki. 1999. How stiff is a french fry? – Teaching biomechanics to biology students. Journal of Biological Education 34:36-40.
21. Ackerman, J.D. 1999. The effect of velocity on the filter feeding of zebra mussels (Dreissena polymorpha and D. bugensis): Implications for Trophic Dynamics. Canadian Journal of Fisheries and Aquatic Sciences 56:1551-1561.
20. Ackerman, J.D. 1998. Is the limited diversity of higher plants in marine systems due to biophysical limitations for reproduction or evolutionary and physiological constraints? Functional Ecology 12:979-982.
19. Arocena, J. and J.D. Ackerman. 1998. Use of statistical tests to describe the basic distribution patterns of iron oxide nodules in soil thin section. American Soil Science Society Journal 62:1346-1350.
18. Ackerman, J.D. 1997. Submarine pollination in the marine angiosperm, Zostera marina: Part I. The influence of floral morphology on fluid flow. American Journal of Botany 84:1099-1109 (Cover Photo).
17. Ackerman, J.D. 1997. Submarine pollination in the marine angiosperm, Zostera marina: Part II. Pollen transport in flow fields and capture by stigmas. American Journal of Botany 84:1110-1119.
16. Dormon, J.M., C.M. Cottrell, D.G. Grant, J.D. Ackerman, and J.K. Spelt. 1996. Copper and copper-nickel alloys as zebra mussel antifoulants. Journal of Environmental Engineering 122:276-283.
15. Ackerman, J.D., C.M. Cottrell, C.R. Ethier, D.G. Allen, and J.K. Spelt.1996. Attachment strength of zebra mussels on natural, polymeric and metallic materials. Journal of Environmental Engineering 122:141-148.
14. Ackerman, J.D., C.M. Cottrell, C.R. Ethier, D.G. Allen, and J.K. Spelt. 1995. A wall jet to measure the attachment strength in zebra mussels. Canadian Journal of Fisheries and Aquatic Sciences 52:126-135.
13. Ackerman, J.D. 1995. Convergence of filiform pollen morphologies in seagrasses: Functional mechanisms. Evolutionary Ecology 9:139-153.
12. Ackerman, J.D., B. Sim, S.J. Nichols, and R. Claudi. 1994. A review of the early life history of the zebra mussel (Dreissena polymorpha): Comparisons with marine bivalves. Canadian Journal of Zoology 72:1169-1179.
11. Ackerman, J.D., L. Wong, C.R. Ethier, D.G. Allen, and J.K. Spelt. 1994. Preston-static tubes for the measurement of wall shear stress. Journal of Fluids Engineering (ASME) 116:645-649.
10. Domm, S., R.W. McCauley, E. Kott, and J.D. Ackerman. 1993. Physiological and taxonomic separation of two dreissenid mussels in the Laurentian Great Lakes. Canadian Journal of Fisheries and Aquatic Sciences 50:2294-2297.
9. Ackerman, J.D. 1993. Pollen germination and pollen tube growth in the marine angiosperm, Zostera marina L. Aquatic Botany 46:189-202.
8. Ackerman, J.D. 1993. Preliminary observations on the hydrodynamics of filter feeding in zebra mussels. pp. 513-514 In: R.F. Dame (ed.) Bivalve Filter Feeders in Estuarine and Coastal Ecosystem Processes (NATO ASI Ser., Ecol. Sci., Vol. G 33). Springer-Verlag, Berlin.
7. Ackerman, J.D. and A. Okubo. 1993. Reduced mixing in a marine macrophyte canopy. Functional Ecology 7:305-309.
6. Ackerman, J.D., C.R. Ethier, D.G. Allen, and J.K. Spelt. 1993. The biomechanics of byssal adhesion in Dreissena polymorpha. pp. 265-282 In: T.F. Nalepa and D.W. Schloesser (eds). Zebra Mussels: Biology, Impacts, and Control. Lewis Press, Boca Raton, FL, 810 pp.
5. Ackerman, J.D., C.R. Ethier, D.G. Allen, and J.K. Spelt. 1992. Investigation of zebra mussel adhesion strength using a rotating disk. Journal of Environmental Engineering 118:708-724.
4. Ackerman, J.D. 1989. Biomechanical aspects of submarine pollination in Zostera marina L. Doctoral Dissertation, Cornell University, Ithaca, N.Y. 225 pp.
3. Ackerman, J.D. 1986. Mechanistic implications for pollination in the marine angiosperm, Zostera marina L. Aquatic Botany 24:343-353.
2. Ackerman, J.D. 1985. Physical implications of the reproductive biology of Zostera marina: Current-flow patterns. Masters Thesis, State University of New York at Stony Brook, N.Y. 110 pp.
1. D’Andrea, C.A., J. Procopio, J.D. Ackerman, and A. Clements, 1984. Faunal analysis of the Beckstead Site (BfFt-1). pp. 202-240 in J.F. Pendergast (Ed.) The Beckstead Site – 1977. Archaeological Survey of Canada Paper no. 123. National Museum of Man Mercury Series. National Museums of Canada, Ottawa. 240 pp.