Chironomidae of the southeastern United States: a checklist of species and notes on biology, distribution, and habitat
Patrick L. Hudson, David R. Lenat, Broughton A. Caldwell, David Smith
1990, Fish and Wildlife Research 7
We provide a current listing of the species of midges (Diptera:Chironomidae) in the southeastern United States (Alabama, Florida, Georgia, North Carolina, South Carolina, and Tennessee). This checklist should aid research on this group of insects, which have often proved useful in the assessment of water quality. We document each species'...
Origin and migration of hydrocarbon gases and carbon dioxide, Bekes Basin, southeastern Hungary
J.L. Clayton, C. W. Spencer, I. Koncz, A. Szalay
1990, Organic Geochemistry (15) 233-247
The Békés Basin is a sub-basin within the Pannonian Basin, containing about 7000 m of post-Cretaceous sedimentary rocks. Natural gases are produced from reservoirs (Precambrian to Tertiary in age) located on structural highs around the margins of the basin. Gas composition and stable carbon isotopic data indicate that most of...
The Pacific Northwest; linkage between earthquake and volcano hazards
R. S. Crosson
1990, Earthquakes & Volcanoes (USGS) (22) 219-225
AS the title of the magazine Earthquake and Volcanoes suggests, these two geological phenomena are often closely associated. Earthquakes frequently precede volcanic eruptions, and volcanoes are often sources of small to intermediate size earthquakes resulting from the movement of magma within the volcano's plumbing system. In the Pacific Northwest, the association between...
Synthetic seismogram analysis of locally-recorded mine tremors
Arthur McGarr, J. Bicknell
1990, Conference Paper, ISRM International Symposium
The fitting of synthetic seismograms to locally-recorded, broad-band, wide dynamic range seismic data is a very effective means of determining both seismic source parameters and focal mechanisms of mine tremors. Using data from a single three-component surface station, in conjunction with a seismic location network, a comprehensive description of the...
Vegetative changes in a wetland in the vicinity of a well field, Dade County, Florida
Ronald H. Hofstetter, Roy S. Sonenshein
1990, Water-Resources Investigations Report 89-4155
Plant communities present in 1978 and 1986 were analyzed at 250 random points on stereoscopic pairs of aerial photographs for four study sites in the vicinity of the Northwest Well Field in Dade County, Florida. Sites NW and NE lie northwest of the well field beyond the cone of depression....
Coastal barrier resources system mapping process
Mary C. Watzin
1990, Biological Report - US Fish & Wildlife Service (90) 21-26
The Coastal Barrier Resources Act of 1982 (P.L. 97-348) established the Coastal Barrier Resources System (system), a 452,834 acre system of undeveloped, unprotected coastal barriers along 666 shoreline miles of the Atlantic Ocean and Gulf of Mexico coasts. Within the 186 unites of the Coastal Barrier Resources System, most Federal...
Social scientist's viewpoint on conflict management
Madge O. Ertel
1990, Book, Managing water-related conflicts: the engineer's role: proceedings of the Engineering Foundation Conference, Sheraton Santa Barbara, Santa Barbara, California, November 5-10, 1989
Social scientists can bring to the conflict-management process objective, reliable information needed to resolve increasingly complex issues. Engineers need basic training in the principles of the social sciences and in strategies for public involvement. All scientists need to be sure that that the information they provide is unbiased by their...
Water resources data Maryland and Delaware, water year 1989, Volume 1. Atlantic Slope Basins, Delaware River through Patuxent River
R.W. James, R.H. Simmons, B.F. Strain, M.J. Smigaj
1989, Water Data Report MD-DE-89-1
No abstract available....
Water resources data Maryland and Delaware, water year 1989, Volume 2: Monongahela and Potomac River Basins
R.W. James, R.H. Simmons, B.F. Strain, M.J. Smigaj
1989, Water Data Report MD-DE-89-2
No abstract available....
The structural geometry and evolution of foreland thrust systems, northern Virginia
Mark A. Evans
1989, Geological Society of America Bulletin (101) 339-354
Seismic reflection data reveal that the structural geometry of the central Appalachians of northern Virginia consists of three distinct thrust systems. Each thrust system is characterized by a unique internal geometry.The Blue Ridge thrust sheet is a composite thrust sheet composed primarily of imbricated Precambrian crystalline rocks. It over-rode Cambrian-Ordovician...
Habitat suitability criteria for assessment of instream flow needs of fish
Johnie H. Crance
1989, Book, Proceedings of the 1989 Georgia Water Resources Conference
In the western portion of the United States, competition for stream water gas often been fierce. Water resource management agencies in the southeastern United States, where water has been relatively abundant, are not being faced with similar competing demands for water, and with increasing pressures to develop and defend...
Can we determine the biological availability of sediment-bound trace elements?
Samuel N. Luoma
1989, Hydrobiologia (176) 379-396
It is clear from available data that the susceptibility of biological communities to trace element contamination differs among aquatic environments. One important reason is that the bioavailability of metals in sediments appears to be altered by variations in sediment geochemistry. However, methods for explaining or predicting the effect of sediment...
Development of the Wink Sink in west Texas, U.S.A., due to salt dissolution and collapse
K. S. Johnson
1989, Environmental Geology and Water Sciences (14) 81-92
The Wink Sink, in Winkler County, Texas, is a collapse feature that formed in June 1980 when an underground dissolution cavity migrated upward by successive roof failures until it breached the land surface. The original cavity developed in the Permian Salado Formation salt beds more than 400 m (1,300 ft)...
Ground-water conditions in Utah, spring of 1989
Carole B. Burden, G. J. Smith, Michael R. Greene, James P. Eads, D.V. Allen, John A. Yarbrough, Lynette E. Brooks, R. B. Garrett, W.C. Brothers, R. W Puchta, R.L. Swenson, D. C. Emett, W.R. Overman, G. W. Sandberg, B.K. Thomas
1989, Cooperative Investigations Report 29
This is the twenty-sixth in a series of annual reports that describe ground-water conditions in Utah. Reports in this series, published cooperatively by the U.S. Geological Survey and the Utah Division of Water Resources, provide data to enable interested parties to keep abreast of changing ground-water conditions.This report, like the...
Water use data for public water suppliers and self supplied industry in Utah: 1986, 1987
1989, Utah Division of Water Rights Water-Use Report 7
This is the seventh in a continuing series of reports presenting water use data for Utah. The report is a summary of data collected under the Utah Water Use program, a cooperative program between the Utah Division of Water Rights and the United States Geological Survey (USGS)...
Seepage study of the South Bend, Richfield, and Vermillion Canals, Sevier County, Utah
L. R. Herbert, G. J. Smith
1989, Technical Publication 97
A seepage investigation was made in 1987 on selected reaches of the South Bend, Richfield, and Vermillion Canals in Sevier County, Utah, to determine gains or losses in discharge. Fluctuations in discharge were adjusted using information from stage recorders operated at selected locations during each set of discharge measurements. The...
Use of experimental ecosystems in regulatory decision making
Thomas W. La Point, James A. Perry
1989, Environmental Management (13) 539-544
Tiered testing for the effects of chemicals on aquatic ecosystems has begun to include tests at the ecosystem level as a component in pesticide regristration. Because such tests are expensive, regulators and industry need to know what additional information they can gain from such tests relative to the costs of...
Glacier outburst floods at Mount Rainier, Washington State, U.S.A.
Carolyn L. Driedger, A. G. Fountain
1989, Annals of Glaciology (13) 51-55
During the twentieth century, glacial outburst floods have been the most destructive natural events on Mount Rainier, a stratovolcano in the Cascade Range in Washington State, U.S.A. In the period between 1930 and 1980 numerous floods were reported from five glaciers on the mountain, most of which flowed from Nisqually,...
Response of salmonid fish to artificial infection with chum salmon virus
J. R. Winton, C.N. Lannan, M. Yoshimizu, T. Kimura
1989, Book chapter, Viruses of lower vertebrates
In the fall of 1978, a reovirus was isolated from normal-appearing adult chum salmon (Oncorhynchus keta) returning to the Tokushibetsu Hatchery in Hokkaido, Japan (Winton et al 1981). The chum salmon virus (CSW) was recovered in the chinook salmon (Oncorhynchus tshawytscha) embryo cell line (CHSE-214) where it replicated at 15-20...
Spiral swimming behavior due to cranial and vertebral lesions associated with Cytophaga psychrophila infections in salmonid fishes
M.L. Kent, J.M. Groff, J.K. Morrison, W. T. Yasutake, R.A. Holt
1989, Diseases of Aquatic Organisms (6) 11-16
C. psychrophila infections of the cranium and anterior vertebrae in salmonid fishes were associated with ataxia, spiral swimming along the axis of the fish, and death. The syndrome was observed in 2-10% of underyearling coho salmon Oncorhynchus kisutch, rainbow troutSalmo gairdneri, and steelhead trout S. gairdneri at several private, state,...
Species profiles: Life histories and environmental requirements of coastal fishes and invertebrates (Pacific Northwest)--ghost and blue mud shrimp
S. Hornig, A. Sterling, Styles Smith
1989, U.S. Fish and Wildlife Service Biological Report Biological Report 82(11.93). U.S. Army Corps of Engineers, TR EL-82-4.
Geographic range: The ghost shrimp is found in intertidal areas along the west coast of North America from Mutiny Bay, Alaska, to the mouth of the Tijuana River, San Diego County, California; MacGinitie (1934) and Ricketts and Calvin (1968) reported finding specimens as far south as El Estuario de Punto...
Prevention of infectious diseases in aquaculture
W. Ahne, J. R. Winton, T. Kimura
1989, Journal of Veterinary Medicine, Series B (36) 561-567
Infectious diseases remain one of the most important limitations to the successful propagation of aquatic animals. Most of the losses caused by pathogens in aquaculture could be prevented by health inspection, adequate environment and sound management practices. Effective control measures, mainly based upon 1) avoidance of pathogens 2) modification of...
Loma salmonae (Protozoa: Microspora) infections in seawater reared coho salmon Oncorhynchus kisutch
M.L. Kent, D.G. Elliott, J.M. Groff, R.P. Hedrick
1989, Aquaculture (80) 211-222
Loma salmonae (Putz et al., 1965) infections were observed in five groups of coho salmon, Oncorhynchus kisutch, reared in seawater net-pens in Washington State, U.S.A. in 1984–1986. Ultrastructural characteristics, size of spores, tissues and host infected, and geographical location identified the microsporidium as Loma salmonae. Preserved spores measured 4.4×2.3 (4–5.6×2–2.4)...
Characterization of the host response to the myxosporean parasite, Ceratomyxa shasta (Noble), by histology, scanning electron microscopy, and immunological techniques
J. L. Bartholomew, C. E. Smith, J. S. Rohovec, J. L. Fryer
1989, Journal of Fish Diseases (12) 509-522
The tissue response of Salmo gairdneri Richardson, against the myxosporean parasite. Ceratomyxa shasta (Noble), was investigated using histological techniques, scanning electron microscopy and immunological methods. The progress of infection in C. shasta‐susceptible and resistant steelhead and rainbow trout was examined by standard histological techniques and by indirect fluorescent antibody methods using monoclonal antibodies directed against C....
Electrofishing mark-recapture and depletion methodologies evoke behavioral and physiological changes in cutthroat trout
M. G. Mesa, C.B. Schreck
1989, Transactions of the American Fisheries Society (118) 644-658
We examined the behavioral and physiological responses of wild and hatchery-reared cutthroat trout Oncorhynchus clarki subjected to a single electroshock, electroshock plus marking, and multiple electroshocks in natural and artificial streams. In a natural stream, cutthroat trout released after capture by electrofishing and marking showed distinct behavioral changes: fish immediately...