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Strontium isotope chronostratigraphic age of a sirenian fossil site on Santa Rosa Island, Channel Islands National Park, California
James B. Paces, Scott A. Minor, Kevin M. Schmidt, Jonathan Hoffman
2023, Scientific Investigations Report 2023-5026
Fossils in the order Sirenia (family Dugongidae) from Santa Rosa Island, part of Channel Islands National Park in southern California, provide rare temporal and spatial links between earlier and later evolutionary forms of dugongids, and add information about their dispersal into the northeastern Pacific region. Marine sedimentary rocks containing these...
Sediment and nutrient deposition over a reconnected floodplain during large-scale river diversions, the Bonnet Carré spillway in 2011, 2016, and 2019
Daniel Kroes, Gregory E. Noe, David Ramirez, Brian Vosburg
2023, Conference Paper, Proceedings of SEDHYD2023
In hopes of reversing or slowing the decline of the river delta, water diversions have been built and planned, and natural diversions have formed and been allowed to develop along the lower Mississippi River. In addition to the possibility of building land, these diversions allow for the storage of nutrients...
National-scale assessment of total gaseous mercury isotopes across the United States
Michael T. Tate, Sarah E. Janssen, Ryan F. Lepak, Laura Elizabeth Flucke, David P. Krabbenhoft
2023, JGR Atmospheres (128)
With the 2011 promulgation of the Mercury and Air Toxics Standards by the U.S. Environmental Protection Agency, and the successful negotiation by the United Nations Environment Program of the Minamata Convention, emissions of mercury (Hg) have declined in the United States. While the declines in atmospheric Hg...
Value-aligned planning objectives for restoring North Carolina aquatic resources
Ana Maria Garcia, Mitchell J. Eaton, Georgina M. Sanchez, Jennifer L. Keisman, Kirsten Ullman, James Blackwell
2023, Open-File Report 2022-1058
Rapid population growth and development in the southeastern United States have resulted in substantial impairment to freshwater aquatic ecosystems. National or regional restoration policies strive to address impaired ecosystems but can suffer from inconsistent and opaque processes. The Clean Water Act, for example, establishes reallocation mechanisms to transfer ecosystem services...
Model-based assessment and mapping of total phosphorus enrichment in rivers with sparse reference data
Peter C. Esselman, R Jan Stevenson
2023, Science of the Total Environment (884)
Water nutrient management efforts are frequently coordinated across thousands of water bodies, leading to a need for spatially extensive information to facilitate decision making. Here we explore potential applications of a machine learning model of river low-flow total phosphorus (TP) concentrations to support landscape...
Evaluating regional length limits in freshwater fisheries
Andrew C. Shamaskin, Michael E. Colvin, Leandro E. Miranda
2023, Canadian Journal Fisheries and Aquatic Sciences (80)
Length limits are often used in recreational fisheries management to prevent overharvest and manipulate fish size distributions. These regulations are ideally customized to meet water-specific stock dynamics and fishery objectives. However, in districts with numerous discrete waters, fisheries are commonly managed with a universal regional regulation. Evaluating...
Climate change risks to freshwater subsistence fisheries in Arctic Alaska: Insights and uncertainty from broad whitefish Coregonus nasus
Jason C. Leppi, Daniel J. Rinella, Mark S. Wipfli, Anna K. Liljedahl, Andrew C. Seitz, Jeffrey A. Falke
2023, Fisheries Magazine (48) 295-306
Arctic freshwater ecosystems and fish populations are largely shaped by seasonal and long-term watershed hydrology. In this paper, we hypothesize how changing air temperature and precipitation will alter freeze and thaw processes, hydrology, and instream habitat to assess potential indirect effects, such as the change...
Effects of nitrate and conductivity on embryo-larval fathead minnows
Thea M. Edwards, Daniel J. Lamm, Joel J. Harvey
2023, Environmental Toxicology and Chemistry (42) 1529-1541
Nitrate concentrations have been rising in surface waters over the last century and now frequently exceed drinking water standards and environmental safety benchmarks globally. Health-wise, these trends are concerning because nitrate has been shown to disrupt endocrine function and developmental outcomes. The present study...
Demographics and gross pathology of scoters and scaups killed by the Cosco Busan oil spill in California
Jessie Beck, Ryan D. Carle, HannahRose M. Nevins, Susan E.W. De La Cruz, Erica Donnelly-Greenan
2023, Marine Ornithology: Journal of Seabird Research and Conservation (51) 73-82
Unusual wildlife mortality events provide a unique opportunity to collect information on demographics, disease, and body condition in affected wildlife, which may be useful for informing oil spill damage assessments and future spill responses. In November 2007, the Cosco Busan Oil Spill occurred in San Francisco Bay, California, a globally...
How do ambient conditions and management actions affect manatee movements and habitat use?
Daniel Slone, Susan M. Butler, James P. Reid, Joyce Kleen, Joyce Palmer
2023, Journal of Wildlife Management (87)
Kings Bay in northwest Florida, USA, is an important winter home of the largest aggregation of Florida manatee (Trichechus manatus latirostris), and the only location in the United States where visitors legally swim and interact with manatees. In addition to ambient conditions, visitors to...
Impact of wastewater treatment plant effluent on the winter thermal regime of two urban Colorado South Platte tributaries
Catherine M. Adams, Dana L. Winkelman, Ryan M. Fitzpatrick
2023, Frontiers in Enviornmental Science (11)
Wastewater treatment plant effluent can increase stream water temperature from near freezing to 5°C–12°C in winter months. Recent research in the South Platte River Basin in Colorado showed that this warming alters the reproductive timing of some fishes. However, the spatial extent and magnitude of this warming are unknown. Thus,...
Predicted aquatic exposure effects from a national urban stormwater study
Paul M. Bradley, Kristin M. Romanok, Kelly L. Smalling, Jason R. Masoner, Dana W. Kolpin, Stephanie E. Gordon
2023, Environmental Science: Water Research and Technology (9) 3191-3199
A multi-agency study of 438 organic and 62 inorganic chemicals measured in urban stormwater during 50 total runoff events at 21 sites across the United States demonstrated that stormwater discharges can generate localized, aquatic exposures to extensive contaminant mixtures, including organics suspected to cause adverse aquatic-health effects. The aggregated risks...
Hypoxia and anoxia tolerance in diploid and triploid eastern oysters at high temperature
Nicholas Coxe, Genesis Mize, Sandra M. Casas, Megan K. La Peyre, Romain Lavaud, Brian Callam, Scott Rikard, Jerome F. La Peyre
2023, Journal of Shellfish Research (42) 29-43
Increasing reliance on the use of triploid oysters to support aquaculture production relies on their generally superior growth rate and meat quality over that of diploid oysters. Reports of elevated triploid mortality have generated questions about potential trade-offs between growth and tolerance to environmental...
Time-lapse seafloor surveys reveal how turbidity currents and internal tides in Monterey Canyon interact with the seabed at centimeter-scale
Monica Wolfson-Schwehr, Charles K. Paull, David W. Caress, Roberto Gwiazda, Nora Maria Nieminski, Peter J. Talling, Cristian Carvajal, Stephen M. Simmons, Giancarlo Troni
2023, Journal of Geophysical Research: Earth Surface (128)
Here we show how ultra-high resolution seabed mapping using new technology can help to understand processes that sculpt submarine canyons. Time-lapse seafloor surveys were conducted in the axis of Monterey Canyon, ∼50 km from the canyon head (∼1,840 m water depth) over an 18-month period. These surveys comprised 5-cm resolution multibeam bathymetry,...
Planktic foraminifera
Harry J. Dowsett, Marci M. Robinson
2023, Book chapter, Reference module in earth systems and environmental sciences
Planktic foraminifera are single-celled marine organisms that secrete calcium carbonate tests. They live in the ocean's photic zone, and when they die, their tests, each about the size of a grain of sand, collect on the ocean floor. The geographic distribution of planktic foraminifera is mostly governed by the temperature and salinity of...
Knowledge coproduction on the impact of decisions for waterbird habitat in a changing climate
Kristin B. Byrd, Elliott Matchett, Claudia Mengelt, Tamara Wilson, Deanne DiPietro, Monica Moritsch, Erin Conlisk, Sam Veloz, Michael L. Casazza, Matthew Reiter
2023, Conservation Biology (37)
Scientists, resource managers, and decision-makers increasingly use knowledge co-production to guide the stewardship of future landscapes under climate change. This process was applied in the California Central Valley, USA to solve complex conservation problems, where managed wetlands and croplands are flooded between fall and spring to support some of the...
Paired Air and Stream Temperature Analysis (PASTA) to evaluate groundwater influence on streams
Danielle K. Hare, Susanne A. Benz, Barret L. Kurylyk, Zachary Johnson, Neil Terry, Ashley M. Helton
2023, Water Resources Research (59)
Groundwater is critical for maintaining stream baseflow and thermal stability; however, the influence of groundwater on streamflow has been difficult to evaluate at broad spatial scales. Techniques such as baseflow separation necessitate streamflow records and do not directly indicate whether groundwater inflow may be sourced from more...
Subsurface porewater flow accelerates talik development under the Alaska Highway, Yukon: A prelude to road collapse and permafrost thaw?
Lin Chen, Daniel Fortier, Jeffrey M. McKenzie, Clifford I. Voss, Pierrick Lamontagne-Halle
2023, Water Resource Research (59)
The presence of taliks (perennially unfrozen zones in permafrost areas) adversely affects the thermal stability of infrastructure in cold regions, including roads. The role of heat advection on talik development and feedback on permafrost degradation has not been quantified methodically in this context. We incorporate a surface...
Environmental factors influencing detection efficiency of an acoustic telemetry array and consequences for data interpretation
Michael Long, Adrian Jordaan, Theodore R. Castro-Santos
2023, Animal Biotelemetry (11)
BackgroundAcoustic telemetry is a commonly used technology to monitor animal occupancy and infer movement in aquatic environments. The information that acoustic telemetry provides is vital for spatial planning and management decisions concerning aquatic and coastal environments by characterizing behaviors and habitats such as spawning aggregations, migrations, corridors, and nurseries, among others....
Observed and projected functional reorganization of riverine fish assemblages from global change
Taylor Woods, Mary Freeman, Kevin P. Krause, Kelly O. Maloney
2023, Global Change Biology (29) 3759-3780
Climate and land-use/land-cover change (‘global change’) are restructuring biodiversity, globally. Broadly, environmental conditions are expected to become warmer, potentially drier (particularly in arid regions), and more anthropogenically developed in the future, with spatiotemporally complex effects on ecological communities. We used functional traits to inform...
Salinity and selenium yield maps derived from geostatistical modeling in the lower Gunnison River Basin, western Colorado, 1992–2013
Cory A. Williams, Rachel G. Gidley, Michael R. Stevens
2023, Scientific Investigations Report 2023-5013
Salinity is known to affect drinking-water supplies and damage irrigated agricultural lands. Selenium in high concentrations is harmful to fish and other wildlife. Land managers, water providers, and agricultural producers in the lower Gunnison River Basin in western Colorado expend resources mitigating the effects of these constituents. The U.S. Geological...
Assessment of three methods to evaluate the distribution of submersed aquatic vegetation in western Lake Erie
Nicole R. King, Jenny L. Hanson, Travis J. Harrison, Patrick M. Kocovsky, Christine M. Mayer
2023, Hydrobiologia (850) 1737-1750
Submersed aquatic vegetation (SAV) plays an important role in ecosystems. Inventories of SAV spatial distribution and composition are important for monitoring changes in SAV. In this study, we compared three common SAV sampling methods to quantify SAV in western Lake Erie. Aerial imagery of near-shore areas...
Energy-related wastewater contamination alters microbial communities of sediment, water, and amphibian skin
Brian J. Tornabene, Kelly L. Smalling, Carrie E. Givens, Emily Bea Oja, Blake R. Hossack
2023, Science of the Total Environment (880)
To inform responsible energy development, it is important to understand the ecological effects of contamination events. Wastewaters, a common byproduct of oil and gas extraction, often contain high concentrations of sodium chloride (NaCl) and heavy metals (e.g., strontium and vanadium). These constituents can negatively...