A proposed aquatic plant community biotic index for Wisconsin lakes
S. Nichols, S. Weber, B. Shaw
2000, Environmental Management (26) 491-502
The Aquatic Macrophyte Community Index (AMCI) is a multipurpose tool developed to assess the biological quality of aquatic plant communities in lakes. It can be used to specifically analyze aquatic plant communities or as part of a multimetric system to assess overall lake quality for regulatory, planning, management, educational, or...
A comparison of selected diversity, similarity, and biotic indices for detecting changes in benthic-invertebrate community structure and stream quality
M.J. Lydy, Charles G. Crawford, J.W. Frey
2000, Archives of Environmental Contamination and Toxicology (39) 469-479
Implementation of advanced wastewater treatment at the two municipal wastewater-treatment plants for Indianapolis, Indiana, resulted in substantial improvement in the quality of the receiving stream and significant changes in the benthic-invertebrate community. Diversity, similarity, and biotic indices were compared to determine which indices best reflected changes in the composition of...
Coupled atmosphere-biophysics-hydrology models for environmental modeling
R. L. Walko, L.E. Band, Jill Baron, T.G.F. Kittel, R. Lammers, T.J. Lee, D. Ojima, R.A. Pielke Sr., C. Taylor, C. Tague, C.J. Tremback, P.L. Vidale
2000, Journal of Applied Meteorology (39) 931-944
The formulation and implementation of LEAF-2, the Land Ecosystem–Atmosphere Feedback model, which comprises the representation of land–surface processes in the Regional Atmospheric Modeling System (RAMS), is described. LEAF-2 is a prognostic model for the temperature and water content of soil, snow cover, vegetation, and canopy air, and includes turbulent and...
Dissolved organic nitrogen budgets for upland, forested ecosystems in New England
J.L. Campbell, J.W. Hornbeck, W. H. McDowell, D.C. Buso, J. B. Shanley, G.E. Likens
2000, Biogeochemistry (49) 123-142
Relatively high deposition of nitrogen (N) in the northeastern United States has caused concern because sites could become N saturated. In the past, mass-balance studies have been used to monitor the N status of sites and to investigate the impact of increased N deposition. Typically, these efforts have focused on...
Monitoring shifts in plant diversity in response to climate change: A method for landscapes
T.J. Stohlgren, A.J. Owen, M. Lee
2000, Biodiversity and Conservation (9) 65-86
Improved sampling designs are needed to detect, monitor, and predict plant migrations and plant diversity changes caused by climate change and other human activities. We propose a methodology based on multi-scale vegetation plots established across forest ecotones which provide baseline data on patterns of plant diversity, invasions of exotic plant...
Uncertainty estimation for resource assessment-an application to coal
J.H. Schuenemeyer, H.C. Power
2000, Mathematical Geology (32) 521-541
The U.S. Geological Survey is conducting a national assessment of coal resources. As part of that assessment, a geostatistical procedure has been developed to estimate the uncertainty of coal resources for the historical categories of geological assurance: measured, indicated, inferred, and hypothetical coal. Data consist of spatially clustered coal thickness...
Modeling and estimation of stage-specific daily survival probabilities of nests
T.R. Stanley
2000, Ecology (81) 2048-2053
In studies of avian nesting success, it is often of interest to estimate stage-specific daily survival probabilities of nests. When data can be partitioned by nesting stage (e.g., incubation stage, nestling stage), piecewise application of the Mayfield method or Johnson's method is appropriate. However, when the data contain nests where...
Identifying fracture‐zone geometry using simulated annealing and hydraulic‐connection data
Frederick D. Day-Lewis, Paul A. Hsieh, Steven M. Gorelick
2000, Water Resources Research (36) 1707-1721
A new approach is presented to condition geostatistical simulation of high‐permeability zones in fractured rock to hydraulic‐connection data. A simulated‐annealing algorithm generates three‐dimensional (3‐D) realizations conditioned to borehole data, inferred hydraulic connections between packer‐isolated borehole intervals, and an indicator (fracture zone or background‐K bedrock) variogram model of spatial variability. We apply...
Formation evaluation of gas hydrate-bearing marine sediments on the Blake Ridge with downhole geochemical log measurements
T. S. Collett, R. F. Wendlandt
2000, Conference Paper, Proceedings of the Ocean Drilling Program: Scientific Results
The analyses of downhole log data from Ocean Drilling Program (ODP) boreholes on the Blake Ridge at Sites 994, 995, and 997 indicate that the Schlumberger geochemical logging tool (GLT) may yield useful gas hydrate reservoir data. In neutron spectroscopy downhole logging, each element has a characteristic gamma ray that...
Development and evaluation of consensus-based sediment quality guidelines for freshwater ecosystems
D.D. MacDonald, C.G. Ingersoll, T.A. Berger
2000, Archives of Environmental Contamination and Toxicology (39) 20-31
Numerical sediment quality guidelines (SQGs) for freshwater ecosystems have previously been developed using a variety of approaches. Each approach has certain advantages and limitations which influence their application in the sediment quality assessment process. In an effort to focus on the agreement among these various published SQGs, consensus-based SQGs were...
Test of a modified habitat suitability model for bighorn sheep
L. C. Zeigenfuss, F. J. Singer, M.A. Gudorf
2000, Restoration Ecology (8) 38-46
Translocation of bighorn sheep (Ovis canadensis) is time, labor, and cost intensive and, therefore, high levels of success are desirable. We tested a widely used habitat suitability model against translocation success and then modified it to include additional factors which improved its usefulness in predicting appropriate translocation sites. The modified...
Vegetation composition and structure of southern coastal plain pine forests: An ecological comparison
C.W. Hedman, S.L. Grace, S.E. King
2000, Forest Ecology and Management (134) 233-247
Longleaf pine (Pinus palustris) ecosystems are characterized by a diverse community of native groundcover species. Critics of plantation forestry claim that loblolly (Pinus taeda) and slash pine (Pinus elliottii) forests are devoid of native groundcover due to associated management practices. As a result of these practices, some believe that ecosystem...
Effect of stream channel size on the delivery of nitrogen to the Gulf of Mexico
R. B. Alexander, R. A. Smith, G. E. Schwarz
2000, Nature (403) 758-761
An increase in the flux of nitrogen from the Mississippi river during the latter half of the twentieth century has caused eutrophication and chronic seasonal hypoxia in the shallow waters of the Louisiana shelf in the northern Gulf of Mexico. This has led to reductions in species diversity, mortality of...
Food-web dynamics and trophic-level interactions in a multispecies community of freshwater unionids
S. J. Nichols, D. Garling
2000, Canadian Journal of Zoology (78) 871-882
We compared feeding habits and trophic-level relationships of unionid species in a detritus-dominated river and an alga-dominated lake using biochemical analyses, gut contents, and stable-isotope ratios. The δ13C ratios for algae and other food-web components show that all unionids from both the river and the lake used bacterial carbons, not...
Predicting broad-scale occurrences of vertebrates in patchy landscapes
R.B. Boone, W.B. Krohn
2000, Landscape Ecology (15) 63-74
Spatially explicit landscape-scale models that predict species distributions, where patches of habitat are shown as having potential to be occupied or unoccupied, are increasingly common. To successfully use such data, one should understand how these predicted distributions are created and how their relative accuracies are assessed. Geographic ranges, defined upon...
A comparison of solute-transport solution techniques based on inverse modelling results
S. Mehl, M. C. Hill
2000, Conference Paper, IAHS-AISH Publication
Five common numerical techniques (finite difference, predictor-corrector, total-variation-diminishing, method-of-characteristics, and modified-method-of-characteristics) were tested using simulations of a controlled conservative tracer-test experiment through a heterogeneous, two-dimensional sand tank. The experimental facility was constructed using randomly distributed homogeneous blocks of five sand types. This experimental model provides an outstanding opportunity to compare...
Ghosts of habitats past: Contribution of landscape change to current habitats used by shrubland birds
Steven T. Knick, J.T. Rotenberry
2000, Ecology (81) 220-227
Models of habitat associations for species often are developed with an implicit assumption that habitats are static, even though recent disturbance may have altered the landscape. We tested our hypothesis that trajectory and magnitude of habitat change influenced observed distribution and abundance of passerine birds breeding in shrubsteppe habitats of...
Imaging and modeling new VETEM data
David L. Wright, David V. Smith, Jared D. Abraham, Raymond S. Hutton, E. Kent Bond, Tie Jun Cui, Alaeddin A. Aydiner, Weng Cho Chew
2000, Conference Paper, Proceedings of SPIE - The International Society for Optical Engineering
In previously reported work (Wright and others, 2000) we found that the very early time electromagnetic (VETEM) prototype system produced data from which high resolution images of a buried former foundry site at the Denver Federal Center were made. The soil covering the site is about 30 mS/m conductivity, and...
The genetics of amphibian decline: population substructure and molecular differentiation in the Yosemite toad, Bufo canorus (Anura, Bufonidae) based on single-strand conformation polymorphism analysis (SSCP) and mitochondrial DNA sequence data
H. Bradley Shaffer, Gary M. Fellers, Allison Magee, S. Randal Voss
2000, Molecular Ecology (9) 245-257
We present a comprehensive survey of genetic variation across the range of the narrowly distributed endemic Yosemite toad Bufo canorus, a declining amphibian restricted to the Sierra Nevada of California. Based on 322 bp of mitochondrial cytochrome b sequence data, we found limited support for the monophyly of B. canorus and...
Scaling up from field to region for wind erosion prediction using a field-scale wind erosion model and GIS
T.M. Zobeck, N. C. Parker, S. Haskell, K. Guoding
2000, Agriculture, Ecosystems and Environment (82) 247-259
Factors that affect wind erosion such as surface vegetative and other cover, soil properties and surface roughness usually change spatially and temporally at the field-scale to produce important field-scale variations in wind erosion. Accurate estimation of wind erosion when scaling up from fields to regions, while maintaining meaningful field-scale process...
Distribution, speciation, and transport of mercury in stream-sediment, stream-water, and fish collected near abandoned mercury mines in southwestern Alaska, USA
J. E. Gray, P. M. Theodorakos, E. A. Bailey, R.R. Turner
2000, Science of the Total Environment (260) 21-33
Concentrations of total Hg, Hg (II), and methylmercury were measured in stream-sediment, stream-water, and fish collected downstream from abandoned mercury mines in south-western Alaska to evaluate environmental effects to surrounding ecosystems. These mines are found in a broad belt covering several tens of thousands of square kilometers, primarily in the...
Comparison of enzyme-linked immunosorbent assay and gas chromatography procedures for the detection of cyanazine and metolachlor in surface water samples
S.M. Schraer, D.R. Shaw, M. Boyette, R.H. Coupe, E.M. Thurman
2000, Journal of Agricultural and Food Chemistry (48) 5881-5886
Enzyme-linked immunosorbent assay (ELISA) data from surface water reconnaissance were compared to data from samples analyzed by gas chromatography for the pesticide residues cyanazine (2-[[4-chloro-6-(ethylamino)-l,3,5-triazin-2-yl]amino]-2-methylpropanenitrile ) and metolachlor (2-chloro-N-(2-ethyl-6-methylphenyl)-N-(2-methoxy-1-methylethyl)acetamide). When ELISA analyses were duplicated, cyanazine and metolachlor detection was found to have highly reproducible results; adjusted R2s were 0.97 and...
Characterizing multiple timescales of stream and storage zone interaction that affect solute fate and transport in streams
Jungyill Choi, Judson W. Harvey, Martha H. Conklin
2000, Water Resources Research (36) 1511-1518
The fate of contaminants in streams and rivers is affected by exchange and biogeochemical transformation in slowly moving or stagnant flow zones that interact with rapid flow in the main channel. In a typical stream, there are multiple types of slowly moving flow zones in which exchange and transformation occur,...
Methodology and application of combined watershed and ground-water models in Kansas
M. Sophocleous, S.P. Perkins
2000, Journal of Hydrology (236) 185-201
Increased irrigation in Kansas and other regions during the last several decades has caused serious water depletion, making the development of comprehensive strategies and tools to resolve such problems increasingly important. This paper makes the case for an intermediate complexity, quasi-distributed, comprehensive, large-watershed model, which falls between the fully distributed,...
Chlorophyll maxima in mountain ponds and lakes, Mount Rainier National Park, Washington State, USA
Gary L. Larson
2000, Lake and Reservoir Management (16) 333-339
Hypolimnetic chlorophyll maxima are common in clear lakes and often occur at depths with between 1 and 0.1% of the surface incident light. Little is known, however, about the concentrations of chlorophyll in thermally unstratified mountain ponds and how these concentrations compare to epilimnetic and hypolimnetic concentrations in mountain lakes....