Interactions between an exotic ecosystem engineer (Dreissena spp.) and native burrowing mayflies (Hexagenia spp.) in soft sediments of western Lake Erie
Kristen M. DeVanna, Don W. Schloesser, Jonathan M. Bossenbroek, Christine M. Mayer
Thomas F. Nalepa, Donald W. Schloesser, editor(s)
2014, Book chapter, Quagga and zebra mussels: Biology, impacts, and control
No abstract available....
The roles of competition and habitat in the dynamics of populations and species distributions
Charles Brandon Yackulic, Janice Reid, James D. Nichols, James E. Hines, Raymond Davis, Eric Forsman
2014, Ecology (95) 265-279
The role of competition in structuring biotic communities at fine spatial scales is well known from detailed process-based studies. Our understanding of competition's importance at broader scales is less resolved and mainly based on static species distribution maps. Here, we bridge this gap by examining the joint occupancy dynamics of...
Fish gut microbiota analysis differentiates physiology and behavior of invasive Asian carp and indigenous American fish
Lin Ye, Jon J. Amberg, Duane Chapman, Mark P. Gaikowski, Wen-Tso Liu
2014, International Society for Microbial Ecology (8) 541-551
Gut microbiota of invasive Asian silver carp (SVCP) and indigenous planktivorous gizzard shad (GZSD) in Mississippi river basin were compared using 16S rRNA gene pyrosequencing. Analysis of more than 440 000 quality-filtered sequences obtained from the foregut and hindgut of GZSD and SVCP revealed high microbial diversity in these samples. GZSD...
Aquatic ecosystems as indicators of status and trends in water quality
Thomas F. Cuffney, Jonathan G. Kennen, Ian R. Waite
2014, Book chapter, Comprehensive Water Quality and Purification
This chapter provides an introduction and overview of the use of aquatic ecosystems as indicators of water quality. The monitoring of biological communities (fish, algae, and invertebrates) as a means of assessing water quality conditions is emphasized along with ecotoxicological studies and measures of ecosystem function. Issues related to the design, implementation,...
Environmental conditions associated with lesions in introduced free-ranging sheep in Hawai‘i
Jenny G. Powers, Colleen G. Duncan, Terry R. Spraker, Bridget A. Schuler, Steven C. Hess, Jonathan K.J. Faford, Hans Sin
2014, Pacific Science (68) 65-74
Wildlife species which have been translocated between temperate and tropical regions of the world provide unique opportunities to understand how disease processes may be affected by environmental conditions. European mouflon sheep (Ovis gmelini musimon) from the Mediterranean Islands were introduced to the Hawaiian Islands for sport hunting beginning in 1954...
Environmental impacts of utility-scale solar energy
R.R. Hernandez, S.B. Easter, M. L. Murphy-Mariscal, F.T. Maestre, M. Tavassoli, E.B. Allen, C.W. Barrows, J. Belnap, R. Ochoa-Hueso, S. Ravi, M.F. Allen
2014, Renewable and Sustainable Energy Reviews (29) 766-779
Renewable energy is a promising alternative to fossil fuel-based energy, but its development can require a complex set of environmental tradeoffs. A recent increase in solar energy systems, especially large, centralized installations, underscores the urgency of understanding their environmental interactions. Synthesizing literature across numerous disciplines, we review direct and indirect...
Net ecosystem productivity of temperate grasslands in northern China: An upscaling study
Li Zhang, Huadong Guo, Gensuo Jia, Bruce Wylie, Tagir Gilmanov, Daniel M. Howard, Lei Ji, Jingfeng Xiao, Jing Li, Wenping Yuan, Tianbao Zhao, Shiping Chen, Guangsheng Zhou, Tomomichi Kato
2014, Agricultural and Forest Meteorology (184) 71-81
Grassland is one of the widespread biome types globally, and plays an important role in the terrestrial carbon cycle. We examined net ecosystem production (NEP) for the temperate grasslands in northern China from 2000 to 2010. We combined flux observations, satellite data, and climate data to develop a piecewise regression...
Historical records, sources, and spatial trends of PCBs along the Rhône River (France).
Brice Mourier, Marc Desmet, Peter C. Van Metre, Barbara Mahler, Yves Perrodin, Gwenaelle Roux, Jean-Phillippe Bedell, Lynn W. Lefebvre, Marc Babut
2014, Chemosphere (476-477) 568-576
Despite bans on PCB use since 1975 (open systems) and 1987 (closed systems), concentrations of PCBs in riverine fish in France continue to exceed regulatory levels. We present historical records of PCB concentrations in sediment cores from eight sites on the Rhône River, from Lake Geneva to the Mediterranean Sea....
Relative significance of microtopography and vegetation as controls on surface water flow on a low-gradient floodplain
Jungyill Choi, Judson W. Harvey
2014, Wetlands (34) 101-115
Surface water flow controls water velocities, water depths, and residence times, and influences sediment and nutrient transport and other ecological processes in shallow aquatic systems. Flow through wetlands is substantially influenced by drag on vegetation stems but is also affected by microtopography. Our goal was to use microtopography data directly...
SemantEco: a semantically powered modular architecture for integrating distributed environmental and ecological data
Evan W. Patton, Patrice Seyed, Ping Wang, Linyun Fu, F. Joshua Dein, R. Sky Bristol, Deborah L. McGuinness
2014, Future Generation Computer Systems (36) 430-440
We aim to inform the development of decision support tools for resource managers who need to examine large complex ecosystems and make recommendations in the face of many tradeoffs and conflicting drivers. We take a semantic technology approach, leveraging background ontologies and the growing body of linked open data. In...
Discontinuities, cross-scale patterns, and the organization of ecosystems
Kirsty L. Nash, Craig R. Allen, David G. Angeler, Chris Barichievy, Tarsha Eason, Ahjond S. Garmestani, Nicholas A.J. Graham, Dean Granholm, Melinda Knutson, R. John Nelson, Magnus Nystrom, Craig A. Stow, Shana M. Sandstrom
2014, Ecology (95) 654-667
Ecological structures and processes occur at specific spatiotemporal scales, and interactions that occur across multiple scales mediate scale-specific (e.g., individual, community, local, or regional) responses to disturbance. Despite the importance of scale, explicitly incorporating a multi-scale perspective into research and management actions remains a challenge. The discontinuity hypothesis provides a...
Large wood budget and transport dynamics on a large river using radio telemetry
Edward R. Schenk, Bertrand Moulin, Cliff R. Hupp, Jean M. Richte
2014, Earth Surface Processes and Landforms (39) 487-498
Despite the abundance of large wood (LW) river studies there is still a lack of understanding of LW transport dynamics on large low gradient rivers. This study used 290 radio frequency identification tagged (RFID) LW and 54 metal (aluminum) tagged LW, to quantify the percent of in-channel LW that moves...
Climate change, fire management, and ecological services in the southwestern US
Matthew D. Hurteau, John B. Bradford, Peter Z. Fule, Alan H. Taylor, Katherine L. Martin
2014, Forest Ecology and Management (327) 280-289
The diverse forest types of the southwestern US are inseparable from fire. Across climate zones in California, Nevada, Arizona, and New Mexico, fire suppression has left many forest types out of sync with their historic fire regimes. As a result, high fuel loads place them at risk of severe fire,...
Commercial possibilities for stranded conventional gas from Alaska's North Slope
E. D. Attanasi, P.A. Freeman
2014, Natural Resources Research (23) 175-193
Stranded gas resources are defined for this study as gas resources in discrete accumulations that are not currently commercially producible, or producible at full potential, for either physical or economic reasons. Approximately 35 trillion cubic feet (TCF) of stranded gas was identified on Alaska’s North Slope. The commercialization of this...
Discharges of produced waters from oil and gas extraction via wastewater treatment plants are sources of disinfection by-products to receiving streams
Michelle Hladik, Michael J. Focazio, Mark Engle
2014, Science of the Total Environment (466-467) 1085-1093
Fluids co-produced with oil and gas production (produced waters) are often brines that contain elevated concentrations of bromide. Bromide is an important precursor of several toxic disinfection by-products (DBPs) and the treatment of produced water may lead to more brominated DBPs. To determine if wastewater treatment plants that accept produced...
Characterizing the distribution of particles in urban stormwater: advancements through improved sampling technology
William R. Selbig
2014, Urban Water Journal (12) 111-119
A new sample collection system was developed to improve the representation of sediment in stormwater by integrating the entire water column. The depth-integrated sampler arm (DISA) was able to mitigate sediment stratification bias in storm water, thereby improving the characterization of particle size distribution from urban source areas. Collector streets...
Chapter A5. Section 2.2B. Syringe-Filter Procedure for Processing Samples for Analysis of Organic Compounds by DAI LC-MS/MS
Mark W. Sandstrom, Franceska D. Wilde
2014, Techniques and Methods 5.2.2.B
This section of chapter 5 of the National Field Manual for the Collection of Water-Quality Data (NFM) describes the field procedures for collecting small-volume samples using a syringe-tip filtration method. The samples are sent to the U.S. Geological Survey (USGS) National Water Quality Laboratory (NWQL) for analysis of organic compounds...
Improvement of the R-SWAT-FME framework to support multiple variables and multi-objective functions
Yiping Wu, Shu-Guang Liu
2014, Science of the Total Environment (466-467) 455-466
Application of numerical models is a common practice in the environmental field for investigation and prediction of natural and anthropogenic processes. However, process knowledge, parameter identifiability, sensitivity, and uncertainty analyses are still a challenge for large and complex mathematical models such as the hydrological/water quality model, Soil and Water Assessment...
An application of Social Values for Ecosystem Services (SolVES) to three national forests in Colorado and Wyoming
Benson C. Sherrouse, Darius J. Semmens, Jessica M. Clement
2014, Ecological Indicators (36) 68-79
Despite widespread recognition that social-value information is needed to inform stakeholders and decision makers regarding trade-offs in environmental management, it too often remains absent from ecosystem service assessments. Although quantitative indicators of social values need to be explicitly accounted for in the decision-making process, they need not be monetary. Ongoing...
Mercury cycling in agricultural and managed wetlands of California: experimental evidence of vegetation-driven changes in sediment biogeochemistry and methylmercury production
Lisamarie Windham-Myers, Mark Marvin-DiPasquale, Craig A. Stricker, Jennifer L. Agee, Le H. Kieu, Evangelos Kakouros
2014, Science of the Total Environment (484) 300-307
The role of live vegetation in sediment methylmercury (MeHg) production and associated biogeochemistry was examined in three types of agricultural wetlands (domesticated or white rice, wild rice, and fallow fields) and adjacent managed natural wetlands (cattail- and bulrush or tule-dominated) in the Yolo Bypass region of California's Central Valley, USA....
Modeling the effects of naturally occurring organic carbon on chlorinated ethene transport to a public supply well
Francis H. Chapelle, Leon J. Kauffman, Mark A. Widdowson
2014, Ground Water (52) 76-89
The vulnerability of public supply wells to chlorinated ethene (CE) contamination in part depends on the availability of naturally occurring organic carbon to consume dissolved oxygen (DO) and initiate reductive dechlorination. This was quantified by building a mass balance model of the Kirkwood-Cohansey aquifer, which is widely used for public...
Response of walleye and yellow perch to water-level fluctuations in glacial lakes
D.J. Dembkowski, Steven R. Chipps, B. G. Blackwell
2014, Fisheries Management and Ecology (21) 89-95
The influence of water levels on population characteristics of yellow perch, Perca flavescens (Mitchill), and walleye, Sander vitreus (Mitchill), was evaluated across a range of glacial lakes in north-eastern South Dakota, USA. Results showed that natural variation in water levels had an important influence on frequently measured fish population characteristics. Yellow perch abundance was...
Understanding relationships among abundance, extirpation, and climate at ecoregional scales
Erik A. Beever, A. Mysnberge, J. Long, Solomon Dubrowski, N. B. Piekielek
2014, Ecology (94) 1563-1571
Recent research on mountain-dwelling species has illustrated changes in species’ distributional patterns in response to climate change. Abundance of a species will likely provide an earlier warning indicator of change than will occupancy, yet relationships between abundance and climatic factors have received less attention. We tested whether predictors of counts...
Spawning related movement of shovelnose sturgeon in the Missouri River above Fort Peck Reservoir, Montana
Ryan R. Richards, Christopher S. Guy, Molly A. Webb, William M. Gardner, C.B. Jensen
2014, Journal of Applied Ichthyology (30) 1-13
The hypotheses of this study were (i) that shovelnose sturgeon would make upstream movements to spawn, (ii) movement of spawning fish would be greater in a year with higher discharge, and (iii) that spawning fish would have greater movements than reproductively inactive fish. Shovelnose sturgeon Scaphirhynchus platorynchus (Rafinesque, 1820) in...
Long-distance transport of Hg, Sb, and As from a mined area, conversion of Hg to methyl-Hg, and uptake of Hg by fish on the Tiber River basin, west-central Italy
John E. Gray, Valentina Rimondi, Pilario Costagliola, Orlando Vaselli, Pierfranco Lattanzi
2014, Environmental Geochemistry and Health (36) 145-157
Stream sediment, stream water, and fish were collected from a broad region to evaluate downstream transport and dispersion of mercury (Hg) from inactive mines in the Monte Amiata Hg District (MAMD), Tuscany, Italy. Stream sediment samples ranged in Hg concentration from 20 to 1,900 ng/g, and only 5 of the...