Estimating prefledging survival: Allowing for brood mixing and dependence among brood mates
Paul L. Flint, Kenneth H. Pollock, Dana Thomas, James S. Sedinger
1995, Journal of Wildlife Management (59) 448-455
Estimates of juvenile survival from hatch to fledging provide important information on waterfowl productivity. We develop a model for estimating survival of young waterfowl from hatch to fledging. Our model enables interchange of individuals among broods and relaxes the assumption that individuals within broods have independent survival probabilities. The model...
Viral hemorrhagic septicemia virus in North America
Theodore R. Meyers, James R. Winton
1995, Annual Review of Fish Diseases (5) 3-24
The first detections of viral hemorrhagic septicemia virus (VHSV) in North America were in Washington State from adult coho (Oncorhynchus kisutch) and chinook (O. tshawytscha) salmon in 1988. Subsequently, VHSV was isolated from adult coho salmon returning to hatcheries in the Pacific Northwest in 1989, 1991 and 1994. These isolates...
Availability of lake trout reproductive habitat in the Great Lakes
Thomas A. Edsall, Gregory W. Kennedy
1995, Journal of Great Lakes Research (21) 290-301
A decades-long program to reestablish self-sustaining stocks of lake trout (Salvelinus namaycush) in the four lower Great Lakes produced excellent fisheries supported by stocked fish. These fish spawned widely and small numbers of their offspring were collected intermittently from Lakes Michigan, Huron, and Ontario, but no self-sustaining stocks were established....
Salmon escapement estimates into the Togiak River using sonar, Togiak National Wildlife Refuge, Alaska, 1987, 1988, and 1990
David B. Irving, James E. Finn, James P. Larson
1995, USFWS Alaska Fisheries Technical Report 31
We began a three year study in 1987 to test the feasibility of using sonar in the Togiak River to estimate salmon escapements. Current methods rely on periodic aerial surveys and a counting tower at river kilometer 97. Escapement estimates are not available until 10 to 14 days after the...
Removal of algae by the zebra mussel (Dreissena polymorpha) population in western Lake Erie: a bioenergetics approach
Charles P. Madenjian
1995, Canadian Journal of Fisheries and Aquatic Sciences (52) 381-390
A bioenergetics model for growth of a zebra mussel (Dreissena polymorpha) individual was verified with observations on zebra mussel growth in western Lake Erie. The bioenergetics model was then applied to the zebra mussel population in the western basin of Lake Erie to estimate the removal of phytoplankton by mussels....
Interpretation of prematurely terminated air-pressurized slug tests
Allen M. Shapiro, Earl A. Greene
1995, Ground Water (33) 539-546
An air-pressurized slug test consists of applying a constant pressure to the column of air in a well, monitoring the declining water level, and then releasing the air pressure and monitoring the recovering water level. Such tests offer a means of estimating formation transmissivity and storativity without extensive downhole equipment...
Paleohydrologic record from lake brine on the southern High Plains, Texas
Ward E. Sanford, Warren W. Wood
1995, Geology (23) 229-232
The timing of changes in the stage and salinity of Double Lakes of Lynn County, Texas, was estimated using dissolved-chloride profiles across an underlying shale layer. Lake conditions over the past 30 to 50 ka can be inferred from the chloride profiles by using the advective velocity of the pore...
Use of electric logs to estimate water quality of pre-tertiary aquifers
J. B. Lindner-Lunsford, Breton W. Bruce
1995, Groundwater (33) 547-555
Electric logs provide a means of estimating ground-water quality in areas where water analyses are not available. Most of the methods for interpreting these logs have been developed for the petroleum industry and are most reliable in saline aquifers (concentration of dissolved solids as sodium...
Determination of nanogram per liter concentrations of volatile organic compounds in water by capillary gas chromatography and selected ion monitoring mass spectrometry and its use to define groundwater flow directions in Edwards Aquifer, Texas
P.M. Buszka, D.L. Rose, G. B. Ozuna, G.E. Groschen
1995, Analytical Chemistry (67) 3659-3667
A method has been developed to measure nanogram per liter amounts of selected volatile organic compounds (VOCs) including dichlorodifluoromethane, trichlorofluoromethane, cis-1,2-dichloroethene, trichloroethene, tetrachloroethene, and the isomers of dichlorobenzene in water. The method uses purge-and-trap techniques on a 100 mL sample, gas chromatography with a megabore capillary column, and electron impact,...
Evaluation of simplified stream-aquifer depletion models for water rights administration
Marios Sophocleous, Antonis Koussis, J.L. Martin, S.P. Perkins
1995, Groundwater (33) 579-588
We assess the predictive accuracy of Glover's (1974) stream-aquifer analytical solutions, which are commonly used in administering water rights, and evaluate the impact of the assumed idealizations on administrative and management decisions. To achieve these objectives, we evaluate the predictive capabilities of the Glover stream-aquifer...
Measured and predicted velocity and longitudinal dispersion at steady and unsteady flow, Colorado River, Glen Canyon Dam to lake mead
J.B. Graf
1995, Water Resources Bulletin (31) 265-281
The effect of unsteadiness or dam releases on velocity and longitudinal dispersion of flow was evaluated by injecting a fluorescent dye into the Colorado River below Glen Canyon Dam and sampling for dye concentration at selected sites downstream. In Glen Canyon, average flow velocity through the study reach increased directly...
Relations between pesticide use and riverine flux in the Mississippi River Basin
Steven J. Larson, Paul D. Capel, Donald A. Goolsby, Steven D. Zaugg, Mark W. Sandstrom
1995, Chemosphere (31) 3305-3321
In an intensive subcontimental study of pesticides in surface waters of the United States, concentrations of 26 high-use pesticides were measured at nine sites in the Mississippi River basin from May 1991 through March 1992. Calculated total fluxes were combined with agricultural-use data to estimate the percentage of applied pesticide...
Fluxes of water and solute in a coastal wetland sediment. 2. Effect of macropores on solute exchange with surface water
J. W. Harvey, W.K. Nuttle
1995, Journal of Hydrology (164) 109-125
Chloride was highly concentrated relative to seawater in matrix porewater but was comparatively dilute in macropores. Concentration differences in pore-size classes declined with depth until indistinguishable below 10 cm. The segregated chloride distribution can be explained if recharge to the sediment occurred by downward infiltration in macropores and discharge occurred...
Contraction scour at a bridge over Wolf Creek, Iowa
Edward E. Fischer
Espey William H.Combs Phil G., editor(s)
1995, Conference Paper, International Water Resources Engineering Conference - Proceedings
Contraction scour at the State Highway 14 bridge over Wolf Creek in south-central Iowa was caused by a large flood on September 14 and 15, 1992. The bridge is a 30.5-m, single-span steel structure supported by vertical-wall concrete abutments with wingwalls. Approximately 6 meters of scour resulted from the flood....
Areal extent of freshwater from an experimental release of Mississippi River Water into Lake Pontchartrain, Louisiana, May 1994
Brian E. McCallum
1995, Conference Paper, Coastal Zone: Proceedings of the Symposium on Coastal and Ocean Management
The effects of the release of freshwater from the Mississippi river into the Lake Pontchartrain was evaluated. The study determined the delineation of the areal extent of the freshwater plume in the lake, intensively sampled lake and river water and bed sediment to determine the effects on water quality in...
Mississippi river methods comparison study: Implications for water quality monitoring of dissolved trace elements
Howard E. Taylor
1995, Environmental Science & Technology (29) 1313-1317
No abstract available....
Prediction of areas where irrigation drainage may induce selenium contamination of water
R. L. Seiler
1995, Journal of Environmental Quality (24) 973-979
The U.S. Department of the Interior has investigated 25 areas in the western USA to determine whether irrigation drainage has caused harmful effects on wildlife or has reduced subsequent beneficial uses of the water. A database of chemical analyses of water, sediment, and biota from the...
Effects of climate on chemical weathering in watersheds
A. F. White, A.E. Blum
1995, Geochimica et Cosmochimica Acta (59) 1729-1747
Climatic effects on chemical weathering are evaluated by correlating variations On solute concentrations and fluxes with temperature, precipitation, runoff, and evapotranspiration (ET) for a worldwide distribution of sixty-eight watersheds underlain by granitoid rock types. Stream solute concentrations are strongly correlated with proportional ET loss, and evaporative concentration makes stream solute concentrations an...
Hydrogen and oxygen isotopic compositions of waters from fumaroles at Kilauea summit, Hawaii
T. K. Hinkley, J. E. Quick, R. T. Gregory, T.M. Gerlach
1995, Bulletin of Volcanology (57) 44-51
Condensate samples were collected in 1992 from a high-temperature (300° C) fumarole on the floor of the Halemaumau Pit Crater at Kilauea. The emergence about two years earlier of such a hot fumarole was unprecedented at such a central location at Kilauea. The condensates have hydrogen and oxygen isotopic compositions...
Evaluation of frequency distributions for flood hazard analysis
Wilbert O. Thomas Jr., Minoru Kuriki, Tadashi Suetsugi
Espey William H.Combs Phil G., editor(s)
1995, Conference Paper, International Water Resources Engineering Conference - Proceedings
Many different frequency distributions and fitting methods are used to determine the magnitude and frequency of floods and rainfall. Ten different combinations of frequency distributions and fitting methods are evaluated by summarizing the differences in the 0.002 exceedance probability quantile (500-year event), presenting graphical displays of the 10 estimates of...
The stability of hydrogen ion and specific conductance in filtered wet-deposition samples stored at ambient temperatures
J.D. Gordon, L.J. Schroder, A. L. Morden-Moore, V.C. Bowersox
1995, Water, Air, & Soil Pollution (83) 299-313
Separate experiments by the U.S. Geological Survey (USGS) and the Illinois State Water Survey Central Analytical Laboratory (CAL) independently assessed the stability of hydrogen ion and specific conductance in filtered wet-deposition samples stored at ambient temperatures. The USGS experiment represented a test of sample stability under a diverse range of...
Soil moisture sensors for continuous monitoring
Saud A. Amer, T. O. Keefer, M.A. Weltz, David C. Goodrich, Leslie Bach
1995, Journal of the American Water Resources Association (30) 69-83
Certain physical and chemical properties of soil vary with soil water content. The relationship between these properties and water content is complex and involves both the pore structure and constituents of the soil solution. One of the most economical techniques to quantify soil water content involves the measurement of...
Fluxes of water and solute in a coastal wetland sediment. l. The contribution of regional groundwater discharge
William K. Nuttle, Judson W. Harvey
1995, Journal of Hydrology (164) 89-107
Upward discharge of fresh groundwater into a mid-Atlantic intertidal wetland contributed 62% of the water needed to replace evapotranspiration losses from the sediment during an 11 day period in September. Infiltration during flooding by tides provided most of the balance; thus there was a net advection of salt into the...
US Geological Survey research on the environmental fate of uranium mining and milling wastes
E. R. Landa, J. R. Gray
1995, Environmental Geology (26) 19-31
Studies by the US Geological Survey (USGS) of uranium mill tailings (UMT) have focused on characterizing the forms in which radionuclides are retained and identifying factors influencing the release of radionuclides to air and water. Selective extraction studies and studies of radionuclide sorption by and leaching from components of UMT...
Correlation of Ordovician rocks of northern Alaska
Anita G. Harris, Julie A. Dumoulin, John E. Repetski, Claire Carter
John D. Cooper, Mary L. Droser, Stanley C. Finney, editor(s)
1995, Conference Paper, Ordovician odyssey: Short papers for the seventh international symposium on the Ordovician system (SEPM Book 77)
The Ordovician sequences presented in this report were chosen to cover a range of depositional and structural settings found in northern Alaska. Consequently, the quality of lithostratigraphic, paleontologic, and sedimentologic data is variable. Until 1982, Ordovician rocks in northern Alaska were known only from a few, widely separated localities. Since...