Identifying translocation sites for a climate relict population of Finescale Dace
Evan C.J. Booher, Annika W. Walters
2022, Transactions of the American Fisheries Society (151) 245-259
Translocation is a management strategy that seeks to address threats to fish and wildlife populations by establishing new populations in ecologically suitable areas. Populations of Finescale Dace Chrosomus neogaeus in the Great Plains may benefit from translocation, as they exhibit a climate relict natural history that has led to a disjunct distribution...
A review of algal toxin exposures on reserved federal lands and among trust species in the United States
Zachary R. Laughrey, Victoria Christensen, Robert J. Dusek, Sarena Senegal, Julia S. Lankton, Tracy Ziegler, Lee C. Jones, Daniel K. Jones, Brianna Williams, Stephanie E. Gordon, Gerald A. Clyde, Erich B Emery, Keith A. Loftin
2022, Critical Reviews in Environmental Science and Technology (52) 4284-4307
Associated health effects from algal toxin exposure are a growing concern for human and animal health. Algal toxin poisonings may occur from contact with or consumption of water supplies or from ingestion of contaminated animals. The U.S. Federal Government owns or holds in trust about 259 million...
Towards a holistic sulfate-water-O2 triple oxygen isotope systematics
Bryan Alan Killingsworth, Pierre Cartigny, Justin A. Hayles, Christophe Thomazo, Pierre Sansjofre, Virgil Pasquier, Stefan V. Lalonde, Pascal Philippot
2022, Chemical Geology (588)
Triple oxygen isotope (∆17O with δ18O) signals of H2O and O2 found in sulfate of oxidative weathering origin offer promising constraints on modern and ancient weathering, hydrology, atmospheric gas concentrations, and bioproductivity. However, interpretations of the sulfate-water-O2 system rely on assuming fixed oxygen-isotope fractionations between sulfate and water, which, contrastingly, are shown to vary widely in sign and...
Complex demographic responses to contrasting climate drivers lead to divergent population trends across the range of a threatened alpine plant
Lucas Berio Fortini, Paul Krushelnycky, Donald Drake, Forest Starr, Kim Starr, Charles G. Chimera
2022, Global Ecology and Conservation (33)
Alpine plants are likely to be particularly vulnerable to climate change because of their restricted distributions and sensitivity to rapid environmental shifts occurring in high-elevation ecosystems. The well-studied Haleakalā silversword (‘āhinahina, Argyroxiphium sandwicense subsp. macrocephalum) already exhibits substantial climate-associated population decline, and offers the opportunity to...
Capacity of two Sierra Nevada rivers for reintroduction of anadromous salmonids: Insights from a high-resolution view
David A. Boughton, Lee R. Harrison, Sara N. John, Rosealea M. Bond, Colin L. Nicol, Carl J. Legleiter, Ryan T. Richardson
2022, Transactions of the American Fisheries Society (151) 13-41
Historically, anadromous steelhead Oncorhynchus mykiss and spring-run Chinook Salmon O. tshawytscha used high-elevation rivers in the Sierra Nevada of California but were extirpated in the 20th century by construction of impassable dams. Plans to reintroduce the fish by opening migratory passage across the dams and reservoirs can only succeed if...
Both real-time and long-term environmental data perform well in predicting shorebird distributions in managed habitat
Erin Conlisk, Gregory Golet, Mark Reynolds, Blake Barbaree, Kristin Sesser, Kristin B. Byrd, Sam Veloz, Matthew E. Reiter
2022, Ecological Applications (32)
Highly mobile species, such as migratory birds, respond to seasonal and inter-annual variability in resource availability by moving to better habitats. Despite the recognized importance of resource thresholds, species distribution models typically rely on long-term average habitat conditions, mostly because large-extent, temporally-resolved, environmental data are difficult...
Climate extremes as drivers of surface-water-quality trends in the United States
Karen R. Ryberg, Jeffrey G. Chanat
2022, Science of the Total Environment (809)
Surface-water quality can change in response to climate perturbations, such as changes in the frequency of heavy precipitation or droughts, through direct effects, such as dilution and concentration, and through physical processes, such as bank scour. Water quality might also change through indirect mechanisms,...
Seasonal impoundment management reduces nitrogen cycling but not resilience to surface fire in a tidal wetland
Scott Jones, Charles A Schutte, Brian J Roberts, Karen M. Thorne
2022, Journal of Environmental Management (303)
Hydrology and salinity regimes of many impounded wetlands are manipulated to provide seasonal habitats for migratory waterfowl, with little-known consequences for ecosystem structure and function. Managed hydrology can alter ecosystems by directly changing soil properties and processes and by...
Estimating pelagic primary production in lakes: Comparison of 14C incubation and free-water O2 approaches
Noah R. Lottig, Joseph Phillips, Ryan D. Batt, Facundo Scordo, Tanner J. Williamson, Stephen R. Carpenter, Sudeep Chandra, Paul C. Hanson, Christopher T. Solomon, Michael J. Vanni, Jacob Aaron Zwart
2022, Limnology and Oceanography: Methods (20) 34-45
Historically, estimates of pelagic primary production in lake ecosystems were made by measuring the uptake of carbon-14 (14C)-labeled inorganic carbon in samples incubated under laboratory or in situ conditions. However, incubation approaches are increasingly being replaced by methods that analyze diel changes in high-frequency...
Geostatistical mapping of salinity conditioned on borehole logs, Montebello Oil Field, California
Neil Terry, Frederick Day-Lewis, Matthew K. Landon, Michael Land, Jennifer S. Stanton, John W. Lane
2022, Groundwater (60) 242-261
We present a geostatistics-based stochastic salinity estimation framework for the Montebello Oil Field that capitalizes on available total dissolved solids (TDS) data from groundwater samples as well as electrical resistivity (ER) data from borehole logging. Data from TDS samples (n = 4924) was coded into an indicator framework...
The presence of denitrifiers in bacterial communities of urban stormwater best management practices (BMPs)
Natalie C. Hall, Masoumeh Sikaroodi, Dianna M. Hogan, R. Christian Jones, Patrick Gillevet
2022, Environmental Management (69) 89-110
Stormwater best management practices (BMPs) are engineered structures that attempt to mitigate the impacts of stormwater, which can include nitrogen inputs from the surrounding drainage area. The goal of this study was to assess bacterial community composition in different types of stormwater BMP soils to establish...
Spatial and temporal controls on proglacial erosion rates: A comparison of four basins on Mount Rainier, 1960 to 2017
Scott W. Anderson, David Shean
2022, Earth Surface Processes and Landforms (47) 596-617
The retreat of alpine glaciers since the mid-19th century has triggered rapid landscape adjustments in many headwater basins. However, the degree to which decadal-scale glacier retreat is associated with systematic or substantial changes in overall coarse sediment export, with the potential to impact downstream river dynamics, remains poorly understood. Here,...
Integrated tools for identifying optimal flow regimes and evaluating alternative minimum flows for recovering at-risk salmonids in a highly managed system
James T. Peterson, Jessica E. Pease, Luke Whitman, James White, Laurel E. Stratton Garvin, Stewart A. Rounds, J. Rose Wallick
2022, River Research and Applications (38) 293-308
Water resource managers are faced with difficult decisions on how to satisfy human water needs while maintaining or restoring riverine ecosystems. Decision sciences have developed approaches and tools that can be used to break down difficult water management decisions into their component parts. An essential aspect of these approaches is...
Assessment and significance of the frequency domain for trends in annual peak streamflow
Christopher P. Konrad, Daniel E. Restivo
2022, Journal of Flood Risk Management (14)
Risk management of nonstationary floods depends on an understanding of trends over a range of flood frequencies representing small (frequent) to large (infrequent) floods. Quantile regression is applied to the annual peak streamflow distributions at 2683 sites in the contiguous United States to test for trends in the 10th quantile...
Final report: Understanding historical and predicting future lake temperatures in North and South Dakota
Jordan Read
2022, Report
Lakes, reservoirs, and ponds are central and integral features of the landscape of the North Central US. These water bodies provide aesthetic, cultural, and ecosystem services to surrounding wildlife and human communities. Lakes are warming, resulting in the loss of many native fish. In order to manage economically valuable fisheries...
Supplemental habitat is reservoir dependent: Identifying optimal planting decision using Bayesian Decision Networks
D. M. Norris, M. E. Colvin, Leandro E. Miranda, M. A. Lashley
2022, Journal of Environmental Management (304)
Environmental management often requires making decisions despite system uncertainty. One such example is mudflat mediation in flood control reservoirs. Reservoir mudflats limit development of diverse fish assemblages due to the lack of structural habitat provided by plants. Seeding mudflats with agricultural plants may mimic floodplain wetlands once inundated and provide fish habitat and achieve...
Multiple lines of evidence for identifying potential hazards to fish from contaminants of emerging concern in Great Lakes tributaries
Sarah M. Elliott, Daniel J. Gefell, Richard L. Kiesling, Stephanie L. Hummel, Chryssa K. King, Charles H. Christen, Satomi Kohno, Heiko L. Schoenfuss
2022, Integrated Environmental Assessment and Management (18) 1246-1259
Contaminants of emerging concern (CECs; e.g., pharmaceuticals, flame retardants, pesticides, and industrial chemicals) are omnipresent throughout tributaries to the Great Lakes. Furthermore, CECs are often present at concentrations that are potentially hazardous to aquatic species. Since 2010, we characterized the presence of CECs at 309 sites...
The silence of the clams: Forestry registered pesticides as multiple stressors on soft-shell clams
Alexandra G. Tissot, Elise F. Granek, Anne W Thompson, Michelle L. Hladik, Patrick W. Moran, Kaegen Scully-Engelmeyer
2022, Science of the Total Environment (819)
Contaminants are ubiquitous in the environment, often reaching aquatic systems. Combinations of forestry use pesticides have been detected in both water and aquatic organism tissue samples in coastal systems. Yet, most toxicological studies focus on the effects of these pesticides individually, at high doses,...
Influence of seasonal extreme flows on Brook Trout recruitment
John A. Sweka, Tyler Wagner
2022, North American Journal of Fisheries Management (151) 231-244
Populations of Brook Trout Salvelinus fontinalis exhibit large variation in annual recruitment (abundance of young of the year [age 0]), which is likely a product of density-dependent and density-independent factors. Quantifying the importance of each of these mechanisms in regulating Brook Trout recruitment would be valuable to managers that are responsible for...
The developing zebrafish kidney is impaired by Deepwater Horizon crude oil early-life stage exposure: A molecular to whole-organism perspective
Fabrizio Bonatesta, Cameron Emadi, Edwin R. Price, Yadong Wang, Justin Blaine Greer, Elvis Genbo Xu, Daniel Schlenk, Martin Grosell, Edward M. Mager
2022, Science of the Total Environment (808)
Crude oil is known to induce developmental defects in teleost fish exposed during early life stages (ELSs). While most studies in recent years have focused on cardiac endpoints, evidence from whole-animal transcriptomic analyses and studies with individual polycyclic aromatic hydrocarbons (PAHs) indicate that the developing kidney (i.e., pronephros) is also...
Loggerhead marine turtles (Caretta caretta) nesting at smaller sizes than expected in the Gulf of Mexico: Implications for turtle behavior, population dynamics, and conservation
Allison Benscoter, Brian J. Smith, Kristen Hart
2022, Conservation Science and Practice (4)
Estimates of parameters that affect population dynamics, including the size at which individuals reproduce, are crucial for efforts aimed at understanding how imperiled species may recover from the numerous threats they face. In this study, we observed loggerhead marine turtles (Caretta caretta) nesting at three sites in the Gulf of...
Calcareous plankton biostratigraphic fidelity and species richness during the last 10 m.y. of the Cretaceous at Blake Plateau, subtropical North Atlantic
Brian T. Huber, Nataliya A. Tur, Jean Self-Trail, Kenneth G. MacLeod
2022, Cretaceous Research (131)
Species distributions of well-preserved and diverse assemblages of planktonic foraminifera and calcareous nannofossils spanning the last 10 m.y. of the Cretaceous (middle Campanian through Maastrichtian) are analyzed from samples taken across a 1400 m depth transect at Blake Nose in the western subtropical North Atlantic (Ocean Drilling Program Sites 1049,...
Factors Affecting Groundwater Quality Used for Domestic Supply in Marcellus Shale Region of North-Central and North-East Pennsylvania, USA
Charles A. Cravotta III, Lisa A. Senior, Matthew D. Conlon
2022, Applied Geochemistry (137)
Factors affecting groundwater quality used for domestic supply within the Marcellus Shale footprint in north-central and north-east Pennsylvania are identified using a combination of spatial, statistical, and geochemical modeling. Untreated groundwater, sampled during 2011–2017 from 472 domestic wells within the study...
Identifying factors that affect mountain lake sensitivity to atmospheric nitrogen deposition across multiple scales
Benjamin Burpee, Jasmine Saros, Leora Nanus, Jill S. Baron, Janice Brahney, Kyle Christianson, Taylor Gantz, Andi Heard, Beth Hundey, Karin Koinig, Jiri Kopacek, Katrina Moser, Koren Nydick, Isabella A. Oleksy, Steven Sadro, Ruben Sommaruga, Rolf Vinebrooke, Jason Williams
2022, Water Research (209)
Increased nitrogen (N) deposition rates over the past century have affected both North American and European mountain lake ecosystems. Ecological sensitivity of mountain lakes to N deposition varies, however, because chemical and biological responses are modulated by local watershed and lake properties. We evaluated predictors of...
Predicting coastal impacts by wave farms: A comparison of wave-averaged and wave-resolving models
Daniel R. David, Dirk P. Rijnsdorp, Jeff E. Hansen, Ryan J. Lowe, Mark L. Buckley
2022, Renewable Energy (183) 764-780
Wave energy converters (WECs) will have to be arranged into arrays of many devices to extract commercially viable amounts of energy. To understand the potential coastal impacts of WEC arrays, most research to date has relied on wave-averaged models given their...