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Page 1711, results 42751 - 42775

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Publication Extents

Not all publications have extents, not all extents are completely accurate
Influence of phosphorus rainbow trout diets on phosphorus discharges effluent water
H. G. Ketola, B.F. Harland
1993, Transactions of the American Fisheries Society (122) 1120-1126
Two experiments were conducted with rainbow trout Oncorhynchus mykiss to investigate the influence of several diets and supplemental phosphorus on discharges of phosphorus in hatchery effluent water. A diet was formulated to contain no fish meal and a reduced level of non‐phytin phosphorus (approximately 0.9%) provided, in part, by supplemental defluorinated rock...
Prolonged swimming performance of northern squawfish
Matthew G. Mesa, Todd M. Olson
1993, Transactions of the American Fisheries Society (122) 1104-1110
We determined the prolonged swimming performance of two size-classes of northern squawfish Ptychocheilus oregonensis at 12 and 18°C. The percentage of fish fatigued was positively related to water velocity and best described by an exponential model. At 12°C, the velocity at which 50% of the fish fatigued (FV50) was estimated...
Evaluation of a bypass system for spent American shad at Holyoke Dam, Massachusetts
B. Kynard, J. O'L'a'y
1993, North American Journal of Fisheries Management (13) 782-789
A bypass system for postspawned American shad Alosa sapidissima began operation in 1980 on the Connecticut River canal system at Holyoke Dam. The purpose of the bypass was to enable downstream migrants that enter the canal to exit and avoid death due to delay or passage through hydroelectric turbines at water use...
The importance of fluvial hydraulics to fish-habitat restoration in low-gradient alluvial streams
Charles F. Rabeni, Robert B. Jacobson
1993, Freshwater Biology (29) 211-220
1. A major cause of degradation and loss of stream fish is alteration of physical habitat within and adjacent to the channel. We describe a potentially efficient approach to fish restoration based upon the relationship between fluvial hydraulics, geomorphology, and those habitats important to fish.2. The aquatic habitat...
Establishment of Populus deltoides under simulated alluvial groundwater declines
Charles A. Segelquist, Michael L. Scott, Gregor T. Auble
1993, American Midland Naturalist (130) 274-285
Establishment, growth, and survival of seedlings of Populus deltoides subsp. monilifera (plains cottonwood) were examined in an experimental facility simulating five rates of declining alluvial groundwater. The treatments were permanent saturation, drawdown rates of 0.4, 0.7, 2.9 cm/d and immediate drainage. The experiment was conducted outdoors in planters...
Long-term frozen storage of stream water samples for dissolved orthophosphate, nitrate plus nitrite, and ammonia analysis
Ronald J. Avanzino, Vance C. Kennedy
1993, Water Resources Research (29) 3357-3362
Many researchers have used freezing as an effective, short-term, water sample preservation method for subsequent nutrient analysis. In this study, filtered samples held at −16±2°C for 4–8 years were reanalyzed for orthophosphate, nitrate plus nitrite, and ammonia. Orthophosphate and ammonia concentrations decreased by 0.2 μg P/L and 5 μg N/L,...
Simulating the volatilization of solvents in unsaturated soils during laboratory and field infiltration experiments
H. Jean Cho, Peter R. Jaffe, James A. Smith
1993, Water Resources Research (29) 3329-3342
This paper describes laboratory and field experiments which were conducted to study the dynamics of trichloroethylene (TCE) as it volatilized from contaminated groundwater and diffused in the presence of infiltrating water through the unsaturated soil zone to the land surface. The field experiments were conducted at the Picatinny Arsenal, which...
Helium isotope and gas discharge variations associated with crustal unrest in Long Valley Caldera, California, 1989-1992
M.L. Sorey, B. M. Kennedy, W.C. Evans, C. D. Farrar, G.A. Suemnicht
1993, Journal of Geophysical Research B: Solid Earth (98) 15871-15889
The onset of anomalous seismic activity in 1989 beneath Mammoth Mountain on the southwestern rim of the Long Valley caldera, California, was followed within ∼4 months by a large increase in 3He/4He in vapor discharged from a fumarole on the north side of the mountain. The helium isotopic ratio at this...
Toward conservation of midcontinental shorebird migrations
Susan K. Skagen, Fritz L. Knopf
1993, Conservation Biology (7) 533-541
Shorebirds represent a highly diverse group of species, many of which experience tremendous energy demands associated with long-distance migratory flights. Transcontinental migrants are dependent upon dynamic freshwater wetlands for stopover resources essential for replenishment of lipid reserves and completion of migration. Patterns of shorebird migration across midcontinental wetlands were detected...
Quantitative analysis of Ostracoda and water masses around Japan: Application to Pliocene and Pleistocene paleoceanography
Noriyuki Ikeya, Thomas M. Cronin
1993, Micropaleontology (39) 263-281
An ostracode data base consisting of 273 samples from coretops and comprising 226 species was developed for the seas around the Japanese Islands to determine zoogeographic patterns and for application to Pliocene and Pleistocene paleoceanography in the area. Quantitative analyses of the 59 most common taxa between 0 and 300m...
Effects of physical and chemical heterogeneity on water-quality samples obtained from wells
Thomas E. Reilly, Jacob Gibs
1993, Groundwater (31) 805-813
Factors that affect the mass of chemical constituents entering a well include the distributions of flow rate and chemical concentrations along and near the screened or open section of the well. Assuming a layered porous medium (with each layer being characterized by a uniform hydraulic conductivity and chemical concentration), a...
A Fast Fourier transform stochastic analysis of the contaminant transport problem
F.W. Deng, J.H. Cushman, J.W. Delleur
1993, Water Resources Research (29) 3241-3247
A three-dimensional stochastic analysis of the contaminant transport problem is developed in the spirit of Naff (1990). The new derivation is more general and simpler than previous analysis. The fast Fourier transformation is used extensively to obtain numerical estimates of the mean concentration and various spatial moments. Data from both...
Application of electromagnetic logging to contamination investigations in glacial sand-and-gravel aquifers
John H. Williams, Wayne W. Lapham, Thomas H. Barringer
1993, Groundwater Monitoring & Remediation (13) 129-138
Electromagnetic (EM) logging provides an efficient method for high‐resolution, vertical delineation of electrically conductive contamination in glacial sand‐and‐gravel aquifers. LM. gamma, and lithologic logs and specific conductance data from sand‐and‐gravel aquifers at five sites in the northeastern United States were analyzed to define the relation of KM conductivity...
Integration of environmental simulation models with satellite remote sensing and geographic information systems technologies: case studies
Louis T. Steyaert, Thomas R. Loveland, Jesslyn F. Brown, Bradley C. Reed
1993, Pecora 12 Symposium 407-417
Environmental modelers are testing and evaluating a prototype land cover characteristics database for the conterminous United States developed by the EROS Data Center of the U.S. Geological Survey and the University of Nebraska Center for Advanced Land Management Information Technologies. This database was developed from multi temporal, 1-kilometer advanced...
An evaluation of atmospheric corrections to advanced very high resolution radiometer data
David Meyer, Joy J. Hood
1993, Pecora 12 Symposium 397-403
A data set compiled to analyze vegetation indices is used to evaluate the effect of atmospheric correction to AVHRR measurement in the solar spectrum. Such corrections include cloud screening and "clear sky" corrections. We used the "clouds from AVHRR" (CLAVR) method for cloud detection and evaluated its performance...
Processing techniques for global land 1-km AVHRR data
Jeffery C. Eidenshink, Daniel R. Steinwand, Charles E. Wivell, Douglas M. Hollaren, David Meyer
1993, Pecora 12 Symposium 214-222
The U.S. Geological Survey's (USGS) Earth Resources Observation Systems (EROS) Data Center (EDC) in cooperation with several international science organizations has developed techniques for processing daily Advanced Very High Resolution Radiometer (AVHRR) 1-km data of the entire global land surface. These techniques include orbital stitching, geometric rectification, radiometric calibration,...
Macrohabitat of Sonora Chub (Gila ditaenia) in Sycamore Creek, Santa Cruz County, Arizona
Jeanette Carpenter, O. Eugene Maughan
1993, Journal of Freshwater Ecology (8) 265-278
Physical characteristics and persistence of macrohabitat used by different life stages of Sonora chub (Gila ditaenia) were determined by repeatedly measuring distinct reaches in Sycamore Creek, Santa Cruz County, Arizona, in 1990 and 1991. At the beginning of summer drought, habitats occupied by adult Sonora chub were deeper and larger...
Factors affecting the geochemistry of a thick, subbituminous coal bed in the Powder River Basin: Volcanic, detrital, and peat-forming processes
Sharon S. Crowley, Leslie F. Ruppert, Harvey E. Belkin, R.W. Stanton, T.A. Moore
1993, Organic Geochemistry (20) 843-853
The inorganic geochemistry and mineralogy of three cores from the Anderson-Dietz 1 coal bed, a 15.2-m-thick subbituminous coal bed in the Tongue River Member (Paleocene) of the Fort Union Formation, were examined (1) to determine if the cores could be correlated by geochemical composition alone over a total distance of...
Monitoring and research at Walnut Creek National Wildlife Refuge
James E. Roelle, David B. Hamilton
1993, Report
Walnut Creek National Wildlife Refuge-Prairie Learning Center (Walnut Creek or the Refuge) is one of the newest additions to the National Wildlife Refuge System, which consists of over 480 units throughout the United States operated by the U.S. Department of the Interior, Fish and Wildlife Service (the Service). Located...
Effect of pH on bacteriophage transport through sandy soils
Takashi Kinoshita, Roger C. Bales, Kimberley M. Maguire, Charles P. Gerba
1993, Journal of Contaminant Hydrology (14) 55-70
Effects of pH and hydrophobicity on attachment and detachment of PRD-1 and MS-2 in three different sandy soils were investigated in a series of laboratory-column experiments. Concentrations of the lipid-containing phage PRD-1 decreased 3–4 orders of magnitude during passage through the 10–15-cm-long columns. Attachment of the lipid-containing phage PRD-1 was...
Sources of pollutants in Wisconsin stormwater
R.T. Bannerman, David W. Owens, R.B. Dodds, Nancy J. Hornewer
1993, Water Science and Technology (28) 241-259
Rainfall runoff samples were collected from streets, parking lots, roofs, driveways, and lawns. These five source areas are located in residential, commercial, and industrial land uses in Madison, Wisconsin. Solids, phosphorus, and heavy metals loads were determined for all the source areas using measured concentrations and runoff volumes estimated by...
Role of physical heterogeneity in the interpretation of small-scale laboratory and field observations of bacteria, microbial-sized microsphere, and bromide transport through aquifer sediments
Ronald W. Harvey, Nancy E. Kinner, Dan MacDonald, David W. Metge, Amoret Bunn
1993, Water Resources Research (29) 2713-2721
The effect of physical variability upon the relative transport behavior of microbial-sized microspheres, indigenous bacteria, and bromide was examined in field and flow-through column studies for a layered, but relatively well sorted, sandy glaciofluvial aquifer. These investigations involved repacked, sieved, and undisturbed aquifer sediments. In the field, peak abundance of...
Trinity River Basin, Texas
Randy L. Ulery, Peter C. Van Metre, Allison S. Crossfield
1993, Journal of the American Water Resources Association (29) 685-711
In 1991 the Trinity River Basin National Water-Quality Assessment (NAWQA) will include assessments of surface-water and ground-water quality. Initial efforts have focused on identifying water-quality issues in the basin and on the environmental factors underlying those issues. Physical characteristics described include climate, geology, soils, vegetation, physiography, and hydrology. Cultural characteristics...