Bioenergetics-based modeling of individual PCB congeners in nestling tree swallows from two contaminated sites on the Upper Hudson River, New York
John W. Nichols, Kathy R. Echols, Donald E. Tillitt, Anne L. Secord, John P. McCarty
2004, Environmental Science & Technology (38) 6234-6239
A bioenergetics-based model was used to simulate the accumulation of total PCBs and 20 PCB congeners by nestling tree swallows at two contaminated sites on the Upper Hudson River, New York. PCB concentrations in birds were calculated as the sum of inherited residues and those acquired through consumption of contaminated...
Potential exposure of larval and juvenile delta smelt to dissolved pesticides in the Sacramento-San Joaquin Delta, California
K.M. Kuivila, G.E. Moon
2004, American Fisheries Society Symposium 229-241
The San Francisco Estuary is critical habitat for delta smelt Hypomesus transpacificus, a fish whose abundance has declined greatly since 1983 and is now listed as threatened. In addition, the estuary receives drainage from the Central Valley, an urban and agricultural region with intense and diverse pesticide usage. One possible...
Effect of outflow on spring and summertime distribution and abundance of larval and juvenile fishes in the upper San Francisco Estuary
M. Dege, L. R. Brown
2004, American Fisheries Society Symposium (2004) 49-65
We analyzed data on spring and summertime larval and juvenile fish distribution and abundance in the upper San Francisco Estuary (SFE), California between 1995 and 2001. The upper SFE includes the tidal freshwater areas of the Sacramento-San Joaquin Delta downstream to the euryhaline environment of San Pablo Bay. The sampling...
Influence of multiple water-quality characteristics on copper toxicity to fathead minnows (Pimephales promelas)
K.L. Sciera, J. Jeffery Isely, J.R. Tomasso Jr., S.J. Klaine
2004, Environmental Toxicology and Chemistry (23) 2900-2905
Water quality influences the bioavailability and toxicity of copper to aquatic organisms. Understanding the relationships between water-quality parameters and copper toxicity may facilitate the development of site-specific criteria for water quality and result in better protection of aquatic biota. Many studies have examined the influence of a single water-quality parameter...
In situ evidence for an ancient aqueous environment at Meridiani Planum, Mars
S. W. Squyres, J.P. Grotzinger, R. E. Arvidson, J.F. Bell III, W. Calvin, P. R. Christensen, B. C. Clark, J.A. Crisp, W. H. Farrand, Kenneth E. Herkenhoff, J. R. Johnson, G. Klingelhofer, A.H. Knoll, S. M. McLennan, H.Y. McSween Jr., R.V. Morris, J. W. Rice Jr., R. Rieder, Laurence A. Soderblom
2004, Science (306) 1709-1714
Sedimentary rocks at Eagle crater in Meridiani Planum are composed of fine-grained siliciclastic materials derived from weathering of basaltic rocks, sulfate minerals (including magnesium sulfate and jarosite) that constitute several tens of percent of the rock by weight, and hematite. Cross-stratification observed in rock outcrops indicates eolian and aqueous transport....
Role of a large marine protected area for conserving landscape attributes of sand habitats on Georges Bank (NW Atlantic)
J. Lindholm, P. Auster, P. Valentine
2004, Marine Ecology Progress Series (269) 61-68
Mobile fishing gear reduces seafloor habitat complexity through the removal of structure-building fauna, e.g. emergent organisms that create pits and burrows, as well as by smoothing of sedimentary bedforms (e.g. sand ripples). In this study, we compared the relative abundance of microhabitat features (the scale at which individual fish associate...
Mineralogy at Meridiani Planum from the Mini-TES experiment on the opportunity rover
P. R. Christensen, M.B. Wyatt, T.D. Glotch, A.D. Rogers, S. Anwar, R. E. Arvidson, J. L. Bandfield, D.L. Blaney, C. Budney, W. M. Calvin, A. Fallacaro, R.L. Fergason, N. Gorelick, T.G. Graff, V.E. Hamilton, A. G. Hayes, J. R. Johnson, A.T. Knudson, H.Y. McSween Jr., G.L. Mehall, L.K. Mehall, J.E. Moersch, R.V. Morris, M. D. Smith, S. W. Squyres, S. W. Ruff, M.J. Wolff
2004, Science (306) 1733-1739
The Miniature Thermal Emission Spectrometer (Mini-TES) on Opportunity investigated the mineral abundances and compositions of outcrops, rocks, and soils at Meridiani Planum. Coarse crystalline hematite and olivine-rich basaltic sands were observed as predicted from orbital TES spectroscopy. Outcrops of aqueous origin are composed of 15 to 35% by volume magnesium...
Flood-related, organic-carbon anomalies as possible temporal markers in reservoir bottom sediments
Kyle E. Juracek
2004, Lake and Reservoir Management (20) 309-321
Results of a study of sediment cores from four reservoirs in the upper Mississippi River Basin, USA, indicated that anomalous organic carbon concentrations associated with flood deposits may provide detectable temporal markers in reservoir bottom sediments. Temporal markers are needed for reservoir sediment studies to date sediment layers deposited between...
Atmospheric wet deposition of trace elements to a suburban environment, Reston, Virginia, USA
Kathryn M. Conko, Karen C. Rice, Margaret M. Kennedy
2004, Atmospheric Environment (38) 4025-4033
Wet deposition from a suburban area in Reston, Virginia was collected during 1998 and analyzed to assess the anion and trace-element concentrations and depositions. Suburban Reston, approximately 26 km west of Washington, DC, is densely populated and heavily developed. Wet deposition was collected bi-weekly in an automated collector using trace-element clean...
Hydrochemical tracers in the middle Rio Grande Basin, USA: 1. Conceptualization of groundwater flow
Niel Plummer, L. M. Bexfield, S. K. Anderholm, W. E. Sanford, E. Busenberg
2004, Hydrogeology Journal (12) 359-388
Chemical and isotopic data for groundwater from throughout the Middle Rio Grande Basin, central New Mexico, USA, were used to identify and map groundwater flow from 12 sources of water to the basin, evaluate radiocarbon ages, and refine the conceptual model of the Santa Fe Group aquifer system.Hydrochemical...
Attempting to bridge the gap between laboratory and seismic estimates of fracture energy
Art McGarr, Joe B. Fletcher, N.M. Beeler
2004, Geophysical Research Letters (31)
To investigate the behavior of the fracture energy associated with expanding the rupture zone of an earthquake, we have used the results of a large-scale, biaxial stick-slip friction experiment to set the parameters of an equivalent dynamic rupture model. This model is determined by matching the fault slip, the static...
Optimizing correlation techniques for improved earthquake location
David P. Schaff, G. H. R. Bokelmann, William L. Ellsworth, E. Zanzerkia, Felix Waldhauser, Gregory C. Beroza
2004, Bulletin of the Seismological Society of America (94) 705-721
Earthquake location using relative arrival time measurements can lead to dramatically reduced location errors and a view of fault-zone processes with unprecedented detail. There are two principal reasons why this approach reduces location errors. The first is that the use of differenced arrival times to solve for the vector separation...
Presence, infectivity, and stability of enteric viruses in seawater: Relationship to marine water quality in the Florida Keys
J.J. Wetz, E.K. Lipp, Dale W. Griffin, J. Lukasik, D. Wait, M.D. Sobsey, T.M. Scott, J.B. Rose
2004, Marine Pollution Bulletin (48) 698-704
Concerns about the presence of enteric viruses in the surface waters of the Florida Keys prompted analyses of virus stability and persistence in these waters. In an in vitro study we evaluated the survival of poliovirus and stability of viral RNA in filtered natural seawater (FSW), unfiltered natural seawater (USW),...
Community structure of fishes inhabiting aquatic refuges in a threatened Karst wetland and its implications for ecosystem management
Robert M. Kobza, J.C. Trexler, W.F. Loftus, S.A. Perry
2004, Biological Conservation (116) 153-165
We illustrate the importance of subsurface refuges for conservation of aquatic fauna with our studies of karstic wetlands in Everglades National Park, Florida, USA. Managers have proposed that water levels there should not fall more than 46 cm below ground level for more than 90 days annually. In four areas,...
Degradation of methyl bromide and methyl chloride in soil microcosms: Use of stable C isotope fractionation and stable isotope probing to identify reactions and the responsible microorganisms
L.G. Miller, K.L. Warner, S.M. Baesman, R.S. Oremland, I.R. McDonald, S. Radajewski, J.C. Murrell
2004, Geochimica et Cosmochimica Acta (68) 3271-3283
Bacteria in soil microcosm experiments oxidized elevated levels of methyl chloride (MeCl) and methyl bromide (MeBr), the former compound more rapidly than the latter. MeBr was also removed by chemical reactions while MeCl was not. Chemical degradation dominated the early removal of MeBr and...
Landscape responses of bats to habitat fragmentation in Atlantic forest of paraguay
P. M. Gorresen, M. R. Willig
2004, Journal of Mammalogy (85) 688-697
Understanding effects of habitat loss and fragmentation on populations or communities is critical to effective conservation and restoration. This is particularly important for bats because they provide vital services to ecosystems via pollination and seed dispersal, especially in tropical and subtropical habitats. Based on more than 1,000 h of survey...
Quantification of nearshore morphology based on video imaging
P. S. Alexander, R.A. Holman
2004, Marine Geology (208) 101-111
The Argus network is a series of video cameras with aerial views of beaches around the world. Intensity contrasts in time exposure images reveal areas of preferential breaking, which are closely tied to underlying bed morphology. This relationship was further investigated, including the effect of tidal elevation and wave height...
The effect of elevated methane pressure on methane hydrate dissociation
S. Circone, L.A. Stern, S. H. Kirby
2004, American Mineralogist (89) 1192-1201
Methane hydrate, equilibrated at P, T conditions within the hydrate stability field, was rapidly depressurized to 1.0 or 2.0 MPa and maintained at isobaric conditions outside its stability field, while the extent and rate of hydrate dissociation was measured at fixed, externally maintained temperatures between 250 and 288 K. The...
Ten suggestions to strengthen the science of ecology
G.E. Belovsky, Daniel B. Botkin, T.A. Crowl, K.W. Cummins, J.F. Franklin, M.L. Hunter Jr., A. Joern, D.B. Lindenmayer, J.A. MacMahon, C.R. Margules, J. M. Scott
2004, Conference Paper, BioScience
There are few well-documented, general ecological principles that can be applied to pressing environmental issues. When they discuss them at all, ecologists often disagree about the relative importance of different aspects of the science's original and still important issues. It may be that the sum of ecological science is not...
Community heterogeneity of Early Pennsylvanian peat mires
Robert A. Gastaldo, I. M. Stevanovic-Walls, W.N. Ware, S.F. Greb
2004, Geology (32) 693-696
Reconstructions of Pennsylvanian coal swamps are some of the most common images of late Paleozoic terrestrial ecosystems. All reconstructions to date are based on data from either time-averaged permineralized peats or single-site collections. An erect, in situ Early Pennsylvanian forest preserved above the Blue Creek Coal, Black Warrior Basin, Alabama,...
The distribution of seabirds and pinnipeds in Marguerite Bay and their relationship to physical features during austral winter 2001
Erik W. Chapman, C. A. Ribic, William R. Fraser
2004, Deep-Sea Research Part II: Topical Studies in Oceanography (51) 2261-2278
The distribution of seabirds and pinnipeds and their relationship to physical oceanographic variables were investigated as part of the US Southern Ocean Global Ocean Ecosystem Dynamics field program along a study grid centered around Marguerite Bay on the west Antarctic Peninsula during late fall (April-May) and winter (July-August), 2001. Sea-ice...
Influence of salinity, competition and food supply on the growth of Gobiosoma robustum and Microgobius gulosus from Florida Bay, U. S. A.
P. J. Schofield
2004, Journal of Fish Biology (64) 820-832
The code Gobiosoma robustum and clown Microgobius gulosus gobies were grown in the laboratory over 27 days at two salinities (5 and 35), two food levels [low (a fixed proportion of initial mass) and high (saturation)] and both with and without the presence of the other species. Both species exhibited...
Evidence of long-term seasonal climate forcing in rhizolith isotopes during the last glaciation
Hongfang Wang, S.H. Ambrose, B.W. Fouke
2004, Geophysical Research Letters (31)
High density carbonate rhizoliths were found from a loess-paleosol succession from the late Wisconsin period (21-11 ka) in Illinois. Their morphology shows that they formed in a close contact with living and decomposing roots, suggesting a root/microbial respiration origin. Carbon (??13C) and oxygen (??18O) isotopic analyses were performed on 36...
An alternative approach to detection of length-related biases in standard weight equations
K.G. Gerow, W.A. Hubert, R. C. Anderson-Sprecher
2004, North American Journal of Fisheries Management (24) 903-910
We propose a new method for assessing length-related biases in standard weight (Ws) equations computed by the regression-line-percentile method. We evaluated the performance of the new method relative to two previous methods for assessing length-related biases using 15 data sets from which W s equations have been computed. The new...
Investigating the Macrodispersion Experiment (MADE) site in Columbus, Mississippi, using a three‐dimensional inverse flow and transport model
Heidi Christiansen Barlebo, Mary C. Hill, Dan Rosbjerg
2004, Water Resources Research (40)
Flowmeter‐measured hydraulic conductivities from the heterogeneous MADE site have been used predictively in advection‐dispersion models. Resulting simulated concentrations failed to reproduce even major plume characteristics and some have concluded that other mechanisms, such as dual porosity, are important. Here an alternative possibility is investigated: that the small‐scale flowmeter measurements are...