Monitoring hydrilla using two RAPD procedures and the nonindigenous aquatic species database
Paul T. Madeira, C.C. Jacono, Thai K. Van
2000, Journal of Aquatic Plant Management (38) 33-40
Hydrilla (Hydrilla verticillata (L.f.) Royle), an invasive aquatic weed, continues to spread to new regions in the United States. Two biotypes, one a female dioecious and the other monoecious have been identified. Management of the spread of hydrilla requires understanding the mechanisms of introduction and transport, an ability to map...
An analysis of the pilot point methodology for automated calibration of an ensemble of conditionally simulated transmissivity fields
Richard L. Cooley
2000, Water Resources Research (36) 1159-1163
An analysis of the pilot point method for automated calibration of an ensemble of conditionally simulated transmissivity fields was conducted on the basis of the simplifying assumption that the flow model is a linear function of log transmissivity. The analysis shows that the pilot point and conditional simulation method of...
Development and evaluation of consensus-based sediment effect concentrations for polychlorinated biphenyls
Donald D. MacDonald, Lisa M. Dipinto, Jay Field, Christopher G. Ingersoll, Edward R. Long, Richard C. Swartz
2000, Environmental Toxicology and Chemistry (19) 1403-1413
Sediment-quality guidelines (SQGs) have been published for polychlorinated biphenyls (PCBs) using both empirical and theoretical approaches. Empirically based guidelines have been developed using the screening-level concentration, effects range, effects level, and apparent effects threshold approaches. Theoretically based guidelines have been developed using the equilibrium-partitioning approach. Empirically-based guidelines were classified into...
Food-web dynamics and trophic-level interactions in a multispecies community of freshwater unionids
S. J. Nichols, D. Garling
2000, Canadian Journal of Zoology (78) 871-882
We compared feeding habits and trophic-level relationships of unionid species in a detritus-dominated river and an alga-dominated lake using biochemical analyses, gut contents, and stable-isotope ratios. The δ13C ratios for algae and other food-web components show that all unionids from both the river and the lake used bacterial carbons, not...
Distribution of surficial sediment in Long Island Sound and adjacent waters: Texture and total organic carbon
L.J. Poppe, H.J. Knebel, Z.J. Mlodzinska, M. E. Hastings, B. A. Seekins
2000, Journal of Coastal Research (16) 567-574
The surficial sediment distribution within Long Island Sound has been mapped and described using bottom samples, photography, and sidescan sonar, combined with information from the geologic literature. The distributions of sediment type and total organic carbon (TOC) reveal several broad trends that are largely related to the sea-floor geology, the...
Comparison of pesticides in eight U.S. urban streams
R.S. Hoffman, P. D. Capel, S.J. Larson
2000, Environmental Toxicology and Chemistry (19) 2249-2258
Little is known of the occurrence of pesticides in urban streams compared to streams draining agricultural areas. Water samples from eight urban streams from across the United States were analyzed for 75 pesticides and seven transformation products. For six of the eight urban streams, paired agricultural streams were used for...
Uncertainty estimation for resource assessment-an application to coal
J.H. Schuenemeyer, H.C. Power
2000, Mathematical Geology (32) 521-541
The U.S. Geological Survey is conducting a national assessment of coal resources. As part of that assessment, a geostatistical procedure has been developed to estimate the uncertainty of coal resources for the historical categories of geological assurance: measured, indicated, inferred, and hypothetical coal. Data consist of spatially clustered coal thickness...
Bottom currents and sediment transport in Long Island Sound: A modeling study
R. P. Signell, J. H. List, A.S. Farris
2000, Journal of Coastal Research (16) 551-566
A high resolution (300-400 m grid spacing), process oriented modeling study was undertaken to elucidate the physical processes affecting the characteristics and distribution of sea-floor sedimentary environments in Long Island Sound. Simulations using idealized forcing and high-resolution bathymetry were performed using a three-dimensional circulation model ECOM (Blumberg and Mellor, 1987)...
Regolith in the Piedmont Upland Section, Piedmont Province, York, Lancaster, and Chester Counties, southeastern Pennsylvania
W. D. Sevon
2000, Southeastern Geology (39) 223-241
Regolith has been mapped in the Piedmont Upland Section of the Piedmont Province in York, Lancaster, and Chester Counties, southeastern Pennsylvania. The Piedmont Upland Section is an area of rounded hills and flat-floored valleys developed by weathering and erosion of schist, gneiss, metaquartzite, and other metamorphic rocks. In situ regolith...
Metals and trace elements in tissues of common eiders (Somateria mollissima) from the Finnish archipelago
J. C. Franson, T. Hollmen, R.H. Poppenga, Martti Hario, Mikaei Kilpi
2000, Ornis Fennica (77) 57-63
We sampled Common Eiders (Somateria mollissima) at five locations near coastal Finland in 1997 and 1998 for evidence of exposure to arsenic, cadmium, chromium, copper, iron, mercury, magnesium, molybdenum, lead, selenium, and zinc. Livers and kidneys were collected from adult males and females found dead and hunter-killed males, and livers...
16-year trends in elements of lichens at Theodore Roosevelt National Park, ND
J. P. Bennett, C. M. Wetmore
2000, Science of the Total Environment (263) 231-241
An epiphytic lichen and a soil lichen in two very closely related genera (Parmelia sulcata and Xanthoparmelia chlorochroa, respectively) were sampled 16 years apart at Theodore Roosevelt National Park in North Dakota and measured for their elemental content. Mercury and cadmium decreased approximately 30% over the time period in both...
Field surveys of Midwestern and Northeastern Fish and Wildlife Service lands for the presence of abnormal frogs and toads
K. A. Converse, J. Mattsson, L. Eaton-Poole
2000, Journal of the Iowa Academy of Science (107) 160-167
The national distribution of information on the discovery of malformations in Minnesota frogs in 1995 stimulated collection and examination of newly metamorphosed frogs during 1996. By late summer and early fall of 1996, malformed frogs and toads were reported on U.S. Fish and Wildlife Service (USFWS) lands in Vermont (Northeast,...
Climate change: Potential impacts and interactions in wetlands of the United States
Virginia Burkett, Jon Kusler
2000, Journal of the American Water Resources Association (36) 313-320
Wetlands exist in a transition zone between aquatic and terrestrial environments which can be altered by subtle changes in hydrology. Twentieth century climate records show that the United States is generally experiencing a trend towards a wetter, warmer climate; some climate models suggest that his trend will continue and possibly...
Historical trends in Chesapeake Bay dissolved oxygen based on benthic foraminifera from sediment cores
A.W. Karlsen, T. M. Cronin, S.E. Ishmans, Debra A. Willard, R. Kerhin, C. W. Holmes, M. Marot
2000, Estuaries (23) 488-508
Environmentally sensitive benthic foraminifera (protists) from Chesapeake Bay were used as bioindicators to estimate the timing and degree of changes in dissolved oxygen (DO) over the past five centuries. Living foraminifers from 19 surface samples and fossil assemblages from 11 sediment cores dated by210Pb,137Cs,14C, and pollen stratigraphy were analyzed from...
Colorado River sediment transport: 1. Natural sediment supply limitation and the influence of Glen Canyon Dam
David J. Topping, David M. Rubin, L. E. Vierra Jr.
2000, Water Resources Research (36) 515-542
Analyses of flow, sediment‐transport, bed‐topographic, and sedimentologic data suggest that before the closure of Glen Canyon Dam in 1963, the Colorado River in Marble and Grand Canyons was annually supply‐limited with respect to fine sediment (i.e., sand and finer material). Furthermore, these analyses suggest that the predam river in Glen...
Heavy metals in wild rice from northern Wisconsin
J. P. Bennett, E. Chiriboga, J. Coleman, D.M. Waller
2000, Science of the Total Environment (246) 261-269
Wild rice grain samples from various parts of the world have been found to have elevated concentrations of heavy metals, raising concern for potential effects on human health. It was hypothesized that wild rice from north-central Wisconsin could potentially have elevated concentrations of some heavy metals because of possible exposure...
Interaction of infection with Renibacterium salmoninarum and physical stress in juvenile chinook salmon: Physiological responses, disease progression, and mortality
M.G. Mesa, A.G. Maule, C.B. Schreck
2000, Transactions of the American Fisheries Society (129) 158-173
We experimentally infected juvenile spring chinook salmon Oncorhynchus tshawytscha with Renibacterium salmoninarum (Rs), the causative agent of bacterial kidney disease (BKD), in order to compare the physiological responses of Rs-infected and Rs-noninfected fish to a series of multiple, acute stressors and to determine whether exposure to these stressors worsens the...
Modeling sand bank formation around tidal headlands
Richard P. Signell, Courtney K. Harris
2000, Proceedings of the International Conference on Estuarine and Coastal Modeling 209-222
Sandbanks are often found in the vicinity of coastal headlands around which tidal flows are strong enough to generate significant tidally-forced residual eddies, typically with scales of 2-10 km. One popular hypothesis is that these sandbanks are generated by a 'tidal stirring' mechanism in which the inward-directed pressure gradient associated...
Test functions for three-dimensional control-volume mixed finite-element methods on irregular grids
R.L. Naff, T.F. Russell, J. D. Wilson
Bentley L.R., Sykes J.F., Brebbia C.A., Gray W.G., Pinder G.F., editor(s)
2000, Conference Paper, Computational methods in water resources - Volume 2 - Computational methods,surface water systems and hydrology
Numerical methods based on unstructured grids, with irregular cells, usually require discrete shape functions to approximate the distribution of quantities across cells. For control-volume mixed finite-element methods, vector shape functions are used to approximate the distribution of velocities across cells and vector test functions are used to minimize the error...
A new ichnospecies of Nereites from carboniferous tidal-flat facies of eastern Kansas, USA: Implications for the Nereites-Neonereites debate
M.G. Mangano, L.A. Buatois, C.G. Maples, R.R. West
2000, Journal of Paleontology (74) 149-157
Predominantly horizontal, gently curved to slightly sinuous traces constituting uniserial rows of imbricated, subspherical sediment pads occur in Pennsylvanian tidal-flat facies of eastern Kansas. These traces exhibit a complex, actively filled internal structure. The presence of a median tunnel enveloped by overlapping pads of reworked sediment indicates that these biogenic...
Copepod (Crustacea) emergence from soils from everglades marshes with different hydroperiods
W.F. Loftus, J.W. Reid
2000, Journal of Freshwater Ecology (15) 515-523
During a severe drought period in the winter and spring of 1989, we made three collections of dried marsh soils from freshwater sloughs in Everglades National Park, Florida, at sites characterized by either long or intermediate annual periods of flooding (hydroperiod). After rehydrating the soils in aquaria, we documented the...
Imaging and modeling new VETEM data
David L. Wright, David V. Smith, Jared D. Abraham, Raymond S. Hutton, E. Kent Bond, Tie Jun Cui, Alaeddin A. Aydiner, Weng Cho Chew
2000, Conference Paper, Proceedings of SPIE - The International Society for Optical Engineering
In previously reported work (Wright and others, 2000) we found that the very early time electromagnetic (VETEM) prototype system produced data from which high resolution images of a buried former foundry site at the Denver Federal Center were made. The soil covering the site is about 30 mS/m conductivity, and...
Formation evaluation of gas hydrate-bearing marine sediments on the Blake Ridge with downhole geochemical log measurements
T. S. Collett, R. F. Wendlandt
2000, Conference Paper, Proceedings of the Ocean Drilling Program: Scientific Results
The analyses of downhole log data from Ocean Drilling Program (ODP) boreholes on the Blake Ridge at Sites 994, 995, and 997 indicate that the Schlumberger geochemical logging tool (GLT) may yield useful gas hydrate reservoir data. In neutron spectroscopy downhole logging, each element has a characteristic gamma ray that...
Age and growth of pike (Esox lucius) in Chivyrkui Bay, Lake Baikal
Randall W. Owens, Nikolai M. Pronin
2000, Journal of Great Lakes Research (26) 164-173
The purpose of this study was to describe age and growth of pike (Esox lucius) in Lake Baikal. Pike were collected with gill nets and by angling in Chivyrkui Bay in late July-early August 1993 and by gill nets in June 1995. Total length (mm), weight (g), and...
Testing assumptions for unbiased estimation of survival of radiomarked harlequin ducks
Daniel Esler, Daniel M. Mulcahy, Robert L. Jarvis
2000, Journal of Wildlife Management (64) 591-598
Unbiased estimates of survival based on individuals outfitted with radiotransmitters require meeting the assumptions that radios do not affect survival, and animals for which the radio signal is lost have the same survival probability as those for which fate is known. In most survival studies, researchers have made these assumptions...