Innate and adaptive immune responses in migrating spring-run adult chinook salmon, Oncorhynchus tshawytscha
Brian P. Dolan, Kathleen M. Fisher, Michael E. Colvin, Susan E. Benda, James T. Peterson, Michael L. Kent, Carl B. Schreck
2016, Fish & Shellfish Immunology (48) 136-144
Adult Chinook salmon (Oncorhynchus tshawytscha) migrate from salt water to freshwater streams to spawn. Immune responses in migrating adult salmon are thought to diminish in the run up to spawning, though the exact mechanisms for diminished immune responses remain unknown. Here we examine both adaptive and innate immune responses as...
Chesapeake Bay recovery and factors affecting trends: Long-termmonitoring, indicators, and insights
Peter J. Tango, Richard A. Batiuk
2016, Regional Studies in Marine Science (4) 12-20
Monitoring the outcome of restoration efforts is the only way to identify the status of a recovery and the most effective management strategies. In this paper, we discuss Chesapeake Bay and watershed recovery and factors influencing water quality trends. For over 30 years, the Chesapeake Bay Program Partnership’s long-term tidal...
Nutrients in the nexus
Eric A. Davidson, Rachel DuBose, Richard B. Ferguson, Cheryl Palm, Deanna L. Osmond, Jill S. Baron
2016, Journal of Environmental Studies and Sciences (6) 25-38
Synthetic nitrogen (N) fertilizer has enabled modern agriculture to greatly improve human nutrition during the twentieth century, but it has also created unintended human health and environmental pollution challenges for the twenty-first century. Averaged globally, about half of the fertilizer-N applied to farms is removed with the crops, while the...
Wetland tree transpiration modified by river-floodplain connectivity
Scott T. Allen, Ken W. Krauss, J. Wesley Cochran, Sammy L. King, Richard F. Keim
2016, Journal of Geophysical Research G: Biogeosciences (121) 753-766
Hydrologic connectivity provisions water and nutrient subsidies to floodplain wetlands and may be particularly important in floodplains with seasonal water deficits through its effects on soil moisture. In this study, we measured sapflow in 26 trees of two dominant floodplain forest species (Celtis laevigata and Quercus lyrata) at two hydrologically distinct sites...
Bioaccessibility tests accurately estimate bioavailability of lead to quail
W. Nelson Beyer, Nicholas T Basta, Rufus L. Chaney, Paula F. P. Henry, David Mosby, Barnett A. Rattner, Kirk G. Scheckel, Dan Sprague, John Weber
2016, Environmental Toxicology and Chemistry (35) 2311-2319
Hazards of soil-borne Pb to wild birds may be more accurately quantified if the bioavailability of that Pb is known. To better understand the bioavailability of Pb to birds, we measured blood Pb concentrations in Japanese quail (Coturnix japonica) fed diets containing Pb-contaminated soils. Relative bioavailabilities were expressed by comparison...
Spatial configuration trends in coastal Louisiana from 1985 to 2010
Brady Couvillion, Michelle Fischer, Holly J. Beck, William J. Sleavin
2016, Wetlands (36) 347-359
From 1932 to 2010, coastal Louisiana has experienced a net loss of 4877 km2 of wetlands. As the area of these wetlands has changed, so too has the spatial configuration of the landscape. The resulting landscape is a mosaic of patches of wetlands and open water. This study examined the spatial and...
Observations of recruitment and colonization by tunicates and associated invertebrates using giant one-meter2 recruitment plates at Woods Hole, Massachusetts
Page C. Valentine, M.R. Carman, Dann S. Blackwood
2016, Management of Biological Invasions (7) 115-130
Large recruitment plates measuring 1 × 1 m were deployed over an 18-month period from September 2013 to March 2015 for the purpose of documenting recruitment and colonization processes of marine invertebrate species at Woods Hole, Massachusetts. Each side of two plates was subdivided into 16 subareas (25 × 25...
The distribution and composition of REE-bearing minerals in placers of the Atlantic and Gulf coastal plains, USA
Carleton R. Bern, Anjana K. Shah, William Benzel, Heather A. Lowers
2016, Journal of Geochemical Exploration (162) 50-61
Rare earth element (REE) resources are currently of great interest because of their importance as raw materials for high-technology manufacturing. The REE-phosphates monazite (light REE enriched) and xenotime (heavy REE enriched) resist weathering and can accumulate in placer deposits as part of the heavy mineral assemblage. The Atlantic and Gulf...
Production of greenhouse-grown biocrust mosses and associated cyanobacteria to rehabilitate dryland soil function
Anita Antoninka, Matthew A. Bowker, Sasha C. Reed, Kyle Doherty
2016, Restoration Ecology (24) 324-335
Mosses are an often-overlooked component of dryland ecosystems, yet they are common members of biological soil crust communities (biocrusts) and provide key ecosystem services, including soil stabilization, water retention, carbon fixation, and housing of N2 fixing cyanobacteria. Mosses are able to survive long dry periods, respond rapidly to precipitation, and reproduce...
Sex-specific energetics of Pacific walruses (Odobenus rosmarus divergens) during the nursing interval
Shawn R. Noren, Mark S. Udevitz, Chadwick V. Jay
2016, Physiological and Biochemical Zoology (89) 93-109
Habitat use and activity patterns of Pacific walruses (Odobenus rosmarus divergens) have changed with climate-induced reductions in sea ice. Increases in the time active in water could result in negative energy balance, precluding females from sustaining lactation, which could impact population demographics. Little is known about lactation costs in walruses....
Seasonal flows of international British Columbia-Alaska rivers: The nonlinear influence of ocean-atmosphere circulation patterns
Sean W. Fleming, Eran Hood, Helen Dalhke, Shad O’Neel
2016, Advances in Water Resources (87) 42-55
The northern portion of the Pacific coastal temperate rainforest (PCTR) is one of the least anthropogenically modified regions on earth and remains in many respects a frontier area to science. Rivers crossing the northern PCTR, which is also an international boundary region between British Columbia, Canada and Alaska, USA, deliver...
T-COMP — A suite of programs for extracting transmissivity from MODFLOW models
Keith J. Halford
2016, Techniques and Methods 6-A54
Simulated transmissivities are constrained poorly by assigning permissible ranges of hydraulic conductivities from aquifer-test results to hydrogeologic units in groundwater-flow models. These wide ranges are derived from interpretations of many aquifer tests that are categorized by hydrogeologic unit. Uncertainty is added where contributing thicknesses differ between field estimates and numerical...
Prey size and availability limits maximum size of rainbow trout in a large tailwater: insights from a drift-foraging bioenergetics model
Michael J. Dodrill, Charles B. Yackulic, Theodore A. Kennedy, John W Haye
2016, Canadian Journal of Fisheries and Aquatic Sciences (73) 759-772
The cold and clear water conditions present below many large dams create ideal conditions for the development of economically important salmonid fisheries. Many of these tailwater fisheries have experienced declines in the abundance and condition of large trout species, yet the causes of these declines remain uncertain. Here, we develop,...
Wide-area estimates of evapotranspiration by red gum (Eucalyptus camaldulensis) and associated vegetation in the Murray-Darling River Basin, Australia
Pamela L. Nagler, Tanya M. Doody, Edward P. Glenn, Christopher J. Jarchow, Armando Barreto-Munoz, Kamel Didan
2016, Hydrological Processes (30) 1376-1387
Floodplain red gum forests (Eucalyptus camaldulensis plus associated grasses, reeds and sedges) are sites of high biodiversity in otherwise arid regions of southeastern Australia. They depend on periodic floods from rivers, but dams and diversions have reduced flood frequencies and volumes, leading to deterioration of trees and associated biota. There is...
Extensive dispersal of Roanoke logperch (Percina rex) inferred from genetic marker data
James H. Roberts, Paul L. Angermeier, Eric M. Hallerman
2016, Ecology of Freshwater Fish (25) 1-16
The dispersal ecology of most stream fishes is poorly characterised, complicating conservation efforts for these species. We used microsatellite DNA marker data to characterise dispersal patterns and effective population size (Ne) for a population of Roanoke logperchPercina rex, an endangered darter (Percidae). Juveniles and candidate parents were sampled for 2 years...
An empirical assessment of which inland floods can be managed
Beatriz Mogollon, Emmanuel A. Frimpong, Andrew B. Hoegh, Paul L. Angermeier
2016, Journal of Environmental Management (167) 38-48
Riverine flooding is a significant global issue. Although it is well documented that the influence of landscape structure on floods decreases as flood size increases, studies that define a threshold flood-return period, above which landscape features such as topography, land cover and impoundments can curtail floods, are lacking. Further, the...
Mapping technological and biophysical capacities of watersheds to regulate floods
Beatriz Mogollon, Amy M. Villamagna, Emmanuel A. Frimpong, Paul L. Angermeier
2016, Ecological Indicators (61) 483-499
Flood regulation is a widely valued and studied service provided by watersheds. Flood regulation benefits people directly by decreasing the socio-economic costs of flooding and indirectly by its positive impacts on cultural (e.g., fishing) and provisioning (e.g., water supply) ecosystem services. Like other regulating ecosystem services (e.g., pollination, water purification),...
Regional monitoring programs in the United States: Synthesis of four case studies from Pacific, Atlantic, and Gulf Coasts
Peter J. Tango, K. Schiff, P.R. Trowbridge, E.T. Sherwood, R.A. Batiuk
2016, Regional Studies in Marine Science (4) A1-A7
Water quality monitoring is a cornerstone of environmental protection and ambient monitoring provides managers with the critical data they need to take informed action. Unlike site-specific monitoring that is at the heart of regulatory permit compliance, regional monitoring can provide an integrated, holistic view of the environment, allowing managers to...
Aerobic biodegradation potential of endocrine disrupting chemicals in surface-water sediment at Rocky Mountains National Park, USA
Paul M. Bradley, William A. Battaglin, Luke R. Iwanowicz, Jimmy M. Clark, Celeste A. Journey
2016, Environmental Chemistry (35) 1087-1096
Endocrine disrupting chemicals (EDC) in surface water and bed sediment threaten the structure and function of aquatic ecosystems. In natural, remote, and protected surface-water environments where contaminant releases are sporadic, contaminant biodegradation is a fundamental driver of exposure concentration, timing, duration, and, thus, EDC ecological risk. Anthropogenic contaminants, including known...
Spatial and temporal variation in microcystins occurrence in wadeable streams in the southeastern USA
Keith A. Loftin, Jimmy M. Clark, Celeste A. Journey, Dana W. Kolpin, Peter C. Van Metre, Paul M. Bradley
2016, Environmental Toxicology and Chemistry (35) 2281-2287
Despite historical observations of potential microcystin-producing cyanobacteria (including Leptolyngbya,Phormidium, Pseudoanabaena, and Anabaena species) in 74% of headwater streams in Alabama, Georgia, South Carolina, and North Carolina (USA) from 1993 to 2011, fluvial cyanotoxin occurrence has not been systematically assessed in the southeastern United States. To begin to address this data...
Evaluating a portable cylindrical bait trap to capture diamondback terrapins in salt marsh
Paula F. P. Henry, G. Michael Haramis, Daniel D. Day
2016, Wildlife Society Bulletin (40) 160-168
Diamondback terrapins (Malaclemys terrapin) are currently in decline across much of their historical range, and demographic data on a regional scale are needed to identify where their populations are at greatest risk. Because terrapins residing in salt marshes are difficult to capture, we designed a cylindrical bait trap (CBT) that...
Invertebrates in managed waterfowl marshes
Joshua D. Stafford, Adam K. Janke, Elisabeth B. Webb, Steven R. Chipps
2016, Book chapter, Invertebrates in freshwater wetlands: an international perspective on their ecology
Invertebrates are an important food for breeding, migrating, and wintering waterfowl. Sparse study has been devoted to understanding the influence of waterfowl and wetland management on production of invertebrates for waterfowl foods; however, manipulation of hydrology and soils may change or enhance production. Fish can compete with waterfowl for invertebrate...
Dissolved gases in hydrothermal (phreatic) and geyser eruptions at Yellowstone National Park, USA
Shaul Hurwitz, Laura Clor, R. Blaine McCleskey, D. Kirk Nordstrom, Andrew G. Hunt, William C. Evans
2016, Geology (44) 235-238
Multiphase and multicomponent fluid flow in the shallow continental crust plays a significant role in a variety of processes over a broad range of temperatures and pressures. The presence of dissolved gases in aqueous fluids reduces the liquid stability field toward lower temperatures and enhances the explosivity potential with respect...
Water balance monitoring for two bioretention gardens in Omaha, Nebraska, 2011–14
Kellan R. Strauch, David L. Rus, Kent E. Holm
2016, Scientific Investigations Report 2015-5188
Bioretention gardens are used to help mitigate stormwater runoff in urban settings in an attempt to restore the hydrologic response of the developed land to a natural predevelopment response in which more water is infiltrated rather than routed directly to urban drainage networks. To better understand the performance of bioretention...
Sediment loads and transport at constructed chutes along the Missouri River - Upper Hamburg Chute near Nebraska City, Nebraska, and Kansas Chute near Peru, Nebraska
Brenda K. Densmore, David L. Rus, Matthew T. Moser, Brent M. Hall, Michael J. Andersen
2016, Scientific Investigations Report 2016-5002
The U.S. Geological Survey, in cooperation with the U.S. Army Corps of Engineers, monitored suspended sediment within constructed Missouri River chutes during March through October 2012. Chutes were constructed at selected river bends by the U.S. Army Corps of Engineers to help mitigate aquatic habitat lost through the creation and...