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Page 733, results 18301 - 18325

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Not all publications have extents, not all extents are completely accurate
Indicators of exposure to estrogenic compounds at Great Lakes Areas of Concern: Species and site comparisons
Vicki S. Blazer, Heather L. Walsh, Cassidy H. Shaw, Luke R. Iwanowicz, Ryan P. Braham, Patricia Mazik
2019, Environmental Monitoring and Assessment (190)
Adverse effects resulting from potential exposure of wild fishes to estrogenic endocrine disruptors was assessed at seven United States Great Lakes Areas of Concern using biomarkers ranging from organismal (gonadosomatic indices) to tissue/plasma (histology, plasma vitellogenin) and molecular (hepatic gene transcripts) levels. Biomonitoring was conducted on pelagic, top predator species,...
Larger body size and earlier run timing increase alewife reproductive success in a whole lake experiment
Allison H. Roy, Meghna N. Marjadi, Adrian Jordaan, Benjamin I. Gahagan, Michael P. Armstrong, Andrew R. Whiteley
2019, Canadian Journal of Fisheries and Aquatic Sciences (76) 1134-1146
Environmental conditions can influence biological characteristics like phenology and body size with important consequences for organismal fitness. Examining these fitness consequences under natural conditions through genetic pedigree reconstruction offers a lens into potential population responses to changing environments. Over three years (2013-2015), we introduced adult alewife (Alosa pseudoharengus), anadromous, iteroparous...
How Minnesota wolf hunter and trapper attitudes and risk- and benefit-based beliefs predict wolf management preferences
Susan A. Schroeder, David C. Fulton, Louis Cornicelli, Jeremy T. Bruskotter
2019, Human Dimensions of Wildlife (23) 552-568
In 2012, Minnesota’s first-ever regulated wolf hunting and trapping season occurred. Research has suggested that beliefs about risks and benefits associated with carnivores affect their acceptance. Using results from a 2013 mail survey of hunters and trappers who participated in the season, we employed mediation analysis to...
Genetic analyses reveal cryptic introgression in secretive marsh bird populations
Stephanie S Costner, Amy B. Welsh, Gary R. Costanzo, Sergio R. Harding, James T. Anderson, Susan B. McRae, Todd E. Katzner
2019, Ecology and Evolution (8) 9870-9879
Hybridization is common in bird populations but can be challenging for management, especially if one of the two parent species is of greater conservation concern than the other. King rails (Rallus elegans) and clapper rails (R. crepitans) are two marsh bird species with similar morphologies, behaviors, and overlapping distributions. The...
Geochemical sourcing of runoff from a young volcanic watershed to an impacted coral reef in Pelekane Bay, Hawaii
Renee K. Takesue, Curt D. Storlazzi
2019, Science of the Total Environment (649) 353-363
Runoff of sediment and other contaminants from developed watersheds threatens coastal ecosystems and services. A sediment geochemical sourcing study was undertaken on a sediment-impacted coral reef flat to identify terrestrial sediment sources and how these changed over time. Geochemical signatures...
Effects of ferric sulfate and polyaluminum chloride coagulation enhanced treatment wetlands on Typha growth, soil and water chemistry
Yan Ling Liang, Tamara E. C. Kraus, Lucas C. R. Silva, Philip A. M. Bachand, Sandra M. Bachand, Timothy A. Doane, William R. Horwath
2019, Science of the Total Environment (648) 116-124
Land surface subsidence is a concern in many deltas worldwide as it contributes to water quality degradation, loss of fertile land and increased potential for levee failure. As a possible solution to these concerns, on-site coagulation enhanced treatment wetlands(CETWs), coagulation water treatment followed by wetland passage serving as a settling basin, were implemented in a field-scale study located on...
Neutral genetic and phenotypic variation within and among isolated headwater Brook Trout populations
T. Casey Weathers, David C. Kazyak, Jay R. Stauffer Jr., Matt A. Kulp, Steve E. Moore, Tim L. King, John E. Carlson
2019, Transactions of the American Fisheries Society (148) 58-72
Isolated populations are challenging to manage and conserve as they are particularly vulnerable to genetic drift, allelic fixation, inbreeding, and may express markedly reduced phenotypic variability. We sought to improve our understanding of how spatial isolation, occupancy range, and restricted gene flow influence contemporary phenotypic variation within and among native...
Optical characterization of two cyanobacteria genera, Aphanizomenon and Microcystis, with hyperspectral microscopy.
Emily Paine, E. Terrence Slonecker, Nancy S. Simon, Barry H. Rosen, Ronald G. Resmini, David W. Allen
2019, Journal of Applied Remote Sensing (12)
Cyanobacterial blooms are a nuisance and a potential hazard in freshwater systems worldwide. Remote sensing has been used to detect cyanobacterial blooms, but few studies have distinguished between genera of cyanobacteria. Because some genera are more likely to be toxic than others, this is a useful distinction.In this study, hyperspectral imaging...
A global empirical model for near real-time assessment of seismically induced landslides
M. Anna Nowicki Jessee, M.W. Hamburger, Kate E. Allstadt, David J. Wald, H. Tanyas, Mike Hearne, E.M. Thompson
2019, Journal of Geophysical Research: Earth Surface (123) 1835-1859
Earthquake-triggered landslides are a significant hazard in seismically active regions, but our ability to assess the hazard they pose in near real-time is limited. In this study, we present a new globally applicable model for seismically induced landslides based on the most comprehensive global dataset available; we use 23...
Subsidies from anadromous sea lamprey (Petromyzon marinus) carcasses function as a reciprocal nutrient exchange between marine and freshwaters
Joseph D. Zydlewski
2019, River Research and Applications (34) 824-833
Nutrient and energy flows across ecosystem boundaries subsidize recipient communities and influence bottom‐up processes in food webs. Migratory fish such as anadromous sea lamprey provide a pulse of marine‐derived nutrients and energy to Atlantic coastal streams in spring when organisms would otherwise be subject to limiting...
Hypotheses from recent assessments of climate impacts to biodiversity and ecosystems in the United States
Shawn L. Carter, Abigail Lynch, Bonnie Myers, Madeleine A. Rubenstein, Laura M. Thompson
Walter Leal Filho, Jelena Barbir, Richard Preziosi, editor(s)
2019, Book chapter, Handbook of climate change and biodiversity
Climate change poses multiple threats to biodiversity, and has already caused demonstrable impacts. We summarize key results from a recent national assessment of observed climate change impacts to terrestrial, marine, and freshwater ecosystems in the United States, and place results in the context of commonly articulated hypotheses about ecosystem response...
Evaluating potential effects of bigheaded carps on fatty acid profiles of multiple trophic levels in large rivers of the Midwest, USA
Andrea K. Fritts, Brent C. Knights, Toben LaFrancois, Jonathan M. Vallazza, Lynn A. Bartsch, Michelle R. Bartsch, William B. Richardson, Sean Bailey, Rebecca M. Kreiling, Byron Karns
2019, Food Webs (16)
Recent work indicates that the establishment of bigheaded carps (Hypophthalmichthys spp.) in the United States has led to a reduction in condition of native planktivores and may detrimentally affect other trophic levels by altering the base of aquatic food webs. We used fatty acids to evaluate potential effects of bigheaded...
Intensive sampling reveals underreported use of great-river tributaries by large-river fishes in Missouri
Corey G. Dunn, Brandon L. Brooke, Robert A. Hrabik, Craig P. Paukert
2019, Southeastern Naturalist (17) 512-520
Large tributaries may help sustain large-river fish populations by mitigating fish-habitat losses within the highly modified great rivers of the Mississippi River basin. These tributaries are likely most beneficial for fish species specializing on non-degraded large-river habitat for some portion of their life histories. Few great-river tributaries, however, have been...
Interactive effects of severe drought and grazing on the life history cycle of a bioindicator species on the edge of its range
David A. Haukos, Clint W. Boal, S. R. Fritts1, B. A. Grisham1, R. D. Cox1, P. McDaniel4, C. A. Hagen, D. U. Greene6
2019, Ecology and Evolution (8) 9550-9562
Recurring drought and grazing are ecological drivers of semi-arid grasslands on the Southern High Plains, USA; however, ecological drivers are currently undergoing human-induced alterations, which likely have implications for wildlife. We used the lesser prairie-chicken (Tympanuchus pallidicinctus), an iconic grouse species that exhibits a boom-bust life history strategy, on the...
Acoustic telemetry and benthic habitat mapping inform the spatial ecology of Shortnose Sturgeon in the Hudson River, New York, USA
Richard M. Pendleton, Christopher R. Standley, Amanda L. Higgs, Gregg H. Kenney, Patrick J. Sullivan, Suresh Sethi, Bradley P. Harris
2019, Transactions of the American Fisheries Society (148) 35-47
A history of overexploitation and industrialization of riverine habitats has impacted the Shortnose Sturgeon Acipenser brevirostrum, leading this species to become one of the earliest listed under the U.S. Endangered Species Act. The present understanding of Shortnose Sturgeon spatial ecology is based on observations from a limited number of Atlantic coastal...
A landscape-level assessment of whitebark pine regeneration in the Rocky Mountains, USA
Sara Goeking, Deborah Izlar, Thomas C. Edwards Jr.
2019, Forest Science (65) 87-99
Whitebark pine (Pinus albicaulis Engelm.) has recently experienced high mortality due to multiple stressors, and future population viability may rely on natural regeneration. We assessed whitebark pine seedling densities throughout the US Rocky Mountains and identified stand, site, and climatic variables related to seedling presence based on data from 1,217...
Identifying optimal hauling densities for adult Chinook Salmon trap and haul operations
Michael Colvin, James Peterson, Cameron Sharpe, Michael L. Kent, Carl B. Schreck
2019, River Research and Applications (34) 1167
Trap and haul programs are used to conserve fish populations by circumventing high mortality locations or events, and enhancing population abundance by reintroducing fish to historical habitats and mitigating for fish passage limitations. Spring run Chinook Salmon are transported in trucks upstream of barrier dams in Willamette River Tributaries...
Characterizing residence patterns of North Atlantic right whales in the southeastern U.S. with a multistate open robust design model
A.M. Krystan, T.A. Gowan, William L. Kendall, Julien Martin, J.G. Ortega-Ortiz, K.B. Jackson, A.R. Knowlton, P. Naessig, M. Zani, D.W. Schulte, C.R. Taylor
2019, Endangered Species Research (36) 279-295
Effective conservation of endangered North Atlantic right whales (Eubalaena glacialis) requires information about their spatio-temporal distribution. Understanding temporal distribution is particularly important, because a portion of the population migrates between high latitude summer feeding grounds off the northeastern U.S. and Canadian Maritimes coasts and lower latitude calving and wintering grounds...
Automated time-series measurement of microbial concentrations in groundwater-derived water supplies
David W. Owens, Randall J. Hunt, Aaron D. Firnstahl, Maureen A. Muldoon, Mark A. Borchardt
2019, Groundwater (2) 329-336
Fecal contamination by human and animal pathogens, including viruses, bacteria, and protozoa, is a potential human health hazard, especially with regards to drinking water. Pathogen occurrence in groundwater varies considerably in space and time, which can be difficult to characterize as sampling typically requires hundreds of liters...
Amendments fail to hasten biocrust recovery or soil stability at a disturbed dryland sandy site
David G. Chandler, Natalie K. Day, Matthew D. Madsen, Jayne Belnap
2019, Restoration Ecology (27) 289-297
In most drylands, biological soil crusts (biocrusts), an assemblage of lichens, bryophytes, fungi, green algae, and cyanobacteria, are critical to healthy ecosystem function. However, they are extremely sensitive to disturbance and attempts to facilitate their recovery have had variable success. In this study, we applied soil amendments designed to improve...
A Bayesian approach to predict sub-annual beach change and recovery
Kathleen Wilson, Erika E. Lentz, Jennifer L. Miselis, Ilgar Safak, Owen T. Brenner
2019, Estuaries and Coasts (42) 112-131
The upper beach, between the astronomical high tide and the dune-toe, supports habitat and recreation along many beaches, making predictions of upper beach change valuable to coastal managers and the public. We developed and tested a Bayesian network (BN) to predict the cross-shore position of an upper beach elevation contour...
Understanding how microbiomes influence the systems they inhabit
E.K. Hall, E. S. Bernhardt, R.L. Bier, M.A. Bradford, C.M. Boot, J.B. Cotner, P.A. del Giorgio, S.E. Evans, E.B.; Graham, S.E. Jones, J.T. Lennon, Kenneth J. Locey, D. Nemergut, B. Osborne, J.D. Rocca, J.S. Schimel, Mark Waldrop, M.W. Wallenstein
2019, Nature Microbiology (3) 977-982
Translating the ever-increasing wealth of information on microbiomes (environment, host, or built environment) to advance the understanding of system-level processes is proving to be an exceptional research challenge. One reason for this challenge is that relationships between characteristics of microbiomes and the system-level processes they influence are often evaluated in...
How many measurements are required to construct an accurate sand budget in a large river? Insights from analyses of signal and noise
Paul E. Grams, Daniel D. Buscombe, David J. Topping, Matthew Kaplinski, Joseph Hazel
2019, Earth Surface Processes and Landforms (44) 160-178
Morphological change in river channels is frequently evaluated in the context of mass balance sediment budgets. In a closed sediment budget, measurements of sediment influx and efflux are coupled with measured changes in channel topography to provide both spatial...
A comparison of methods for streamflow uncertainty estimation
Julie E. Kiang, Christopher L. Gazoorian, Hillary McMillan, Gemma Coxon, Jerome Le Coz, Ida Westerberg, Arnaud Belleville, Damien Sevrez, Anna Sikorska, Asgeir Petersen-Overleir, Trond Reitan, Jim Freer, Benjamin Renard, Valentin Mansanarez, Robert R. Mason, Jr.
2019, Water Resources Research (54) 7149-7176
Streamflow time series are commonly derived from stage‐discharge rating curves, but the uncertainty of the rating curve and resulting streamflow series are poorly understood. While different methods to quantify uncertainty in the stage‐discharge relationship exist, there is limited understanding of how uncertainty estimates differ between methods due...