Concentrations and loads of suspended sediment-associated pesticides in the San Joaquin River, California and tributaries during storm events
M.L. Hladik, Joseph L. Domagalski, K.M. Kuivila
2009, Science of the Total Environment (408) 356-364
Current-use pesticides associated with suspended sediments were measured in the San Joaquin River, California and its tributaries during two storm events in 2008. Nineteen pesticides were detected: eight herbicides, nine insecticides, one fungicide and one insecticide synergist. Concentrations for the herbicides (0.1 to 3000 ng/g; median of 6.1 ng/g) were...
Effects of Hurricane Katrina on the forest structure of taxodium distichum swamps of the Gulf Coast, USA
B.A. Middleton
2009, Wetlands (29) 80-87
Hurricane Katrina pushed mixed Taxodium distichum forests toward a dominance of Taxodium distichum (baldcypress) and Nyssa aquatica (water tupelo) because these species had lower levels of susceptibility to wind damage than other woody species. This study documents the volume of dead versus live material of woody trees and shrubs of...
Simulating hydrologic and hydraulic processes throughout the Amazon River Basin
R.E. Beighley, K.G. Eggert, T. Dunne, Y. He, V. Gummadi, K.L. Verdin
2009, Hydrological Processes (23) 1221-1235
Presented here is a model framework based on a land surface topography that can be represented with various degrees of resolution and capable of providing representative channel/floodplain hydraulic characteristics on a daily to hourly scale. The framework integrates two models: (1) a water balance model (WBM) for the vertical fluxes...
Channel responses to varying sediment input: A flume experiment modeled after Redwood Creek, California
Mary Ann Madej, D.G. Sutherland, T.E. Lisle, B. Pryor
2009, Geomorphology (103) 507-519
At the reach scale, a channel adjusts to sediment supply and flow through mutual interactions among channel form, bed particle size, and flow dynamics that govern river bed mobility. Sediment can impair the beneficial uses of a river, but the timescales for studying recovery following high sediment loading in the...
Investigating different mechanisms for biogenic selenite transformations: Geobacter sulfurreducens, Shewanella oneidensis and Veillonella atypica
C.I. Pearce, R.A.D. Pattrick, N. Law, J.M. Charnock, V.S. Coker, J.W. Fellowes, R.S. Oremland, J.R. Lloyd
2009, Environmental Technology (30) 1313-1326
The metal-reducing bacteria Geobacter sulfurreducens, Shewanella oneidensis and Veillonella atypica, use different mechanisms to transform toxic, bioavailable sodium selenite to less toxic, non-mobile elemental selenium and then to selenide in anaerobic environments, offering the potential for in situ and ex situ bioremediation of contaminated soils, sediments, industrial effluents, and agricultural...
Benthic nutrient sources to hypereutrophic Upper Klamath Lake, Oregon, USA
J.S. Kuwabara, B.R. Topping, D. D. Lynch, J.L. Carter, H.I. Essaid
2009, Environmental Toxicology and Chemistry (28) 516-524
Three collecting trips were coordinated in April, May, and August 2006 to sample the water column and benthos of hypereutrophic Upper Klamath Lake (OR, USA) through the annual cyanophyte bloom of Aphanizomenon flos‐aquae. A pore‐water profiler was designed and fabricated to obtain the first high‐resolution (centimeter‐scale) estimates of the vertical concentration...
Pore-water chemistry from the ICDP-USGS core hole in the Chesapeake Bay impact structure-Implications for paleohydrology, microbial habitat, and water resources
W. E. Sanford, M.A. Voytek, D.S. Powars, B.F. Jones, I.M. Cozzarelli, C.S. Cockell, R.P. Eganhouse
2009, Special Paper of the Geological Society of America 867-890
We investigated the groundwater system of the Chesapeake Bay impact structure by analyzing the pore-water chemistry in cores taken from a 1766-m-deep drill hole 10 km north of Cape Charles, Virginia. Pore water was extracted using high-speed centrifuges from over 100 cores sampled from a 1300 m section of the...
Geomorphic controls on mercury accumulation in soils from a historically mined watershed, Central California Coast Range, USA
J.M. Holloway, M. B. Goldhaber, J.M. Morrison
2009, Applied Geochemistry (24) 1538-1548
Historic Hg mining in the Cache Creek watershed in the Central California Coast Range has contributed to the downstream transport of Hg to the San Francisco Bay-Delta. Different aspects of Hg mobilization in soils, including pedogenesis, fluvial redistribution of sediment, volatilization and eolian transport were considered. The greatest soil concentrations...
Migratory patterns and population structure among breeding and wintering red-breasted mergansers (Mergus serrator) and common mergansers (M. merganser)
John M. Pearce, K. G. McCracken, Thomas K. Christensen, Y.N. Zhuravlev
2009, The Auk (126) 784-798
Philopatry has long been assumed to structure populations of waterfowl and other species of birds genetically, especially via maternally transmitted mitochondrial DNA (mtDNA), yet other migratory behaviors and nesting ecology (use of ground vs. cavity sites) may also contribute to population genetic structure. We investigated the effects of migration and...
Modeled ground water age distributions
Linda R. Woolfenden, Timothy R. Ginn
2009, Ground Water (47) 547-557
The age of ground water in any given sample is a distributed quantity representing distributed provenance (in space and time) of the water. Conventional analysis of tracers such as unstable isotopes or anthropogenic chemical species gives discrete or binary measures of the presence of water of a given age. Modeled...
Characteristics of organic soil in black spruce forests: Implications for the application of land surface and ecosystem models in cold regions
S. Yi, K. Manies, J. Harden, A. D. McGuire
2009, Geophysical Research Letters (36)
Soil organic layers (OL) play an important role in landatmosphere exchanges of water, energy and carbon in cold environments. The proper implementation of OL in land surface and ecosystem models is important for predicting dynamic responses to climate warming. Based on the analysis of OL samples of black spruce (Picea...
Widespread increase of tree mortality rates in the Western United States
P. J. van Mantgem, N.L. Stephenson, J.C. Byrne, L.D. Daniels, J.F. Franklin, P.Z. Fule, M. E. Harmon, A.J. Larson, Joseph M. Smith, A.H. Taylor, T.T. Veblen
2009, Science (323) 521-524
Persistent changes in tree mortality rates can alter forest structure, composition, and ecosystem services such as carbon sequestration. Our analyses of longitudinal data from unmanaged old forests in the western United States showed that background (noncatastrophic) mortality rates have increased rapidly in recent decades, with doubling periods ranging from 17...
Characterizing canopy biochemistry from imaging spectroscopy and its application to ecosystem studies
R.F. Kokaly, Gregory P. Asner, S.V. Ollinger, M.E. Martin, C.A. Wessman
2009, Remote Sensing of Environment (113)
For two decades, remotely sensed data from imaging spectrometers have been used to estimate non-pigment biochemical constituents of vegetation, including water, nitrogen, cellulose, and lignin. This interest has been motivated by the important role that these substances play in physiological processes such as photosynthesis, their relationships with ecosystem processes such...
Small estuarine fishes feed on large trematode cercariae: Lab and field investigations
A.T. Kaplan, S. Rebhal, K. D. Lafferty, A. M. Kuris
2009, Journal of Parasitology (95) 477-480
In aquatic ecosystems, dense populations of snails can shed millions of digenean trematode cercariae every day. These short-lived, free-living larvae are rich in energy and present a potential resource for consumers. We investigated whether estuarine fishes eat cercariae shed by trematodes of the estuarine snail Cerithidea californica. In aquaria we...
Assessment tools for urban catchments: developing biological indicators based on benthic macroinvertebrates
A.H. Purcell, D.W. Bressler, M.J. Paul, M.T. Barbour, E.T. Rankin, J.L. Carter, V.H. Resh
2009, Journal of the American Water Resources Association (45) 306-319
Biological indicators, particularly benthic macroinvertebrates, are widely used and effective measures of the impact of urbanization on stream ecosystems. A multimetric biological index of urbanization was developed using a large benthic macroinvertebrate dataset (n = 1,835) from the Baltimore, Maryland, metropolitan area and then validated with datasets from Cleveland, Ohio...
Freshwater ecosystems and resilience of Pacific salmon: Habitat Management based on natural variability
P.A. Bisson, J. B. Dunham, G.H. Reeves
2009, Ecology and Society (14)
In spite of numerous habitat restoration programs in fresh waters with an aggregate annual funding of millions of dollars, many populations of Pacific salmon remain significantly imperiled. Habitat restoration strategies that address limited environmental attributes and partial salmon life-history requirements or approaches that attempt to force aquatic habitat to conform...
Identifying across‐system sources of variation in a generalist freshwater fish: Correlates of total and size‐specific abundance of yellow perch
Michael P. Carey, M. E. Mather
2009, Ecology of Freshwater Fish (18) 145-155
Variation in fish abundance across systems presents a challenge to our understanding of fish populations because it limits our ability to predict and transfer basic ecological principles to applied problems. Yellow perch (Perca flavescens) is an ideal species for exploring environmental and biotic correlates across system because it is widely...
A proposed origin for fossilized Pennsylvanian plant cuticles by pyrite oxidation (Sydney Coalfield, Nova Scotia, Canada)
E.L. Zodrow, Maria Mastalerz
2009, Bulletin of Geosciences (84) 227-240
Fossilized cuticles, though rare in the roof rocks of coal seam in the younger part of the Pennsylvanian Sydney Coalfield, Nova Scotia, represent nearly all of the major plant groups. Selected for investigation, by methods of Fourier transform infrared spectroscopy (FTIR) and elemental analysis, are fossilized cuticles (FCs) and cuticles...
Coldwater fish in small standing waters
Nigel P. Lester, Paul E. Bailey, Wayne A. Hubert
Scott A. Bonar, Wayne A. Hubert, David W. Willis, editor(s)
2009, Book chapter, Standard methods for sampling North American freshwater fishes
This chapter describes standard techniques for sampling coldwater fishes in small standing waters. Within the context of this book, coldwater fish species are those that prefer water temperatures less than 15°C, and small standing waters are lakes and reservoirs where surface area is less than 200 ha. Chapter 7 of...
Warmwater fish in small standing waters
Kevin L. Pope, Robert M. Neumann, Scott D. Bryan
2009, Book chapter, Standard methods for sampling North American freshwater fishes
This chapter describes standardized sampling techniques for routine monitoring and population assessment of warmwater sport and prey fishes in small standing water bodies. Although water temperature regulates growth, survival, and reproduction of fishes, there are no specific criteria that define a warmwater fish community. Dodds (2002) noted that...
An introduction to standardized sampling
Scott A. Bonar, Salvador Contreras-Balderas, Alison C. Iles
Scott A. Bonar, Wayne A. Hubert, David W. Willis, editor(s)
2009, Book chapter, Standard methods for sampling North American freshwater fishes
It was probably one of the oddest riots in the history of the United States. In Erie, Pennsylvania during 1853. federal marshals were called to restore order during bloody uprisings. A mob of women, equipped with sledgehammers, was tearing up railroad rack to protest standardization of track width (Nesmith 1985)....
Derivation of habitat-specific dissolved oxygen criteria for Chesapeake Bay and its tidal tributaries
Richard A. Batiuk, Denise L. Breitburg, Robert J. Diaz, Thomas M. Cronin, David H. Secor, Glen Thursby
2009, Journal of Experimental Marine Biology and Ecology (381) S204-S215
The Chesapeake 2000 Agreement committed its state and federal signatories to “define the water quality conditions necessary to protect aquatic living resources” in the Chesapeake Bay (USA) and its tidal tributaries. Hypoxia is one of the key water quality issues addressed as a result of the above Agreement. This paper...
Food supplies of stream-dwelling salmonids
Mark S. Wipfli
2009, Conference Paper, American Fisheries Society Symposium 70
Much is known about the importance of the physical characteristics of salmonid habitat in Alaska and the Pacific Northwest, with far less known about the food sources and trophic processes within these habitats, and the role they play in regulating salmonid productivity. Freshwater food webs supporting salmonids in Alaska rely...
Coldwater fish in large standing waters
David A. Beauchamp, Donna L. Parrish, Roy A. Whaley
Scott A. Bonar, Wayne A. Hubert, David W. Willis, editor(s)
2009, Book chapter, Standard methods for sampling North American freshwater fishes
Large coldwater lakes are defined here as standing freshwater bodies with surface area greater than 200 ha that support coldwater fishes such as trouts and salmons throughout the year. These large water bodies can be exposed to extensive wind fetch, which will affect the timing, mobility, and safety of personnel...
Dynamic modeling of nitrogen losses in river networks unravels the coupled effects of hydrological and biogeochemical processes
Richard B. Alexander, J.K. Bohlke, Elizabeth W. Boyer, Mark B. David, Judson W. Harvey, Patrick J. Mulholland, Sybil P. Seitzinger, Craig R. Tobias, Christina Tonitto, Wilfred M. Wollheim
2009, Biogeochemistry (93) 91-116
The importance of lotic systems as sinks for nitrogen inputs is well recognized. A fraction of nitrogen in streamflow is removed to the atmosphere via denitrification with the remainder exported in streamflow as nitrogen loads. At the watershed scale, there is a keen interest in understanding the factors that control...