Publications
The USGS publishes peer-reviewed reports and journal articles which are used by Chesapeake Bay Program resource managers and policy makers to make science-based decisions for ecosystem conservation and restoration. Use the Search box below to find publications on selected topics.
If you wish to search by author, click the button below to be directed to USGS Publications Warehouse.
Filter Total Items: 942
Summary of suspended-sediment data for streams draining the Chesapeake Bay Watershed, water years 1952-2002 Summary of suspended-sediment data for streams draining the Chesapeake Bay Watershed, water years 1952-2002
U.S. Geological Survey suspended-sediment data from 1952 to 2002 from selected stream-gaging stations draining the nontidal parts of the Chesapeake Bay Watershed were summarized to identify areas in the Watershed with high suspended-sediment loads, yields, and concentrations. The suspended-sediment load data were separated into two periods, 1952?1984 and 1985?2001. In 1985, the...
Authors
Allen C. Gellis, William S.L. Banks, Michael J. Langland, Sarah K. Martucci
Atmospheric wet deposition of trace elements to a suburban environment, Reston, Virginia, USA Atmospheric wet deposition of trace elements to a suburban environment, Reston, Virginia, USA
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 sampling and analytical...
Authors
Kathryn M. Conko, Karen C. Rice, Margaret M. Kennedy
Bog iron formation in the Nassawango Creek watershed, Maryland, USA Bog iron formation in the Nassawango Creek watershed, Maryland, USA
The Nassawango bog ores in the modern environment for surficial geochemical processes were studied. The formation of Nassawango bog ores was suggested to be due to inorganic oxidation when groundwater rich in ferrous iron emerges into the oxic, surficial environment. It was suggested that the process, providing a phosphorus sink, may be an unrecognized benefit for mitigating nutrient...
Authors
O.P. Bricker, Wayne L. Newell, N.S. Simon
Building a geospatial ROMA project database Building a geospatial ROMA project database
No abstract available.
Authors
Robert G. Clark, Steven Kambly, Thomas Moreland, Milan Pavich
Food habits of mute swans in the Chesapeake Bay Food habits of mute swans in the Chesapeake Bay
Unlike the tundra swan (Cygnus columbianus) that migrate to the Bay for the winter, the mute swan (Cygnus olor) is a year long resident and therefore has raised concerns among research managers over reports of conflicts with nesting native water birds and the consumption of submerged aquatic vegetation (SAV). Although data on the reduction of SAV by nesting mute swans and their offspring...
Authors
Matthew C. Perry, P.C. Osenton, E.J.R. Lohnes
Coring the Chesapeake Bay impact crater Coring the Chesapeake Bay impact crater
In July 1983, the shipboard scientists of Deep Sea Drilling Project Leg 95 found an unexpected bonus in a core taken 150 kilometers east of Atlantic City, N.J. At Site 612, the scientists recovered a 10-centimeter-thick layer of late Eocene debris ejected from an impact about 36 million years ago. Microfossils and argon isotope ratios from the same layer reveal that the ejecta were part...
Authors
C. Wylie Poag
Invasive herbivory: resident Canada geese and the decline of wild rice along the tidal Patuxent River Invasive herbivory: resident Canada geese and the decline of wild rice along the tidal Patuxent River
While concern grows over the increasing numbers of exotic mute swans (Cygnus olor) on the Chesapeake Bay, less attention seems to be given to the highly familiar and native Canada goose (Branta canadensis) which has over time developed unprecedented nonmigratory, or resident, populations. Although nuisance flocks of Canada geese have been well advertised at city parks, athletic fields...
Authors
G. Michael Haramis, Gregory D. Kearns
Assessing development pressure in the Chesapeake Bay watershed: An evaluation of two land-use change models Assessing development pressure in the Chesapeake Bay watershed: An evaluation of two land-use change models
Natural resource lands in the Chesapeake Bay watershed are increasingly susceptible to conversion into developed land uses, particularly as the demand for residential development grows. We assessed development pressure in the Baltimore-Washington, DC region, one of the major urban and suburban centers in the watershed. We explored the utility of two modeling approaches for forecasting...
Authors
Peter R. Claggett, Claire A. Jantz, S.J. Goetz, C. Bisland
Mute swans and their Chesapeake Bay habitats: proceedings of a symposium Mute swans and their Chesapeake Bay habitats: proceedings of a symposium
The symposium 'Mute Swans and their Chesapeake Bay Habitats,' held on June 7, 2001, provided a forum for biologists and managers to share research findings and management ideas concerning the exotic and invasive mute swan (Cygnus olar). This species has been increasing in population size and is considered by many to be a problem in regard to natural food resources in the Bay that are...
Isolation and characterization of mycobacteria from striped bass Morone saxatilis from the Chesapeake Bay Isolation and characterization of mycobacteria from striped bass Morone saxatilis from the Chesapeake Bay
Mycobacteriosis in striped bass Morone saxatilis of Chesapeake Bay, USA, was first diagnosed in 1997 based on the presence of granulomatous inflammation and acid-fast bacteria in skin and spleen. To confirm histopathology, bacteriological detection and identification of mycobacteria were begun using splenic tissue from fish with and without skin ulcerations. On the basis of initial...
Authors
M. W. Rhodes, H. Kator, I. Kaattari, D. Gauthier, W. Vogelbein, C. A. Ottinger
An association of benthic foraminifera and gypsum in Holocene sediments of estuarine Chesapeake Bay, USA An association of benthic foraminifera and gypsum in Holocene sediments of estuarine Chesapeake Bay, USA
Two cores of Holocene sediments recovered from the Cape Charles Channel of Chesapeake Bay yielded radiocarbon ages of about 6.8 to 5.8 ka for the lower intervals. Fossil foraminifera preserved in these lower sediments are dominated by species of Elphidium, which make up about 90% of the assemblage throughout, and probably signify deposition in hypersaline waters. Buccella frigida and...
Authors
J. Cann, T. Cronin
Population ecology and shell chemistry of a phytal ostracode species (Loxoconcha matagordensis) in the Chesapeake Bay watershed Population ecology and shell chemistry of a phytal ostracode species (Loxoconcha matagordensis) in the Chesapeake Bay watershed
Population ecology and shell chemistry were studied in the phytal ostracode Loxoconcha matagordensis (Swain 1955) collected from Zostera marina seagrass beds in the Chesapeake Bay to provide seasonal constraints on shell secretion time for paleothermometry. Population density and age structure were defined by two main breeding cycles that occurred between 01 to 15 June and 02 to 16...
Authors
C.D. Vann, T. M. Cronin, Gary S. Dwyer