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Publications

Publications from USGS science centers throughout the Southeast Region.

Filter Total Items: 10352

Investigation of submarine groundwater discharge along the tidal reach of the Caloosahatchee River, southwest Florida Investigation of submarine groundwater discharge along the tidal reach of the Caloosahatchee River, southwest Florida

The tidal reach of the Caloosahatchee River is an estuarine habitat that supports a diverse assemblage of biota including aquatic vegetation, shellfish, and finfish. The system has been highly modified by anthropogenic activity over the last 150 years (South Florida Water Management District (SFWMD), 2009). For example, the river was channelized and connected to Lake Okeechobee in 1881...
Authors
Christopher D. Reich

Can differences in phosphorus uptake kinetics explain the distribution of cattail and sawgrass in the Florida Everglades? Can differences in phosphorus uptake kinetics explain the distribution of cattail and sawgrass in the Florida Everglades?

Background Cattail (Typha domingensis) has been spreading in phosphorus (P) enriched areas of the oligotrophic Florida Everglades at the expense of sawgrass (Cladium mariscus spp. jamaicense). Abundant evidence in the literature explains how the opportunistic features of Typha might lead to a complete dominance in P-enriched areas. Less clear is how Typha can grow and acquire P at...
Authors
Hans Brix, Bent Lorenzen, Irving A. Mendelssohn, Karen L. McKee, ShiLi Miao

Power to detect trends in Missouri River fish populations within the Habitat Assessment Monitoring Program Power to detect trends in Missouri River fish populations within the Habitat Assessment Monitoring Program

As with all large rivers in the United States, the Missouri River has been altered, with approximately one-third of the mainstem length impounded and one-third channelized. These physical alterations to the environment have affected the fish populations, but studies examining the effects of alterations have been localized and for short periods of time, thereby preventing generalization...
Authors
Janice L. Bryan, Mark L. Wildhaber, Dan W. Gladish

Bank erosion, mass wasting, water clarity, bathymetry and a sediment budget along the dam-regulated Lower Roanoke River, North Carolina Bank erosion, mass wasting, water clarity, bathymetry and a sediment budget along the dam-regulated Lower Roanoke River, North Carolina

Dam construction and its impact on downstream fluvial processes may substantially alter ambient bank stability, floodplain inundation patterns, and channel morphology. Most of the world's largest rivers have been dammed, which has prompted management efforts to mitigate dam effects. Three high dams (completed between 1953 and 1963) occur along the Piedmont portion of the Roanoke River...
Authors
Edward R. Schenk, Cliff R. Hupp, Jean M. Richter, Daniel E. Kroes

An overview of historical channel adjustment and selected hydraulic values in the Lower Sabine and Lower Brazos River Basins, Texas and Louisiana An overview of historical channel adjustment and selected hydraulic values in the Lower Sabine and Lower Brazos River Basins, Texas and Louisiana

The Sabine and Brazos are alluvial rivers; alluvial rivers are dynamic systems that adjust their geometry in response to changes in streamflow (discharge) and sediment load. In fluvial geomorphology, the term 'channel adjustment' refers to river channel changes in three geometric dimensions: (1) channel slope (profile); (2) the outline or shape, such as meandering or braided, projected...
Authors
Franklin T. Heitmuller, Lauren E. Greene, John D. John D. Gordon

Sediment distribution on the Mississippi-Alabama shelf, northern Gulf of Mexico Sediment distribution on the Mississippi-Alabama shelf, northern Gulf of Mexico

The Mississippi-Alabama shelf is bounded to the west by landforms associated with the Mississippi River Delta, to the north by the barrier-island systems of the Mississippi Alabama shoreline, and to the east by the Desoto Canyon. This portion of the northern Gulf of Mexico has been described as a slowly subsiding, passive continental margin (Sydow and Roberts, 1994). Presently, sediment...
Authors
James G. Flocks, Jordan Sanford, Jackie L. Smith

Biocomplexity in mangrove ecosystems Biocomplexity in mangrove ecosystems

Mangroves are an ecological assemblage of trees and shrubs adapted to grow in intertidal environments along tropical coasts. Despite repeated demonstration of their economic and societal value, more than 50% of the world's mangroves have been destroyed, 35% in the past two decades to aquaculture and coastal development, altered hydrology, sea-level rise, and nutrient overenrichment...
Authors
Ilka C. Feller, Catherine E. Lovelock, U. Berger, Karen L. McKee, Samantha B. Joye, M.C. Ball

Integrated characterization of the Richelieu/Lake Champlain basin Integrated characterization of the Richelieu/Lake Champlain basin

No abstract available.
Authors
A. Rivera, C. Rivard, M. Parent, N. Benoit, R. Lefebvre, M.A. Carrier, E. Gloaguen, Richard J. Reynolds, Thomas J. Mack, J.H. Williams, Y. H. Baevsky

Increase in black mangrove abundance in coastal Louisiana Increase in black mangrove abundance in coastal Louisiana

Black mangrove (Avicennia germinans), a subtropical species, has historically occurred in saline marsh habitat along the Louisiana coast, but their distribution has always been sparse and they seldom achieved heights of greater than 1 m. The distribution of black mangrove in Louisiana has been largely limited by freezing temperatures. Weather records show a decrease in freeze frequency...
Authors
Thomas Claud Michot, Richard H. Day, Christopher J. Wells

Effects of current-use pesticides on amphibians Effects of current-use pesticides on amphibians

For many years, amphibians were understudied in the ecotoxicological literature. In 1989, the Canadian Wildlife Service published a comprehensive review of studies examining the effects of contaminants on amphibians (Power et al. 1989). Just 10 years later, the same organization published an updated review that included twice the number of studies (Pauli et al. 2000), indicating rapid...
Authors
C. Lehman, B K Williams

Effect of numerical dispersion as a source of structural noise in the calibration of a highly parameterized saltwater intrusion model Effect of numerical dispersion as a source of structural noise in the calibration of a highly parameterized saltwater intrusion model

A model with a small amount of numerical dispersion was used to represent saltwater 7 intrusion in a homogeneous aquifer for a 10-year historical calibration period with one 8 groundwater withdrawal location followed by a 10-year prediction period with two groundwater 9 withdrawal locations. Time-varying groundwater concentrations at arbitrary locations in this low-10 dispersion model...
Authors
Christian D. Langevin, Joseph D. Hughes

Measurement-derived heat-budget approaches for simulating coastal wetland temperature with a hydrodynamic model Measurement-derived heat-budget approaches for simulating coastal wetland temperature with a hydrodynamic model

Numerical modeling is needed to predict environmental temperatures, which affect a number of biota in southern Florida, U.S.A., such as the West Indian manatee (Trichechus manatus), which uses thermal basins for refuge from lethal winter cold fronts. To numerically simulate heat-transport through a dynamic coastal wetland region, an algorithm was developed for the FTLOADDS coupled...
Authors
Eric Swain, Jeremy Decker
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