Publications
Publications from USGS science centers throughout the Southeast Region.
Filter Total Items: 10351
Assessment of coastal-vegetation habitats using airborne laser remote sensing Assessment of coastal-vegetation habitats using airborne laser remote sensing
No abstract available.
Authors
Amar Nayegandhi, John Brock
An ecological risk assessment of the exposure and effects of 2,4-D acid to rainbow trout (Oncorhyncus mykiss) An ecological risk assessment of the exposure and effects of 2,4-D acid to rainbow trout (Oncorhyncus mykiss)
Numerous state and federal agencies are increasingly concerned with the rapid expansion of invasive, noxious weeds across the United States. Herbicides are frequently applied as weed control measures in forest and rangeland ecosystems that frequently overlap with critical habitats of threatened and endangered fish species. However, there is little published chronic toxicity data for...
Authors
James Fairchild, Kevin P. Feltz, Ann Allert, L.C. Sappington, K.J. Nelson, J.A. Valle
Influence of thiamine deficiency on Lake Trout larval growth, foraging, and predator avoidance Influence of thiamine deficiency on Lake Trout larval growth, foraging, and predator avoidance
Diet‐related thiamine deficiency increases the acute mortality, known as early mortality syndrome, of salmonines from some of the Great Lakes. The consequences of thiamine deficiency as measured at the egg stage for other important early life stage processes like growth, foraging efficiency, and predator avoidance that may also result in mortality, are unknown. Accordingly, we...
Authors
J.D. Fitzsimons, Scott B. Brown, B. Williston, G. Williston, Lisa R. Brown, K. Moore, Dale C. Honeyfield, Donald E. Tillitt
Geographic extent and chronology of the invasion of non-native lionfish (Pterois volitans [Linnaeus 1758] and P. miles [Bennett 1828]) in the Western North Atlantic and Caribbean Sea Geographic extent and chronology of the invasion of non-native lionfish (Pterois volitans [Linnaeus 1758] and P. miles [Bennett 1828]) in the Western North Atlantic and Caribbean Sea
The Indo-Pacific lionfishes (Pterois volitans [Linnaeus 1758] and P. miles [Bennett 1828]: Family Scorpaenidae) are the first non-native marine fishes to establish in the Western North Atlantic. The chronology of the invasion is reported here using records from the US Geological Survey's Nonindigenous Aquatic Species database. Currently, lionfish are established off the Atlantic coast of...
Authors
Pamela J. Schofield
Field guide to the nonindigenous marine fishes of Florida Field guide to the nonindigenous marine fishes of Florida
No abstract available.
Authors
Pamela J. Schofield, James A. Morris, Lad Akins
Hurricane Katrina sediment slowed elevation loss in subsiding brackish marshes of the Mississippi River delta Hurricane Katrina sediment slowed elevation loss in subsiding brackish marshes of the Mississippi River delta
Although hurricanes can damage or destroy coastal wetlands, they may play a beneficial role in reinvigorating marshes by delivering sediments that raise soil elevations and stimulate organic matter production. Hurricane Katrina altered elevation dynamics of two subsiding brackish marshes in the Mississippi River deltaic plain by adding 3 to 8 cm of sediment to the soil surface in August...
Authors
K.L. McKee, J. A. Cherry
Culture-independent characterization of bacterial communities associated with the cold-water coral Lophelia pertusa in the northeastern Gulf of Mexico Culture-independent characterization of bacterial communities associated with the cold-water coral Lophelia pertusa in the northeastern Gulf of Mexico
Bacteria are recognized as an important part of the total biology of shallow-water corals. Studies of shallow-water corals suggest that associated bacteria may benefit the corals by cycling carbon, fixing nitrogen, chelating iron, and producing antibiotics that protect the coral from other microbes. Cold-water or deep-sea corals have a fundamentally different ecology due to their...
Authors
Christina A. Kellogg, John T. Lisle, Julia P. Galkiewicz
Selected achievements, science directions, and new opportunities for the WEBB small watershed research program Selected achievements, science directions, and new opportunities for the WEBB small watershed research program
Over nearly two decades, the Water, Energy, and Biogeochemical Budgets (WEBB) small watershed research program of the U.S. Geological Survey (USGS) has documented how water and solute fluxes, nutrient, carbon, and mercury dynamics, and weathering and sediment transport respond to natural and humancaused drivers, including climate, climate change, and atmospheric deposition. Together with...
Authors
Pierre D. Glynn, Matthew C. Larsen, Earl A. Greene, Heather L. Buss, David W. Clow, Randall J. Hunt, M. Alisa Mast, Sheila F. Murphy, Norman E. Peters, Stephen D. Sebestyen, James B. Shanley, John F. Walker
Regionally coherent Little Ice Age cooling in the Atlantic Warm Pool Regionally coherent Little Ice Age cooling in the Atlantic Warm Pool
[1] We present 2 new decadal-resolution foraminiferal Mg/Ca-SST records covering the past 6–8 centuries from the northern Gulf of Mexico (GOM). These records provide evidence for a Little Ice Age (LIA) cooling of 2°C, consistent with a published Mg/Ca record from Pigmy Basin. Comparison of these 3 records with existing SST proxy records from the GOM-Caribbean region show that the...
Authors
J.N. Richey, R.Z. Poore, B.P. Flower, T. M. Quinn, D.J. Hollander
Trend estimation in populations with imperfect detection Trend estimation in populations with imperfect detection
1. Trends of animal populations are of great interest in ecology but cannot be directly observed owing to imperfect detection. Binomial mixture models use replicated counts to estimate abundance, corrected for detection, in demographically closed populations. Here, we extend these models to open populations and illustrate them using sand lizard Lacerta agilis counts from the national...
Authors
Marc Kery, Robert M. Dorazio, Leo Soldaat, Arco Van Strien, Annie Zuiderwijk, J. Andrew Royle
The golden rule of reviewing The golden rule of reviewing
A major bottleneck in the time required to publish a scientific or scholarly paper is the speed with which reviews by peers are returned to journals. Peer review is a reciprocal altruistic system in which each individual may perform every task—editors, reviewers, and authors—at different times. Journals have no way to coerce reviewers to return their critiques faster. To greatly shorten...
Authors
Mark A. McPeek, Donald L. DeAngelis, Ruth G. Shaw, Allen J. Moore, Mark D. Rausher, Donald R. Strong, Aaron M. Ellison, Louise Barrett, Loren Rieseberg, Michael D. Breed, Jack Sullivan, Craig W. Osenberg, Marcel Holyoak, Mark A. Elgar
Consumer-resource theory predicts dynamic transitions between outcomes of interspecific interactions Consumer-resource theory predicts dynamic transitions between outcomes of interspecific interactions
Interactions between two populations are often defined by their interaction outcomes; that is, the positive, neutral, or negative effects of species on one another. Yet, signs of outcomes are not absolute, but vary with the biotic and abiotic contexts of interactions. Here, we develop a general theory for transitions between outcomes based on consumer-resource (C-R) interactions in which...
Authors
J. Nathaniel Holland, Donald L. DeAngelis