Publications
Publications from USGS science centers throughout the Southeast Region.
Filter Total Items: 10367
Surface water-quality and water-quantity data from selected urban runoff-monitoring sites at the Rocky Mountain Arsenal, Commerce City, Colorado, water years 1988-2004 Surface water-quality and water-quantity data from selected urban runoff-monitoring sites at the Rocky Mountain Arsenal, Commerce City, Colorado, water years 1988-2004
The U.S. Geological Survey has monitored the quality and quantity of streamflow at the Rocky Mountain Arsenal (RMA) northeast of Denver, Colorado, since the early 1990s in cooperation with the U.S. Army. This report, prepared in cooperation with the U.S. Fish and Wildlife Service, documents existing surface-water-quality conditions on the RMA. All RMA water-quality data for the Irondale...
Authors
John D. Gordon, Donald E. Schild, Joseph P. Capesius, Cecil B. Slaughter
Thiamine status in adult salmonines in the Great Lakes Thiamine status in adult salmonines in the Great Lakes
In 1996 and again in 1999, hatchery personnel noted that some Lake Michigan coho salmon Oncorhynchus kisutch from fall spawning runs on the Platte River weir exhibited abnormal wiggling behavior that was similar to the behavior exhibited by thiamine-deficient Atlantic salmon Salmo salar, from the Baltic Sea. Samples of eggs or gonads, muscle, and liver from salmon and lake trout...
Authors
S.B. Brown, D. C. Honeyfield, J.G. Hnath, M. Wolgamood, S.V. Marcquenski, J.D. Fitzsimons, D. E. Tillitt
Use of sediment quality guidelines Use of sediment quality guidelines
Are sediment quality guidelines (SQGs) adequately able to predict the presence or absence of chronic toxicity to sediment-dwelling organisms in field-collected sediments? Can SQGs predict effects resulting from the bioaccumulation of sediment-associated contaminants? Do SQGs define cause-and-effect relationships? Can they predict effects on organisms exposed in the field on the basis of...
Authors
R. J. Wenning, G. E. Batley, Christopher G. Ingersoll, David W. Moore
Implications of thiamine deficiency in Great Lakes salmonines Implications of thiamine deficiency in Great Lakes salmonines
Our recent experimental work and ecoepizootiological assessments provide mechanistic data supporting a plausible hypothesis for an association between a prey base comprised of a large biomass of nonnative alewives Alosa pseudoharengus and the recruitment difficulties currently experienced by Great Lakes salmonines. We hypothesize that the thiamine deficiency induced by alewives, a...
Authors
Scott B. Brown, John D. Fitzsimons, Dale C. Honeyfield, Donald E. Tillitt
Metamorphosis of two amphibian species after chronic cadmium exposure in outdoor aquatic mesocosms Metamorphosis of two amphibian species after chronic cadmium exposure in outdoor aquatic mesocosms
Amphibian larvae at contaminated sites may experience an alteration of metamorphic traits and survival compared to amphibians in uncontaminated conditions. Effects of chronic cadmium (Cd) exposure on the metamorphosis of American toads (Bufo americanus) and southern leopard frogs (Rana sphenocephala) were determined. The two species were reared separately from shortly after hatching...
Authors
S.M. James, E. E. Little, R. D. Semlitsch
A method for measuring total thiaminase activity in fish tissues A method for measuring total thiaminase activity in fish tissues
An accurate, quantitative, and rapid method for the measurement of thiaminase activity in fish samples is required to provide sufficient information to characterize the role of dietary thiaminase in the onset of thiamine deficiency in Great Lakes salmonines. A radiometric method that uses 14C-thiamine was optimized for substrate and co-substrate (nicotinic acid) concentrations...
Authors
James L. Zajicek, Donald E. Tillitt, Dale C. Honeyfield, Scott B. Brown, John D. Fitzsimons
Amphibian ecotoxicology Amphibian ecotoxicology
No abstract available.
Authors
R. D. Semlitsch, C.M. Bridges
Inventory of gate-sensing equipment at 14 U.S. Army Corps of Engineers dams in Texas Inventory of gate-sensing equipment at 14 U.S. Army Corps of Engineers dams in Texas
The U.S. Army Corps of Engineers (USACE) is a worldwide organization that provides engineering services, environmental restoration, and construction support for a wide variety of civil and military projects. The primary civil mission of the USACE is developing and managing the Nation's water resources. USACE develops projects to reduce flood damage, improve navigation channels and...
Authors
Glenn R. Harwell
Red Hills salamander. Phaeognathus hubrichti Highton, 1961 Red Hills salamander. Phaeognathus hubrichti Highton, 1961
Abstract not supplied at this time
Authors
C.K. Dodd
Spartina alterniflora genotype influences facilitation and suppression of high marsh species colonizing an early successional salt marsh Spartina alterniflora genotype influences facilitation and suppression of high marsh species colonizing an early successional salt marsh
Genetically based phenotypic and ecotypic variation in a dominant plant species can influence ecological functions and patterns of recruitment by other species in plant communities. However, the nature and degree of importance of genotypic differences is poorly understood in most systems.The dominant salt marsh species, Spartina alterniflora, is known to induce facilitative and...
Authors
C.E. Proffitt, R.L. Chiasson, A.B. Owens, K.R. Edwards, S.E. Travis
Effects of flooding regime and seedling treatment on early survival and growth of nuttall oak Effects of flooding regime and seedling treatment on early survival and growth of nuttall oak
Effects of flooding on survival and growth of three different types of Nuttall oak (Quercus texana Buckl.) seedlings were observed at the end of third and fifth growing seasons at Yazoo National Wildlife Refuge, Mississippi, U.S.A. Three types of seedlings were planted in January 1995 in a split‐plot design, with four replications at each of two elevations on floodprone, former cropland...
Authors
V.R. Burkett, R.O. Draugelis-Dale, H.M. Williams, S.H. Schoenholtz