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The USGS has been a leading contributor to the interagency response to white-nose syndrome since 2008, when millions of bats died from this devastating disease.
The health of animals, humans, and the environment are closely connected. The effects of diseases, pathogens, contaminants, and toxins are global and profound, often resulting in economic and agricultural impacts, declines in wildlife populations, and ecological disturbance. The USGS works to advance wildlife health science for the benefit of animals, humans, and the environment.
The cyanobacteria Gleotrichia shown under a microscope from a water sample collected at Ek Lake Trail, a popular recreational area in Kabetogama Lake where algal blooms frequently occur. Gleotrichia can produce microcystin.
Viruses, bacteria, fungi, and parasites are a normal part of any ecosystem. But viruses, along with some bacteria, fungi, and parasites, can also be pathogens, meaning they cause disease in humans, plants, and wildlife. The fungus Pseudogymnoascus destructans causes the deadly white-nose syndrome in hibernating bats. A tiny protein particle known as a prion causes the fatal brain disease Chronic Wasting Disease in deer. The H5N1 virus causes avian influenza in birds. These diseases can devastate wildlife populations and have serious conservation and management consequences. The health of people is also connected to the health of wildlife and our shared environment. Some diseases, known as zoonotic diseases, can jump from animals to humans. According to the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention, 60% of known infectious diseases in people can be spread from animals, and three out of every four new or emerging infectious diseases in people come from animals. Other diseases can jump from wild animals to domestic animals.
USGS is a leader in wildlife disease research and surveillance. The USGS monitors the presence of pathogens and diseases in animals and the environment, develops tools for their detection, identifies whether environmental factors influence their spread, and studies the health risks that they pose. Our scientists are at the table with public and animal health agencies as they tackle diseases that affect mammals, fish, reptiles, and more, developing advanced tools for diagnosis, surveillance, risk assessment, and control.
Contaminants and Toxins
Contaminants and toxins represent another potential threat to the health of humans and wildlife, and in their shared environment. People use chemical-based products every day, and these chemicals enter the environment from treated wastewater, industrial processes, runoff from urban and agricultural land surfaces, and more. Pesticides, pharmaceuticals, and per-and polyfluoroalkyl substances (PFAS) are just a few examples of the many contaminants that make their way into our Nation’s waterways each day. Contaminants may be found at high levels and cause immediate effects or occur lower levels and only cause problems after long-term exposure, and sometimes the chemicals are at low enough levels that they do not by themselves create a health risk.
The environment also contains natural toxins. For example, algal blooms often contain cyanobacteria and other microorganisms which can produce natural toxins that harm people, pets, and wildlife when they occur at high enough levels in water resources used for recreation and drinking water. Harmful algal blooms (HABs) occur when environmental conditions are favorable, such as when water temperatures are unusually warm, but human activities can also contribute to their occurrence, for example when fertilizers used on lawns and crops run off into waterways.
Supporting the Health of Our Wildlife, Lands, and Waters
The USGS is a leader in developing research solutions to address the deadliest wildlife diseases, detect pathogens in the environment, and monitor for the presence of dangerous chemicals and toxins.
USGS science focuses on quickly detecting, characterizing, and responding to potential hazards and biological threats, including infectious diseases like chronic wasting disease and avian influenza and other pathogens like waterborne bacteria.
The USGS is leading efforts to predict and forecast the risk of biological threats like infectious diseases and to ensure that these risks are detected early. This information helps federal, and state natural resource managers and public health professionals prepare for and respond to these threats. The USGS is developing a nationwide biosurveillance network to address ongoing and emerging needs through projects that improve threat detection, interagency communication, and early detection and rapid response decision making. Explore these activities below.
Environmental DNA (eDNA), or DNA that is released from an organism into the environment, can allow for rapid, cost-effective data collection on the distribution and abundance of a species. It can also be used to understand the distribution and prevalence of pathogens on land or in water.
USGS scientists are using eDNA to sample water inhabited by amphibians for the presence of Batrachochytrium dendrobatidis, a chytrid fungus that causes disease in amphibians and has been attributed to population declines of at least 200 species worldwide.
USGS scientists tested a new approach for sampling eDNA of organisms in water that are not very abundant – something akin to finding a needle in a haystack. A robot was installed at a streamgage in Idaho, and proved to be an effective and efficient method of collecting eDNA that could help efforts to identify invasive species and pathogens.
Following multiple unprecedented die-offs of mountain whitefish and trout in the Yellowstone River in 2016 and 2017, USGS scientists developed a new early detection eDNA method for the parasite Tetracapsuloides bryosalmonae, which causes proliferative kidney disease in fish.
Investigating Exposure to Lethal Threats
Sometimes, the effects of biological threats are immediate and abrupt, such as the sudden and sharp decline of a population, an event known as a “die-off”. In other cases, impacts are felt over time, such as when small amounts of a contaminant build up in the tissues of organisms and can cause long-term effects on plant, animal, and even human health. USGS scientists work in collaboration with partner agencies to investigate the exposure of plants and animals to lethal diseases, pathogens, contaminants, and the impacts of these threats on species.
In the summer of 2019, dozens of Arctic terns were found dead at a nesting colony near Juneau, Alaska. Three years later, USGS scientists identified the culprit – a potent neurotoxin produced by harmful algae.
USGS scientists investigated the role of the deadly amphibian disease severe Perkinsea infections (SPI) in large-scale frog die-offs from 1999-2015. They found that the disease cause 21 frog mass mortalities in 10 states, killing up to 95% of tadpoles in affected populations.
In national parks across the country, citizen scientists and researchers are working together to monitor mercury in dragonflies. Dragonfly larvae provide an indicator of the levels of mercury pollution within the broader ecosystem.
The U.S. Fish and Wildlife Service National Elk Refuge (NER) in Jackson, Wyoming, supplementally feeds Cervus elaphus canadensis (elk) and Bison bison (American bison) during winter months, but the costs and benefits of this management strategy are being reevaluated considering the potential effects of chronic wasting disease (CWD) on elk. U.S. Geological Survey scientists worked with...
A decade after a marine epidemic killed off sea stars and triggered ecosystem-wide effects along the Pacific Coast of North America, researchers have identified the bacterial pathogen that is responsible for sea star wasting disease.
Rapid warming could drastically alter host–parasite relationships, which is especially important for fisheries crucial to human nutrition and economic livelihoods, yet we lack a synthetic understanding of how warming influences parasite-induced mortality in these systems. We conducted a meta-analysis using 266 effect sizes from 52 empirical papers on harvested aquatic species and...
Authors
M. M. Tomamichel, K. I. Lowe, K. M.H. Arnold, M. E. Frischer, Brian J. Irwin, C. W. Osenberg, R. J. Hall, J. E. Byers
Executive Summary Algal blooms in water, soils, dusts, and the environment have captured national attention because of concerns associated with exposure to algal toxins for humans and animals. Algal blooms naturally occur in all surface-water types and are important primary producers for aquatic ecosystems. However, excessive algae growth can be associated with many harmful effects...
Authors
Victoria G. Christensen, Christopher J. Crawford, Robert J. Dusek, Michael J. Focazio, Lisa Reynolds Fogarty, Jennifer L. Graham, Celeste A. Journey, Mari E. Lee, James H. Larson, Sarah M. Stackpoole, Viviana Mazzei, Emily Pindilli, Barnett A. Rattner, E. Terrence Slonecker, Kristen B. McSwain, Timothy J. Reilly, Ashley E. Lopez
Executive Summary The authors used decision and modeling analyses to evaluate management alternatives for a decision on whether to permit Cervus canadensis (elk) feeding on two sites on Bridger-Teton National Forest, Dell Creek and Forest Park. Supplemental feeding of elk could increase the transmission of chronic wasting disease (CWD) locally and disease spread regionally, potentially...
Authors
Jonathan D. Cook, Paul C. Cross, Emily M. Tomaszewski, Eric K. Cole, Evan H. Campbell Grant, James M. Wilder, Michael C. Runge
The Research Triangle area, located within the upper Cape Fear and Neuse River basins, is one of the most rapidly developing areas in the Nation. Growth has increased demand for water from public suppliers, the majority of which draw water from streams and lakes in the region. Growth also brings the threat of greater loads of contaminants and new contaminant sources that, if not properly managed...
The Research Triangle area, located within the upper Cape Fear and Neuse River basins, is one of the most rapidly developing areas in the Nation. Growth has increased demand for water from public suppliers, the majority of which draw water from streams and lakes in the region. Growth also brings the threat of greater loads of contaminants and new contaminant sources that, if not properly managed...
This research effort is an interagency partnership between U.S. Geological Survey and U.S. Fish and Wildlife Service to model the social-ecological system that encompasses chronic wasting disease management in the United States. Chronic wasting disease (CWD) is a fatal, neurologically degenerative disease that impacts many cervid species in North America (e.g., elk, moose, mule deer, and white...
Mapping Chronic Wasting Disease Management: Identify Opportunities for Intervention
This research effort is an interagency partnership between U.S. Geological Survey and U.S. Fish and Wildlife Service to model the social-ecological system that encompasses chronic wasting disease management in the United States. Chronic wasting disease (CWD) is a fatal, neurologically degenerative disease that impacts many cervid species in North America (e.g., elk, moose, mule deer, and white...
Elevated ocean temperatures are linked to the development of harmful algal blooms (HABs). Toxins from these blooms may pose health threats to marine organisms, including seabirds. Since 2015, the USGS has worked with a variety of stakeholders to develop testing methods and research projects to better understand the geographic extent, timing and impacts of algal toxins in Alaska marine ecosystems...
Elevated ocean temperatures are linked to the development of harmful algal blooms (HABs). Toxins from these blooms may pose health threats to marine organisms, including seabirds. Since 2015, the USGS has worked with a variety of stakeholders to develop testing methods and research projects to better understand the geographic extent, timing and impacts of algal toxins in Alaska marine ecosystems...
Since 2006, the USGS Alaska Science Center has been part of the State and Federal interagency team for the detection and response to highly pathogenic (HPAI) viruses in North America. Avian influenza or "bird flu" is a viral disease that primarily infects domestic poultry and wild birds. Avian influenza viruses are naturally occurring in wild birds such as ducks, geese, swans, and gulls. These...
Since 2006, the USGS Alaska Science Center has been part of the State and Federal interagency team for the detection and response to highly pathogenic (HPAI) viruses in North America. Avian influenza or "bird flu" is a viral disease that primarily infects domestic poultry and wild birds. Avian influenza viruses are naturally occurring in wild birds such as ducks, geese, swans, and gulls. These...
USGS Laboratory for the Analysis of Per- and Polyfluoroalkyl Substances (PFAS)
The U.S. Geological Survey laboratory for the analysis of per- and polyfluoroalkyl substances (PFAS) uses cutting-edge techniques to analyze environmental samples including tissues, plasma, water, and soils to undertake and support research projects across the country.
The U.S. Geological Survey laboratory for the analysis of per- and polyfluoroalkyl substances (PFAS) uses cutting-edge techniques to analyze environmental samples including tissues, plasma, water, and soils to undertake and support research projects across the country.
USGS volunteer Liliana uses a syringe to draw an eDNA sample from a rock pool along the Puka Stream. The eDNA sampled by USGS field crews informs research on invasive mosquito population dynamics.
USGS volunteer Liliana uses a syringe to draw an eDNA sample from a rock pool along the Puka Stream. The eDNA sampled by USGS field crews informs research on invasive mosquito population dynamics.
Scientist wades in wetland while filtering for infectious avian influenza in Minnesota
Field assistant Kathryn Johncock wades in a wetland while filtering for infectious avian influenza virus at the Roseau River Wildlife Management Area, Roseau, Minnesota.
Field assistant Kathryn Johncock wades in a wetland while filtering for infectious avian influenza virus at the Roseau River Wildlife Management Area, Roseau, Minnesota.
Environmental health is defined by connections between the physical environment, ecological health, and human health. Current research within the U.S. Geological Survey (USGS) recognizes the importance of this integrated research philosophy, which includes study of disease and pollutants as they pertain to wildlife and humans. Due to its key geographic location and significant wildlife...
Authors
Caroline R. Van Hemert, John M. Pearce, Karen Oakley, Mary E. Whalen
USGS scientists have advanced methods to measure bacterial activity in environmental waters. Their research showed that when bacteria naturally in the water are exposed to substances like pharmaceuticals, herbicides, and antimicrobials, their normal functions are disrupted. This finding suggests that monitoring bacterial activity could provide early warnings about potential problems with water...
Revolutionizing Water Quality Assessment: Chemical Pollutants Alter Bacterial Metabolism
USGS scientists have advanced methods to measure bacterial activity in environmental waters. Their research showed that when bacteria naturally in the water are exposed to substances like pharmaceuticals, herbicides, and antimicrobials, their normal functions are disrupted. This finding suggests that monitoring bacterial activity could provide early warnings about potential problems with water...
The Energy Resources Life Cycle Integrated Science Team focuses on the potential for environmental contaminant exposures that might originate from energy resource activities including extraction, production, transportation, storage, waste management, and restoration. Perceived health risks to humans and other organisms will be distinguished from actual risks, if any. If actual risks are identified...
Energy Resources Life Cycle Integrated Science Team
The Energy Resources Life Cycle Integrated Science Team focuses on the potential for environmental contaminant exposures that might originate from energy resource activities including extraction, production, transportation, storage, waste management, and restoration. Perceived health risks to humans and other organisms will be distinguished from actual risks, if any. If actual risks are identified...
The USGS National Wildlife Health Center (NWHC) conducts surveillance in wild birds to facilitate early detection and situational awareness for high consequence pathogens, including highly pathogenic avian influenza (HPAI) viruses.
The USGS National Wildlife Health Center (NWHC) conducts surveillance in wild birds to facilitate early detection and situational awareness for high consequence pathogens, including highly pathogenic avian influenza (HPAI) viruses.
Wastewater treatment plant discharges can be a source of organic contaminants, including pesticides, to rivers. Pesticide concentrations were predicted based on wastewater percentages in stream water using a modeling tool, and verified with measured concentrations to identify other potential landscape sources.
New study highlights the role of wastewater and landscape sources contributing to pesticide contamination in the Potomac River watershed
Wastewater treatment plant discharges can be a source of organic contaminants, including pesticides, to rivers. Pesticide concentrations were predicted based on wastewater percentages in stream water using a modeling tool, and verified with measured concentrations to identify other potential landscape sources.
The USGS has cooperated with federal, state, and tribal partners to conduct research on Avian Influenza (AI) viruses and to assist with response to outbreaks of highly pathogenic AI (HPAI) since 2006. Read ahead for information about HPAI, the occurrence of HPAI among wildlife, USGS-led research and surveillance efforts, and potentially helpful online resources.
Q&A: Bird Flu - Ongoing Threat of Highly Pathogenic Avian Influenza (HPAI) in Alaska and North America
The USGS has cooperated with federal, state, and tribal partners to conduct research on Avian Influenza (AI) viruses and to assist with response to outbreaks of highly pathogenic AI (HPAI) since 2006. Read ahead for information about HPAI, the occurrence of HPAI among wildlife, USGS-led research and surveillance efforts, and potentially helpful online resources.
The team studies toxicants and pathogens in water resources from their sources, through watersheds, aquifers, and infrastructure to human and wildlife exposures. That information is used to develop decision tools that protect human and wildlife health.
Drinking Water and Wastewater Infrastructure Science Team
The team studies toxicants and pathogens in water resources from their sources, through watersheds, aquifers, and infrastructure to human and wildlife exposures. That information is used to develop decision tools that protect human and wildlife health.
Research has documented exposures and consequential environmental health effects of pesticides, PFAS, microplastics, and antibiotic resistance genes in environmental biota. Little is known, however, regarding such effects in white-tailed deer ( Odocoileus virginianus).
A National Assessment of Pesticide, PFAS, Microplastic, and Antibiotic Resistance Gene Exposures in White-Tailed Deer
Research has documented exposures and consequential environmental health effects of pesticides, PFAS, microplastics, and antibiotic resistance genes in environmental biota. Little is known, however, regarding such effects in white-tailed deer ( Odocoileus virginianus).
The effect of selenium toxicity on wildlife has been known for more than 50 years. This issue drew particular attention in the 1980s when embryo deformity and mortality was observed in birds at a wildlife refuge in California. Harmful effects from selenium were determined to be connected to irrigation drainage water. As a result, an effort began to monitor levels of selenium in irrigation drainage...
The effect of selenium toxicity on wildlife has been known for more than 50 years. This issue drew particular attention in the 1980s when embryo deformity and mortality was observed in birds at a wildlife refuge in California. Harmful effects from selenium were determined to be connected to irrigation drainage water. As a result, an effort began to monitor levels of selenium in irrigation drainage...
The first 2021/2022 detection of Eurasian strain (EA) highly pathogenic avian influenza (HPAI) H5N1 in North America occurred in December 2021 in Newfoundland and Labrador, Canada. Subsequently, HPAI EA H5 and EA H5N1 viruses have been confirmed in wild birds, backyard flocks, commercial poultry facilities, and wild mammals in both Canada and the United States. This HPAI distribution map will be...
Distribution of Highly Pathogenic Avian Influenza in North America, 2021/2022
The first 2021/2022 detection of Eurasian strain (EA) highly pathogenic avian influenza (HPAI) H5N1 in North America occurred in December 2021 in Newfoundland and Labrador, Canada. Subsequently, HPAI EA H5 and EA H5N1 viruses have been confirmed in wild birds, backyard flocks, commercial poultry facilities, and wild mammals in both Canada and the United States. This HPAI distribution map will be...
Below are the USGS 2020 Coronavirus Aid, Relief and Economic Security Act (CARES Act) research projects related to COVID-19 pathways and wildlife dynamics. Select tabs above for related items.
Below are the USGS 2020 Coronavirus Aid, Relief and Economic Security Act (CARES Act) research projects related to COVID-19 pathways and wildlife dynamics. Select tabs above for related items.
Increasing scientific and public awareness of the widespread distribution of per- and poly-fluoroalkyl substances (PFAS) in U.S. drinking-water supplies, aquatic and terrestrial ecosystems, wildlife, and humans has raised many public health and resource management questions that U.S. Geological Survey's (USGS) science can inform. The USGS Environmental Health Program's PFAS Integrated Science Team...
Per-and Polyfluoroalkyl Substances (PFAS) Integrated Science Team
Increasing scientific and public awareness of the widespread distribution of per- and poly-fluoroalkyl substances (PFAS) in U.S. drinking-water supplies, aquatic and terrestrial ecosystems, wildlife, and humans has raised many public health and resource management questions that U.S. Geological Survey's (USGS) science can inform. The USGS Environmental Health Program's PFAS Integrated Science Team...
Golden eagles can be killed by colliding with a number of human-made objects, including wind turbines. USGS research wildlife biologist Todd Katzner describes his studies of golden eagle flight. This research is being done to model flight behavior which might help managers understand how placement of wind turbines might pose significant risks to golden eagles.
Golden eagles can be killed by colliding with a number of human-made objects, including wind turbines. USGS research wildlife biologist Todd Katzner describes his studies of golden eagle flight. This research is being done to model flight behavior which might help managers understand how placement of wind turbines might pose significant risks to golden eagles.
First Study to Track a Wild Bird Known to Have Highly Pathogenic Avian Influenza
LAUREL, Md. — For the first time, scientists have tracked the movement of a wild bird known to be infected with highly pathogenic avian influenza in...
A Climate Change Canary in the Coal Mine - The Endangered Hawaiian Honeycreepers
Native Hawaiians have a deep kinship with Hawaiian forest birds and revere, honor, and deify them as family, ancestors, guardians, spirits, and gods...
Avian influenza research sheds light on possible routes of introduction to North America
Understanding how wild birds facilitate the maintenance, reassortment, and dispersal of influenza A viruses (IAV) is key to forecasting global disease...
The Hidden Cost of Disease for Bighorn Sheep—Smaller Horns
Male bighorn sheep have spectacular horns, making them popular among hikers, photographers and hunters. However, disease threatens the magnificence of...
The FAQs below are a sample of USGS science on disease and contaminants and do not represent a complete list.
The health of animals, humans, and the environment are closely connected. The effects of diseases, pathogens, contaminants, and toxins are global and profound, often resulting in economic and agricultural impacts, declines in wildlife populations, and ecological disturbance. The USGS works to advance wildlife health science for the benefit of animals, humans, and the environment.
The cyanobacteria Gleotrichia shown under a microscope from a water sample collected at Ek Lake Trail, a popular recreational area in Kabetogama Lake where algal blooms frequently occur. Gleotrichia can produce microcystin.
Viruses, bacteria, fungi, and parasites are a normal part of any ecosystem. But viruses, along with some bacteria, fungi, and parasites, can also be pathogens, meaning they cause disease in humans, plants, and wildlife. The fungus Pseudogymnoascus destructans causes the deadly white-nose syndrome in hibernating bats. A tiny protein particle known as a prion causes the fatal brain disease Chronic Wasting Disease in deer. The H5N1 virus causes avian influenza in birds. These diseases can devastate wildlife populations and have serious conservation and management consequences. The health of people is also connected to the health of wildlife and our shared environment. Some diseases, known as zoonotic diseases, can jump from animals to humans. According to the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention, 60% of known infectious diseases in people can be spread from animals, and three out of every four new or emerging infectious diseases in people come from animals. Other diseases can jump from wild animals to domestic animals.
USGS is a leader in wildlife disease research and surveillance. The USGS monitors the presence of pathogens and diseases in animals and the environment, develops tools for their detection, identifies whether environmental factors influence their spread, and studies the health risks that they pose. Our scientists are at the table with public and animal health agencies as they tackle diseases that affect mammals, fish, reptiles, and more, developing advanced tools for diagnosis, surveillance, risk assessment, and control.
Contaminants and Toxins
Contaminants and toxins represent another potential threat to the health of humans and wildlife, and in their shared environment. People use chemical-based products every day, and these chemicals enter the environment from treated wastewater, industrial processes, runoff from urban and agricultural land surfaces, and more. Pesticides, pharmaceuticals, and per-and polyfluoroalkyl substances (PFAS) are just a few examples of the many contaminants that make their way into our Nation’s waterways each day. Contaminants may be found at high levels and cause immediate effects or occur lower levels and only cause problems after long-term exposure, and sometimes the chemicals are at low enough levels that they do not by themselves create a health risk.
The environment also contains natural toxins. For example, algal blooms often contain cyanobacteria and other microorganisms which can produce natural toxins that harm people, pets, and wildlife when they occur at high enough levels in water resources used for recreation and drinking water. Harmful algal blooms (HABs) occur when environmental conditions are favorable, such as when water temperatures are unusually warm, but human activities can also contribute to their occurrence, for example when fertilizers used on lawns and crops run off into waterways.
Supporting the Health of Our Wildlife, Lands, and Waters
The USGS is a leader in developing research solutions to address the deadliest wildlife diseases, detect pathogens in the environment, and monitor for the presence of dangerous chemicals and toxins.
USGS science focuses on quickly detecting, characterizing, and responding to potential hazards and biological threats, including infectious diseases like chronic wasting disease and avian influenza and other pathogens like waterborne bacteria.
The USGS is leading efforts to predict and forecast the risk of biological threats like infectious diseases and to ensure that these risks are detected early. This information helps federal, and state natural resource managers and public health professionals prepare for and respond to these threats. The USGS is developing a nationwide biosurveillance network to address ongoing and emerging needs through projects that improve threat detection, interagency communication, and early detection and rapid response decision making. Explore these activities below.
Environmental DNA (eDNA), or DNA that is released from an organism into the environment, can allow for rapid, cost-effective data collection on the distribution and abundance of a species. It can also be used to understand the distribution and prevalence of pathogens on land or in water.
USGS scientists are using eDNA to sample water inhabited by amphibians for the presence of Batrachochytrium dendrobatidis, a chytrid fungus that causes disease in amphibians and has been attributed to population declines of at least 200 species worldwide.
USGS scientists tested a new approach for sampling eDNA of organisms in water that are not very abundant – something akin to finding a needle in a haystack. A robot was installed at a streamgage in Idaho, and proved to be an effective and efficient method of collecting eDNA that could help efforts to identify invasive species and pathogens.
Following multiple unprecedented die-offs of mountain whitefish and trout in the Yellowstone River in 2016 and 2017, USGS scientists developed a new early detection eDNA method for the parasite Tetracapsuloides bryosalmonae, which causes proliferative kidney disease in fish.
Investigating Exposure to Lethal Threats
Sometimes, the effects of biological threats are immediate and abrupt, such as the sudden and sharp decline of a population, an event known as a “die-off”. In other cases, impacts are felt over time, such as when small amounts of a contaminant build up in the tissues of organisms and can cause long-term effects on plant, animal, and even human health. USGS scientists work in collaboration with partner agencies to investigate the exposure of plants and animals to lethal diseases, pathogens, contaminants, and the impacts of these threats on species.
In the summer of 2019, dozens of Arctic terns were found dead at a nesting colony near Juneau, Alaska. Three years later, USGS scientists identified the culprit – a potent neurotoxin produced by harmful algae.
USGS scientists investigated the role of the deadly amphibian disease severe Perkinsea infections (SPI) in large-scale frog die-offs from 1999-2015. They found that the disease cause 21 frog mass mortalities in 10 states, killing up to 95% of tadpoles in affected populations.
In national parks across the country, citizen scientists and researchers are working together to monitor mercury in dragonflies. Dragonfly larvae provide an indicator of the levels of mercury pollution within the broader ecosystem.
The U.S. Fish and Wildlife Service National Elk Refuge (NER) in Jackson, Wyoming, supplementally feeds Cervus elaphus canadensis (elk) and Bison bison (American bison) during winter months, but the costs and benefits of this management strategy are being reevaluated considering the potential effects of chronic wasting disease (CWD) on elk. U.S. Geological Survey scientists worked with...
A decade after a marine epidemic killed off sea stars and triggered ecosystem-wide effects along the Pacific Coast of North America, researchers have identified the bacterial pathogen that is responsible for sea star wasting disease.
Rapid warming could drastically alter host–parasite relationships, which is especially important for fisheries crucial to human nutrition and economic livelihoods, yet we lack a synthetic understanding of how warming influences parasite-induced mortality in these systems. We conducted a meta-analysis using 266 effect sizes from 52 empirical papers on harvested aquatic species and...
Authors
M. M. Tomamichel, K. I. Lowe, K. M.H. Arnold, M. E. Frischer, Brian J. Irwin, C. W. Osenberg, R. J. Hall, J. E. Byers
Executive Summary Algal blooms in water, soils, dusts, and the environment have captured national attention because of concerns associated with exposure to algal toxins for humans and animals. Algal blooms naturally occur in all surface-water types and are important primary producers for aquatic ecosystems. However, excessive algae growth can be associated with many harmful effects...
Authors
Victoria G. Christensen, Christopher J. Crawford, Robert J. Dusek, Michael J. Focazio, Lisa Reynolds Fogarty, Jennifer L. Graham, Celeste A. Journey, Mari E. Lee, James H. Larson, Sarah M. Stackpoole, Viviana Mazzei, Emily Pindilli, Barnett A. Rattner, E. Terrence Slonecker, Kristen B. McSwain, Timothy J. Reilly, Ashley E. Lopez
Executive Summary The authors used decision and modeling analyses to evaluate management alternatives for a decision on whether to permit Cervus canadensis (elk) feeding on two sites on Bridger-Teton National Forest, Dell Creek and Forest Park. Supplemental feeding of elk could increase the transmission of chronic wasting disease (CWD) locally and disease spread regionally, potentially...
Authors
Jonathan D. Cook, Paul C. Cross, Emily M. Tomaszewski, Eric K. Cole, Evan H. Campbell Grant, James M. Wilder, Michael C. Runge
The Research Triangle area, located within the upper Cape Fear and Neuse River basins, is one of the most rapidly developing areas in the Nation. Growth has increased demand for water from public suppliers, the majority of which draw water from streams and lakes in the region. Growth also brings the threat of greater loads of contaminants and new contaminant sources that, if not properly managed...
The Research Triangle area, located within the upper Cape Fear and Neuse River basins, is one of the most rapidly developing areas in the Nation. Growth has increased demand for water from public suppliers, the majority of which draw water from streams and lakes in the region. Growth also brings the threat of greater loads of contaminants and new contaminant sources that, if not properly managed...
This research effort is an interagency partnership between U.S. Geological Survey and U.S. Fish and Wildlife Service to model the social-ecological system that encompasses chronic wasting disease management in the United States. Chronic wasting disease (CWD) is a fatal, neurologically degenerative disease that impacts many cervid species in North America (e.g., elk, moose, mule deer, and white...
Mapping Chronic Wasting Disease Management: Identify Opportunities for Intervention
This research effort is an interagency partnership between U.S. Geological Survey and U.S. Fish and Wildlife Service to model the social-ecological system that encompasses chronic wasting disease management in the United States. Chronic wasting disease (CWD) is a fatal, neurologically degenerative disease that impacts many cervid species in North America (e.g., elk, moose, mule deer, and white...
Elevated ocean temperatures are linked to the development of harmful algal blooms (HABs). Toxins from these blooms may pose health threats to marine organisms, including seabirds. Since 2015, the USGS has worked with a variety of stakeholders to develop testing methods and research projects to better understand the geographic extent, timing and impacts of algal toxins in Alaska marine ecosystems...
Elevated ocean temperatures are linked to the development of harmful algal blooms (HABs). Toxins from these blooms may pose health threats to marine organisms, including seabirds. Since 2015, the USGS has worked with a variety of stakeholders to develop testing methods and research projects to better understand the geographic extent, timing and impacts of algal toxins in Alaska marine ecosystems...
Since 2006, the USGS Alaska Science Center has been part of the State and Federal interagency team for the detection and response to highly pathogenic (HPAI) viruses in North America. Avian influenza or "bird flu" is a viral disease that primarily infects domestic poultry and wild birds. Avian influenza viruses are naturally occurring in wild birds such as ducks, geese, swans, and gulls. These...
Since 2006, the USGS Alaska Science Center has been part of the State and Federal interagency team for the detection and response to highly pathogenic (HPAI) viruses in North America. Avian influenza or "bird flu" is a viral disease that primarily infects domestic poultry and wild birds. Avian influenza viruses are naturally occurring in wild birds such as ducks, geese, swans, and gulls. These...
USGS Laboratory for the Analysis of Per- and Polyfluoroalkyl Substances (PFAS)
The U.S. Geological Survey laboratory for the analysis of per- and polyfluoroalkyl substances (PFAS) uses cutting-edge techniques to analyze environmental samples including tissues, plasma, water, and soils to undertake and support research projects across the country.
The U.S. Geological Survey laboratory for the analysis of per- and polyfluoroalkyl substances (PFAS) uses cutting-edge techniques to analyze environmental samples including tissues, plasma, water, and soils to undertake and support research projects across the country.
USGS volunteer Liliana uses a syringe to draw an eDNA sample from a rock pool along the Puka Stream. The eDNA sampled by USGS field crews informs research on invasive mosquito population dynamics.
USGS volunteer Liliana uses a syringe to draw an eDNA sample from a rock pool along the Puka Stream. The eDNA sampled by USGS field crews informs research on invasive mosquito population dynamics.
Scientist wades in wetland while filtering for infectious avian influenza in Minnesota
Field assistant Kathryn Johncock wades in a wetland while filtering for infectious avian influenza virus at the Roseau River Wildlife Management Area, Roseau, Minnesota.
Field assistant Kathryn Johncock wades in a wetland while filtering for infectious avian influenza virus at the Roseau River Wildlife Management Area, Roseau, Minnesota.
Environmental health is defined by connections between the physical environment, ecological health, and human health. Current research within the U.S. Geological Survey (USGS) recognizes the importance of this integrated research philosophy, which includes study of disease and pollutants as they pertain to wildlife and humans. Due to its key geographic location and significant wildlife...
Authors
Caroline R. Van Hemert, John M. Pearce, Karen Oakley, Mary E. Whalen
USGS scientists have advanced methods to measure bacterial activity in environmental waters. Their research showed that when bacteria naturally in the water are exposed to substances like pharmaceuticals, herbicides, and antimicrobials, their normal functions are disrupted. This finding suggests that monitoring bacterial activity could provide early warnings about potential problems with water...
Revolutionizing Water Quality Assessment: Chemical Pollutants Alter Bacterial Metabolism
USGS scientists have advanced methods to measure bacterial activity in environmental waters. Their research showed that when bacteria naturally in the water are exposed to substances like pharmaceuticals, herbicides, and antimicrobials, their normal functions are disrupted. This finding suggests that monitoring bacterial activity could provide early warnings about potential problems with water...
The Energy Resources Life Cycle Integrated Science Team focuses on the potential for environmental contaminant exposures that might originate from energy resource activities including extraction, production, transportation, storage, waste management, and restoration. Perceived health risks to humans and other organisms will be distinguished from actual risks, if any. If actual risks are identified...
Energy Resources Life Cycle Integrated Science Team
The Energy Resources Life Cycle Integrated Science Team focuses on the potential for environmental contaminant exposures that might originate from energy resource activities including extraction, production, transportation, storage, waste management, and restoration. Perceived health risks to humans and other organisms will be distinguished from actual risks, if any. If actual risks are identified...
The USGS National Wildlife Health Center (NWHC) conducts surveillance in wild birds to facilitate early detection and situational awareness for high consequence pathogens, including highly pathogenic avian influenza (HPAI) viruses.
The USGS National Wildlife Health Center (NWHC) conducts surveillance in wild birds to facilitate early detection and situational awareness for high consequence pathogens, including highly pathogenic avian influenza (HPAI) viruses.
Wastewater treatment plant discharges can be a source of organic contaminants, including pesticides, to rivers. Pesticide concentrations were predicted based on wastewater percentages in stream water using a modeling tool, and verified with measured concentrations to identify other potential landscape sources.
New study highlights the role of wastewater and landscape sources contributing to pesticide contamination in the Potomac River watershed
Wastewater treatment plant discharges can be a source of organic contaminants, including pesticides, to rivers. Pesticide concentrations were predicted based on wastewater percentages in stream water using a modeling tool, and verified with measured concentrations to identify other potential landscape sources.
The USGS has cooperated with federal, state, and tribal partners to conduct research on Avian Influenza (AI) viruses and to assist with response to outbreaks of highly pathogenic AI (HPAI) since 2006. Read ahead for information about HPAI, the occurrence of HPAI among wildlife, USGS-led research and surveillance efforts, and potentially helpful online resources.
Q&A: Bird Flu - Ongoing Threat of Highly Pathogenic Avian Influenza (HPAI) in Alaska and North America
The USGS has cooperated with federal, state, and tribal partners to conduct research on Avian Influenza (AI) viruses and to assist with response to outbreaks of highly pathogenic AI (HPAI) since 2006. Read ahead for information about HPAI, the occurrence of HPAI among wildlife, USGS-led research and surveillance efforts, and potentially helpful online resources.
The team studies toxicants and pathogens in water resources from their sources, through watersheds, aquifers, and infrastructure to human and wildlife exposures. That information is used to develop decision tools that protect human and wildlife health.
Drinking Water and Wastewater Infrastructure Science Team
The team studies toxicants and pathogens in water resources from their sources, through watersheds, aquifers, and infrastructure to human and wildlife exposures. That information is used to develop decision tools that protect human and wildlife health.
Research has documented exposures and consequential environmental health effects of pesticides, PFAS, microplastics, and antibiotic resistance genes in environmental biota. Little is known, however, regarding such effects in white-tailed deer ( Odocoileus virginianus).
A National Assessment of Pesticide, PFAS, Microplastic, and Antibiotic Resistance Gene Exposures in White-Tailed Deer
Research has documented exposures and consequential environmental health effects of pesticides, PFAS, microplastics, and antibiotic resistance genes in environmental biota. Little is known, however, regarding such effects in white-tailed deer ( Odocoileus virginianus).
The effect of selenium toxicity on wildlife has been known for more than 50 years. This issue drew particular attention in the 1980s when embryo deformity and mortality was observed in birds at a wildlife refuge in California. Harmful effects from selenium were determined to be connected to irrigation drainage water. As a result, an effort began to monitor levels of selenium in irrigation drainage...
The effect of selenium toxicity on wildlife has been known for more than 50 years. This issue drew particular attention in the 1980s when embryo deformity and mortality was observed in birds at a wildlife refuge in California. Harmful effects from selenium were determined to be connected to irrigation drainage water. As a result, an effort began to monitor levels of selenium in irrigation drainage...
The first 2021/2022 detection of Eurasian strain (EA) highly pathogenic avian influenza (HPAI) H5N1 in North America occurred in December 2021 in Newfoundland and Labrador, Canada. Subsequently, HPAI EA H5 and EA H5N1 viruses have been confirmed in wild birds, backyard flocks, commercial poultry facilities, and wild mammals in both Canada and the United States. This HPAI distribution map will be...
Distribution of Highly Pathogenic Avian Influenza in North America, 2021/2022
The first 2021/2022 detection of Eurasian strain (EA) highly pathogenic avian influenza (HPAI) H5N1 in North America occurred in December 2021 in Newfoundland and Labrador, Canada. Subsequently, HPAI EA H5 and EA H5N1 viruses have been confirmed in wild birds, backyard flocks, commercial poultry facilities, and wild mammals in both Canada and the United States. This HPAI distribution map will be...
Below are the USGS 2020 Coronavirus Aid, Relief and Economic Security Act (CARES Act) research projects related to COVID-19 pathways and wildlife dynamics. Select tabs above for related items.
Below are the USGS 2020 Coronavirus Aid, Relief and Economic Security Act (CARES Act) research projects related to COVID-19 pathways and wildlife dynamics. Select tabs above for related items.
Increasing scientific and public awareness of the widespread distribution of per- and poly-fluoroalkyl substances (PFAS) in U.S. drinking-water supplies, aquatic and terrestrial ecosystems, wildlife, and humans has raised many public health and resource management questions that U.S. Geological Survey's (USGS) science can inform. The USGS Environmental Health Program's PFAS Integrated Science Team...
Per-and Polyfluoroalkyl Substances (PFAS) Integrated Science Team
Increasing scientific and public awareness of the widespread distribution of per- and poly-fluoroalkyl substances (PFAS) in U.S. drinking-water supplies, aquatic and terrestrial ecosystems, wildlife, and humans has raised many public health and resource management questions that U.S. Geological Survey's (USGS) science can inform. The USGS Environmental Health Program's PFAS Integrated Science Team...
Golden eagles can be killed by colliding with a number of human-made objects, including wind turbines. USGS research wildlife biologist Todd Katzner describes his studies of golden eagle flight. This research is being done to model flight behavior which might help managers understand how placement of wind turbines might pose significant risks to golden eagles.
Golden eagles can be killed by colliding with a number of human-made objects, including wind turbines. USGS research wildlife biologist Todd Katzner describes his studies of golden eagle flight. This research is being done to model flight behavior which might help managers understand how placement of wind turbines might pose significant risks to golden eagles.
First Study to Track a Wild Bird Known to Have Highly Pathogenic Avian Influenza
LAUREL, Md. — For the first time, scientists have tracked the movement of a wild bird known to be infected with highly pathogenic avian influenza in...
A Climate Change Canary in the Coal Mine - The Endangered Hawaiian Honeycreepers
Native Hawaiians have a deep kinship with Hawaiian forest birds and revere, honor, and deify them as family, ancestors, guardians, spirits, and gods...
Avian influenza research sheds light on possible routes of introduction to North America
Understanding how wild birds facilitate the maintenance, reassortment, and dispersal of influenza A viruses (IAV) is key to forecasting global disease...
The Hidden Cost of Disease for Bighorn Sheep—Smaller Horns
Male bighorn sheep have spectacular horns, making them popular among hikers, photographers and hunters. However, disease threatens the magnificence of...