Wisconsin Department of Natural Resources employees measure current velocity and dissolved oxygen as part of a Long Term Resource Monitoring Program (LTRMP) partnership with the Upper Midwest Environmental Sciences Center (UMESC), Upper Mississippi River System (UMRS) Pool 8
Jeff Houser, PhD
Jeff Houser
Experience
2003 – present: Research Ecologist, U.S. Geological Survey Upper Midwest Environmental Sciences Center.
2004 – present: Adjunct, Department of Biology, University of Wisconsin—La Crosse.
2001- 2003: Postdoctoral Research Associate—Stream Ecology, Oak Ridge National Laboratory.
Research Interests
Aquatic ecology, large rivers, ecosystem metabolism, carbon and nutrient cycling, biogeochemistry, food webs, applied ecology, ecosystem restoration
Professional Societies
American Society of Limnology and Oceanography; Society for Freshwater Science; Mississippi River Research Consortium
Education and Certifications
Ph.D. in Zoology – University of Wisconsin-Madison, 2001
M.S. in Zoology – University of Wisconsin-Madison, 1998
B.S. in Biology – Wake Forest University, 1994
Science and Products
Understanding constraints on submersed vegetation distribution in a large, floodplain river: the role of water level fluctuations, water clarity and river geomorphology
National Stream Summarization: Standardizing Stream-Landscape Summaries
Continuous water quality sensor data from the main channel and a backwater of the Upper Mississippi River from 2015-2018
2006-2009 Phytoplankton data collected in the Mississippi River Navigation Pools 8, 13, and 26
Wisconsin Department of Natural Resources employees measure current velocity and dissolved oxygen as part of a Long Term Resource Monitoring Program (LTRMP) partnership with the Upper Midwest Environmental Sciences Center (UMESC), Upper Mississippi River System (UMRS) Pool 8
Intrinsic and extrinsic regulation of water clarity in a large, floodplain-river ecosystem
River geomorphology affects biogeochemical responses to hydrologic events in a large river ecosystem
Ecological status and trends of the Upper Mississippi and Illinois Rivers
Resisting-accepting-directing: Ecosystem management guided by an ecological resilience assessment
Spatial and temporal dynamics of phytoplankton assemblages in the upper Mississippi River
Warmer winters increase the biomass of phytoplankton in a large floodplain river
Understanding constraints on submersed vegetation distribution in a large, floodplain river: The role of water level fluctuations, water clarity and river geomorphology
Conceptualizing alternate regimes in a large floodplain-river ecosystem
Light exposure along particle flowpaths in large rivers
Applying concepts of general resilience to large river ecosystems: A case study from the Upper Mississippi and Illinois rivers
Indicators of ecosystem structure and function for the Upper Mississippi River System
Limited nitrate retention capacity in the Upper Mississippi River
Science and Products
Understanding constraints on submersed vegetation distribution in a large, floodplain river: the role of water level fluctuations, water clarity and river geomorphology
National Stream Summarization: Standardizing Stream-Landscape Summaries
Continuous water quality sensor data from the main channel and a backwater of the Upper Mississippi River from 2015-2018
2006-2009 Phytoplankton data collected in the Mississippi River Navigation Pools 8, 13, and 26
Wisconsin Department of Natural Resources employees measure current velocity and dissolved oxygen as part of a Long Term Resource Monitoring Program (LTRMP) partnership with the Upper Midwest Environmental Sciences Center (UMESC), Upper Mississippi River System (UMRS) Pool 8
Wisconsin Department of Natural Resources employees measure current velocity and dissolved oxygen as part of a Long Term Resource Monitoring Program (LTRMP) partnership with the Upper Midwest Environmental Sciences Center (UMESC), Upper Mississippi River System (UMRS) Pool 8