Judson W Harvey (Former Employee)
Science and Products
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Low threshold for nitrogen concentration saturation in headwaters increases regional and coastal delivery Low threshold for nitrogen concentration saturation in headwaters increases regional and coastal delivery
River corridors store, convey, and process nutrients from terrestrial and upstream sources, regulating delivery from headwaters to estuaries. A consequence of chronic excess nitrogen loading, as supported by theory and field studies in specific areas, is saturation of the biogeochemically-mediated nitrogen removal processes that weakens the capacity of the river corridor to remove...
Authors
Noah Schmadel, Judson Harvey, Richard Alexander, Elizabeth W. Boyer, Gregory E. Schwarz, Jesus D. Gomez-Velez, Durelle Scott, Christopher Konrad
The method controls the story - Sampling method impacts on the detection of pore-water nitrogen concentrations in streambeds The method controls the story - Sampling method impacts on the detection of pore-water nitrogen concentrations in streambeds
Biogeochemical gradients in streambeds are steep and can vary over short distances often making adequate characterisation of sediment biogeochemical processes challenging. This paper provides an overview and comparison of streambed pore-water sampling methods, highlighting their capacity to address gaps in our understanding of streambed biogeochemical processes. This work reviews and...
Authors
Sophie Comer-Warner, Julia LA Knapp, Phillip J Blaen, Megan Klaar, Felicity Shelley, Jay P. Zarnetske, Joseph Lee-Cullen, Silvia Folegot, Marie Kurz, Jorg Lewandowski, Judson Harvey, Adam Ward, Clara Mendoza-Lera, Sami Ullah, Thibault Datry, Nicholas Kettridge, Daren Gooddy, Jennifer Drummond, Eugenia Marti, Alexander Milner, David Hannah, Stefan Krause
Floodplain inundation spectrum across the United States Floodplain inundation spectrum across the United States
Floodplain inundation poses both risks and benefits to society. In this study, we characterize floodplain inundation across the United States using 5800 stream gages. We find that between 4% and 12.6% of a river’s annual flow moves through its floodplains. Flood duration and magnitude is greater in large rivers, whereas the frequency of events is greater in small streams. However, the...
Authors
Durelle T. Scott, Jesus D. Gomez-Velez, C. Nathan Jones, Judson Harvey
Small ponds in headwater catchments are a dominant influence on regional nutrient and sediment budgets Small ponds in headwater catchments are a dominant influence on regional nutrient and sediment budgets
Small ponds—farm ponds, detention ponds, or impoundments below 0.01 km2—serve important human needs throughout most large river basins. Yet the role of small ponds in regional nutrient and sediment budgets is essentially unknown, currently making it impossible to evaluate their management potential to achieve water quality objectives. Here we used new hydrography data sets and found that...
Authors
Noah Schmadel, Judson Harvey, Gregory E. Schwarz, Richard Alexander, Jesus D. Gomez-Velez, Durelle Scott, Scott W. Ator
Residence time controls on the fate of nitrogen in flow‐through lakebed sediments Residence time controls on the fate of nitrogen in flow‐through lakebed sediments
For many glacial lakes with highly permeable sediments, water exchange rates control hydrologic residence times within the sediment‐water interface (SWI) and the removal of reactive compounds such as nitrate, a common pollutant in lakes and groundwater. Here we conducted a series of focused tracer injection experiments in the upper 20 cm of the naturally downwelling SWI in a flow‐through...
Authors
Tyler B. Hampton, Jay P. Zarentske, Martin A. Briggs, Kamini Singha, Judson W. Harvey, Frederick D. Day-Lewis, Farzaneh MahmoodPoor Dehkordy, John W. Lane
The metabolic regimes of 356 rivers in the United States The metabolic regimes of 356 rivers in the United States
A national-scale quantification of metabolic energy flow in streams and rivers can improve understanding of the temporal dynamics of in-stream activity, links between energy cycling and ecosystem services, and the effects of human activities on aquatic metabolism. The two dominant terms in aquatic metabolism, gross primary production (GPP) and aerobic respiration (ER), have recently...
Authors
Alison P. Appling, Jordan S. Read, Luke A. Winslow, Maite Arroita, Emily S. Bernhardt, Natalie A. Griffiths, Robert O. Hall, Judson W. Harvey, James B. Heffernan, Emily H. Stanley, Edward G. Stets, Charles B. Yackulic
Hydrogeochemical controls on brook trout spawning habitats in a coastal stream Hydrogeochemical controls on brook trout spawning habitats in a coastal stream
Brook trout (Salvelinus fontinalis) spawn in fall and overwintering egg development can benefit from stable, relatively warm temperatures in groundwater-seepage zones. However, eggs are also sensitive to dissolved oxygen concentration, which may be reduced in discharging groundwater (i.e., seepage). We investigated a 2 km reach of the coastal Quashnet River in Cape Cod, Massachusetts...
Authors
Martin A. Briggs, Judson W. Harvey, Stephen T. Hurley, Donald O. Rosenberry, Timothy D. McCobb, Dale D. Werkema, John W. Lane
How hydrologic connectivity regulates water quality in river corridors How hydrologic connectivity regulates water quality in river corridors
Downstream flow in rivers is repeatedly delayed by hydrologic exchange with off‐channel storage zones where biogeochemical processing occurs. We present a dimensionless metric that quantifies river connectivity as the balance between downstream flow and the exchange of water with the bed, banks, and floodplains. The degree of connectivity directly influences downstream water quality —...
Authors
Judson Harvey, Jesus Gomez-Velez, Noah Schmadel, Durelle Scott, Elizabeth W. Boyer, Richard Alexander, Ken Eng, Heather E. Golden, Albert Kettner, Christopher Konrad, Richard Moore, Jim Pizzuto, Gregory E. Schwarz, Chris Soulsby, Jay Choi
Direct observations of hydrologic exchange occurring with less‐mobile porosity and the development of anoxic microzones in sandy lakebed sediments Direct observations of hydrologic exchange occurring with less‐mobile porosity and the development of anoxic microzones in sandy lakebed sediments
Quantifying coupled mobile/less‐mobile porosity dynamics is critical to the prediction of biogeochemical storage, release, and transformation processes in the zone where groundwater and surface water exchange. The recent development of fine‐scale geoelectrical monitoring paired with pore‐water sampling in groundwater systems enables direct characterization of hydrologic exchange between...
Authors
Martin A. Briggs, Frederick D. Day-Lewis, Farzaneh Mahmood Poor Dehkordy, Tyler B. Hampton, Jay P. Zarnetske, Courtney R. Scruggs, Kamini Singha, Judson W. Harvey, John W. Lane
Less fine particle retention in a restored versus unrestored urban stream: Balance between hyporheic exchange, resuspension, and immobilization Less fine particle retention in a restored versus unrestored urban stream: Balance between hyporheic exchange, resuspension, and immobilization
Stream restoration goals include reducing erosion and increasing hyporheic exchange to promote biogeochemical processing and improve water quality. Little is known, however, about fine particle dynamics in response to stream restoration. Fine particles (
Authors
J. D. Drummond, L. G. Larsen, R. Gonzalez-Pinzon, A. I. Packman, J. W. Harvey
The metabolic regimes of flowing waters The metabolic regimes of flowing waters
The processes and biomass that characterize any ecosystem are fundamentally constrained by the total amount of energy that is either fixed within or delivered across its boundaries. Ultimately, ecosystems may be understood and classified by their rates of total and net productivity and by the seasonal patterns of photosynthesis and respiration. Such understanding is well developed for...
Authors
Emily S. Bernhardt, Jim B. Heffernan, Nancy B. Grimm, Emily H. Stanley, Judson Harvey, M. Arroita, Alison P. Appling, M.J. Cohen, William H. McDowell, R.O. Hall, Jordan S. Read, B.J. Roberts, Edward G. Stets, Charles B. Yackulic
On factors influencing air-water gas exchange in emergent wetlands On factors influencing air-water gas exchange in emergent wetlands
Knowledge of gas exchange in wetlands is important in order to determine fluxes of climatically and biogeochemically important trace gases and to conduct mass balances for metabolism studies. Very few studies have been conducted to quantify gas transfer velocities in wetlands, and many wind speed/gas exchange parameterizations used in oceanographic or limnological settings are...
Authors
David T. Ho, Victor C. Engel, Sara Ferron, Benjamin Hickman, Jay Choi, Judson W. Harvey
Science and Products
Filter Total Items: 16
No Result Found
Filter Total Items: 121
Low threshold for nitrogen concentration saturation in headwaters increases regional and coastal delivery Low threshold for nitrogen concentration saturation in headwaters increases regional and coastal delivery
River corridors store, convey, and process nutrients from terrestrial and upstream sources, regulating delivery from headwaters to estuaries. A consequence of chronic excess nitrogen loading, as supported by theory and field studies in specific areas, is saturation of the biogeochemically-mediated nitrogen removal processes that weakens the capacity of the river corridor to remove...
Authors
Noah Schmadel, Judson Harvey, Richard Alexander, Elizabeth W. Boyer, Gregory E. Schwarz, Jesus D. Gomez-Velez, Durelle Scott, Christopher Konrad
The method controls the story - Sampling method impacts on the detection of pore-water nitrogen concentrations in streambeds The method controls the story - Sampling method impacts on the detection of pore-water nitrogen concentrations in streambeds
Biogeochemical gradients in streambeds are steep and can vary over short distances often making adequate characterisation of sediment biogeochemical processes challenging. This paper provides an overview and comparison of streambed pore-water sampling methods, highlighting their capacity to address gaps in our understanding of streambed biogeochemical processes. This work reviews and...
Authors
Sophie Comer-Warner, Julia LA Knapp, Phillip J Blaen, Megan Klaar, Felicity Shelley, Jay P. Zarnetske, Joseph Lee-Cullen, Silvia Folegot, Marie Kurz, Jorg Lewandowski, Judson Harvey, Adam Ward, Clara Mendoza-Lera, Sami Ullah, Thibault Datry, Nicholas Kettridge, Daren Gooddy, Jennifer Drummond, Eugenia Marti, Alexander Milner, David Hannah, Stefan Krause
Floodplain inundation spectrum across the United States Floodplain inundation spectrum across the United States
Floodplain inundation poses both risks and benefits to society. In this study, we characterize floodplain inundation across the United States using 5800 stream gages. We find that between 4% and 12.6% of a river’s annual flow moves through its floodplains. Flood duration and magnitude is greater in large rivers, whereas the frequency of events is greater in small streams. However, the...
Authors
Durelle T. Scott, Jesus D. Gomez-Velez, C. Nathan Jones, Judson Harvey
Small ponds in headwater catchments are a dominant influence on regional nutrient and sediment budgets Small ponds in headwater catchments are a dominant influence on regional nutrient and sediment budgets
Small ponds—farm ponds, detention ponds, or impoundments below 0.01 km2—serve important human needs throughout most large river basins. Yet the role of small ponds in regional nutrient and sediment budgets is essentially unknown, currently making it impossible to evaluate their management potential to achieve water quality objectives. Here we used new hydrography data sets and found that...
Authors
Noah Schmadel, Judson Harvey, Gregory E. Schwarz, Richard Alexander, Jesus D. Gomez-Velez, Durelle Scott, Scott W. Ator
Residence time controls on the fate of nitrogen in flow‐through lakebed sediments Residence time controls on the fate of nitrogen in flow‐through lakebed sediments
For many glacial lakes with highly permeable sediments, water exchange rates control hydrologic residence times within the sediment‐water interface (SWI) and the removal of reactive compounds such as nitrate, a common pollutant in lakes and groundwater. Here we conducted a series of focused tracer injection experiments in the upper 20 cm of the naturally downwelling SWI in a flow‐through...
Authors
Tyler B. Hampton, Jay P. Zarentske, Martin A. Briggs, Kamini Singha, Judson W. Harvey, Frederick D. Day-Lewis, Farzaneh MahmoodPoor Dehkordy, John W. Lane
The metabolic regimes of 356 rivers in the United States The metabolic regimes of 356 rivers in the United States
A national-scale quantification of metabolic energy flow in streams and rivers can improve understanding of the temporal dynamics of in-stream activity, links between energy cycling and ecosystem services, and the effects of human activities on aquatic metabolism. The two dominant terms in aquatic metabolism, gross primary production (GPP) and aerobic respiration (ER), have recently...
Authors
Alison P. Appling, Jordan S. Read, Luke A. Winslow, Maite Arroita, Emily S. Bernhardt, Natalie A. Griffiths, Robert O. Hall, Judson W. Harvey, James B. Heffernan, Emily H. Stanley, Edward G. Stets, Charles B. Yackulic
Hydrogeochemical controls on brook trout spawning habitats in a coastal stream Hydrogeochemical controls on brook trout spawning habitats in a coastal stream
Brook trout (Salvelinus fontinalis) spawn in fall and overwintering egg development can benefit from stable, relatively warm temperatures in groundwater-seepage zones. However, eggs are also sensitive to dissolved oxygen concentration, which may be reduced in discharging groundwater (i.e., seepage). We investigated a 2 km reach of the coastal Quashnet River in Cape Cod, Massachusetts...
Authors
Martin A. Briggs, Judson W. Harvey, Stephen T. Hurley, Donald O. Rosenberry, Timothy D. McCobb, Dale D. Werkema, John W. Lane
How hydrologic connectivity regulates water quality in river corridors How hydrologic connectivity regulates water quality in river corridors
Downstream flow in rivers is repeatedly delayed by hydrologic exchange with off‐channel storage zones where biogeochemical processing occurs. We present a dimensionless metric that quantifies river connectivity as the balance between downstream flow and the exchange of water with the bed, banks, and floodplains. The degree of connectivity directly influences downstream water quality —...
Authors
Judson Harvey, Jesus Gomez-Velez, Noah Schmadel, Durelle Scott, Elizabeth W. Boyer, Richard Alexander, Ken Eng, Heather E. Golden, Albert Kettner, Christopher Konrad, Richard Moore, Jim Pizzuto, Gregory E. Schwarz, Chris Soulsby, Jay Choi
Direct observations of hydrologic exchange occurring with less‐mobile porosity and the development of anoxic microzones in sandy lakebed sediments Direct observations of hydrologic exchange occurring with less‐mobile porosity and the development of anoxic microzones in sandy lakebed sediments
Quantifying coupled mobile/less‐mobile porosity dynamics is critical to the prediction of biogeochemical storage, release, and transformation processes in the zone where groundwater and surface water exchange. The recent development of fine‐scale geoelectrical monitoring paired with pore‐water sampling in groundwater systems enables direct characterization of hydrologic exchange between...
Authors
Martin A. Briggs, Frederick D. Day-Lewis, Farzaneh Mahmood Poor Dehkordy, Tyler B. Hampton, Jay P. Zarnetske, Courtney R. Scruggs, Kamini Singha, Judson W. Harvey, John W. Lane
Less fine particle retention in a restored versus unrestored urban stream: Balance between hyporheic exchange, resuspension, and immobilization Less fine particle retention in a restored versus unrestored urban stream: Balance between hyporheic exchange, resuspension, and immobilization
Stream restoration goals include reducing erosion and increasing hyporheic exchange to promote biogeochemical processing and improve water quality. Little is known, however, about fine particle dynamics in response to stream restoration. Fine particles (
Authors
J. D. Drummond, L. G. Larsen, R. Gonzalez-Pinzon, A. I. Packman, J. W. Harvey
The metabolic regimes of flowing waters The metabolic regimes of flowing waters
The processes and biomass that characterize any ecosystem are fundamentally constrained by the total amount of energy that is either fixed within or delivered across its boundaries. Ultimately, ecosystems may be understood and classified by their rates of total and net productivity and by the seasonal patterns of photosynthesis and respiration. Such understanding is well developed for...
Authors
Emily S. Bernhardt, Jim B. Heffernan, Nancy B. Grimm, Emily H. Stanley, Judson Harvey, M. Arroita, Alison P. Appling, M.J. Cohen, William H. McDowell, R.O. Hall, Jordan S. Read, B.J. Roberts, Edward G. Stets, Charles B. Yackulic
On factors influencing air-water gas exchange in emergent wetlands On factors influencing air-water gas exchange in emergent wetlands
Knowledge of gas exchange in wetlands is important in order to determine fluxes of climatically and biogeochemically important trace gases and to conduct mass balances for metabolism studies. Very few studies have been conducted to quantify gas transfer velocities in wetlands, and many wind speed/gas exchange parameterizations used in oceanographic or limnological settings are...
Authors
David T. Ho, Victor C. Engel, Sara Ferron, Benjamin Hickman, Jay Choi, Judson W. Harvey