Suresh Andrew Sethi, PhD (Former Employee)
Science and Products
Filter Total Items: 47
Round Goby captured in a North American estuary: Status and implications in the Hudson River, New York Round Goby captured in a North American estuary: Status and implications in the Hudson River, New York
Round Goby Neogobius melanostomus, a nonnative fish species to North America, has been rapidly expanding through the connected waterways of the Laurentian Great Lakes. Herein, we document the eastward and southern expansion of Round Goby into the Hudson River, New York, an iconic coastal estuary that drains to Long Island Sound and the Atlantic seaboard. In summer and early fall 2021...
Authors
Richard Pendleton, Russell Berdan, Scott D. George, Gregg Kenney, Suresh Sethi
Ecological and social strategies for managing fisheries using the Resist-Accept-Direct (RAD) framework Ecological and social strategies for managing fisheries using the Resist-Accept-Direct (RAD) framework
Fisheries management is a complex task made even more challenging by rapid and unprecedented socioecological transformations associated with climate change. The Resist-Accept-Direct (RAD) framework can be a useful tool to support fisheries management in facing the high uncertainty and variability associated with aquatic ecosystem transformations. Here, RAD strategies are presented to...
Authors
Abigail J. Lynch, Frank J. Rahel, Douglas Limpinsel, Suresh Sethi, Agustin C. Engman, David J. Lawrence, Katherine E. Mills, Wendy Morrison, Jay O. Peterson, Mark T. Porath
Balancing prey availability and predator consumption: A multispecies stock assessment for Lake Ontario Balancing prey availability and predator consumption: A multispecies stock assessment for Lake Ontario
Trophic interactions are drivers of ecosystem change and stability, yet are often excluded from fishery assessment models, despite their potential capacity to improve estimates of species dynamics and future fishery sustainability. In Lake Ontario, recreational salmonine fisheries, including Chinook salmon (Oncorhynchus tshawytscha) and lake trout (Salvelinus namaycush), depend on a...
Authors
Kimberly B. Fitzpatrick, Brian Weidel, Michael J. Connerton, Jana R. Lantry, Jeremy P. Holden, Michael J. Yuille, Brian F. Lantry, Steven R. LaPan, Lars G. Rudstam, Patrick J. Sullivan, Travis O. Brenden, Suresh Sethi
Contemporary spatial extent and environmental drivers of larval coregonine distributions across Lake Ontario Contemporary spatial extent and environmental drivers of larval coregonine distributions across Lake Ontario
Coregonine fishes are important to Laurentian Great Lakes food webs and fisheries and are central to basin-wide conservation initiatives. In Lake Ontario, binational management objectives include conserving and restoring spawning stocks of cisco (Coregonus artedi) and lake whitefish (C. clupeaformis), but the spatial extent of contemporary coregonine spawning habitat and the...
Authors
Taylor A. Brown, Suresh Sethi, Lars G. Rudstam, Jeremy P. Holden, Michael J. Connerton, Dimitry Gorsky, Curtis T. Karboski, Marc Chalupnicki, Nicholas M. Sard, Edward F. Roseman, Scott E. Prindle, Matthew J. Sanderson, Thomas M. Evans, Amanda Cooper, Daren J. Reinhart, Cameron David, Brian Weidel
A machine learning approach to identify barriers in stream networks demonstrates high prevalence of unmapped riverine dams A machine learning approach to identify barriers in stream networks demonstrates high prevalence of unmapped riverine dams
Restoring stream ecosystem integrity by removing unused or derelict dams has become a priority for watershed conservation globally. However, efforts to restore connectivity are constrained by the availability of accurate dam inventories which often overlook smaller unmapped riverine dams. Here we develop and test a machine learning approach to identify unmapped dams using a combination...
Authors
Brian Buchanan, Suresh Sethi, Scott Cuppett, Megan Lung, George Jackman, Liam Zarri, Ethan Duvall, Jeremy Dietrich, Patrick Sullivan, Alon Dominitz, Josephine Archibald, Alexander Flecker, Brian Rahm
RAD adaptive management for transforming ecosystems RAD adaptive management for transforming ecosystems
Intensifying global change is propelling many ecosystems toward irreversible transformations. Natural resource managers face the complex task of conserving these important resources under unprecedented conditions and expanding uncertainty. As once familiar ecological conditions disappear, traditional management approaches that assume the future will reflect the past are becoming...
Authors
Abigail J. Lynch, Laura Thompson, John M. Morton, Erik A. Beever, Michael Clifford, Douglas Limpinsel, Robert T. Magill, Dawn R. Magness, Tracy A. Melvin, Robert A. Newman, Mark T. Porath, Frank J. Rahel, Joel H. Reynolds, Gregor W. Schuurman, Suresh Sethi, Jennifer L. Wilkening
Climate change may impair electricity generation and economic viability of future Amazon hydropower Climate change may impair electricity generation and economic viability of future Amazon hydropower
Numerous hydropower facilities are under construction or planned in tropical and subtropical rivers worldwide. While dams are typically designed considering historic river discharge regimes, climate change may induce large-scale alterations in river hydrology. Here we analyze how future climate change will affect river hydrology, electricity generation, and economic viability of > 350...
Authors
Rafael M. Almeida, Ayan S. Fleischmann, Joao P.F. Breda, Diego S. Cardoso, Hector Angarita, Walter Collischonn, Bruce R. Forsberg, Roosevelt García-Villacorta, Stephen K. Hamilton, Phillip M. Hannam, Rodrigo Paiva, N. LeRoy Poff, Suresh Sethi, Qinru Shi, Carla P. Gomes, Alexander S. Flecker
Marine ecotourism for small pelagics as a source of alternative income generating activities to fisheries in a tropical community Marine ecotourism for small pelagics as a source of alternative income generating activities to fisheries in a tropical community
Overharvest has led to marine ecosystem degradation and declining fishery catches in many tropical communities. To allow stocks to recover and provide increased flows of food and income, reductions in fishing effort are necessary. The development of Alternative Income Generating Activities can help to reduce the economic reliance of coastal communities on fishing, potentially reducing...
Authors
Christopher Cusack, Suresh Sethi, Aaron Rice, Joseph Warren, Rod Fujita, Jose Ingles, Jimely Flores, Edwina Garchitorena, Sheryll Mesa
Managing for RADical ecosystem change: Applying the Resist-Accept-Direct (RAD) framework Managing for RADical ecosystem change: Applying the Resist-Accept-Direct (RAD) framework
Ecosystem transformation involves the emergence of persistent ecological or social–ecological systems that diverge, dramatically and irreversibly, from prior ecosystem structure and function. Such transformations are occurring at increasing rates across the planet in response to changes in climate, land use, and other factors. Consequently, a dynamic view of ecosystem processes that...
Authors
Abigail J. Lynch, Laura Thompson, Erik A. Beever, Augustin C. Engman, Cat Hawkins Hoffman, Stephen T. Jackson, Trevor J. Krabbenhoft, David J Lawrence, Douglas Limpinsel, Robert T. Magill, Tracy Melvin, John M. Morton, Robert Newman, Jay Peterson, Mark T. Porath, Frank J. Rahel, Gregor Schuurman, Suresh Sethi, Jennifer L. Wilkening
Declining diversity of wild-caught species puts dietary nutrient supplies at risk Declining diversity of wild-caught species puts dietary nutrient supplies at risk
Although biodiversity loss adversely influences a variety of ecosystem functions, how declining wild food diversity affects nutrient supplies for people is poorly understood. Here, we analyze the impact of declining biodiversity on nutrients supplied by fish using detailed information from the Peruvian Amazon, where inland fisheries provide a critical source of nutrition for many of the...
Authors
Sebastian A. Heilpern, Ruth DeFries, Kathryn J. Fiorella, Alexander Flecker, Suresh Sethi, María Uriarte, Shahid Naeem
Acoustic tag retention and tagging mortality of juvenile cisco Coregonus artedi Acoustic tag retention and tagging mortality of juvenile cisco Coregonus artedi
Release of hatchery-reared juvenile cisco (Coregonus artedi) is an important tool for recovering Great Lakes populations, but post-release survival is unknown. Telemetry using small acoustic tags provides opportunities to assess the efficacy of hatchery-reared fish releases. However, better understanding of the tolerance of juvenile cisco to acoustic tags is needed. Juvenile cisco...
Authors
James E. McKenna, Suresh Sethi, Grant Marvin Scholten, Jeremy W. Kraus, Marc Chalupnicki
Substitution of inland fisheries with aquaculture and chicken undermines human nutrition in the Peruvian Amazon Substitution of inland fisheries with aquaculture and chicken undermines human nutrition in the Peruvian Amazon
With declining capture fisheries production, maintaining nutrient supplies largely hinges on substituting wild fish with economically comparable farmed animals. Although such transitions are increasingly commonplace across global inland and coastal communities, their nutritional consequences are unknown. Here, using human demographic and health information, and fish nutrient composition...
Authors
Sebastian A. Heilpern, Kathryn Fiorella, Carlos Canas, Alexander S. Flecker, Luis Moya, Shahid Naeem, Suresh Sethi, Maria Uriarte, Ruth DeFries
Science and Products
Filter Total Items: 47
Round Goby captured in a North American estuary: Status and implications in the Hudson River, New York Round Goby captured in a North American estuary: Status and implications in the Hudson River, New York
Round Goby Neogobius melanostomus, a nonnative fish species to North America, has been rapidly expanding through the connected waterways of the Laurentian Great Lakes. Herein, we document the eastward and southern expansion of Round Goby into the Hudson River, New York, an iconic coastal estuary that drains to Long Island Sound and the Atlantic seaboard. In summer and early fall 2021...
Authors
Richard Pendleton, Russell Berdan, Scott D. George, Gregg Kenney, Suresh Sethi
Ecological and social strategies for managing fisheries using the Resist-Accept-Direct (RAD) framework Ecological and social strategies for managing fisheries using the Resist-Accept-Direct (RAD) framework
Fisheries management is a complex task made even more challenging by rapid and unprecedented socioecological transformations associated with climate change. The Resist-Accept-Direct (RAD) framework can be a useful tool to support fisheries management in facing the high uncertainty and variability associated with aquatic ecosystem transformations. Here, RAD strategies are presented to...
Authors
Abigail J. Lynch, Frank J. Rahel, Douglas Limpinsel, Suresh Sethi, Agustin C. Engman, David J. Lawrence, Katherine E. Mills, Wendy Morrison, Jay O. Peterson, Mark T. Porath
Balancing prey availability and predator consumption: A multispecies stock assessment for Lake Ontario Balancing prey availability and predator consumption: A multispecies stock assessment for Lake Ontario
Trophic interactions are drivers of ecosystem change and stability, yet are often excluded from fishery assessment models, despite their potential capacity to improve estimates of species dynamics and future fishery sustainability. In Lake Ontario, recreational salmonine fisheries, including Chinook salmon (Oncorhynchus tshawytscha) and lake trout (Salvelinus namaycush), depend on a...
Authors
Kimberly B. Fitzpatrick, Brian Weidel, Michael J. Connerton, Jana R. Lantry, Jeremy P. Holden, Michael J. Yuille, Brian F. Lantry, Steven R. LaPan, Lars G. Rudstam, Patrick J. Sullivan, Travis O. Brenden, Suresh Sethi
Contemporary spatial extent and environmental drivers of larval coregonine distributions across Lake Ontario Contemporary spatial extent and environmental drivers of larval coregonine distributions across Lake Ontario
Coregonine fishes are important to Laurentian Great Lakes food webs and fisheries and are central to basin-wide conservation initiatives. In Lake Ontario, binational management objectives include conserving and restoring spawning stocks of cisco (Coregonus artedi) and lake whitefish (C. clupeaformis), but the spatial extent of contemporary coregonine spawning habitat and the...
Authors
Taylor A. Brown, Suresh Sethi, Lars G. Rudstam, Jeremy P. Holden, Michael J. Connerton, Dimitry Gorsky, Curtis T. Karboski, Marc Chalupnicki, Nicholas M. Sard, Edward F. Roseman, Scott E. Prindle, Matthew J. Sanderson, Thomas M. Evans, Amanda Cooper, Daren J. Reinhart, Cameron David, Brian Weidel
A machine learning approach to identify barriers in stream networks demonstrates high prevalence of unmapped riverine dams A machine learning approach to identify barriers in stream networks demonstrates high prevalence of unmapped riverine dams
Restoring stream ecosystem integrity by removing unused or derelict dams has become a priority for watershed conservation globally. However, efforts to restore connectivity are constrained by the availability of accurate dam inventories which often overlook smaller unmapped riverine dams. Here we develop and test a machine learning approach to identify unmapped dams using a combination...
Authors
Brian Buchanan, Suresh Sethi, Scott Cuppett, Megan Lung, George Jackman, Liam Zarri, Ethan Duvall, Jeremy Dietrich, Patrick Sullivan, Alon Dominitz, Josephine Archibald, Alexander Flecker, Brian Rahm
RAD adaptive management for transforming ecosystems RAD adaptive management for transforming ecosystems
Intensifying global change is propelling many ecosystems toward irreversible transformations. Natural resource managers face the complex task of conserving these important resources under unprecedented conditions and expanding uncertainty. As once familiar ecological conditions disappear, traditional management approaches that assume the future will reflect the past are becoming...
Authors
Abigail J. Lynch, Laura Thompson, John M. Morton, Erik A. Beever, Michael Clifford, Douglas Limpinsel, Robert T. Magill, Dawn R. Magness, Tracy A. Melvin, Robert A. Newman, Mark T. Porath, Frank J. Rahel, Joel H. Reynolds, Gregor W. Schuurman, Suresh Sethi, Jennifer L. Wilkening
Climate change may impair electricity generation and economic viability of future Amazon hydropower Climate change may impair electricity generation and economic viability of future Amazon hydropower
Numerous hydropower facilities are under construction or planned in tropical and subtropical rivers worldwide. While dams are typically designed considering historic river discharge regimes, climate change may induce large-scale alterations in river hydrology. Here we analyze how future climate change will affect river hydrology, electricity generation, and economic viability of > 350...
Authors
Rafael M. Almeida, Ayan S. Fleischmann, Joao P.F. Breda, Diego S. Cardoso, Hector Angarita, Walter Collischonn, Bruce R. Forsberg, Roosevelt García-Villacorta, Stephen K. Hamilton, Phillip M. Hannam, Rodrigo Paiva, N. LeRoy Poff, Suresh Sethi, Qinru Shi, Carla P. Gomes, Alexander S. Flecker
Marine ecotourism for small pelagics as a source of alternative income generating activities to fisheries in a tropical community Marine ecotourism for small pelagics as a source of alternative income generating activities to fisheries in a tropical community
Overharvest has led to marine ecosystem degradation and declining fishery catches in many tropical communities. To allow stocks to recover and provide increased flows of food and income, reductions in fishing effort are necessary. The development of Alternative Income Generating Activities can help to reduce the economic reliance of coastal communities on fishing, potentially reducing...
Authors
Christopher Cusack, Suresh Sethi, Aaron Rice, Joseph Warren, Rod Fujita, Jose Ingles, Jimely Flores, Edwina Garchitorena, Sheryll Mesa
Managing for RADical ecosystem change: Applying the Resist-Accept-Direct (RAD) framework Managing for RADical ecosystem change: Applying the Resist-Accept-Direct (RAD) framework
Ecosystem transformation involves the emergence of persistent ecological or social–ecological systems that diverge, dramatically and irreversibly, from prior ecosystem structure and function. Such transformations are occurring at increasing rates across the planet in response to changes in climate, land use, and other factors. Consequently, a dynamic view of ecosystem processes that...
Authors
Abigail J. Lynch, Laura Thompson, Erik A. Beever, Augustin C. Engman, Cat Hawkins Hoffman, Stephen T. Jackson, Trevor J. Krabbenhoft, David J Lawrence, Douglas Limpinsel, Robert T. Magill, Tracy Melvin, John M. Morton, Robert Newman, Jay Peterson, Mark T. Porath, Frank J. Rahel, Gregor Schuurman, Suresh Sethi, Jennifer L. Wilkening
Declining diversity of wild-caught species puts dietary nutrient supplies at risk Declining diversity of wild-caught species puts dietary nutrient supplies at risk
Although biodiversity loss adversely influences a variety of ecosystem functions, how declining wild food diversity affects nutrient supplies for people is poorly understood. Here, we analyze the impact of declining biodiversity on nutrients supplied by fish using detailed information from the Peruvian Amazon, where inland fisheries provide a critical source of nutrition for many of the...
Authors
Sebastian A. Heilpern, Ruth DeFries, Kathryn J. Fiorella, Alexander Flecker, Suresh Sethi, María Uriarte, Shahid Naeem
Acoustic tag retention and tagging mortality of juvenile cisco Coregonus artedi Acoustic tag retention and tagging mortality of juvenile cisco Coregonus artedi
Release of hatchery-reared juvenile cisco (Coregonus artedi) is an important tool for recovering Great Lakes populations, but post-release survival is unknown. Telemetry using small acoustic tags provides opportunities to assess the efficacy of hatchery-reared fish releases. However, better understanding of the tolerance of juvenile cisco to acoustic tags is needed. Juvenile cisco...
Authors
James E. McKenna, Suresh Sethi, Grant Marvin Scholten, Jeremy W. Kraus, Marc Chalupnicki
Substitution of inland fisheries with aquaculture and chicken undermines human nutrition in the Peruvian Amazon Substitution of inland fisheries with aquaculture and chicken undermines human nutrition in the Peruvian Amazon
With declining capture fisheries production, maintaining nutrient supplies largely hinges on substituting wild fish with economically comparable farmed animals. Although such transitions are increasingly commonplace across global inland and coastal communities, their nutritional consequences are unknown. Here, using human demographic and health information, and fish nutrient composition...
Authors
Sebastian A. Heilpern, Kathryn Fiorella, Carlos Canas, Alexander S. Flecker, Luis Moya, Shahid Naeem, Suresh Sethi, Maria Uriarte, Ruth DeFries