Publications
Read publications and other informational products to learn more about USGS science occurring in the Mississippi Basin.
Filter Total Items: 5583
Contaminant residues in fish from Tensas River National Wildlife Refuge Contaminant residues in fish from Tensas River National Wildlife Refuge
Tensas River National Wildlife Refuge, Madison Parish, Louisiana, consists of bottomland hardwood swamps interspersed with small lakes and bayous supporting a diverse assemblage of waterfowl, fish, and assorted species of game and nongame wildlife. Fish collected in the refuge in 1984–85 from areas receiving direct inflow from agricultural runoff contained from 5 to 10 μg/g total DDT...
Authors
Parley V. Winger
Distribution and bioaccumulation of selenium in aquatic microcosms Distribution and bioaccumulation of selenium in aquatic microcosms
Closed-system microcosms were used to study factors affecting the fate of selenium (Se) in aquatic systems. Distribution and bioaccumulation of Se varied among sediment types and Se species. A mixture of dissolved 75Se species (selenate, selenite and selenomethionine) was sorbed more rapidly to fine-textured, highly organic pond sediments than to sandy riverine sediments. Sulfate did not...
Authors
John M. Besser, James N. Huckins, Edward E. Little, Thomas W. La Point
Rising water levels and the future of southeastern Louisiana swamp forests Rising water levels and the future of southeastern Louisiana swamp forests
An important factor contributing to the deterioration of wetland forests in Louisiana is increasing water levels resulting from eustatic sea-level rise and subsidence. Analyses of long-term water level records from the Barataria and Verret watersheds in southeastern Louisiana indicate an apparent sea level rise of about 1-m per century, mainly the result of subsidence. Permanent study...
Authors
W.H. Conner, M. Brody
A system for reconstituting special water qualities for use in chronic toxicity studies A system for reconstituting special water qualities for use in chronic toxicity studies
A water treatment system and procedure are described that are designed for preparing large quantities of reconstituted water with specific chemical and physical characteristics for use in chronic toxicity studies with fish and invertebrates. Water treatment units produce high-purity water in large quantities for storage in high-density cross-linked polyethylene tanks, where it is...
Authors
Steven J. Hamilton, Neil L. Faerber, Kevin J. Buhl
Water resources data Iowa, water year 1988 Water resources data Iowa, water year 1988
Water resources data for the 1988 water year for Iowa consist of records of stage, discharge, and water quality of streams; stage, contents, and water quality of lakes and reservoirs; ground water levels and water quality of ground-water wells. This report contains records of water discharge for 117 stream-gaging stations; stage or contents for 7 lakes and reservoirs; water quality for 9...
Authors
N.B. Melcher, M.G. Detroy, R.A. Karsten, W.J. Matthes
Water resources data, Iowa, water year 1989 Water resources data, Iowa, water year 1989
Water resources data for the 1989 water year for Iowa consist of records of stage, discharge, and water quality of streams; stage, contents, and water quality of lakes and reservoirs; ground water levels and water quality of ground-water wells. This report contains records of water discharge for 117 stream-gaging stations; stage or contents for 8 lakes and reservoirs; water quality for 6...
Authors
D. J. O’Connell, M. J. Liszewski, R.B. Lambert, W.J. Matthes
A multiple testing approach for hazard evaluation of complex mixtures in the aquatic environment: the use of diesel oil as a model A multiple testing approach for hazard evaluation of complex mixtures in the aquatic environment: the use of diesel oil as a model
Traditional single species toxicity tests and multiple component laboratory-scaled microcosm assays were combined to assess the toxicological hazard of diesel oil, a model complex mixture, to a model aquatic environment. The immediate impact of diesel oil dosed on a freshwater community was studied in a model pond microcosm over 14 days: a 7-day dosage and a 7-day recovery period. A...
Authors
B. Thomas Johnson
Accretion and canal impacts in a rapidly subsiding wetland II: Feldspar marker horizon technique Accretion and canal impacts in a rapidly subsiding wetland II: Feldspar marker horizon technique
Recent (6–12 month) marsh sediment accretion and accumulation rates were measured with feldspar marker horizons in the vicinity of natural waterways and man-made canals with spoil banks in the rapidly subsiding environment of coastal Louisiana. Annual accretion rates in aSpartina alterniflora salt marsh in the Mississippi deltaic plain averaged 6 mm in marsh adjacent to canals compared...
Authors
Donald R. Cahoon, R.E. Turner
Bone characteristics and metal concentrations in white suckers (Catostomus commersoni) from one neutral and three acidified lakes in Maine Bone characteristics and metal concentrations in white suckers (Catostomus commersoni) from one neutral and three acidified lakes in Maine
The bone characteristics of white suckers, Catostomus commersoni, from four lakes in Maine were studied in relation to lake water quality and metal concentrations in fish. Green Lake had a neutral pH, high buffering capacity, and low aluminum concentrations, whereas the other three lakes had low pH, low buffering capacity, and elevated aluminum concentrations. The concentrations of...
Authors
Steven J. Hamilton, Terry A. Haines
Pattern and process in arid-region salt marshes - Southern California Pattern and process in arid-region salt marshes - Southern California
No abstract available.
Authors
Christopher P. Onuf, Joy B. Zedler
Annual body weight change in ring-neck ducks (Aythya collaris) Annual body weight change in ring-neck ducks (Aythya collaris)
No abstract available.
Authors
William L. Hohman, T. Scott Taylor, Milton W. Weller
Field validation of a habitat suitability index model for the American oyster Field validation of a habitat suitability index model for the American oyster
A habitat suitability index (HSI) model, developed for the American oyster,Crassostrea virginica, along the Gulf of Mexico, was field tested on 38 0.1-ha reef and nonreef sites in Galveston Bay, Texas. The HSI depends upon six (HSI1) or, optionally, eight (HSI2) variables. The six variables are percent of bottom covered with suitable cultch (V1), mean summer water salinity (V2), mean...
Authors
Thomas M. Soniat, Michael S. Brody