Publications by authors named "Linda C Schaffner"

Benthic indices are typically developed independently by habitat, making their incorporation into large geographic scale assessments potentially problematic because of scaling inequities. A potential solution is to establish common scaling using expert best professional judgment (BPJ). To test if experts from different geographies agree on condition assessment, sixteen experts from four regions in USA and Europe were provided species-abundance data for twelve sites per region.

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Low dissolved oxygen (hypoxia and/or anoxia) has become a major cause of change to the benthic component of ecosystems around the world. We present the response of a benthic community to hypoxia in organically enriched environments in Korean coastal waters. Disturbances due to low dissolved oxygen (DO), and organic enrichment altered community dynamics, result in defaunation during summer hypoxia with delayed recolonization occurring in winter.

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E(h) measurements by electrodes are commonly used to characterize redox status of sediments in freshwater, marine and estuarine studies, due to the relative ease and rapidity of data collection. In our studies of fine-grained estuarine seabeds, we observed that E(h) values measured in intact sediment cores were influenced by different electrode insertion techniques. Sediment E(h) measurements generated via lateral insertion of platinum electrodes through silicone-filled ports in acrylic cores were systematically more positive (on the order of 10-100 mV) than profiles generated via vertical insertion of platinum electrodes downward through the sediment-water interface of the same cores.

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