20 results match your criteria: "Patrick Center for Environmental Research[Affiliation]"

Size-dependent effects of dams on river ecosystems and implications for dam removal outcomes.

Ecol Appl

September 2024

Senator George J. Mitchell Center for Sustainability Solutions and School of Biology and Ecology, University of Maine, Orono, Maine, USA.

Understanding the relationship between a dam's size and its ecological effects is important for prioritization of river restoration efforts based on dam removal. Although much is known about the effects of large storage dams, this information may not be applicable to small dams, which represent the vast majority of dams being considered for removal. To better understand how dam effects vary with size, we conducted a multidisciplinary study of the downstream effect of dams on a range of ecological characteristics including geomorphology, water chemistry, periphyton, riparian vegetation, benthic macroinvertebrates, and fish.

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Coupled human-environment system amid COVID-19 crisis: A conceptual model to understand the nexus.

Sci Total Environ

January 2021

Department of Ecology and Environmental Science, Assam University, Silchar 788011, India. Electronic address:

The world today is dealing with a havoc crisis due to the pervasive outbreak of COVID-19. As a preventive measure against the pandemic, government authorities worldwide have implemented and adopted strict policy interventions such as lockdown, social distancing, and quarantine to curtail the disease transmission. Consequently, humans have been experiencing several ill impacts, while the natural environment has been reaping the benefits of the interventions.

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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 critiques available pore-water sampling techniques to characterise streambed biogeochemical conditions, including their characteristic spatial and temporal resolutions, and associated advantages and limitations.

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In a whole-ecosystem, nutrient addition experiment in the Plum Island Sound Estuary (Massachusetts), we tested the effects of nitrogen enrichment on the carbon and nitrogen contents, respiration, and strength of marsh soils. We measured soil shear strength within and across vegetation zones. We found significantly higher soil percent organic matter, carbon, and nitrogen in the long-term enriched marshes and higher soil respiration rates with longer duration of enrichment.

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Concurrent regional and global environmental changes are affecting freshwater ecosystems. Decadal-scale data on lake ecosystems that can describe processes affected by these changes are important as multiple stressors often interact to alter the trajectory of key ecological phenomena in complex ways. Due to the practical challenges associated with long-term data collections, the majority of existing long-term data sets focus on only a small number of lakes or few response variables.

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A diatom-based biological condition gradient (BCG) approach for assessing impairment and developing nutrient criteria for streams.

Sci Total Environ

August 2016

Division of Science, Research, and Environmental Health, New Jersey Department of Environmental Protection, Trenton, NJ 08625, USA. Electronic address:

Over-enrichment leading to excess algal growth is a major problem in rivers and streams. Regulations to protect streams typically incorporate nutrient criteria, concentrations of phosphorus and nitrogen that should not be exceeded in order to protect biological communities. A major challenge has been to develop an approach for both categorizing streams based on their biological conditions and determining scientifically defensible nutrient criteria to protect the biotic integrity of streams in those categories.

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Twenty-five years of environmental radionuclide concentrations near a nuclear power plant.

Health Phys

May 2015

*US Nuclear Regulatory Commission, retired, 11 Mills Road, Gaithersburg, MD 20877; †Partnership for the Delaware Estuary, One Riverwalk Plaza, Suite 202, Wilmington, DE 19801; ‡Academy of Natural Sciences of Drexel University, Patrick Center for Environmental Research, 1900 Benjamin Franklin Parkway, Philadelphia, PA 19103; §Distinguished Professor Emeritus, University of South Carolina, Office of the President, Columbia, SC 29208.

The areas in and along a 262-km length of the Susquehanna River in Pennsylvania were monitored for the presence of radioactive materials. This study began two months after the 1979 Three Mile Island (TMI) partial reactor meltdown; it spanned the next 25 y. Monitoring points included stations at the PPL Susquehanna and TMI nuclear power plants.

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Black flies are ubiquitous and important members of lotic ecosystems. Size is known to affect many aspects of their life in the aquatic larval stage, including intraspecific competition for feeding sites. As filter feeders, flow affects their ability to feed and reach sufficiently fast flow.

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Historical contamination of the Anacostia River, Washington, D.C.

Environ Monit Assess

December 2011

Patrick Center for Environmental Research, The Academy of Natural Sciences, 1900 Benjamin Franklin Parkway, Philadelphia, PA 19103, USA.

The tidal Anacostia River in Washington DC has long been impacted by various sources of chemical pollution over the past 200 years. To explore more recent inputs of various chemicals, six sediment cores were collected for dating and chemical analysis in the downstream section of the tidal Anacostia River. Profiles of contaminants in sediment cores can be useful in determining management direction and effectiveness of pollution controls over time.

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This 25-y study monitored aquatic and terrestrial gamma-ray-emitting radionuclide levels near a nuclear power plant. It is the only known, long-term environmental survey of its kind. It was conducted neither by a utility owner, nor by a government agency, but rather by a private, environmental research institution.

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Silk filaments enhance the settlement of stream insect larvae.

Oecologia

November 2006

Patrick Center for Environmental Research, Academy of Natural Sciences of Philadelphia, 1900 Benjamin Franklin Parkway, Philadelphia, PA 19103, USA.

Many aquatic organisms need to settle in suitable benthic habitats while being transported via water currents. Such settlement is especially challenging for organisms that encounter complex benthic topography and lack the ability to move easily from the water column to the bed (e.g.

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With increasing concern over degradation of aquatic resources, issues of liability, and maintenance costs, removal of small dams has become increasing popular. Although the benefits of removal seem to outweigh the drawbacks, there is a relative paucity of studies documenting the extent and magnitude of biological and chemical changes associated with dam removal, especially those evaluating potential changes in contaminant inventories. In August and November of 2000, a run-of-the-river dam on Manatawny Creek (southeast Pennsylvania) was removed in a two-stage process.

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Probabilistic settling in the Local Exchange Model of turbulent particle transport.

J Theor Biol

July 2006

Patrick Center for Environmental Research, Academy of Natural Sciences of Philadelphia, 1900 Benjamin Franklin Parkway, Philadelphia, PA 19103, USA.

The Local Exchange Model (LEM) is a stochastic diffusion model of particle transport in turbulent flowing water. It was developed mainly for application to particles of near-neutral buoyancy that are strongly influenced by turbulent eddies. Turbulence can rapidly transfer such particles to the bed, where settlement can then occur by, for example, sticking to biofilms (e.

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Local modification of benthic flow environments by suspension-feeding stream insects.

Oecologia

August 2004

Patrick Center for Environmental Research, Academy of Natural Sciences of Philadelphia, 1900 Benjamin Franklin Parkway, Philadelphia, PA 19103, USA.

Larval black flies often exhibit spatially aggregated distributions, and individuals within patches can potentially reduce the supply of suspended food particles to downstream neighbors by modifying local flow characteristics. We used hot-film anemometry to quantify the magnitude and spatial extent of flow modifications downstream from feeding Simulium vittatum larvae in a laboratory flume, and to determine whether temporal patterns of flow variation are related to movements of the larval feeding appendages. Mean velocity 1 mm downstream from feeding larvae was reduced by 75%, and the percent reduction in velocity diminished asymptotically with downstream distance.

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Benthic suspension feeders are important components of aquatic ecosystems, often dominating the use of space and influencing patterns of material cycling between the water column and benthos. Biomechanical theory predicts that feeding by these consumers is governed by the flux (i.e.

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Seston in salt marshes contains a temporally and spatially complex mixture of natural microparticulate organic material, including phytoplankton, vascular plant detritus, bacteria, heterotrophic nanoflagellates and benthic diatoms. Quantitative information is available concerning how suspension-feeding consumers, such as the ribbed mussel, Geukensia demissa (Dillwyn), utilize some of these components to satisfy their carbon demands. Despite this information there is still a limited understanding of how the relative nutritive contribution of these different dietary items may shift during the year associated with variations in both seston composition and the mussel's physiological condition.

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Turbulent transport of suspended particles and dispersing benthic organisms: the hitting-distance problem for the local exchange model.

J Theor Biol

April 2001

Patrick Center for Environmental Research, Academy of Natural Sciences of Philadelphia, 1900 Benjamin Franklin Parkway, Philadelphia, PA 19103, U.S.A.

The local exchange model developed by McNair et al. (1997) provides a stochastic diffusion approximation to the random-like motion of fine particles suspended in turbulent water. Based on this model, McNair (2000) derived equations governing the probability distribution and moments of the hitting time, which is the time until a particle hits the bottom for the first time from a given initial elevation.

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Turbulent transport of suspended particles and dispersing benthic organisms: the hitting-time distribution for the local exchange model.

J Theor Biol

February 2000

Patrick Center for Environmental Research, Academy of Natural Sciences of Philadelphia, 1900 Benjamin Franklin Parkway, Philadelphia, PA 19103, USA.

Fine particles suspended in turbulent water exhibit highly irregular trajectories as they are buffeted by fluid eddies. The Local Exchange Model provides a stochastic diffusion approximation to the randomlike motion of such particles (e.g.

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Predator-prey interactions in a benthic stream community: a field test of flow-mediated refuges.

Oecologia

April 1998

Department of Biology, Swarthmore College, Swarthmore, PA 19081-1397, USA, , , , , , US.

Ecological theory suggests that the impact of predation can be strongly modified by the existence of regions of the environment in which prey are less accessible to predators, which underscores the need for empirical studies examining the factors influencing the availability and importance of such prey refuges. Our study tested whether benthic microhabitats with high flows provide suspension-feeding larval black flies (Simulium␣vittatum) with a spatial refuge in which the negative impact of predatory flatworms (Dugesia dorotocephala) is reduced. We conducted a short-term field experiment in Chester Creek (southeastern Pennsylvania, United States) to examine how the number of black fly larvae inhabiting tile substrates responded to manipulated variations in flatworm abundance and current speed.

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Accumulation of selenium in a model freshwater microbial food web.

Appl Environ Microbiol

August 1994

Academy of Natural Sciences, Patrick Center for Environmental Research, Philadelphia, Pennsylvania 19103.

The transfer of selenium between bacteria and the ciliated protozoan, Paramecium putrinum, was examined in laboratory cultures. The population growth of the ciliate was not inhibited in the presence of the highest concentrations of dissolved selenite or selenate tested (10(3) micrograms liter-1). Experiments with radioactive 75selenite or 75selenate indicated that accumulation of selenium by ciliates through time was low when feeding and metabolism were reduced by incubating at 0 degrees C.

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