journal
https://read.qxmd.com/read/38783923/feasibility-of-implementing-an-integrated-long-term-database-to-advance-ecosystem-based-management-in-the-laurentian-great-lakes-basin
#1
JOURNAL ARTICLE
Richard R Budnik, Kenneth T Frank, Lyndsie M Collis, Michael E Fraker, Lacey A Mason, Andrew M Muir, Steven A Pothoven, David F Clapp, Paris D Collingsworth, Joel C Hoffman, James M Hood, Timothy B Johnson, Marten A Koops, Lars G Rudstam, Stuart A Ludsin
The North American Great Lakes have been experiencing dramatic change during the past half-century, highlighting the need for holistic, ecosystem-based approaches to management. To assess interest in ecosystem-based management (EBM), including the value of a comprehensive public database that could serve as a repository for the numerous physical, chemical, and biological monitoring Great Lakes datasets that exist, a two-day workshop was organized, which was attended by 40+ Great Lakes researchers, managers, and stakeholders...
February 21, 2024: Journal of Great Lakes Research
https://read.qxmd.com/read/37324162/decreasing-trends-in-total-suspended-solids-and-cumulative-effects-of-nonpoint-source-projects-in-the-cuyahoga-river-watershed-oh
#2
JOURNAL ARTICLE
Michael G McManus, Christopher T Nietch, Matthew T Heberling, Leslie Gains-Germain
Using the US EPA's Grants Reporting and Tracking System (GRTS), we test if completion of best management practices (BMPs) through the Clean Water Act Section (§)319 National Nonpoint Source Program was associated with a decreasing trend in total suspended solids (TSS) load (metric tons/year). The study area chosen had 21 completed projects in the Cuyahoga River watershed in northeastern Ohio from 2000 to 2018. The §319 projects ranged from dam removal, floodplain/wetland restoration to stormwater projects...
June 1, 2023: Journal of Great Lakes Research
https://read.qxmd.com/read/38269193/community-engagement-and-the-importance-of-partnerships-within-the-great-lakes-areas-of-concern-program-a-mixed-methods-case-study
#3
JOURNAL ARTICLE
Alison Rentschler, Kathleen C Williams
The Great Lakes Areas of Concern (AOC) program was created through amendments to the Great Lakes Water Quality Agreement (GLWQA) in 1987 to restore contaminated sites using an ecosystem-based approach. This program represents one of the first instances of ecosystem-based management (EBM) in the Great Lakes region with a specific focus on the inclusion of the public and local stakeholders in the process. Despite official language incorporating EBM in the AOC program, implementation of these practices has not been consistent across AOCs given differences in local arrangements of Public Advisory Councils (PACs), approaches to community engagement, and environmental problems...
December 2022: Journal of Great Lakes Research
https://read.qxmd.com/read/36778902/setting-an-agenda-to-catalyze-research-in-the-social-and-organizational-dimensions-of-great-lakes-remediation-restoration-and-revitalization
#4
JOURNAL ARTICLE
Kathleen C Williams, Chris McLaughlin, Paul W Seelbach, Jon W Allan, Joel C Hoffman
The Great Lakes region was once a hub of industry and innovation that provided wealth and identity to the region. Economic upheavals have left the region trying to recreate economies and cleanup degraded environments. There have been multiple, overlapping efforts to change these conditions and create a new narrative for the region through environmental remediation, habitat restoration, and community revitalization on the path towards resilience. The elements that contribute to success are organized differently in different places, and are not always identified or characterized in the environmental literature...
December 2022: Journal of Great Lakes Research
https://read.qxmd.com/read/36643389/defining-community-revitalization-in-great-lakes-areas-of-concern-and-investigating-how-revitalization-can-be-catalyzed-through-remediation-and-restoration
#5
JOURNAL ARTICLE
Carly Norris, Caitie Nigrelli, Tammy A Newcomer-Johnson, Dalon P White, Gale B Beaubien, Amy Pelka, Marc A Mills
An international effort to restore contaminated areas across the Great Lakes has been underway for over 50 years. Although experts have increasingly recognized the inherent connections between ecological conditions and community level benefits, Great Lakes community revitalization continues to be a broad and complex topic, lacking a comprehensive definition. The purpose of this study was to generate a testable "AOC-Revitalization Framework" for linking remediation and restoration success, represented by Beneficial Use Impairment (BUI) removal in U...
December 1, 2022: Journal of Great Lakes Research
https://read.qxmd.com/read/37961050/human-well-being-and-natural-capital-indictors-for-great-lakes-waterfront-revitalization
#6
JOURNAL ARTICLE
Ted R Angradi, Jonathon J Launspach, Molly J Wick
Revitalization of natural capital amenities at the Great Lakes waterfront can result from sediment remediation, habitat restoration, climate resilience projects, brownfield reuse, economic redevelopment and other efforts. Practical indicators are needed to assess the socioeconomic and cultural benefits of these investments. We compiled U.S. census-tract scale data for five Great Lakes communities: Duluth/Superior, Green Bay, Milwaukee, Chicago, and Cleveland. We downloaded data from the US Census Bureau, Centers for Disease Control and Prevention, Environmental Protection Agency, National Oceanic and Atmospheric Administration, and non-governmental organizations...
August 1, 2022: Journal of Great Lakes Research
https://read.qxmd.com/read/35958273/opportunities-for-combining-data-of-estonian-and-russian-monitoring-to-reflect-on-water-quality-in-large-transboundary-lake-peipsi
#7
JOURNAL ARTICLE
Olga Tammeorg, Lea Tuvikene, Sergey Kondratyev, Sergey Golosov, Ilya Zverev, Olga Zadonskaya, Peeter Nõges
Lake Peipsi, one of the world's largest lakes, is shared between Estonia and Russia. The water quality in different parts of the lake has so far been assessed independently. Here we explore opportunities for combining data of Estonian and Russian monitoring. For that, we 1) analysed the compatibility of data for some water quality variables; 2) estimated the potential effects of the differences in sampling frequency; 3) provided a few regression models to calculate the missing data for months not sampled by the Russian side...
August 2022: Journal of Great Lakes Research
https://read.qxmd.com/read/35928830/retraction-notice-to-comparison-of-thiaminase-activity-in-fish-using-the-radiometric-and-4-nitrothiophenol-colorimetric-methods-j-great-lakes-res-36-2010-641-645
#8
Dale C Honeyfield, Jeremiah W Hanes, Lisa Brown, Clifford E Kraft, Tadhg P Begley
[This retracts the article PMC6042866.].
August 2022: Journal of Great Lakes Research
https://read.qxmd.com/read/36591538/early-career-researchers-benefit-from-inclusive-diverse-and-international-collaborations-changing-how-academic-institutions-utilize-the-seminar-series
#9
JOURNAL ARTICLE
Catherine M Febria, Donna R Kashian, Kory R T Bertrand, Brittanie Dabney, Matthew Day, Madison Dugdale, Kate O Ekhator, Héctor J Esparra-Escalera, Ryan Graham, Keira Harshaw, Darrin S Hunt, Savannah Knorr, Katrina Lewandowski, Colleen Linn, Allison Lucas, Scott O C Mundle, Gelareh Raoufi, Chelsea Salter, Zoha Siddiqua, Smita Tyagi, Megan M Wallen
Efforts to make research environments more inclusive and diverse are beneficial for the next generation of Great Lakes researchers. The global COVID-19 pandemic introduced circumstances that forced graduate programs and academic institutions to re-evaluate and promptly pivot research traditions, such as weekly seminar series, which are critical training grounds and networking opportunities for early career researchers (ECRs). While several studies have established that academics with funded grants and robust networks were better able to weather the abrupt changes in research and closures of institutions, ECRs did not...
June 2022: Journal of Great Lakes Research
https://read.qxmd.com/read/36092777/six-decades-of-lake-ontario-ecological-history-according-to-benthos
#10
JOURNAL ARTICLE
Lyubov E Burlakova, Alexander Y Karatayev, Allison R Hrycik, Susan E Daniel, Knut Mehler, Lars G Rudstam, James M Watkins, Ronald Dermott, Jill Scharold, Ashley K Elgin, Thomas Nalepa
The Laurentian Great Lakes have experienced multiple anthropogenic changes in the past century, including cultural eutrophication, phosphorus abatement initiatives, and the introduction of invasive species. Lake Ontario, the most downstream lake in the system, is considered to be among the most impaired. The benthos of Lake Ontario has been studied intensively in the last six decades and can provide insights into the impact of environmental changes over time. We used multivariate community analyses to examine temporal changes in community composition over the last 54 years, and to assess the major drivers of long-term changes in benthos...
April 2022: Journal of Great Lakes Research
https://read.qxmd.com/read/35958892/-dreissena-in-lake-ontario-30-years-post-invasion
#11
JOURNAL ARTICLE
Alexander Y Karatayev, Lyubov E Burlakova, Knut Mehler, Ashley K Elgin, Lars G Rudstam, James M Watkins, Molly Wick
We examined three decades of changes in dreissenid populations in Lake Ontario and predation by round goby ( Neogobius melanostomus ). Dreissenids (almost exclusively quagga mussels, Dreissena rostriformis bugensis ) peaked in 2003, 13 years after arrival, and then declined at depths <90 m but continued to increase deeper through 2018. Lake-wide density also increased from 2008 to 2018 along with average mussel lengths and lake-wide biomass, which reached an all-time high in 2018 (25.2 ± 3.3 g AFTDW/m2 )...
April 1, 2022: Journal of Great Lakes Research
https://read.qxmd.com/read/35967967/linking-multi-media-modeling-with-machine-learning-to-assess-and-predict-lake-chlorophyll-a-concentrations
#12
JOURNAL ARTICLE
Christina Feng Chang, Valerie Garcia, Chunling Tang, Penny Vlahos, David Wanik, Jun Yan, Jesse O Bash, Marina Astitha
Eutrophication and excessive algal growth pose a threat on aquatic organisms and the health of the public, environment, and the economy. Understanding what drives excessive algal growth can inform mitigation measures and aid in advance planning to minimize impacts. We demonstrate how simulated data from weather, hydrological, and agroecosystem numerical prediction models can be combined with machine learning (ML) to assess and predict Chlorophyll a (Chl a ) concentrations, a proxy for lake eutrophication and algal biomass...
December 13, 2021: Journal of Great Lakes Research
https://read.qxmd.com/read/35949990/status-of-the-amphipod-diporeia-spp-in-lake-superior-2006-2016
#13
JOURNAL ARTICLE
Jill V Scharold, Timothy D Corry
The amphipod Diporeia spp. has historically been an important component of the benthic food web of the Laurentian Great Lakes. The Great Lakes Water Quality Agreement included its population density as an indicator of ecological condition for Lake Superior, with target values of 220-320 m-2 in nearshore areas (≤100 m depth) and 30-160 m-2 in offshore areas (>100 m). To assess the status of Diporeia in Lake Superior, we used a probability-based lake-wide survey design to obtain estimates of Diporeia density and biomass in 2006, 2011 and 2016...
August 1, 2021: Journal of Great Lakes Research
https://read.qxmd.com/read/35464820/spatial-and-temporal-distributions-of-dreissena-spp-veligers-in-lake-huron-does-calcium-limit-settling-success
#14
JOURNAL ARTICLE
Darren S Kirkendall, David B Bunnell, Patricia M Armenio, Lauren A Eaton, Anett S Trebitz, Nicole M Watson
The larval stage of invasive Dreissena spp. mussels (i.e., veligers) are understudied despite their seasonal numerical dominance among plankton. We report the spring and summer veliger densities and size structure across the main basin, North Channel, and Georgian Bay of Lake Huron, and seek to explain spatiotemporal variation. Monthly sampling was conducted at 9 transects and up to 3 sites per transect from spring through summer 2017. Veliger densities peaked in June and July, and we found comparable densities and biomasses of veligers between basins, despite differences in density of juvenile and adult mussels across these regions...
August 2021: Journal of Great Lakes Research
https://read.qxmd.com/read/35520458/trophic-transfer-efficiency-in-the-lake-superior-food-web-assessing-the-impacts-of-non-native-species
#15
JOURNAL ARTICLE
B G Matthias, T R Hrabik, J C Hoffman, O T Gorman, M J Seider, M E Sierszen, M R Vinson, D L Yule, P M Yurista
Ecosystem-based management relies on understanding how perturbations influence ecosystem structure and function (e.g., invasive species, exploitation, abiotic changes). However, data on unimpacted systems are scarce, therefore, we often rely on impacted systems to make inferences about 'natural states.' Among the Laurentian Great Lakes, Lake Superior provides a unique case study to address non-native species impacts because the food web is dominated by native species. Additionally, Lake Superior is both vertically (benthic versus pelagic) and horizontally (nearshore versus offshore) structured by depth, providing an opportunity to compare the function of these sub-food webs...
April 13, 2021: Journal of Great Lakes Research
https://read.qxmd.com/read/33716391/risk-benefit-modeling-to-guide-health-research-in-collaboration-with-great-lakes-fish-consuming-native-american-communities
#16
JOURNAL ARTICLE
Matthew J Dellinger, Ronald Anguzu, Noel Pingatore, Michael Ripley
It is well documented that fish consumption imparts both health risks and benefits. Furthermore, fish harvest and consumption are an essential part of Great Lakes Native American cultures. Quantitative models that compare risk and benefits to potential consumption scenarios can help guide future health research as well as consumption advice for potentially sensitive populations. This article presents fish consumption scenarios based on self-reported meal plans constructed by tribal members in eastern upper peninsula and northern lower Michigan Anishinaabe...
December 2020: Journal of Great Lakes Research
https://read.qxmd.com/read/33122871/dietary-niche-and-growth-rate-of-the-nonnative-tubenose-goby-proterorhinus-semilunaris-in-the-lake-superior-basin
#17
JOURNAL ARTICLE
Bradley Dawson, Greg Peterson, Thomas Hrabik, Joel Hoffman
The tubenose goby (Proterorhinus semilunaris) entered the Great Lakes in the 1990s via ballast water, but remains poorly studied within North America, making it difficult to predict its effects on native ecosystems. Dietary breadth and somatic growth rate have important ramifications for survival, competitiveness, and dispersal ability of a fish species, and thereby its ecological impact. We studied diet and growth of age-0 tubenose goby within the St. Louis River, a tributary to Lake Superior that contains the largest population within the Lake Superior basin...
October 13, 2020: Journal of Great Lakes Research
https://read.qxmd.com/read/33424103/deep-lake-explorer-a-web-application-for-crowdsourcing-the-classification-of-benthic-underwater-video-from-the-laurentian-great-lakes
#18
JOURNAL ARTICLE
Molly J Wick, Ted R Angradi, Matthew B Pawlowski, David Bolgrien, Rick Debbout, Jonathon Launspach, Mari Nord
Underwater video is increasingly used to study aspects of the Great Lakes benthos including the abundance of round goby and dreissenid mussels. The introduction of these two species have resulted in major ecological shifts in the Great Lakes, but the species and their impacts have heretofore been underassessed due to limitations of monitoring methods. Underwater video (UVID) can "sample" hard bottom sites where grab samplers cannot. Efficient use of UVID data requires affordable and accurate classification and analysis tools...
October 1, 2020: Journal of Great Lakes Research
https://read.qxmd.com/read/33100489/the-taxonomic-diversity-of-the-cichlid-fish-fauna-of-ancient-lake-tanganyika-east-africa
#19
REVIEW
Fabrizia Ronco, Heinz H Büscher, Adrian Indermaur, Walter Salzburger
Ancient Lake Tanganyika in East Africa houses the world's ecologically and morphologically most diverse assemblage of cichlid fishes, and the third most species-rich after lakes Malawi and Victoria. Despite long-lasting scientific interest in the cichlid species flocks of the East African Great Lakes, for example in the context of adaptive radiation and explosive diversification, their taxonomy and systematics are only partially explored; and many cichlid species still await their formal description. Here, we provide a current inventory of the cichlid fish fauna of Lake Tanganyika, providing a complete list of all valid 208 Tanganyikan cichlid species, and discuss the taxonomic status of more than 50 undescribed taxa on the basis of the available literature as well as our own observations and collections around the lake...
October 2020: Journal of Great Lakes Research
https://read.qxmd.com/read/32952278/consequences-of-calamities-and-their-management-the-case-of-covid-19-pandemic-and-flooding-on-inland-capture-fisheries-in-kenya
#20
JOURNAL ARTICLE
Christopher Mulanda Aura, Chrisphine S Nyamweya, Cyprian O Odoli, Horace Owiti, James M Njiru, Patrick W Otuo, Edna Waithaka, John Malala
During the period February to June 2020, heavy rainfall caused increases in levels and flooding in many lakes in East Africa. This coincided with the COVID-19 pandemic. These calamities affected ecosystems and livelihoods, especially of fishers who depend on fisheries as their only source of livelihood. This study examined the effects of COVID-19 and flooding on the major inland capture fisheries in Kenya to illustrate the effect of such calamities on vulnerable communities to guide interventions. Socioeconomic data were collected across the fish value chains during the peak of COVID-19 pandemic and flooding in Kenya from May to early June 2020...
September 15, 2020: Journal of Great Lakes Research
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