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1.
Environ Monit Assess ; 186(8): 5235-46, 2014 Aug.
Artigo em Inglês | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-24756414

RESUMO

The weathering of coal combustion products (CCPs) in a lotic environment was assessed following the Tennessee Valley Authority (Kingston, TN) fly ash release of 2008 into surrounding rivers. Sampled materials included stockpiled ash and sediment collected from 180 to 880 days following the release. Total recoverable concentrations of heavy metals and metalloids in sediment were measured, and percent ash was estimated visually or quantified by particle counts. Arsenic and selenium in sediment were positively correlated with percent ash. For samples collected 180 days after the release, total concentrations of trace elements downstream of the release were greater than reference levels but less than concentrations measured in stockpiled ash. Total concentrations of trace elements remained elevated in ash-laden sediment after almost 2.5 years. A sequential extraction procedure (SEP) was used to speciate selected fractions of arsenic, copper, lead, nickel, and selenium in decreasing order of bioavailability. Concentrations of trace elements in sequentially extracted fractions were one to two orders of magnitude lower than total recoverable trace elements. The bulk of sequentially extractable trace elements was associated with iron-manganese oxides, the least bioavailable fraction of those measured. By 780 days, trace element concentrations in the SEP fractions approached reference concentrations in the more bioavailable water soluble, ion exchangeable, and carbonate-bound fractions. For each trace element, the percentage composition of the bioavailable fractions relative to the total concentration was calculated. These SEP indices were summed and shown to significantly decrease over time. These results document the natural attenuation of leachable trace elements in CCPs in river sediment as a result of the loss of bioavailable trace elements over time.


Assuntos
Carvão Mineral , Monitoramento Ambiental , Sedimentos Geológicos/química , Rios/química , Poluentes Químicos da Água/análise , Metaloides/análise , Metais Pesados/análise , Modelos Químicos , Centrais Elétricas , Tennessee , Oligoelementos/análise
2.
Ibis (Lond 1859) ; 163(3): 977-989, 2021 Feb 05.
Artigo em Inglês | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-35801167

RESUMO

Mothers may produce more of one sex to maximize their fitness if there are differences in the cost of producing each sex or there are differences in their relative reproductive value. Breeding date and clutch size are known to influence offspring sex ratios in birds through sex differences in dispersal, social behaviours, differential mortality, and available food resources. We tested if breeding date, clutch size and drought conditions influenced offspring sex ratios in a sexually size-monomorphic species, the Western Bluebird, by interrogating a 21-year dataset. After controlling for differential mortality, we found that hatch dates late in the breeding season were associated with the production of more females, suggesting that the value of producing males declines as the breeding season progresses. When clutch size was taken into account, small clutches yielded significantly more females late in the breeding season compared to the early and middle parts of the breeding season that produced significantly more males. Large clutches early in the season tended to produce more females, although this was not significant. Drought severity was not correlated with sex ratio adjustment. We propose and discuss several explanations for these patterns, including male offspring, but not female offspring, acting as helpers, increased female nestling provisioning late in the breeding season, differences in food abundance, and egg-laying order. Future work will help to uncover the mechanisms leading to these patterns. Identifying patterns and mechanisms of sex ratio skew from long-term datasets is important for informing predictions regarding life-history trade-offs in wildlife populations.

3.
Ecol Appl ; 2(4): 404-410, 1992 Nov.
Artigo em Inglês | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-27759273

RESUMO

Among the numerous site-ranking or reserve selection approaches is to select reserves based on the current distribution of a suite of species. This approach only requires distribution data for the species in the "focal taxon." To what extent is the proposed reserve network dependent on the species included in the focal taxon? Can a suite of species act as an umbrella or indicator for other species whose distribution was not directly considered? A simple reserve selection algorithm was applied to species lists from sites where multiple taxa were sampled. The algorithm selected sites so that each species in the focal taxon was represented in at least one reserve. The species lists were complied for birds, mammals, reptiles, and plants on islands in the Gulf of California, and for birds, mammals, and plants in canyons in San Diego County, California. Within both data sets, there were significant rank correlations (P < .01) between the number of species in different taxa per potential reserve. Yet the number of proposed reserves that satisfied the selection algorithm differed strongly between taxa. For example, 2 of 25 canyons were in the San Diego bird reserve network, but 10 of 25 canyons were in the native plant reserve network. The area of the proposed reserves selected by the algorithm ranged from a minimum of 3.2% of the total area for San Diego bird reserves to a maximum of 98.3% of the total area for the Gulf of California plant reserves. The bird reserves included only 45-78% of the species in the other taxa. Conversely, the plant reserve network would contain 88-100% of the vertebrate species. Thus, plants were better indicators than birds for reserve establishment. Plant occurrences were less ordered than bird occurrences, and there were 10 or 20 times more plant species than bird species. The better umbrella taxon was more speciose or had less pattern to species occurrences. Rather than a literal application of plants as reserve indicators, a better approach would be to collect some preliminary distribution data for a number of taxa in the potential reserve network and use these preliminary data to define the focal taxon (or taxa).

4.
Oecologia ; 64(2): 184-190, 1984 Oct.
Artigo em Inglês | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-28312337

RESUMO

The density and presence of 18 saxicolous (occurring among rocks) perennial plant species were measured on 61 habitat islands in Baja California. These data were compared with a random colonization simulation that placed species on islands in direct proportion to species densities and island areas. The initial simulation placed too many species on the islands. This problem was rectified by introducing the effects of within island seed dispersal. Both the data and the simulations showed patterns of density compensation. Density compensation is usually perceived as being evidence of interspecific competition; however, it could be caused by other factors, such as lack of predators or habitat differences between the islands. Since the simulation included no differences between the species in their competitive ability, I used the deviations of the simulations from the data as a measure of relative competitive ability. A conservative requirement for demonstrating that competition affects the densities of these species is finding an ecological tradeoff between colonizing and competitive ability. There was no evidence for a tradeoff between competitive and colonizing ability. The dispersal method of the plants (either animal or wind) had a larger but nonsignificant effect on the deviations. Thus there is no evidence for competition affecting the deviations in density and occurrence of these species from the simulations. Random colonization including the effects of both multiple source pools and perhaps the dispersal method of the species is the most parsimonious explanation for the density and diversity patterns.

5.
Oecologia ; 69(3): 446-453, 1986 Jun.
Artigo em Inglês | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-28311347

RESUMO

The nest locations of two ant species in the Colorado Desert are intraspecifically overdispersed. Intraspecific overdispersion has been thought to represent strong intraspecific competition. Here we consider this hypothesis along with three competing hypotheses: microhabitat selection by foundress queens, predation on foundress queens, and predation on established colonies. To test these hypotheses five types of data were collected: (1) the forager population sizes of Veromessor pergandei and Pogonomyrmex californicus, (2) the response of the territory use of V. pergandei to varying levels of food, (3) the encounter rates of conspecifics and other ant species to foundress queens artificially placed near and far from conspecific colonies, (4) predation on colonies as a function of colony spacing, and (5) the relationship between the plant microhabitat at the nest and colony spacing. The results show that established colonies have no apparent selectivity for a particular type of plant microhabitat nor do foundress queens show avoidance or attraction toward conspecifics. V. pergandei workers show only a slight ability to find V. pergandei queens that are artificially placed near their entrances. Certain spiders are the most common ant predators on our study area. Direct observations on spiders indicate that colonies with closer neighbors are not prone to a higher risk of predation. In addition, the estimates of the death rate of workers from a mark-recapture technique indicate that colonies with closer neighbors lose similar numbers of workers as compared to colonies with further neighbors. In favor of the competition hypothesis, the summed size of intraspecific nearest neighbor pairs are larger for colonies that are spaced further apart than those colonies that are spaced closer together. We also develop an index of foraging directionality for the column foraging species V. pergandei. Using this measure, we find that nearest neighbors tend to avoid foraging toward each other. The response of territory use to food levels was tested with experiments involving patches of cracked wheat. These experiments showed that patches away from nearest neighbors were found significantly sooner than patches toward nearest neighbors. The above five sets of data together suggest that resource competition and perhaps queen predation by established colonies account for the intraspecific spatial patterns of these species.

6.
Oecologia ; 75(2): 303-306, 1988 Mar.
Artigo em Inglês | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-28310851

RESUMO

We marked the sites chosen by 338 foundress queens of two desert ant species (Veromessor pergandei and Myrmecocystus flaviceps) and monitored changes in the spacing of both species and the foraging activity at V. pergandei young nests. Although the long established colonies of both species tend intraspecifically toward regular dispersion, queens of both species were intraspecifically clumped. After 3 months, when the first workers emerged, the young colonies (reduced to a total of 42 colonies) were randomly spaced intraspecifically. We also followed the spatial patter of queens with respect to established colonies of both species. Queens founded nests away from the nests of all established colonies on the site. After three months, the young colonies were dispersed away from conspecifics only. During June through August 1986, we censused the number of foragers at the surviving V. pergandei nests. Young colonies that were more active also tended to be far from established conspecifics in July and August. There was no correlation of forating activity with distance to heterospecific established colonies in any month. These results indicate that established conspecifics may reduce the survivorship of young ant colonies.

7.
Oecologia ; 62(3): 401-404, 1984 Jun.
Artigo em Inglês | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-28310895

RESUMO

The spatial patterns and diets of three desert ant species were examined. The results indicate that food competition may account for the spatial arrangement of these species, and that only intraspecific interactions may be required. Each ant species was significantly overdispersed, and the average intraspecific nearest neighbor distances were greater than the interspecific nearest neighbor distances. A test of pairwise spatial arrangment showed that all three species pairs were aggregated interspecifically. The level of the interspecific aggregation was related to the diet similarity of the species. The two species pairs with the lowest diet overlaps were significantly aggregated, and the species pair with the most similar diets was not significantly aggregated. Pairwise dietary overlaps between colonies showed that average intraspecific overlaps were significantly greater than interspecific diet overlaps. Furthermore, the diet overlap was significantly positively correlated to the mean nearest neighbor distance for the three intraspecific and three interspecific comparisons. These data indicate competition for food, especially within species, may be regulating the intercolony distances of these ant species. A computer simulation tested whether only intraspecific territoriality is necessary to produce the observed nearest neighbor distances. A simulation that placed colonies randomly on a patch confirmed that these colonies are intraspecifically overdispersed. By adding intraspecific territoriality, the simulation nearest neighbor distances fit the empirical data reasonably well. Thus interspecific competitive interactions seem unnecessary to account for the spatial arrangement of these species.

8.
Integr Environ Assess Manag ; 4(4): 425-30, 2008 Oct.
Artigo em Inglês | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-18593218

RESUMO

Since the onset of plutonium production at the U.S. Department of Energy's Hanford Site, several hundred cubic meters of carbon tetrachloride (CCl4) has been discharged to the soil column, resulting in a dispersed CCI4 vapor plume in the subsurface. Inhalation of volatile organic chemicals could be an important exposure pathway for burrowing animals there. Historical levels of CCl4 in soil pore gas exceeded the inhalation ecological screening level for CCl4. Thus, the inhalation exposure pathway was evaluated with the use of artificial burrows deployed at locations that had elevated levels of CCl4 in soil gas. Artificial burrows were designed on the basis of information available for Hanford Site fossorial wildlife. After installation, the artificial burrow atmosphere was sampled and analyzed for CCl4 and its degradation products: chloroform, methylene chloride, and chloromethane. Sampling was repeated on 3 occasions to capture varying atmospheric conditions affecting exposure concentrations. CCl4 was detected in the artificial burrows, and maximum exposures were observed during relatively low barometric conditions. The highest CCl4 detections were still well below the inhalation-based ecological screening level and CCl4 degradation products were never detected. This study shows that artificial burrows are an efficient method for obtaining relevant exposure data and illustrates the utility of directly measuring the medium for exposure under ecologically realistic conditions.


Assuntos
Tetracloreto de Carbono/análise , Monitoramento Ambiental/métodos , Exposição por Inalação/análise , Poluentes do Solo/análise , Animais , Tetracloreto de Carbono/química , Tetracloreto de Carbono/toxicidade , Exposição por Inalação/efeitos adversos , Medição de Risco/métodos , Poluentes do Solo/química , Poluentes do Solo/toxicidade , Volatilização
9.
Environ Manage ; 35(5): 632-48, 2005 May.
Artigo em Inglês | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-15924205

RESUMO

Concentrations of contaminants in sediment deposits can have large spatial variability resulting from geomorphic processes acting over long time periods. Thus, systematic (e.g., regularly spaced sample locations) or random sampling approaches might be inefficient and/or lead to highly biased results. We demonstrate the bias associated with systematic sampling and compare these results to those achieved by methods that merge a geomorphic approach to evaluating the physical system and stratified random sampling concepts. By combining these approaches, we achieve a more efficient and less biased characterization of sediment contamination in fluvial systems. These methods are applied using a phased sampling approach to characterize radiological contamination in sediment deposits in two semiarid canyons that have received historical releases from the Los Alamos National Laboratory. Uncertainty in contaminant inventory was used as a metric to evaluate the adequacy of sampling during these phased investigations. Simple, one-dimensional Monte Carlo simulations were used to estimate uncertainty in contaminant inventory. We also show how one can use stratified random sampling theory to help estimate uncertainty in mean contaminant concentrations.


Assuntos
Radioisótopos de Césio/análise , Monitoramento Ambiental/métodos , Sedimentos Geológicos/análise , Plutônio/análise , Poluentes Radioativos do Solo/análise , Poluentes Radioativos da Água/análise , Monitoramento Ambiental/estatística & dados numéricos , Método de Monte Carlo , New Mexico , Rios , Incerteza , Abastecimento de Água
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