Filters: Tags: invertebrates (X)
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ABSTRACT Six new aleocharine species are described and illustrated from the Yukon and Alaska: Atheta (Dimetrota) cadeti Klimaszewski and Godin, sp. nov.; Atheta (Hypatheta) pseudomet lakatlana Klimaszewski and Godin, sp. nov.; Cypha inexpectata Klimaszewski and Godin, sp. nov.; Oxypoda yukonensis Klimaszewski and Godin, sp. nov., Oxypoda pseudoconvergens Klimaszewski and Godin, sp. nov.; and Clusiota antennalis Klimaszewski and Godin, sp. nov. Atheta (Rhagocneme) subsinuata (Erichson), known from the western Palaearctic region, was discovered in the Yukon and is reported in North America for the first time as an adventive species. Amischa tersa Casey is recorded from Canada and the Yukon for the first time. Twenty-four...
Categories: Publication;
Types: Citation;
Tags: Invertebrates,
Monitoring 1-Changes in Plant and Animal Distribution: Fauna
This map was created to help assess impacts on nonindigenous aquatic species distributions due to flooding associated with Hurricane Maria. Storm surge and flood events can assist expansion and distribution of nonindigenous aquatic species through the connection of adjacent watersheds, backflow of water upstream of impoundments, increased downstream flow, and creation of freshwater bridges along coastal regions. This map will help natural resource managers determine potential new locations for individual species, or to develop a watch list of potential new species within a watershed. These data include a subset of data from the Nonindigenous Aquatic Species Database, that fall within the general area of the 2017...
Invertebrate, fish, and habitat data were collected as part of a cooperative project that began in 2002 between the U.S. Geological Survey, Colorado Springs Utilities, and Colorado Springs Engineering. Other entities have contributed to the project over the years including Colorado Parks and Wildlife. Habitat samples were collected and analyzed at 27 sites – 25 in the Fountain Creek Basin as well as two sites on the Arkansas River, El Paso and Pueblo Counties, Colorado. The number of sites sampled each year as well as the number of annual visits during which data were collected, and sampling methods used during each visit vary. The habitat data were collected between 2002 and 2023 and is intended to be updated annually...
Categories: Data;
Tags: Aquatic biology,
Benthic environments,
Colorado,
Community ecology,
Ecology,
Intensification of permafrost thaw has increased the frequency and magnitude of large permafrost slope disturbances (mega slumps) in glaciogenic terrain of northwestern Canada. Individual thermokarst disturbances up to 40 ha in area have made large volumes of previously frozen, highly weatherable fine-grained sediments available for leaching and transport to adjacent streams, significantly increasing sediment and solute loads in these systems. To test the effects of this climate-sensitive disturbance regime on the ecology of Arctic streams, we explored the relationship between physical and chemical variables and benthic macroinvertebrate communities in disturbed and undisturbed stream reaches in the Peel Plateau...
Categories: Data,
Publication;
Types: Citation,
Downloadable,
Map Service,
OGC WFS Layer,
OGC WMS Layer,
Shapefile;
Tags: Invertebrates,
Monitoring 1-Changes in Plant and Animal Distribution: Fauna
Categories: Data,
Publication;
Types: Citation,
Downloadable,
Map Service,
OGC WFS Layer,
OGC WMS Layer,
Shapefile;
Tags: Invertebrates,
Monitoring 1-Changes in Plant and Animal Distribution: Fauna
This portion of the data release presents terrestrial invertebrate abundance data from samples collected in emergent and shrub vegetation along the edge of the Elwha River estuary, Washington, in 2007 and 2013 (no associated USGS Field Activities numbers because data were collected predominantly by biologists from the Lower Elwha Klallam Tribe). We deployed terrestrial insect fallout traps at ten locations in the east estuary, five replicates each in shrub and emergent (littoral) vegetation habitats. Clear, rectangular traps (2,400 cm2 in 2007 and 3,526 cm2 in 2013) were filled with 5 cm of filtered soapy water and deployed for 72 hours. Invertebrate counts from 2013 were standardized to the 2007 bin size to account...
Categories: Data;
Types: Citation;
Tags: Clallam County,
Elwha River,
Olympic Peninsula,
State of Washington,
Strait of Juan de Fuca,
A dataset of the macroinvertebrates collected for a trout production study from August 2017- August 2018 in northern New Mexico. The invertebrates are sampled from the benthos, drift, and trout stomachs (via gastric lavage). The drift and benthic invertebrate data represent subsampled individuals. There is a separate file that documents the percent of original sample. The diet samples were not subsampled. The dataset includes individual invertebrates identified to taxonomic Order, lifestage, habitat, their measured lengths, and regressed dry masses.
These data were used to describe temporal trends in invertebrate communities in the Fountain Creek basin. Invertebrate data were collected between 1985 and 2022. Datasets include invertebrate frequency of occurrence, invertebrate tolerance index values, invertebrate multi-metric index, and new zealand mudsnial counts. Description of invertebrate sampling methodology are documented in the associated publication (https://doi.org/10.5066/P9PUY4FC).
Biological invasions are one of the greatest threats to native species in natural ecological systems. One of the most successful invasive species is Bromus tectorum L. (cheatgrass), which is having marked impacts on native plant communities and ecosystem processes. However, we know little about the effects of this invasion on native animal species in the Intermountain West. Because ants have been used to detect ecological change associated with anthropogenic land use, they seem well suited for a preliminary evaluation of the consequences of cheatgrass-driven habitat conversion. In our study, we used pitfall traps to assess ant community assemblages in intact sagebrush and nearby cheatgrass-dominated vegetation....
These data were compiled to explore the foraging ecology of Rainbow Trout (Oncorhynchus mykiss) in the Colorado River, Grand Canyon, Arizona. These data represent samples characterizing the availability of drifting invertebrate prey (hereafter, drift) and use of these invertebrate prey by rainbow trout determined by gut samples (hereafter, diets). Drift and diet sampling occurred in five distinct reaches downstream of Glen Canyon Dam (river kilometer (rkm) from the dam): (I) rkm 16.3-21.7; (II) rkm 52.8-58.3; (III) rkm 86.6-91.9; (IV) rkm 122.0-123.6; and (V) rkm 127.1-129.6. Samples were taken on 12 trips in April, July, September and January from April 2012 through January 2015. The aquatic prey base consists...
Categories: Data;
Tags: Aquatic Biology,
Arizona,
Bayesian discrete choice model,
Colorado River,
Ecology,
This map was created to help assess impacts on nonindigenous aquatic species distributions due to flooding associated with Hurricane Irma. Storm surge and flood events can assist expansion and distribution of nonindigenous aquatic species through the connection of adjacent watersheds, backflow of water upstream of impoundments, increased downstream flow, and creation of freshwater bridges along coastal regions. This map will help natural resource managers determine potential new locations for individual species, or to develop a watch list of potential new species within a watershed. These data include a subset of data from the Nonindigenous Aquatic Species Database, that fall within the general area of the 2017...
The urbanized area of downtown Menlo Park is subject to persistent flooding and sediment deposition by San Francisquito Creek in South San Francisco Bay. To mitigate these events, a suite of cores was collected in 2002 at the mouth of the creek to determine sediment depositional rates on the delta. One of those cores (721-1) was selected for microbiological (pollen, diatoms, and foraminifera) and geochemical analyses to reconstruct a depositional record over the past two millennia. This data release provides radiocarbon dates, census counts of benthic foraminifera, diatoms, and palynomorphs, and the measurement of anthropogenic metals and other elements in sediments from this core.
Categories: Data;
Types: Map Service,
OGC WFS Layer,
OGC WMS Layer,
OGC WMS Service;
Tags: CMHRP,
Coastal and Marine Hazards and Resources Program,
Habitat,
Hooks Point,
Invertebrates,
This project evaluates the effects of global climate change and sea level rise on estuarine intertidal habitat in the San Francisco Bay and the Pacific Flyway migratory waterbirds that rely on this habitat. Phase 2 of this project is a continuation of work to evaluate the effects of global climate change and sea level rise (SLR) on intertidal shoals in the San Francisco Bay Estuary and the migratory waterbirds that rely on this critically important resource in the Pacific Flyway. The primary objectives are to: 1) use downscaled global climate change models to translate SLR and climate scenarios into habitat quantity predictions through Delft3D and Dflow-FM (unstructured grid) geomorphic modeling; 2) model the response...
Categories: Data,
Project;
Tags: 2010,
2012,
Applications and Tools,
CA,
California Landscape Conservation Cooperative,
Categories: Publication;
Types: Citation;
Tags: Invertebrates,
Monitoring 1-Changes in Plant and Animal Distribution: Fauna
RÉSUMÉ. Les mollusques d'eau douce constituent une partie imposante du régime alimentaire du corégone à bosse (Coregonus pidschian) et du corégone tschir (C. nasus), deux corégonidés à alimentation benthique. L'analyse récente de pisidies (Sphaeriidae), de valvatidés (Valvatidae) et de lymnéidés (Lymnaeidae) provenant du tractus digestif inférieur de ces poissons a permis de constater que grand nombre de ces mollusques étaient toujours en vie. Le fait d'avoir entièrement survécu dans le passage digestif porterait à croire qu'il s'agirait là d'un mécanisme de dispersion des mollusques d'eau douce qui n'a jamais encore été reconnu. Une étude sur le terrain a été réalisée au moyen de corégones à bosse et de corégones...
Categories: Publication;
Types: Citation;
Tags: Invertebrates,
Monitoring 1-Changes in Plant and Animal Distribution: Fauna
Introduction: ... As a directed effort to further document moths of limited geographic occurrence, an initial inventory of the southwestern Yukon was conducted in 2004. Survey efforts focused on habitats known to harbor species of limited occurrence, particularly sand dunes and low elevation grasslands / steppe. Alpine tundra was also surveyed, but to a lesser extent owing to the fact that many of the Beringian endemic species have a biennial life cycle and fly only in odd-numbered years (Lafontaine & Wood 1997). Although Yukon's boreal habitats are undoubtedly home to many species not yet documented from this territory, the boreal fauna is generally transcontinental in distribution, and survey work was not explicitly...
Categories: Publication;
Types: Citation;
Tags: Invertebrates,
Monitoring 1-Changes in Plant and Animal Distribution: Fauna
Categories: Publication;
Types: Citation;
Tags: Invertebrates,
Monitoring 1-Changes in Plant and Animal Distribution: Fauna
During the last two decades a great number of studies dealing witharctic and boreal spiders have been published, both in thePalaearctic and the Nearctic. Such an increase in informationmakes it possible to analyze basic patterns of spider diversity inthe North as well as to show areas where further studies are stillnecessary. The number of species found in faunas of larger areasnorth of 60 degree N varies from 620 (Finland) to 250 (PolarUrals) and 300 (Yukon), when island faunas are excluded. Twoareas, divided by the Bering Strait, Northeastern Siberia andnorth-western North America have marked proportion of endemic taxa(ca. 8 %) belonging to several spider families. Considerablenumber of endemic spiders are known...
Categories: Publication;
Types: Citation;
Tags: Invertebrates,
Monitoring 1-Changes in Plant and Animal Distribution: Fauna
Dendroctonus ponderosae (Hopkins) or mountain pine beetle is a native bark beetle (Coleoptera: Curculionidae: Scolytinae) that feeds on more than 20 species of pine in western North America. In British Columbia, its principal host is lodgepole pine (Pinus contorta var. latifolia Engelmann). As a "primary" bark beetle, D. ponderosae kills its host at epidemic stages, exerting profound landscape-level mortality. As of 2012, D. ponderosae has caused the loss of 726 million cubic meters of timber, covering an area of 17.5 million hectares of mature pine forest in British Columbia and Alberta. Small diameter hosts are not suitable for D. ponderosae , however, creating a niche for the "secondary" bark beetles, including...
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