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  • Limnology  (49)
  • Oceanography  (39)
  • Cell & Developmental Biology
  • Fish counters
  • General Chemistry
  • LUNAR AND PLANETARY EXPLORATION
  • Gainesville, FL  (62)
  • Bristol, UK
  • 1
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    National Rivers Authority | Bristol, UK
    In:  dis@fba.org.uk | http://aquaticcommons.org/id/eprint/10949 | 1256 | 2013-03-26 13:57:52 | 10949 | Environment Agency, UK (Freshwater Biological Association)
    Publication Date: 2021-06-25
    Description: This is the Salmonid & Freshwater Fisheries Statistics for England & Wales 1992 produced by the National Rivers Authority (NRA) in 1994. This report is focused on the maintenance, improvement and development of fisheries of England and Wales. This report is the fourth compilation of salmon and migratory trout catch statistics for England and Wales published by the National Rivers Authority. For the years 1983-88, these statistics were published by the Ministry of Agriculture, Fisheries and Food (MAFF), Directorate of Fisheries Research in their Data Report Series. Other than for rod catches, the 1992 data have been presented in a broadly similar format to those of 1991, Presentation of the rod data however has changed considerably due to the introduction in January 1992 of the first National Rod Fishing Licence. This report makes a general review of different catches: Northumbria, Yorkshire, Anglian, Thames, Southern, Wessex, South West, Severn-Trent, Welsh and North West.
    Description: Environment Agency Archives North West
    Keywords: Fisheries ; Limnology ; Management ; England ; Wales ; Northumbria ; Yorkshire ; Anglian ; Thames ; Southern ; Wessex ; South West ; Severn-Trent ; Welsh ; North West ; Inland waters ; Rivers ; River fisheries ; Freshwater fish ; Fishery management ; Fishery data ; Fish catch statistics ; Migratory species ; Licensing
    Repository Name: AquaDocs
    Type: monograph
    Format: application/pdf
    Format: application/pdf
    Format: 51
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  • 2
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    National Rivers Authority | Bristol, UK
    In:  dis@fba.org.uk | http://aquaticcommons.org/id/eprint/10950 | 1256 | 2013-03-26 13:57:26 | 10950 | Environment Agency, UK (Freshwater Biological Association)
    Publication Date: 2021-06-25
    Description: This is the Salmonid & Freshwater Fisheries Statistics for England & Wales 1994 produced by the National Rivers Authority (NRA) in 1995. This report is focused on the maintenance, improvement and development of fisheries of England and Wales. This report is the sixth compilation of salmon and migratory trout catch statistics for England and Wales produced by the National Rivers Authority. For the years 1983-88, these statistics were published by the Ministry o f Agriculture, Fisheries and Food (MAFF), Directorate of Fisheries Research in their Data Report Series. The 1994 data have been presented in a broadly similar format to those of 1993.This report makes a general review of different catches: Northumbria, Yorkshire, Anglian, Thames, Southern, Wessex, South West, Severn-Trent, Welsh and North West.
    Description: Environment Agency Archives North West
    Keywords: Fisheries ; Limnology ; Management ; England ; Wales ; Northumbria ; Yorkshire ; Anglian ; Thames ; Southern ; Wessex ; South West ; Severn-Trent ; Welsh ; North West ; Inland waters ; Rivers ; River fisheries ; Freshwater fish ; Fishery management ; Fishery data ; Fish catch statistics ; Migratory species ; Licensing
    Repository Name: AquaDocs
    Type: monograph
    Format: application/pdf
    Format: application/pdf
    Format: 57
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  • 3
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    National Rivers Authority | Bristol, UK
    In:  dis@fba.org.uk | http://aquaticcommons.org/id/eprint/11036 | 1256 | 2013-03-26 13:41:04 | 11036 | Environment Agency, UK (Freshwater Biological Association)
    Publication Date: 2021-06-26
    Description: This is the Wetland resource evaluation and the NRA's role in its conservation: Resource assessment report produced by the National Rivers Authority in 1995. This R&D document provides a strategy for the assessment of the wetland resource of England and Wales. As a first step the report defines wetlands in their UK context. The following working definition is suggested: Wetland is land that has (or had until modified) a water level predominantly at, near, or up to 1.5 m above the ground surface for sufficient time during the year to allow hydrological processes to be a major influence on the soils and biota. These processes may be expressed in certain features, such as characteristic soils and vegetation. The report also summarises a hydrotopographical classification of wetlands. The report then develops a strategy for the establishment of a wetland resource Inventory based on a geographical information system (GIS) as a means of storing and manipulating site data from across England and Wales.
    Description: Environment Agency Archives North West
    Keywords: Fisheries ; Limnology ; Management ; UK ; England ; Wales ; Inland waters ; Wetland ; GIS ; Resource ; Survey ; Classification ; Inventory ; Definition ; Hydrotopography
    Repository Name: AquaDocs
    Type: monograph
    Format: application/pdf
    Format: application/pdf
    Format: 76
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  • 4
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    National Rivers Authority | Bristol, UK
    In:  dis@fba.org.uk | http://aquaticcommons.org/id/eprint/11035 | 1256 | 2013-03-26 13:41:14 | 11035 | Environment Agency, UK (Freshwater Biological Association)
    Publication Date: 2021-06-26
    Description: This is the Wetland resource evaluation and the NRA's role in its conservation: Classification of British wetlands report produced by the National Rivers Authority in 1995. This R&D document provides a clear classification for wetlands in England and Wales. The classification incorporates many of the existing ideas on the subject but avoids some of the problems associated with other classifications. A two-layered 'hydrotopographical' classification is proposed. The first layer identifies situation-types, i.e. the position the wetland occupies in the landscape, with special emphasis upon the principal sources of water. The second layer identifies hydrotopographical elements, i.e. units with distinctive water supply and, sometimes, distinctive topography in response to this. This system is seen as an independent, basic, classification upon which it is possible to superimpose additional, independent classifications based on other features (e.g. base-status, fertility, vegetation, management etc.). Some proposals for such additional classifications are provided.
    Description: Environment Agency Archives North West
    Keywords: Fisheries ; Limnology ; Management ; England ; Wales ; Inland waters ; Wetlands ; Resource ; Classification ; Key ; Hydrotopography ; Survey
    Repository Name: AquaDocs
    Type: monograph
    Format: application/pdf
    Format: application/pdf
    Format: 106
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  • 5
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    Environment Agency | Bristol, UK
    In:  dis@fba.org.uk | http://aquaticcommons.org/id/eprint/11083 | 1256 | 2013-03-27 12:47:07 | 11083 | Environment Agency, UK (Freshwater Biological Association)
    Publication Date: 2021-06-27
    Description: This report is the fourth collation of salmon and migratory trout catch statistics for England and Wales produced by the Environment Agency. For the years 1989-94 these statistics were published by the National Rivers Authority (NRA) and for the years 1983-88 by the Ministry of Agriculture, Fisheries and Food, Directorate of Fisheries Research, in its Data Report series. This report is designed to be a reference document of declared salmonid catches in England and Wales. Salmon stock assessment data including provisional catches, counter run estimates and some juvenile data are now published in an annual assessment for the International Council for the Exploitation of the Seas (ICES). The second report in this series was published jointly by the Environment Agency and the Centre for Environment, Fisheries & Aquatic Science (CEFAS) in April 1998 (Anon 1999).
    Description: Environment Agency Archives North West
    Description: + tables and figures
    Keywords: Fisheries ; Limnology ; Management ; UK ; England ; Wales ; Inland waters ; Rivers ; Migratory species ; Freshwater fish ; Fish counters ; Fish passes ; Fish catch statistics ; Fisheries
    Repository Name: AquaDocs
    Type: monograph
    Format: application/pdf
    Format: application/pdf
    Format: 8
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  • 6
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    Environment Agency | Bristol, UK
    In:  dis@fba.org.uk | http://aquaticcommons.org/id/eprint/10935 | 1256 | 2013-03-26 14:00:06 | 10935 | Environment Agency, UK (Freshwater Biological Association)
    Publication Date: 2021-07-02
    Description: This is the Proposed Environmental Quality Standards (EQS) for Nonylphenol in Water produced by the Environment Agency in 1997. The report reviews the properties and uses of Nonylphenol, its fate, behaviour and reported concentrations in the environment, and critically assesses available data on its toxicity and bioaccumulation. The information is used to derive EQSs for the protection of fresh and saltwater life as well as for water abstracted to potable supply.Nonylphenol (NP) is used extensively in the production of other substances such as non-ionic ethoxylate surfactants. It is through the incomplete anaerobic biodegradation of these surfactants that most nonylphenol reaches the aquatic environment in effluents, e.g. from sewage treatment works and certain manufacturing operations. It was explicitly stated by the Environment Agency that the EQS was to be derived for NP and not Nonylphenol ethoxylates. However, since NP is unlikely to be present in the aquatic environment in the absence of other nonylphenol ethoxylate (NPE) degradation by-products, the toxicity, fate and behaviour of some of these (i.e. nonylphenol mono- and diethoxylates (NP1EO and NP2EO), mono- and di-nonylphenoxy carboxylic acids (NP1EC and NP2EC) have also been considered in this report. In the aquatic environment and during sewage treatment, NPEs are rapidly degraded to NP under aerobic conditions. NP may then be either fully mineralised or may be adsorbed to sediments. Since NP cannot be biodegraded under anaerobic conditions it can accumulate in sediments to high concentrations.
    Description: Environment Agency Archives North West
    Keywords: Fisheries ; Limnology ; Management ; Environmental Quality Standard ; EQS ; Nonylphenol ; Freshwater ; Saltwater ; Toxicity ; Bioaccumulation
    Repository Name: AquaDocs
    Type: monograph
    Format: application/pdf
    Format: application/pdf
    Format: 75
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  • 7
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    Environment Agency | Bristol, UK
    In:  dis@fba.org.uk | http://aquaticcommons.org/id/eprint/10946 | 1256 | 2013-03-26 13:59:36 | 10946 | Environment Agency, UK (Freshwater Biological Association)
    Publication Date: 2021-06-25
    Description: This is the Impact Assessment of ionising Radiation on Wildlife document produced by the Environment Agency in 2001. This report describes the behaviour and transport of radionuclides in the environment, considers the impact of ionising radiation on wildlife, and makes recommendations on an approach for the Impact assessment of ionising radiation on wildlife for England and Wales. The assessment approach focuses on three ecosystems representative of those considered potentially most at risk from the impact of authorised radioactive discharges, namely a coastal grassland (terrestrial ecosystem); estuarine and freshwater ecosystems. The likely scale of the impact on wildlife is also assessed in light of a preliminary analysis based on this assessment approach. The report demonstrates the behaviour and transfer of radionuclides in a number of different ecosystem types. Particular emphasis is placed on exposure pathways in those ecosystems most likely to be impacted by the authorised discharges of radioactivity within England and Wales. The use of biomarker techniques is reviewed in the report, and their application to the study of exposure to multiple contaminants is discussed.
    Description: Environment Agency Archives North West
    Description: + glossary
    Keywords: Fisheries ; Limnology ; Management ; Europe ; UK ; Pollution effects ; Radionuclides ; Biomarker ; Freshwater ; Estuarine ; Coastal grassland
    Repository Name: AquaDocs
    Type: monograph
    Format: application/pdf
    Format: application/pdf
    Format: 222
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  • 8
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    National Rivers Authority | Bristol, UK
    In:  dis@fba.org.uk | http://aquaticcommons.org/id/eprint/10982 | 1256 | 2013-03-26 13:51:31 | 10982 | Environment Agency, UK (Freshwater Biological Association)
    Publication Date: 2021-06-25
    Description: This is the report on Lakes – Classification and Monitoring, a strategy for the classification of lakes by the National Rivers Authority.This report describes a scheme for the assessment and monitoring of water and ecological quality in standing waters, greater than about 1ha in area, in England and Wales although it is generally relevant to Northwest Europe. Thirteen hydrological, chemical and biological variables are used to characterize the standing water body in any current sampling. Statistical testing on the chemical variables showed that at least six samples during a year would be needed to produce a representative sampling mean; but in this scheme the choice of variables minimizes logistic cost by not using boat sampling and time costs by not demanding extensive taxonomic work. Standing waters are classified in a state-changed system in which the contemporary values of the variables are compared with a reference baseline state and then placed in categories of percentage change from this baseline. The scheme is presently designed for use at about five year intervals on all lakes greater than 2ha area plus additional lakes of significant amenity or conservation interest.
    Description: Environment Agency Archives North West
    Keywords: Fisheries ; Limnology ; Management ; England ; Wales ; Lake classification ; Monitoring ; Eutrophication ; Acidification ; Infilling ; Water quality ; Ecological quality ; State-changed schemes ; Export coefficient models ; Nutrients ; Aquatic plants
    Repository Name: AquaDocs
    Type: monograph
    Format: application/pdf
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    Format: 100
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  • 9
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    National Rivers Authority | Bristol, UK
    In:  dis@fba.org.uk | http://aquaticcommons.org/id/eprint/8378 | 1256 | 2012-03-07 14:44:30 | 8378 | Environment Agency, UK (Freshwater Biological Association)
    Publication Date: 2021-07-02
    Description: The overall purpose of this guide is to provide a manualfor the collection and interpretation of sea trout scales. Abrief introduction considers the advantages anddisadvantages of using scales to determine age and growth.To ensure that scales are interpreted in a consistentmanner, all major terms are defined and a standard systemfor age notation is proposed. The methodology for thecollection, mounting and interpretation of scales isdescribed in detail, and this is followed by a section on the back-calculation of lengths at different ages. Each topic is discussed critically. The final part of this guide is an atlas illustrating scales from a wide range of sea trout and including not only excellent "type-scales" but also difficult and impossible scales.
    Description: Environment Agency Archives North West
    Keywords: Biology ; Fisheries ; Limnology ; Scales ; Tagging ; Salmo trutta ; Scale reading ; Age ; Animal morphology ; Length
    Repository Name: AquaDocs
    Type: monograph
    Format: application/pdf
    Format: application/pdf
    Format: 63
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  • 10
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    Environment Agency | Bristol, UK
    In:  dis@fba.org.uk | http://aquaticcommons.org/id/eprint/10951 | 1256 | 2013-03-26 13:57:18 | 10951 | Environment Agency, UK (Freshwater Biological Association)
    Publication Date: 2021-06-25
    Description: This is the Salmonid & Freshwater Fisheries Statistics for England & Wales 1996 produced by the Environment Agency in 1997. The principal aim of the Environment Agency in respect of fisheries is to maintain improve and develop fish stocks, the basic fisheries resource, in order to optimise the social and economic benefits from their sustainable exploitation. This report is the second collation of salmon and migratory trout catch statistics for England and Wales produced by the Environment Agency. For the years 1989-94, these statistics were published by the National Rivers Authority (NRA) and the years 1983-88 by the Ministry of Agriculture, Fisheries and Food, Directorate of Fisheries Research in its Data Report series. The 1996 data, have been presented in a broadly similar format to those of 1995. This report makes a general review of different catches: Northumbria, Yorkshire, Anglian, Thames, Southern, Wessex, South West, Severn-Trent, Welsh and North West.
    Description: Environment Agency Archives North West
    Keywords: Fisheries ; Limnology ; Management ; England ; Wales ; Northumbria ; Yorkshire ; Anglian ; Thames ; Southern ; Wessex ; South West ; Severn-Trent ; Welsh ; North West ; Inland waters ; Rivers ; River fisheries ; Freshwater fish ; Fishery management ; Fishery data ; Fish catch statistics ; Migratory species ; Licensing
    Repository Name: AquaDocs
    Type: monograph
    Format: application/pdf
    Format: application/pdf
    Format: 59
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  • 11
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    National Rivers Authority | Bristol, UK
    In:  dis@fba.org.uk | http://aquaticcommons.org/id/eprint/11034 | 1256 | 2013-03-26 13:41:24 | 11034 | Environment Agency, UK (Freshwater Biological Association)
    Publication Date: 2021-06-26
    Description: This is the NRA's role in wetland conservation report produced by the National Rivers Authority in 1995. This document is the third of a series of three R&D Notes produced as part of an integrated research programme addressing aspects of the NRA's role in wetland management and conservation. Chapter 1 considers the nature of the wetland resource and its definition. Chapter 2 presents the NRA's current legislative and policy framework relating to its role in wetland conservation. National and international legislation and agreements are considered, and particular attention is afforded to the potential implications of the 'Habitats Directive'. Chapter 4 presents key examples of operational casework involving wetlands. Differences in approach and external perceptions of the NRA's current and likely future role in wetland conservation are discussed within Chapter 5. Other issues highlighted in this report are: policy guidance required on NRA’s role in land drainage; standard of flood defence service for wetlands; cost-benefit analysis; strategies for halting and reversing the decline and degradation of wetland resource; and Catchment Management Planning.
    Description: Environment Agency Archives North West
    Keywords: Fisheries ; Limnology ; Management ; England ; Inland waters ; Wetland definition ; Wetland management ; Wetland conservation ; Water management ; Legislation ; Policy ; Strategy ; Survey ; Restoration
    Repository Name: AquaDocs
    Type: monograph
    Format: application/pdf
    Format: application/pdf
    Format: 114
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  • 12
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    Environment Agency | Bristol, UK
    In:  dis@fba.org.uk | http://aquaticcommons.org/id/eprint/11082 | 1256 | 2013-03-27 12:47:17 | 11082 | Environment Agency, UK (Freshwater Biological Association)
    Publication Date: 2021-06-27
    Description: This report is the third collation of salmon and migratory trout catch statistics for England and Wales produced by the Environment Agency. For the years 1989-94, these statistics were published by the National Rivers Authority (NRA) and the years 1983-88 by the Ministry of Agriculture, Fisheries and Food, Directorate of Fisheries Research in its Data Report series. This report is designed to be a reference document of declared salmonid catches in England and Wales and is produced in the autumn following the season. Salmon stock assessment data including provisional catches, counter run estimates and some juvenile data are now published in an annual assessment for the International Council for the Exploitation of the Seas (ICES). The first report in this series was published jointly by the Environment Agency and the Centre for Environment, Fisheries & Aquatic Science (CEFAS) in April 1997 (Anon 1998).
    Description: Environment Agency Archives North West
    Keywords: Fisheries ; Limnology ; Management ; UK ; England ; Wales ; Inland waters ; Rivers ; Migratory species ; Freshwater fish ; Fish counters ; Fish passes ; Fish catch statistics ; Fisheries
    Repository Name: AquaDocs
    Type: monograph
    Format: application/pdf
    Format: application/pdf
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  • 13
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    National Rivers Authority | Bristol, UK
    In:  dis@fba.org.uk | http://aquaticcommons.org/id/eprint/10938 | 1256 | 2013-03-26 13:59:55 | 10938 | Environment Agency, UK (Freshwater Biological Association)
    Publication Date: 2021-07-02
    Description: This is the Species management in aquatic Habitats WRc Nov 1993 produced by the National Rivers Authority (NRA) in 1993. This report identified key rare and nuisance species of interest to the NRA and prioritised research needs to develop conservation strategies for these species. The NRA has in the past adopted a habitat maintenance and protection approach to conservation paying less attention at individual species. There is a risk that conservation based on a habitat management policy will no further the conservation of certain species. In addition, certain ‘nuisance’ species cause problems for conservation by having a negative impact on more valued species or ecosystems. Through the combination of the review of current legislation and literature and consultation with NRA staff, this project identified key rare and nuisance species of interest to the NRA and prioritised research needs to develop conservation strategies for these species.
    Description: Environment Agency Archives North West
    Description: + appendices
    Keywords: Fisheries ; Limnology ; Management ; UK ; Conservation ; Species management ; Rare species ; Nuisance species
    Repository Name: AquaDocs
    Type: monograph
    Format: application/pdf
    Format: application/pdf
    Format: 54
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  • 14
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    Environment Agency | Bristol, UK
    In:  dis@fba.org.uk | http://aquaticcommons.org/id/eprint/10936 | 1256 | 2013-03-26 13:58:31 | 10936 | Environment Agency, UK (Freshwater Biological Association)
    Publication Date: 2021-07-02
    Description: This is the Species management in aquatic Habitats overview of sub projects and their management produced by the Environment Agency in 1998. This report was under the R&D Project, which it was initiated in 1995 to provide information on species of conservation value of particular relevance to the Environment Agency (then the National Rivers Authority, NRA), in relation to its activities affecting aquatic environments. Outputs comprise Species Action Plans (SAPs), practical management guidelines for Agency staff and third parties, and various research and survey outputs to improve the knowledge base on the status and ecological requirements of priority species. This R&D Technical Report provides an overview of the work undertaken, additionally identifying lessons to be learnt in the management of species-related research within the framework of the UK Biodiversity Action Plan. The process of species selection was initially based upon a wide ranging review of priority species of relevance to the then NRA, encompassing both highly threatened species and species that are relatively common but are at particular risk from Agency activities.
    Description: Environment Agency Archives North West
    Keywords: Fisheries ; Limnology ; Management ; UK ; Priority species ; Conservation ; Management ; Aquatic habitats
    Repository Name: AquaDocs
    Type: monograph
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  • 15
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    National Rivers Authority | Bristol, UK
    In:  dis@fba.org.uk | http://aquaticcommons.org/id/eprint/10937 | 1256 | 2013-03-26 13:58:19 | 10937 | Environment Agency, UK (Freshwater Biological Association)
    Publication Date: 2021-07-02
    Description: This is the Species management in aquatic Habitats WRc Dec 1993 produced by the National Rivers Authority in 1993. This report is focused on the Phase 1 of the Species Management in Aquatic Habitats, based on the Development of priority lists of rare and nuisance species for the National Rivers Authority (NRA). Certain ‘nuisance’ species cause problems for conservation by having a negative impact on more valued species or ecosystems. This project was initiated as part of a programme of research to develop strategies for the management of both rare and nuisance species. This project identified key rare and nuisance species of interest to the NRA and prioritised research needs to develop conservation strategies for these species. A combined provisional list of almost a thousand rare species, a priority list of 58 species of potential interest and a priority list of nine nuisance species was developed by a process of literature review and from suggestions by NRA conservation staff.
    Description: Environment Agency Archives North West
    Keywords: Fisheries ; Limnology ; Management ; UK ; Conservation ; Species management ; Rare species ; Nuisance species ; Biomarkers
    Repository Name: AquaDocs
    Type: monograph
    Format: application/pdf
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    Format: 99
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  • 16
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    Environment Agency | Bristol, UK
    In:  dis@fba.org.uk | http://aquaticcommons.org/id/eprint/10940 | 1256 | 2013-03-26 13:59:45 | 10940 | Environment Agency, UK (Freshwater Biological Association)
    Publication Date: 2021-07-02
    Description: This is the Species management in aquatic Habitats WRc Interim 1997 document produced by the Environment Agency in 1997. This document reports progress on R&D Project 640, which aims to provide information on species of conservation value of particular relevance to the Environment Agency, in relation to its activities affecting aquatic environments. A range of stand-alone outputs is being produced, comprising Species Action Plans, practical management guidelines for Agency staff and third parties, and various research outputs to improve the knowledge base on the status and ecological requirements of priority species. The species of conservation values are: water shrew, daubenton’s bat, Kingfisher, yellow wagtail, Grey wagtail, sand martin, reed bunting, dipper, marsh warbler, great crested new, spined loach, brook lamprey, river lamprey, sea lamprey, shining rams-horn snail, little whirlpool rams-horn snail, depressed river mussel, a freshwater pea mussel, native crayfish, and triangular club-rush. The process of species selection was altered during the course of the project by the report on biodiversity by the UK Biodiversity Steering Group (1995). Whilst still including species that were not particularly endangered but were greatly influenced by the activities of the Agency, the project addressed species on the ‘short’ and ‘middle’ priority lists of the Biodiversity report, particularly those for which the Agency had specific responsibilities.
    Description: Environment Agency Archives South West
    Keywords: Fisheries ; Limnology ; Management ; UK ; Priority species ; Habitat management ; Aquatic habitats
    Repository Name: AquaDocs
    Type: monograph
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    Format: 257
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  • 17
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    Environment Agency | Bristol, UK
    In:  dis@fba.org.uk | http://aquaticcommons.org/id/eprint/10945 | 1256 | 2013-03-26 13:58:39 | 10945 | Environment Agency, UK (Freshwater Biological Association)
    Publication Date: 2021-06-25
    Description: This is the Habitats regulations for stage 3 assessments: radioactive substances authorisations report from the Environment Agency, published on October 2003. The report focuses on the stage 3 assessments of radioactive substances authorisations in UK (to take place over the next five years, starting in 2003), which may have a potential impact on European designated Natura 2000 sites such Special Protection Areas (SPA), Special Areas of Conservation (SAC); and thus require further detailed assessment. This Environment Agency R&D project was commissioned to ERC, University o f Liverpool, in conjunction with Westlakes Scientific Consulting and the Centre for Ecology and Hydrology, as part o f the agency's preparation for the Stage 3 Assessments o f radioactive substances authorisations. The aim was to prepare site information sheets containing all data relevant for individual Natura 2000 sites needing Stage 3 Assessment and to stylise and represent species that require protection under the Habitats Regulations by the reference organism geometries listed in R&D Publication 128 (Copplestone et al., 2001).
    Description: Environment Agency Archives North West
    Keywords: Fisheries ; Limnology ; Management ; Europe ; UK ; Radioactive substances ; Conservation ; Protected areas ; Natura 2000 ; SPA ; SAC
    Repository Name: AquaDocs
    Type: monograph
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  • 18
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    National Rivers Authority | Bristol, UK
    In:  dis@fba.org.uk | http://aquaticcommons.org/id/eprint/10948 | 1256 | 2013-03-26 13:58:02 | 10948 | Environment Agency, UK (Freshwater Biological Association)
    Publication Date: 2021-06-25
    Description: This is the Salmonid & Freshwater Fisheries Statistics for England & Wales 1990 produced by the National Rivers Authority (NRA) in 1992. This report is focused on the maintenance, improvement and development of fisheries of England and Wales. This report is the second compilation of salmon and migratory trout catch statistics for England and Wales published by the National Rivers Authority (NRA). Before 1989, these statistics were published by the Ministry of Agriculture Fisheries and Food (MAFF) Directorate of Fisheries Research in their Data Report Series. The 1990 data have been presented in a broadly similar format to those of 1989. However, two further NRA regions, four in all, provided effort data for rod fisheries in 1990. This report makes a general review of different catches: Northumbria, Yorkshire, Anglian, Thames, Southern, Wessex, South West, Severn-Trent, Welsh and North West.
    Description: Environment Agency Archives North West
    Keywords: Fisheries ; Limnology ; Management ; England ; Wales ; Northumbria ; Yorkshire ; Anglian ; Thames ; Southern ; Wessex ; South West ; Severn-Trent ; Welsh ; North West ; Inland waters ; Rivers ; River fisheries ; Freshwater fish ; Fishery management ; Fishery data ; Fish catch statistics ; Migratory species ; Licensing
    Repository Name: AquaDocs
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  • 19
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    Environment Agency | Bristol, UK
    In:  dis@fba.org.uk | http://aquaticcommons.org/id/eprint/10957 | 1256 | 2013-03-26 13:56:03 | 10957 | Environment Agency, UK (Freshwater Biological Association)
    Publication Date: 2021-06-25
    Description: This is the Effect of water quality on coarse fish productivity and movement in the Lower River Irwell and Upper Manchester Ship Canal: a watercourse recovering from historical pollution report produced by the Environment Agency in 2003. The aim of this study was to investigate the impact of water quality upon coarse fish population dynamics in a lowland, urban watercourse. All of the research carried was undertaken in the lower River Irwell and upper Manchester Ship Canal, between February 1998 and December 2001. Of particular interest was the natural sustainability of the urban fishery given recent concern raised in the angling community over an apparent decline in coarse fish populations in lowland rivers. The research described in this report has concentrated upon the role of water quality in determining coarse fish population dynamics, and in particular: The impact of water quality upon fish growth and productivity; The impact of poor water quality and low dissolved oxygen concentrations upon fish distribution and movement; The impact of water quality upon the sexual development of fish.
    Description: Environment Agency Archives North West
    Keywords: Fisheries ; Limnology ; Management ; England ; Irwell ; Manchester Ship Canal ; Inland waters ; Rivers ; Invertebrates ; Freshwater fish ; Migratory species ; Fish catch statistics ; Fish distribution ; Fish population ; Population dynamics ; Population structure ; Freshwater pollution ; Water quality
    Repository Name: AquaDocs
    Type: monograph
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    Florida Sea Grant College Program | Gainesville, FL
    In:  http://aquaticcommons.org/id/eprint/230 | 3 | 2011-09-29 22:22:20 | 230 | Florida Sea Grant College Program
    Publication Date: 2021-06-27
    Description: In collaboration with researchers from FloridaState University, Florida Sea Grant introduces an important but poorly known topic:submarine groundwater discharge. Although nearly invisible, submarinegroundwater discharge influences coastal systems. This brochure helps explain this important phenomenon. (8pp.)
    Description: National Sea Grant College Program
    Description: Center for Natural Resources, IFAS, University of Florida
    Description: NOAA Grant No 76 RG-0120
    Keywords: Pollution ; Oceanography ; Earth Sciences ; Environment ; groundwater discharge ; Florida
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    University of Florida/IFAS, Office of Conferences & Institutes | Gainesville, FL
    In:  http://aquaticcommons.org/id/eprint/231 | 3 | 2011-09-29 22:23:17 | 231 | Florida Sea Grant College Program
    Publication Date: 2021-06-27
    Description: This joint conference is to provide a forum forphysical, biological, and social scientists to share their knowledge andresearch results concerning restoration of the Greater Everglades and Florida Bay Ecosystem.
    Keywords: Conservation ; Oceanography ; Biology ; Chemistry ; Planning ; Florida Bay ; research ; conferences
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    Type: book
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    Format: 282
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    Florida Sea Grant College | Gainesville, FL
    In:  http://aquaticcommons.org/id/eprint/360 | 3 | 2021-02-27 20:07:45 | 360 | Florida Sea Grant College Program
    Publication Date: 2021-06-28
    Description: In recent times, from 1871-1993, nearly 1,0OO tropical cyclonesof tropical storm or hurricane intensity have s cur red in the NorthAtlantic, Caribbean Sea, and Gulf of Mexico. Of this total, about180 have reached Florida, with 75 of these known to have hurricaneforce winds (wind speed 2 74 mph) and 105 with tropical stormforce winds (39 mph - 73 mph). While early records are fragmentary and incomplete, thefollowing is a discussion of the more formidable Florida hurricanes.For convenience and to provide readable hurricane tracks, thediscussion examines hurricanes occurring within 30-year periods,divided into 10-year sections. When possible the SaffirISirnpson Scale (Table 1) describes the hurricane category for both past hurricanes (before the scale was developed), and recent hurricanes. (157pp.)
    Description: National Oceanic and Atmospheric Administration, U.S. Department of Commerce
    Keywords: Atmospheric Sciences ; Oceanography ; hurricanes ; Florida
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    Florida Sea Grant College Program | Gainesville, FL
    In:  http://aquaticcommons.org/id/eprint/300 | 3 | 2020-08-24 02:45:05 | 300 | Florida Sea Grant College Program
    Publication Date: 2021-06-28
    Description: As a program supporting academic research that addresses recognized societal needs, theFlorida Sea Grant Program is developing a research theme area on estuaries to provide a uniquely academic product that will augment mission-oriented research undertaken by government and bythe private sector. This report is not a call for proposals. It does not prescribe a specific researchplan. Rather, it is a concept paper designed to focus research on two broad "organizing themes":(1) the hydrology of Florida's estuaries, and (2) the impact of cyclic environmental variability onestuarine function. (46pp.)
    Description: National oceanic and Atmospheric Administration, U.S. Department of Commerce
    Keywords: Oceanography ; Engineering ; Earth Sciences ; Planning ; estuaries ; hydrology ; Florida
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    University of Florida, Coastal and Oceanographic Engineering Department | Gainesville, FL
    In:  http://aquaticcommons.org/id/eprint/428 | 3 | 2020-08-24 02:56:50 | 428 | Oceanographic Engineering Program, Department of Civil and Coastal Engineering, University of Florida
    Publication Date: 2021-06-29
    Description: The shoaling and bank erosion at Ponce de Leon channel, Punta Gorda, Florida, havecaused concern of harming the mangrove community along the channel. Three factorswere identified that could contribute to the bank erosion of Ponce channel. Theyare tidal induced current, wind waves penetrating from the Charlotte Harbor, andwakes caused by boat traffic. According to the field experiments and numericalmodeling studies, it was determined that the combined wind wave and tidal currentforce is the major cause to the bank erosion. Wind wave appears to play a moreimportant role because of its dynamic nature. For the present cross-sectionalchannel condition the tidal current alone is only a moderate erosional force.It was also found that reopening the barge canal would cut the tidal currentstrength in the Ponce channel by a half. This current reduction would reduce butnot eliminate bank erosion in the lower reach as the wind-wave induced force willremain to be an important erosional factor.A number of remedial alternatives were given in the report. The most direct methodis to provide bank protection. The extent of the protection depends upon theextent of wind wave penetration which could be as deep as 150 m into the channelunder the present channel entrance condition. (This document has 49 pages. )
    Keywords: Oceanography ; Engineering ; tidal current ; erosion ; channels ; Ponce de Leon channel ; Florida ; mangroves ; Punta Gorda
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    University of Florida, Coastal and Oceanographic Engineering Department | Gainesville, FL
    In:  http://aquaticcommons.org/id/eprint/536 | 3 | 2020-08-24 03:04:36 | 536 | Oceanographic Engineering Program, Department of Civil and Coastal Engineering, University of Florida
    Publication Date: 2021-06-30
    Description: This is the first of a pair of reports documenting the effects of storms on barrier island systems.The present report (Volume 1) investigates storm effects on natural island conditions whereasVolume 2 addresses the effects of seawalls. With the aim of simulating the effects of overwashon barrier islands and characterizing their response, a series of nine experiments was conductedat the Coastal Engineering Laboratory of the University of Florida. The barrier island wassimulated by a 400 feet wide (prototype units) horizontal crest and an initially planar (1:19)beach. The effects of various storm surge levels and accompanying overtopping were investigated.Experiments were conducted with both regular and irregular storm waves. Regularwaves without overtopping caused the formation of a substantial berm in the swash zone and aprominent longshore bar offshore. Increasing degrees of overtopping resulted in substantial lossof sand from the barrier island system. The longshore bar was considerably more subtle for thehighest water level tested (11.5 ft. above mean sea level). Simulation of a storm-surge hydrographwith rising and falling water levels indicated that the presence of the bar tends to occuronly during a relatively steady or slowly changing water level. The experiments with irregularwaves were conducted with reasonably similar wave heights and carrier periods as those withregular waves. The major difference was in the characteristics of the longshore bar response. Incomparison with cases with regular waves, the bar was less distinct without overtopping, subtlewith minimal overtopping and absent in cases with substantial overtopping. These experimentsseem to indicate that offshore bars are simply break-point bars which require a fairly steadybreak-point and undertow (return of mass transport) for optimal formation. (Document has 84 pages.)
    Description: Department of Civil and Coastal Engineering, University of Florida
    Description: Prepared for: Beaches and Shores Resource Center Innovation Park, Morgan Building Box 9 2035 East Paul Dirac Drive Tallahassee, Fl 32304
    Keywords: Oceanography ; Engineering ; Earth Sciences ; Barrier Island ; Storm Effects ; Beach Erosion ; Overwash ; Washover
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    University of Florida, Coastal and Oceanographic Engineering Department | Gainesville, FL
    In:  http://aquaticcommons.org/id/eprint/533 | 3 | 2021-02-27 20:20:10 | 533 | Oceanographic Engineering Program, Department of Civil and Coastal Engineering, University of Florida
    Publication Date: 2021-06-30
    Description: This report presents results of the experiments of the existing inlet and eightstructural alternatives to the Sebastian Inlet from a movable bed model. It is intendedto find solutions for improvement of boating safety and protection of beaches adjacentto the inlet. Based upon the experimental results from here and the fixed bed modelstudy, which is summarized in Part I report, an optimum structural modification planwas then recommended providing a general frame of improvement scheme.The research in this report was authorized by the Sebastian Inlet District Commissionof September 15, 1989. The University of Florida was notified to proceedon November 14, 1989. The study and report were prepared by the Department ofCoastal and Oceanographic Engineering, University of Florida. Coastal TechnologyCorporation was the technical monitor representing the Sebastian Inlet District. (Document has 109 pages.)
    Keywords: Oceanography ; Engineering ; Planning ; Erosion ; Sediment transport ; Shore erosion ; Structural alternative ; Sebastian Inlet ; Florida
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    University of Florida, Coastal and Oceanographic Engineering Department | Gainesville, FL
    In:  http://aquaticcommons.org/id/eprint/534 | 3 | 2020-08-24 03:03:47 | 534 | Oceanographic Engineering Program, Department of Civil and Coastal Engineering, University of Florida
    Publication Date: 2021-06-30
    Description: This thesis examines the historical shoreline response to inlet modifications and sealevel rise. Inlet modifications are considered to be the geographic stabilization and training(through the use of structures) of natural inlets and the creation and further modification ofartificial inlets. Shoreline response to natural and artificial processes must be understood inorder to predict the performance of the coastline. The tendency for creating and modifyinginlets increases as industry and population growth demands. Sea level rise is a natural processwhich cannot be controlled at this time. Current theoretical approaches to predictingshoreline response indicate that sea level rise and inlet modifications can cause substantialshoreline impact. Florida, with roughly a century of shoreline position and relative sea leveldata, provides a basis for examining past trends and comparing them with theory.The shoreline of Florida was found to be accreting with the greatest accretion alongthe east coast. Shoreline responses within the boundaries of the erosional influence of inletsdue to their creation and/or modification were examined for 19 inlets around the coast ofFlorida. The differences in the shoreline response before and after the initial modification ofeach inlet show the erosional strain that inlets apply on the nearby shoreline. The effect onshoreline response due to the human intervention (unnatural processes) of modifying inletswas isolated and examined. The shoreline response due to this "human intervention" was erosional, thereby showing the negative impact that modified inlets have on shorelines. Thisinduced erosion is responsible for the loss of roughly 21.6 million cubic yards of sand from theshoreline that is within the erosional influence of Florida's east coast inlets. Combining theshoreline changes due only to natural processes with sea level rise data allows for comparisonwith the commonly accepted Bruun Rule for shoreline response as a result of a changingsea level. This comparison and the effects of including a lag time between a rise in sea leveland a change in shoreline along the east coast of Florida during the last century show noagreement with the Bruun Rule and no correlation with a specific lag time. (Document has 153 pages.)
    Keywords: Oceanography ; Engineering ; Earth Sciences ; Coasts ; Sea level changes ; Coastal inlets ; Florida
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    University of Florida, Coastal and Oceanographic Engineering Department | Gainesville, FL
    In:  http://aquaticcommons.org/id/eprint/541 | 3 | 2020-08-24 03:05:18 | 541 | Oceanographic Engineering Program, Department of Civil and Coastal Engineering, University of Florida
    Publication Date: 2021-06-30
    Description: This is the second of a pair of reports documenting the effects of storms on beach systemsincluding the presence of seawalls. With the aim of simulating the effects of overwash onbarrier islands with seawalls and characterizing their response, a series of eight experimentswas conducted at the Coastal Engineering Laboratory of the University of Florida. The barrierisland was simulated by a 400 feet wide horizontal crest and an initially uniform mildly-sloped(1:19) beach. The effects of positioning the seawall at two different locations as well as the effectsof various storm surge levels and accompanying overtopping were investigated. Experimentswere conducted with both regular and irregular storm waves. With the seawall located at theslope break between the crest and the sloping beach of the barrier island, and the crest of theseawall just submerged in sand, the effects on the sediment transport process were found to beminimal. For the same position of the seawall but with the crest of the seawall raised above thesurrounding ground level, overtopping caused washover of sand indicating substantial transportin suspension. Increased levels of overtopping tended to accentuate bed profile changes butsupress bar formation (as did irregular waves). Positioning the seawall at the Mean Sea Levelshoreline caused significant scour both immediately landward as well as immediately seawardof the seawall. A prominent scour trough developed further seaward. The longshore bar washighly three-dimensional. It appears that seawalls need to be located adequately landward of theshoreline to discharge their function effectively without adverse effect to the beach. In addition,concerns for safety warrant the presence of an adequate buffer-zone between the seawall andthe upland property. (61 pp.)
    Description: Prepared for: Beaches and Shores Resource Center Innovation Park, Morgan Building Box 9 2035 East Paul Dirac Drive Tallahassee, Fl 32304
    Keywords: Oceanography ; Engineering ; Earth Sciences ; Barrier island ; seawalls ; storm effects ; beach erosion ; overwash
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    University of Florida, Florida Cooperative Fish and Wildlife Research Unit | Gainesville, FL
    In:  http://aquaticcommons.org/id/eprint/1001 | 3 | 2011-09-29 21:17:28 | 1001 | Florida Cooperative Fish and Wildlife Research Unit
    Publication Date: 2021-07-05
    Description: The value of the natural resources of the White River Basin (Basin), AR isrecognized by the area's designation as a "Wetland of International Importance". TheBasin constitutes one of the Nation's largest remaining intact forested wetlandlandscapes, second only to the Atchafalya Basin. It supports the North Americancontinent's largest concentration of over-wintering mallard ducks, a world-class troutfishery, the last vestige of a big river fishery remaining in the Mississippi River Basin,and numerous threatened and endangered species. The continued viability of thiswetland ecosystem depends on the suitability of the hydrologic environment to theresident flora and fauna. Numerous modifications of the Basin hydrologic features in thepast century have seriously impaired the sustainability of these resources. The Basinwidealterations of hydrologic processes (e.g., impoundment and regulatory releases offlows and volumes in the upper reaches, navigational modifications of lower reaches, andconsumptive demands for agricultural use throughout) have affected the hydrology of thesystem profoundly. The result is highly regulated flows and stages, vastly alteredhydrologic patterns, over-stabilized water levels, and disruption of seasonal waterdistribution patterns. Given the critical nature of hydrology in regulating the structureand function of wetland ecosystems, the impacts have been devastating, particularly tothe critical bottomland hardwoods that support the Basin's fish and wildlife resources.To date these piece-meal, system-wide, hydrologic alterations have cornmutativelydegraded the habitat value of this resource for fish and wildlife in the Basin, and havelead to changes in their numbers and distributions. In spite of the enormous stakesinvolved, there has been no comprehensive characterization of the Basin hydrology.System alterations such as channel deepening, dam construction, water allocationplans, and flood control measures are currently pending. These projects will potentiallyhrther modify the hydrologic environments of the Basin, and no doubt require mitigationmeasures. In addition, there is genuine interest in restoring aspects of the Basin's historichydrologic regime within some set of reasonable limits. In order to proceed with thiseffort, the anticipated effects of these modifications and restorations on the Basin ecologyrequire thorough study of the area's historic hydrology, so that connectivity among Basinprecipitation patterns, flow fluctuations, and land use changes can be made. A basinhydrologic characterization is an initial component of this effort. The focus of this effortwas to determine and assemble the data set from which characterization of the hydrologicenvironments of the Basin using historic and recent water level, flow, (primarily byUSGS-WRD) at locations throughout the Basin could proceed. ( Document has 11 pages.)
    Description: Research Work Order no. 203
    Keywords: Conservation ; Biology ; Limnology ; Environment ; Policies ; White River Basin ; Arkansas ; hydrology ; species
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    Coastal and Oceanographic Engineering Department, University of Florida | Gainesville, FL
    In:  http://aquaticcommons.org/id/eprint/1064 | 3 | 2011-09-29 21:11:59 | 1064 | Oceanographic Engineering Program, Department of Civil and Coastal Engineering, University of Florida
    Publication Date: 2021-07-05
    Description: This report presents the results of a bathymetric surveying program carriedout on the beach and nearshore region about 1 km to the north of the PortCanaveral inlet. The survey data covers a period between March 16 and July 21,1988. The data was collected in support of a field study on directional wavemeasurement and Bragg reflection from artificial, shore-parallel bars, performedduring June-July, 1988. The topography at the experiment site was generallymonotonic in the on-offshore direction (except near the end of the experimentalprogram) and uniform in the longshore direction. (64 pages)
    Description: Office of Naval Research
    Keywords: Oceanography ; Engineering ; Bathymetric survey ; beach profiles ; Port Canaveral ; Florida
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    Florida Cooperative Fish and Wildlife Research Unit, University of Florida | Gainesville, FL
    In:  http://aquaticcommons.org/id/eprint/1063 | 3 | 2011-09-29 21:12:04 | 1063 | Florida Cooperative Fish and Wildlife Research Unit
    Publication Date: 2021-07-05
    Description: Loxahatchee can be grouped into three zones according to the patterns of change of treeislands observed from 1950 to 1991. 1 ) the edge ofthe refuge adjacent to the canals, 2) the eastern interiorof the refuge, and 3) the western interior ofthe refuge. The general trend is for tree islandsAlong the edge of the refuge to have decreased insize, number, and percent cover, while those on theinterior increased in size, nunber, and percentcover.Results from this study illustrate the importanceof flow magnitude as well as hydroperiodand depth in stucturing patterns of tree islandswithin this peat wetland. Restoration of historichydroperiods and depths without historic flow patternsmay not be sufficient to restore or maintainthe historic pattern and function of the system. (60 pages)
    Keywords: Conservation ; Biology ; Limnology ; Arthur R. Marshall Loxahatchee National Wildlife Refuge ; Florida ; hydrology ; tree islands ; water regimes
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    Gainesville, FL
    In:  http://aquaticcommons.org/id/eprint/1071 | 3 | 2011-09-29 21:11:25 | 1071 | Florida Cooperative Fish and Wildlife Research Unit
    Publication Date: 2021-07-05
    Description: We present a new modeling method for use in large-scale physical systems, such as the Everglades ecosystem.The current work that has been done in the ATLSS (Across-Trophic-Level System Simulation) project-whichfocuses on simulating key Everglades system components-relies on code integration. While this represents anecessary first step in analyzing the dynamics of species within the Everglades, it falls short of true modelintegration. We have constructed a methodology called object-oriented physical modeling (OOPM), which allowsa comprehensive knowledge representation to be constructedfor large-scale systems. OOPM enforces theidea that an implementation ofcomputer code can be accomplished in an incremental fashion by starting with aconceptual model and progressing to more detailed models. During this evolutionary procedure, a minimal amountof code is written, since the emphasis is on developing the conceptual model so that it not only represents theintuitive aspects ofthe model, but is also executable. OOPM provides a kind of "blueprint" for ecologists, biologistsand hydrologists to communicate and integrate models effectively. (14 page document)
    Keywords: Conservation ; Management ; Engineering ; Limnology ; Everglades ; Florida ; ecosystem ; modeling ; ATLSS (Across-Trophic-Level System Simulation) ; restoration
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    Department of Wildlife Ecology and Conservation, Everglades Research and Education Center, University of Florida | Gainesville, FL
    In:  http://aquaticcommons.org/id/eprint/1117 | 3 | 2011-09-29 21:06:20 | 1117 | Florida Cooperative Fish and Wildlife Research Unit
    Publication Date: 2021-07-05
    Description: The purpose of this project was to conduct a pilot project to determine the feasibility ofperforming a study to evaluate the ecological role of alligator holes in the Everglades system andto develop interagency support and a scope of work for future studies. The objectives for the firstyear were to: 1. Review existing information on the ecology of alligator holes and conduct a survey oncurrent complimentary studies.2. Conduct an ecological survey. including mapping and description. of existing alligatorholes.3. Establish interagency cooperation and support for an Alligator Hole Project. Based onthis interagency consultation develop a consensus for priorities for future research andintegration into ecosystem restoration efforts.(96 page document)
    Description: Final annual report for year 1. Submitted to: Everglades Agricultural Area Environmental Protection District
    Keywords: Biology ; Limnology ; alligator holes ; Everglades ; Florida
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    Department of Coastal and Oceanographic Engineering, University of Florida | Gainesville, FL
    In:  http://aquaticcommons.org/id/eprint/1695 | 3 | 2011-09-29 20:11:10 | 1695 | Oceanographic Engineering Program, Department of Civil and Coastal Engineering, University of Florida
    Publication Date: 2021-07-09
    Description: This report responds to the 1986 Beaches Bill which, in recognition of thepotential deleterious impact on Florida's beaches of inlets modified for navigation,mandated a study of those inlets with identification of recommended action to reducethe impacts. This report addresses west Coast inlets; East Coast inlets are thesubject of a companion report.There are 37 inlets along that portion of Florida's West Coast commencing fromPensacola Bay Entrance to Caxambas Pass at the south end of Marco Island. Compared tothose on the East Coast, most West Coast inlets have not had the deleterious effectson the adjacent beaches, yet all modified inlets without proper management have thepotential of impacting unfavorably on the adjacent shorelines. Moreover, at presentthere is interest in opening three West Coast entrances which either have been openin the past (Midnight Pass) or which have opened occasionally (Navarre Pass andEntrance to Phillips Lake).A review of inlets in their natural condition demonstrates the presence of ashallow broad outer bar across which the longshore transport Occurs. These shallowand shifting bar features were unsuitable for navigation which in many cases has ledto the deepening of the channels and fixing with one or two jetty structures. Inlets in this modified state along with inappropriate maintenance practices have thepotential of placing great ero$ional stress along the adjacent beaches. Moreover.channel dredging can reduce wave sheltering of the shoreline by ebb tidal shoals andalter the equilibrium of the affected shoreline segments. The ultimate in poor sandmanagement practice is the placement of good quality beach sand in water depths toogreat for the sand to reenter the longshore system under natural forces; depths of 12ft. or less are considered appropriate for Florida in order to maintain the sand inthe system.With the interference of the nearshore sediment transport processes by inletsmodified for navigation, if the adjacent beaches are to be stabilized there must bean active monitoring program with commitment to placement of dredged material ofbeach quality on shoreline segments of documented need. Several East Coast inletshave such transfer facilities; however. the quantities of sand transferred should beincreased. Although an evolution and improvement in the technical capability tomanage sand resources in the vicinity of inlets is expected, an adequate capabilityexists today and a concerted program should be made to commence a scheduledimplementation of this capability at those entrances causing greatest erosionalstress on the adjacent shorelines.A brief summary review for each of the 37 West Coast inlets is presentedincluding: a scaled aerial photograph, brief historical information, several itemsrelated to sediment losses at each inlet and special characteristics relevant toState responsibilities. For each inlet, where appropriate, the above infor~tion isutilized to develop a recommenced action. (PDF has 101 pages.)
    Description: Division of Beaches and Shores, Florida Department of Natural Resources
    Keywords: Oceanography ; Engineering ; Bypassing ; Entrances ; Inlets ; Florida
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    University of Florida, Florida Sea Grant College Progam | Gainesville, FL
    In:  http://aquaticcommons.org/id/eprint/284 | 3 | 2011-09-29 22:18:00 | 284 | Florida Sea Grant College Program
    Publication Date: 2021-06-28
    Description: Marine biotechnology is a new economic sectorglobally, and is in its infancy in Florida. As an industry, itis still a very small part of biotechnology overall, but onewhere Florida has potential and real advantages overmany areas for developing a robust commercial,technical and educational investment. (8pp.)
    Keywords: Health ; Oceanography ; Biology
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    University of Florida, College of Arts and Sciences, Department of Biology | Gainesville, FL
    In:  http://aquaticcommons.org/id/eprint/369 | 3 | 2011-09-29 22:09:52 | 369
    Publication Date: 2021-06-29
    Description: Work has begun on studying the factors responsible for productivityin the Florida springs, which are nearly constant temperature, constantchemical, steady state giant laboratories. Progress has been made on fiveaspects: qualitative description, quantitative description, completionof knowledge of chemical factors, measurement of productivity , developmentof productivity theory.Measurement of the primary productivity in Silver Springs and GreenCove Springs by two new methods: the raising of organisms in cages, and themeasurement of night & day differences in oxygen downstream agree roughly.Production in these springs is greater than previous production figures reportedfor marine, fresh water, and land areas. Instantaneous measures of production show large variations with season, time of day, cloud cover. Productionestimates range from 11,000 lbs per acre per year to 70,000 lbs. glucose peracre per year during daylight hours.Essential stability of the springs environment has been shown withrespect to temperature, phosphorus, and plant cover. A correlation of speciesnumber with lack of stability has been shown with insects. Quantitativestudies have shown very large plant base to pyramids of mass. Correlationof marine invasion with chlorinity has been shown. The essential aspects ofpH regulated phosphorus geochemistry in Florida have been outlined. Sometheoretical ideas on productivity have been evolved. Mapping of sessileorganisms in springs and taxonomic identification of dominants are halfcompleted. Plans for second six months include measurement of herbivoreand carnivore production rates and completion of food chain efficiencydeterminations in Silver Springs as a preparation for subsequentcomparisons between springs. (34pp.)
    Keywords: Ecology ; Limnology ; springs ; Florida ; productivity
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    University of Florida, Coastal and Oceanographic Engineering Department | Gainesville, FL
    In:  http://aquaticcommons.org/id/eprint/468 | 3 | 2020-08-24 02:57:37 | 468 | Oceanographic Engineering Program, Department of Civil and Coastal Engineering, University of Florida
    Publication Date: 2021-06-29
    Description: The following report presents wave data collected at two near shore locations off Hollywood Beach, Florida beginning inJanuary 1990 and ending May 1992. The methods used to collect and analyze the data are also presented. Significant waveheight, peak wave period, and peak wave direction are presented in time series plots, and summarized monthly in tables.Appendices include the time series plots, wave roses of each deployment period, an overall wave rose for each site and adiskette of the data in ASCII format. (Document has 68 pages; diskette lacking.)
    Keywords: Oceanography ; Engineering ; waves ; Florida ; Hollywood Beach
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    University of Florida, Department of Biology | Gainesville, FL
    In:  http://aquaticcommons.org/id/eprint/374 | 3 | 2011-09-29 22:09:16 | 374
    Publication Date: 2021-06-29
    Description: The effect of productivity on species variety has been studied by countsof diatom species on glass slides at favorable and unfavorable stations withinSilver Springs. Species variety has been presented in a measure that is independentof sample size, "species per cycle". This measure is based on the linear increase of accumulated species with logarithmic increase of individuals counted, which has been found approximately true for many kinds of populations in many communities. Diatom productivity was measured by the rate of chlorophyll accumulation. The poor station accumulated diatoms and chlorophyll slowly and was characterized by a large species variety. There was little change after 79 days. The rich station accumulated diatoms and chlorophyll rapidly and was characterized by a small species variety that decreased for 93 days as the density of the population increased. These results indicated that species variet was decreased by conditions of high productivity possibly through the action of high densities and competition.Twelve new diurnal production curves were obtained including two more on Silver Springs and one each for 10 different Florida Springs. A shallow oligohaline spring possessed the highest productivity of 58.0 gm/m2/day; a shaded and anerobic spring possessed the lowest producvitiy of 0.66 gm /m2/day. Findings in further studies in Silver Springs indicated a two fold diurnal chlorophyll fluctuation in the pseudoplankton going downstream, photosynthetic quotients corresponding to carbohydrate production on winter or heavily clouded days, and higher quotients corresponding to protein production on sunny, summer days; evidences that bell jar estimates of respiration in flowing water communities lead to underestimates; recalculation of mean depth of plant beds leads to a 5% estimate of photosynthetic efficiency for Silver Springs (rather than 8%). Correlated with a 20% decrease in the discharge associated with widespread drought in 1954-55 the oxygen of the main boil dropped from 2.5 ppm to 1.7 ppm. A production measurement by the diurnal oxygen and carbon-dioxide curve method was made in a somewhat isolated "boat basin." Efficiency of production in this stationary, plankton containing water of Silver Springs origin was about 1%. Further evidence was obtained of nitrate increase in water flowing from anaerobic springs over blue-green algae. The area based chlorophyll of the benthic Silver Springs community was similar to that in forests and lakes of Europe. (63 pages)
    Keywords: Ecology ; Limnology ; diatoms ; Silver Springs ; Florida ; productivity
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    Florida Institute of Technology, Department of Oceanography and Ocean Engineering | Gainesville, FL
    In:  http://aquaticcommons.org/id/eprint/34 | 3 | 2021-02-27 20:03:06 | 34 | Florida Sea Grant College Program
    Publication Date: 2021-06-25
    Description: It has been the purpose of this project to provide the basic biological and geological data together with summary guidelines which will allow the Florida Dept. of Environmental Regulation and project engineers to make the necessary permitting and design decisions for beach nourishment project in worm reef areas. The present workseeks to determine the tolerance of P. lapidosa tosediment burial, the tolerance of these organisms to exposure to hydrogen sulfide, the tolerances of these organisms to heavy silt loads in the water, etc. (37pp.)
    Keywords: Oceanography ; Engineering ; Environment ; beach nourishment ; Sabellariid ; Phragmatapoma lapidosa ; Florida ; reefs
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    University of Florida Coastal and Oceanographic Engineering Department | Gainesville, FL
    In:  http://aquaticcommons.org/id/eprint/127 | 3 | 2020-08-24 02:53:49 | 127 | Oceanographic Engineering Program, Department of Civil and Coastal Engineering, University of Florida
    Publication Date: 2021-06-26
    Description: The critical need to predict the turbidity in water due to fine-grained sediment suspensionunder wave action over mud deposits for sedimentation and erosion studies, as well assorbed contaminant transport, is well known. Since fall velocities of fine sediment particlesare very small, they can be easily transported by hydrodynamic flows such as waves andcurrents. The presence of these particles in the water column affects accoustic transmission,heat absorption and depth of the eutrophic zone (Luettich et al., 1989). Because these sedimentsalso have a strong affinity for sorbing nutrients and toxic chemicals, sediments whichhave been deposited on the bottom may function as a source of contaminants to the watercolumn if they are disturbed by eroding forces resulting, for instance, from wave action. Anoutstanding example of a water body for these problems is Lake Okeechobee, the largestshallow lake in Florida. This lake shows typical signs of artificial eutrophication mainly dueto increased phosphorus loading associated with the surrounding region. Resuspension of sediment at the bottom of Lake Okeechobee composed of fine-grainedmaterial has been examined. A sediment transport model was used to simulate likelytrends in the evolution of the vertical suspended sediment concentration profile resultingfrom wave action, and the corresponding eroded bed depth was calculated through massbalance. Requisite information on characteristic parameters and relationships related tofine sediment erodibility were derived from field sampling of bottom sediment in the lake,and through laboratory experiments using this sediment and lake water. (161pp.)
    Description: South Florida Water Management District
    Keywords: Engineering ; Limnology ; Environment ; Chemistry ; Erosion ; Fine sediment ; Lake mud ; Lake Okeechobee
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    Florida Sea Grant College | Gainesville, FL
    In:  http://aquaticcommons.org/id/eprint/181 | 3 | 2020-08-24 02:42:52 | 181 | Florida Sea Grant College Program
    Publication Date: 2021-06-27
    Description: Florida's coastal county artificial reef sampling and data management programsare surveyed in this report. The survey describes the county level capability for artificialreef documentation and performance assessment based on their needs, interests,organizational structure and "in-situ" data collection and data management techniques.The. primary purpose of this study is to describe what staffing, training, techniques,organizational procedures and equipment are used by the coastal counties to establishlocal reef assessment projects, if they have such an effort. This information is necessaryto help determine the feasibility of implementing standards of data quality assurance andcontrol for a state reef database with information provided by local reef managers. (103pp.)
    Description: Florida Department of Natural Resources
    Description: Florida Department of Natural Resources Project Number R/FDNR-4
    Keywords: Oceanography ; Engineering ; artificial reefs ; Florida
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    University of Florida Coastal and Oceanographic Engineering Department | Gainesville, FL
    In:  http://aquaticcommons.org/id/eprint/210 | 3 | 2020-08-24 02:55:34 | 210 | Oceanographic Engineering Program, Department of Civil and Coastal Engineering, University of Florida
    Publication Date: 2021-06-27
    Description: It is well known that tidal inlets tend to cause accretion on updrift shorelines anderosion on downdrift shorelines. This study documented the shoreline changes near severaltidal inlets along Florida's east and west coasts. An analytical and a numerical methodwere used to attempt to predict the shoreline changes downdrift of these inlets. (142pp.)
    Keywords: Oceanography ; Engineering ; shore protection ; beach erosion ; inlets ; Florida ; thesis ; Ft. Pierce Inlet ; Sebastian Inlet ; St. Lucie Inlet ; Boca Raton Inlet ; baker's Haulover ; St. Andrews Bay Entrance ; Venice Inlet ; Lake Worth Inlet
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    University of Florida, Coastal and Oceanographic Engineering Department | Gainesville, FL
    In:  http://aquaticcommons.org/id/eprint/471 | 3 | 2020-08-24 02:58:12 | 471 | Oceanographic Engineering Program, Department of Civil and Coastal Engineering, University of Florida
    Publication Date: 2021-06-29
    Description: This report is to document the programs my colleague and I developed for computingtime-dependent nearshore hydrographic changes including beach profile responses.The time scale of the model is suitable for storm events to seasonalchanges, currently up to one year period. The model is very stable and is capableof handling complicated topographies including inlets and irregularly-shapedstructures such as curved jetties and breakwaters.The purpose of three-dimensional models is to predict the change of bottomtopography from the spatial distribution of the sediment transport rates, which areevaluated from the nearshore wave and current fields computed point by point insmall areas defined by a horizontal grid placed over the region of interest. Modelsof 3-D beach topography change require much fewer idealizations than do the linemodels. (Document has 43 pages.)
    Keywords: Oceanography ; Engineering ; Earth Sciences ; Coast changes ; models ; nearshore currents
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    University of Florida, Coastal and Oceanographic Engineering Department | Gainesville, FL
    In:  http://aquaticcommons.org/id/eprint/474 | 3 | 2020-08-24 02:59:04 | 474 | Oceanographic Engineering Program, Department of Civil and Coastal Engineering, University of Florida
    Publication Date: 2021-06-29
    Description: This data report contains measurements of turbidity obtained near Hollywood,Florida, during the period of January 1990 to April 1992. Data were obtainedwithin one meter of the seabed in depths of 5 m and 10 m. Turbidity was found tovary significantly under natural conditions, with values during storms sometimesexceeding 29 NTU. Tables and plots of turbidity data are presented. (Document contains 77 pages.)
    Description: Florida Sea Grant College Program
    Keywords: Oceanography ; Engineering ; beach nourishment ; Hollywood ; Florida ; turbidity
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    Florida Cooperative Fish and Wildlife Research Unit , University of Florida | Gainesville, FL
    In:  http://aquaticcommons.org/id/eprint/1077 | 3 | 2011-09-29 21:11:52 | 1077 | Florida Cooperative Fish and Wildlife Research Unit
    Publication Date: 2021-07-05
    Description: The Cabo Rojo Salt Flats, at the southwestern tip ofPuerto Rico, provide important autumn stopover and winteringhabitat for migratory shorebirds. I studied the abundanceand distribution of shorebirds and their food resources atthis site during autumn of 1990 and 1991.Small calidrids (primarily Calidris pusilla and C.mauri) were the most abundant shorebirds at the salt flats.The maximum weekly counts of small calidrids in 1990 (2,690)and 1991 (3,532) occurred in mid October. Calidrids foragedprimarily in the Fraternidad lagoon system; roosting tookplace most often at the neighboring Candelaria Lagoon.The macroinvertebrate prey important to calidrids in theFraternidad system were Dasyhelea (Diptera), Trichocorixa(Hemiptera), and Artemia (Anostraca). Changes in invertebrateabundance coincided with fluctuations in salinity. (100 page document)
    Description: Research Work Order no. 78
    Keywords: Conservation ; Management ; Biology ; Limnology ; Shorebirds ; Cabo Rojo Salt Flats ; Puerto Rico ; migration ; Calidrids ; Candelaria Lagoon
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    Florida Cooperative Fish and Wildlife Research Unit , University of Florida | Gainesville, FL
    In:  http://aquaticcommons.org/id/eprint/1079 | 3 | 2011-09-29 21:09:38 | 1079 | Florida Cooperative Fish and Wildlife Research Unit
    Publication Date: 2021-07-05
    Description: This goals of this research and monitoring effort are to document nesting effortand roughly categorize success of nesting by wading birds in the central Everglades ofFlorida, and to investigate the causes of nonbreeding in a high proportion of the adultwading birds in the ecosystem The latter goal has focused on breeding of White Ibises(Eudocimus albus) and has been approached through 1) understanding the nutritional,behavioral, and hormonal aspects of normal breeding in a captive colony ofScarlet Ibises(considered conspecific to White Ibises) in central Florida, and 2) comparing breeding andnonbreeding wild White Ibises in the Everglades, in their physiology, nutritional state,breeding phenology, contaminant load, and hormonal status. This report covers work onthis project between January and November, 2000. (81 page docoument)
    Description: Research Work Order no. 191
    Description: 2000 draft Final Annual Report to The U. S. Army Corps of Engineers Jacksonville, Florida
    Keywords: Conservation ; Management ; Biology ; Limnology ; Wading birds ; nesting success ; Everglades ; Water Conservation Area 1 ; Water Conservation Area 2 ; Water Conservation Area 3 ; Florida ; water levels ; Loxahatchee National Wildlife Refuge ; Northeast Shark Slough (NESS) ; White Ibis ; Eudocimus albus
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    Florida Cooperative Fish and Wildlife Research Unit , University of Florida | Gainesville, FL
    In:  http://aquaticcommons.org/id/eprint/1075 | 3 | 2011-09-29 21:11:45 | 1075 | Florida Cooperative Fish and Wildlife Research Unit
    Publication Date: 2021-07-05
    Description: This project was initiated to continue monitoring reproductive responses of wadingbirds in the central Everglades, and to investigate two areas of research considered key tounderstanding and managing wading birds: nestling energetics, and factors affecting foodavailability. This report summarizes the first of two years of work. (101 page document)
    Description: Final Report to The U. S. Army Corps of Engineers Jacksonville, Florida
    Keywords: Conservation ; Management ; Biology ; Limnology ; Wading birds ; nesting success ; Everglades ; Water Conservation Area 1 ; Water Conservation Area 2 ; Water Conservation Area 3 ; Florida ; water levels ; Loxahatchee National Wildlife Refuge ; Northeast Shark Slough (NESS)
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    Florida Cooperative Fish and Wildlife Research Unit , University of Florida | Gainesville, FL
    In:  http://aquaticcommons.org/id/eprint/1073 | 3 | 2011-09-29 21:11:39 | 1073 | Florida Cooperative Fish and Wildlife Research Unit
    Publication Date: 2021-07-05
    Description: This report documents breeding numbers, reproductive success, and foragingdispersion of long-legged wading birds in the Water Conservation Areas (WCAs) of theEverglades during the first six months of 1993. Briefly, the 1993 spring had abnormallyhigh water and windy conditions throughout the season, and produced poor nesting effort,low to moderate nesting success, and low production of young. Some species, like WoodStorks and White Ibises, did not nest at all in the WCAs. Others, like Great Egrets andTricolored Herons, showed considerably tenacity under the extremely poor nestingconditions. The 1993 season provided a rare chance to record the reproductive responses ofwading birds during sustained high water conditions. (108 page document)
    Description: Research Work Order no. 110
    Description: Final Report to The U. S. Army Corps of Engineers Jacksonville, Florida
    Keywords: Conservation ; Management ; Biology ; Limnology ; Wading birds ; nesting success ; Everglades ; Water Conservation Area 1 ; Water Conservation Area 2 ; Water Conservation Area 3 ; Florida ; water levels ; Loxahatchee National Wildlife Refuge ; Northeast Shark Slough (NESS)
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    University of Florida, Department of Fisheries | Gainesville, FL
    In:  http://aquaticcommons.org/id/eprint/1084 | 3 | 2011-09-29 21:12:43 | 1084 | Florida Cooperative Fish and Wildlife Research Unit
    Publication Date: 2021-07-05
    Description: This study investigated the status of fish communitiesin 12 naturally acid Florida lakes. The small, shallowlakes were located in the Ocala National Forest, the TrailRidge, and panhandle Florida; regions where lakes have lowacid neutralizing capacities and are considered sensitive tofurther acidification from anthropogenic sources.Fifteen species from seven families were capturedduring mark-recapture sampling. Warmouth (Lepomis gulosus)was the only cosmopolitan species in the study. Bluegill(Lepomis macrochirus) and largemouth bass (Micropterussalmoides), collected from 11 and 10 lakes, respectively,were also widely distributed species. Total fish abundanceand biomass were not related to lake pH or total alkalinity.(Document has 202 pages)
    Description: Research Work Order no. 73
    Description: PhD
    Description: This document was Cecil Jenning's Ph.D. dissertation submitted to the Department of Fisheries and Aquaculture, University of Florida.
    Keywords: Biology ; Limnology ; Chemistry ; lakes ; Florida ; fishes ; community ; water chemistry
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    Florida Cooperative Fish and Wildlife Research Unit , University of Florida | Gainesville, FL
    In:  http://aquaticcommons.org/id/eprint/1078 | 3 | 2011-09-29 21:11:55 | 1078 | Florida Cooperative Fish and Wildlife Research Unit
    Publication Date: 2021-07-05
    Description: This report summarizes work done during the 1998 field season on ResearchWork Order 188, for the U.S. Army Corps ofEngineers through the U.S. GeologicalService's Biological Resource Division's Florida Cooperative Research Unit.The goals ofthis work were to continue the monitoring of nesting by waterbirdsin the central and northern Everglades, and to initiate research aimed at understandingwhy a very large proportion ofthe adult wading birds in the Everglades do not initiatenesting in most years.Between January and July of 1998, we performed systematic aerial surveys ofWCAs 1, 2, and 3 ofthe central and northern Everglades in order to locate and documentbreeding colonies ofwading birds. In addition, we performed systematic ground surveysto serve as checks on the aerial work, and to document solitary nesting species, and darkcolored species not easily counted from the air. (88 page document)
    Description: Research Work Order no. 188
    Description: Final Report to The U. S. Army Corps of Engineers Jacksonville, Florida
    Keywords: Conservation ; Management ; Biology ; Limnology ; Wading birds ; nesting success ; Everglades ; Water Conservation Area 1 ; Water Conservation Area 2 ; Water Conservation Area 3 ; Florida ; water levels ; Loxahatchee National Wildlife Refuge ; Northeast Shark Slough (NESS)
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    Florida Cooperative Fish and Wildlife Research Unit , University of Florida | Gainesville, FL
    In:  http://aquaticcommons.org/id/eprint/1080 | 3 | 2011-09-29 21:09:44 | 1080 | Florida Cooperative Fish and Wildlife Research Unit
    Publication Date: 2021-07-05
    Description: This comprehensive final report summarizes the results of a four-year researchand monitoring effort (1998 - 2001) designed to document nesting effort and success bywading birds, and to investigate the reproductive physiology and ecology of White Ibises(Eudocimus albus) in the Everglades ecosystem. The monitoring of nesting has beenaccomplished bystandardized systematic aerial and ground surveys and study of nestingsuccess of nesting colonies in Water Conservation Areas (WCAs) 2 and 3 ofthe centralEverglades. The White Ibis work was accomplished through 1) investigation of thenutritional, behavioral, and hormonal aspects of "normal" breeding in a captive colony ofScarlet Ibises (Eudocimus ruber, considered by many to be the same species as the WhiteIbis), and 2) documenting the physiology, nutritional state, breeding phenology,contaminant load, and hormonal status of free- living adult White Ibises in the centralEverglades. (364 page document)
    Description: Research Work Order no. 191
    Description: 2001 final comprehensive report to The U. S. Army Corps of Engineers Jacksonville, Florida
    Keywords: Conservation ; Management ; Biology ; Limnology ; Wading birds ; nesting success ; Everglades ; Water Conservation Area 1 ; Water Conservation Area 2 ; Water Conservation Area 3 ; Florida ; water levels ; Loxahatchee National Wildlife Refuge ; Northeast Shark Slough (NESS) ; White Ibis ; Eudocimus albus
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    Florida Cooperative Fish and Wildlife Research Unit, University of Florida | Gainesville, FL
    In:  http://aquaticcommons.org/id/eprint/1090 | 3 | 2011-09-29 21:10:31 | 1090 | Florida Cooperative Fish and Wildlife Research Unit
    Publication Date: 2021-07-05
    Description: The purpose of this study was to determine how the dynamic system off Cape San Blas affects its unique group ofnesting sea turtles we assessed:1. changes in beach topography,2. changes in offshore topography,3. current flows and direction,4. tidal patterns,5. sand composition and origin,6. sea turtle nesting pattern, and7. structure of the sea turtle group nesting along Cape San Blas. (9 page document)
    Description: Research Work Order no. 197B
    Description: Project status report. Final report.
    Keywords: Oceanography ; Biology ; Earth Sciences ; Cape San Blas ; Florida ; barrier islands ; green turtles ; Chelonia mydas ; loggerhead turtles ; nesting ; sea turtles
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    Florida Cooperative Fish and Wildlife Research Unit, University of Florida | Gainesville, FL
    In:  http://aquaticcommons.org/id/eprint/1110 | 3 | 2011-09-29 21:07:12 | 1110 | Florida Cooperative Fish and Wildlife Research Unit
    Publication Date: 2021-07-05
    Description: 79 page document.
    Description: Supported by: U.S. Department of the Interior Fish and Wildlife Service Contract No. 14-16-0009-80-038
    Keywords: Limnology ; Earth Sciences ; Santa Fe River ; Florida ; geology
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    Florida Cooperative Fish and Wildlife Research Unit, University of Florida | Gainesville, FL
    In:  http://aquaticcommons.org/id/eprint/1109 | 3 | 2011-09-29 21:08:03 | 1109 | Florida Cooperative Fish and Wildlife Research Unit
    Publication Date: 2021-07-05
    Description: The following bibliography was compiled for use by the CooperativeFish and Wildlife Unit and their cooperators as an aid in determiningresearch priorities in Florida wetlands. Emphasis was placed on studiesdone on the economic value of wetlands, values to fish and wildlife, methodsof sampling in a wetland area, and restoration practices. Material wasgenerally gathered from studies done in the southeast, however, somerelevant national papers were also included. (35 page document)
    Description: Supported by: U.S. Department of the Interior Fish and Wildlife Service Contract No. 14-16-0009-80-038 November
    Keywords: Limnology ; Policies ; wetlands ; Florida ; values
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    Florida Cooperative FIsh and Wildlife Research Unit, University of Florida | Gainesville, FL
    In:  http://aquaticcommons.org/id/eprint/1111 | 3 | 2011-09-29 21:07:25 | 1111 | Florida Cooperative Fish and Wildlife Research Unit
    Publication Date: 2021-07-05
    Description: The Suwannee River sill was constructed following extensive wildfires during1954-1955, with the intent of protecting the swamp and surrounding uplands from effectsof wildfires. During subsequent years, concern was raised that the dam might beadversely affecting the swamp ecology by extending periods of inundation, increasingwater depths, and subsequently affecting swamp vegetation. Delineating the effects ofthe Suwannee River sill on the swamp hydrologic environment and vegetationdistributions, in the process of exploring relationships among driving functions andlandscape responses, was a purpose of this research.(834 page document)
    Description: Supported by: U.S. Department of the Interior Fish and Wildlife Service Contract No. 14-16-0009-80-038 November
    Keywords: Limnology ; Policies ; Suwannee River sill ; Okefenokee Swamp ; wildfires ; Florida ; wetlands ; Georgia
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    Coastal and Oceanographic Engineering Department, University of Florida | Gainesville, FL
    In:  http://aquaticcommons.org/id/eprint/1476 | 3 | 2011-09-29 20:31:04 | 1476 | Oceanographic Engineering Program, Department of Civil and Coastal Engineering, University of Florida
    Publication Date: 2021-07-08
    Description: Inlets are common coastal features around the world. Essentially aninlet connects a lagoon, a bay or an estuary to the ocean (or sea), and theflow through the inlet channel is primarily induced by the tidal rise andfall of water level in the ocean. When speaking of the hydraulics of an inlet,one is interested mainly in determining the flow through the inlet andthe tidal variation in the bay, given the following:(1) Inlet geometry(2) Bay geometry(3) Bottom sediment characteristics in the inlet(4) Fresh water inflow into the bay (and out throughthe inlet)(5) Ocean tide characteristicsA combination of all these factors can produce a rather complex situation. (PDF contains 34 pages.)
    Keywords: Oceanography ; Engineering ; Tidal inlets
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    Coastal and Oceanographic Engineering Department, University of Florida | Gainesville, FL
    In:  http://aquaticcommons.org/id/eprint/1474 | 3 | 2011-09-29 20:31:13 | 1474 | Oceanographic Engineering Program, Department of Civil and Coastal Engineering, University of Florida
    Publication Date: 2021-07-08
    Description: The purpose of this study was to determinethe actual direction of littoral transport along the north shore of SantaRosa Island in the vicinity of Pensacola Beach, Florida. To accomplish thisobjective the sand tracer method was used for the study. Visual observationsand instrument recordings of the environment factors were also made duringthe tracing operations. The investigation covered a time span from September14, 1976 to March 12, 1977.(PDF contains 68 pages.)
    Description: Sponsor: Department-of the Army Mobile District, Corps of Engineers Mobile, Alabama
    Keywords: Oceanography ; Engineering ; Santa Rosa Island ; Florida ; Longshore sediment transport
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    Coastal and Oceanographic Engineering Department, University of Florida | Gainesville, FL
    In:  http://aquaticcommons.org/id/eprint/1472 | 3 | 2011-09-29 20:31:18 | 1472 | Oceanographic Engineering Program, Department of Civil and Coastal Engineering, University of Florida
    Publication Date: 2021-07-08
    Description: The framework of sediment budget concepts provides a formalized procedureto account for the various components of sediment flux and the changes ofvolume that occur within a given region. Sediment budget methodology can beuseful in a number of coastal engineering and research applications,including: inferring the amount of onshore sediment transport for a nearshoresystem that contains an "excess of sediment", determining sediment deficits todowndrift beaches as a result of engineering works at navigational entrances,evaluating the performance of a beach nourishment project, inferring thedistribution of longshore sediment transport across the surf zone, etc.This chapter reviews briefly the governing equations for sediment budgetcalculations, considers various measurement and other bases for determiningthe sediment flux components necessary to apply the sediment budget conceptand finally for illustration purposes, applies the sediment budget concept toseveral examples. (PDF contains 52 pages.)
    Description: PUBLISHED IN DYNAMICS OF SAND BEACHES, INTERNATIONAL CONFERENCE ON COASTAL ENGINEERING (ICCE) 20th TAIPEL, R.O.C. NOV., 1986.
    Keywords: Oceanography ; Engineering ; Sediment transport ; modeling
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    Coastal and Oceanographic Engineering Department, University of Florida | Gainesville, FL
    In:  http://aquaticcommons.org/id/eprint/1477 | 3 | 2011-09-29 20:30:26 | 1477 | Oceanographic Engineering Program, Department of Civil and Coastal Engineering, University of Florida
    Publication Date: 2021-07-08
    Description: The effects of potential sea level rise on the shoreline and shore environmenthave been briefly examined by considering the interactions between sea level rise andrelevant coastal processes. These interactions have been reviewed beginning with adiscussion of the need to reanalyze previous estimates of eustatic sea level rise andcompaction effects in water level measurement. This is followed by considerations onsea level effects on coastal and estuarine tidal ranges, storm surge and water levelresponse, and interaction with natural and constructed shoreline features. Thedesirability to reevaluate the well known Bruun Rule for estimating shoreline recessionhas been noted. The mechanics of ground and surface water intrusion with reference tosea level rise are then reviewed. This is followed by sedimentary processes in theestuaries including wetland response. Finally comments are included on some probableeffects of sea level rise on coastal ecosystems.These interactions are complex and lead to shoreline evolution (under a sea levelrise) which is highly site-specific. Models which determine shoreline change on thebasis of inundation of terrestrial topography without considering relevant coastalprocesses are likely to lead to erroneous shoreline scenarios, particularly where theshoreline is composed of erodible sedimentary material.With some exceptions, present day knowledge of shoreline response to hydrodynamicforcing is inadequate for long-term quantitative predictions. A series of interrelatedbasic and applied research issues must be addressed in the coming decades todetermine shoreline response to sea level change with an acceptable degree ofconfidence. (PDF contains 189 pages.)
    Description: Sponsor Oak Ridge National Laboratory P.O. Box X Oak Ridge, TN 37831
    Keywords: Oceanography ; Coastal ecosystems ; Coastal processes ; Sea level rise ; Estuarine sedimentation ; Coasts
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    Coastal and Oceanographic Engineering Department, University of Florida | Gainesville, FL
    In:  http://aquaticcommons.org/id/eprint/1471 | 3 | 2011-09-29 20:31:48 | 1471 | Oceanographic Engineering Program, Department of Civil and Coastal Engineering, University of Florida
    Publication Date: 2021-07-08
    Description: A fixed-bed hydraulic model of Jupiter Inlet, Florida, wasconstructed for the purpose of testing measures designed to remedyproblems of sediment erosion and deposition in the inlet area. Bothtide-induced flows as well as waves were simulated in the model whichwas built on an undistorted scale of 1:49. Model verification was basedon prototype measurements of waves, tides and currents. Results havebeen interpreted in terms of the influence of various proposed remedialschemes on flow velocity magnitude, distribution and wave height atvarious locations within the study area. A stability parameter has beenutilized for evaluating the degree of sediment erosion or deposition ata given location.Various structural solutions were examined in the model. It isproposed that, in the initial phase of solution implementation, sedimentremoval/nourishment methods be used primarily to mitigate the existingproblems. New structures, as per model test results, should beinstalled under subsequent phases, only if sediment managementprocedures do not prove to be adequate. The currently followedprocedure of periodic sand trap dredging may be extended to include thenew dredging/nourishment requirements. (PDF contains 245 pages.)
    Description: Submitted to: Jupiter Inlet District and Palm Beach County
    Keywords: Oceanography ; Engineering ; Hydraulic model ; Inlet hydraulics ; tidal inlets ; Jupiter Inlet ; Sedimentation ; Florida
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    Coastal and Oceanographic Engineering Department, University of Florida | Gainesville, FL
    In:  http://aquaticcommons.org/id/eprint/1473 | 3 | 2011-09-29 20:31:16 | 1473 | Oceanographic Engineering Program, Department of Civil and Coastal Engineering, University of Florida
    Publication Date: 2021-07-08
    Description: A summary is presented of research conducted on beach erosion associated withextreme storms and sea level rise. These results were developed by the author andgraduate students under sponsorship of the University of Delaware Sea Grant Program.Various shoreline response problems of engineering interest are examined. Thebasis for the approach is a monotonic equilibrium profile of the form h = Ax2 /3 inwhich h is water depth at a distance x from the shoreline and A is a scale parameterdepending primarily on sediment characteristics and secondarily on wavecharacteristics. This form is shown to be consistent with uniform wave energydissipation per unit volume. The dependency of A on sediment size is quantifiedthrough laboratory and field data. Quasi-static beach response is examined torepresent the effect of sea level rise. Cases considered include natural and seawalledprofiles.To represent response to storms of realistic durations, a model is proposed inwhich the offshore transport is proportional to the "excess" energy dissipation perunit volume. The single rate constant in this model was evaluated based on largescale wave tank tests and confirmed with Hurricane Eloise pre- and post-stormsurveys. It is shown that most hurricanes only cause 10% to 25% of the erosionpotential associated with the peak storm tide and wave conditions. Additionalapplications include profile response employing a fairly realistic breaking model inwhich longshore bars are formed and long-term (500 years) Monte Carlo simulationincluding the contributions due to sea level rise and random storm occurrences. (PDF has 67 pages.)
    Keywords: Atmospheric Sciences ; Oceanography ; Beach erosion ; Storms ; Sea level rise ; Modeling
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    Coastal and Oceanographic Engineering Department, University of Florida | Gainesville, FL
    In:  http://aquaticcommons.org/id/eprint/1478 | 3 | 2011-09-29 20:30:35 | 1478 | Oceanographic Engineering Program, Department of Civil and Coastal Engineering, University of Florida
    Publication Date: 2021-07-08
    Description: This study presents the third post-nourishment survey (January 1989) results forthe Sand Key Phase II beach nourishment project carried out in June, 1988. Themonitoring program to this beach nourishment project is a joint effort betweenthe University of South Florida and University of Florida. The field surveysinclude a total of 26 profiles, encompassing approximately 3 miles of shorelineextending from DNR R-96 to R-1ll. The total calculated volume loss of sand inthe nourished segment (from R-99G to R-107) between the July 88 and January 89surveys is 51,113 cubic yards, which is a loss about 9.7 percent of 529,150 cubicyards actually placed in the nourishment project. The total loss of sand computedin the entire survey area is 26,796 cubic yards, which is only 5.1 percent of thesand placed in the nourishment project. It is stressed that a part of these netvolume reductions is due to the background erosion and not due to spreading lossesinduced by the nourishment project. (PDF contains 168 pages.)
    Description: Prepared for: Pinellas County and Division of Beaches and Shores Florida Department of Natural Resources
    Keywords: Management ; Conservation ; Oceanography ; Sand Key ; Florida ; Beach nourishment ; North Redington Beach
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    University of Florida. Department of Coastal and Oceanographic Engineering | Gainesville, FL
    In:  http://aquaticcommons.org/id/eprint/493 | 3 | 2020-08-24 03:01:09 | 493 | Oceanographic Engineering Program, Department of Civil and Coastal Engineering, University of Florida
    Publication Date: 2021-06-30
    Description: Covers the engineering aspects of beach nourishment.(Document is 192 pages)
    Keywords: Oceanography ; Engineering ; Beach nourishment ; Florida
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    University of Florida. Department of Coastal and Oceanographic Engineering | Gainesville, FL
    In:  http://aquaticcommons.org/id/eprint/496 | 3 | 2020-08-24 03:02:24 | 496 | Oceanographic Engineering Program, Department of Civil and Coastal Engineering, University of Florida
    Publication Date: 2021-06-30
    Description: This report presents the results of laboratory studies which were carried out in the Coastaland Oceanographical Engineering Laboratory to investigate the effects of ground water tableelevations on the beach profile changes over the swash zone. The experiment was conducted atthree different water table levels while the other experimental conditions were fixed to constantvalues with regular waves. The water table levels included (1) normal water table level whichis the same as mean sea level, (2) a higher level and (3) a lower level than the mean sealevel. Special attention was given to the higher water level to investigate whether this levelenhances erosion of the beach face and also to methods of interpreting the experimental data.The experiment described herein was carried out with a fairly fine sand and has demonstratedthe significance of beach water table on profile dynamics. The increased water table levelcaused distinct effects in three definite zones. First, erosion occurred at the base of the beachface and the sand eroded was carried up and deposited on the upper portion of the beachface. Secondly, the bar trough deepened considerably and rapidly and the eroded sand wasdeposited immediately landward. This depositional area changed from mildly erosional tostrongly depositional. Third, the area seaward of the bar eroded with a substantial deepening.The lowered water table appeared to result in a much more stable beach and the resultingeffects were much less. The only noticeable trend was a limited deposition in the scour area atthe base of the beach face. (Document has 37 pages.)
    Keywords: Oceanography ; Limnology ; Engineering ; Earth Sciences ; Beach erosion ; ground water
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    University of Florida. Department of Coastal and Oceanographic Engineering | Gainesville, FL
    In:  http://aquaticcommons.org/id/eprint/495 | 3 | 2020-08-24 03:01:50 | 495 | Oceanographic Engineering Program, Department of Civil and Coastal Engineering, University of Florida
    Publication Date: 2021-06-30
    Description: The focus of this study was the flow patterns of a flood tide near an inlet. The objectiveswere to examine flood flow patterns with particular reference to non-uniform or selectivewithdrawal as influenced by bottom topography and longshore currents, and to test theapplicability of conceptually simple analytic solutions to realistic sandy inlet bottom topographies,which often include an ebb shoal. Specifically, the applicability of three analytic solutions, twoof which include offshore selective withdrawal, to modeling of tidal water withdrawal duringflood tide under variable bottom topography and varying ratios of longshore current to inletvelocity, was examined. The three analytic solutions, including those for a horizontal (flat)bottom, a linearly sloping bottom and a logarithmically sloping bottom, together with a uniformlongshore current, were derived using potential flow theory. These solutions exhibit uniformlydistributed flows, selective offshore withdrawal, or an exaggerated offshore withdrawal,respectively, depending on the bottom slope. In order to investigate the flow patterns that exist during flood flow at a real inlet, experiments were conducted in a fixed bed hydrodynamic modelof Jupiter Inlet, Florida. Measurements were made to determine streamlines and velocities. Afield study at the prototype also tracked drogue patterns to determine streamlines and velocities.The physical model tests compared well with the field data. Comparison of thelaboratory and field data was then made to the analytic solutions to determine whether thetopography at Jupiter Inlet, which includes a well-developed ebb shoal, simulates a flat, meanlinearly or logarithmically sloping bottom. By comparing velocities at six selected points, asignificant relationship between the physical model and field data to the flat bottom analyticsolution was evident. The physical model tests and field data suggested that the flood tidal prismwas drawn from the region predominantly shoreward of the ebb shoal, thus implying a nearshoreselective withdrawal. Because the flood tidal prism was drawn from the nearshore, the flowpatterns at Jupiter Inlet did not resemble the analytic solutions of a linearly or logarithmicallysloping bottom, even though over a relatively long distance offshore, the bottom topography doesslope offshore at this inlet. In general, different inlet topographies would lend themselves todifferent analytic solutions, two examples being 1) the linearly sloping bottom of Koombana BayInlet, Australia, which shows an offshore selective withdrawal and 2) the basin-like nearfieldtopography of Jupiter Inlet which shows a more uniform nearshore withdrawal. The implicationsof this study are relevant to inlet management issues such as the mining of an ebb shoal for useas a source of beach sediment and changes in larval transport patterns due to jetty modifications. (Document has 97 pages.)
    Description: Thesis, M.S., Engineering
    Keywords: Oceanography ; Engineering ; Tidal inlets ; Jupiter Island ; Florida
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    Florida Cooperative FIsh and Wildlife Research Unit, University of Florida | Gainesville, FL
    In:  http://aquaticcommons.org/id/eprint/1116 | 3 | 2011-09-29 21:06:16 | 1116 | Florida Cooperative Fish and Wildlife Research Unit
    Publication Date: 2021-07-05
    Description: A comparison between a 1985 photo-interpreted vegetation mapand a vegetation map made from classified 1987 satellite data ofthe Loxahatchee National Wildlife Refuge showed that 81% ofsamples taken in areas occupied by cattail (Typha sp.) on thephoto-interpreted map corresponded with cattail on the satellitedata map.(5 page document)
    Keywords: Biology ; Limnology ; Engineering ; Loxahatchee National Wildlife Refuge ; satellite imagery ; cattail ; Typha sp.
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    University of Florida, Department of Coastal and Oceanographic Engineering | Gainesville, FL
    In:  http://aquaticcommons.org/id/eprint/1069 | 3 | 2011-09-29 21:11:07 | 1069 | Oceanographic Engineering Program, Department of Civil and Coastal Engineering, University of Florida
    Publication Date: 2021-07-05
    Description: To predict the hydrodynamics of lakes, estuaries and shallow seas, a two 'dimensionalnumerical model is developed using the method of fractional steps. Thegoverning equations, i.e., the vertically integrated Navier-Stokes equations of fluidmotion, are solved through three steps: advection, diffusion and propagation. Thecharacteristics method is used to solve the advection, the alternating direction implicitmethod is applied to compute the diffusion, and the conjugate gradient iterativemethod is employed to calculate the propagation. Two ways to simulatethe moving boundary problem are studied. The first method is based on the weirformulation. The second method is based on the assumption that a thin water layerexists over the entire dry region at all times. A number of analytical solutions areused to validate the model. The model is also applied to simulate the wind drivencirculation in Lake Okeechobee, Florida.(135 page document)
    Keywords: Oceanography ; Limnology ; Engineering ; hydrodynamics ; simulations ; lakes ; estuaries ; Lake Okeechobee ; Florida ; thesis
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    Coastal and Oceanographic Engineering Department, University of Florida | Gainesville, FL
    In:  http://aquaticcommons.org/id/eprint/1475 | 3 | 2011-09-29 20:31:06 | 1475 | Oceanographic Engineering Program, Department of Civil and Coastal Engineering, University of Florida
    Publication Date: 2021-07-08
    Description: Inlets which require frequent channel dredging due to gradual shoaling,exhibit migration, or shoal up during storms, are in general unstable andpose a problem to the engineer. This problem of inlet stability is a complexone, because of the rather large number of variables that go into definingstability. The reference here is to inlets on sandy coasts only, becausethe absence of sand or similar sedimentary material the problem does notarise. Shell is also found in varying proportions with sand. Some of thisis. new, whereas in some areas it is ancient reworked material whose sizedistribution is close to that of the sand with which it is associated. (PDF has 24 pages.)
    Keywords: Oceanography ; Engineering ; Tidal inlets
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    Florida Sea Grant College Program | Gainesville, FL
    In:  http://aquaticcommons.org/id/eprint/1854 | 3 | 2021-02-27 20:11:33 | 1854 | Florida Sea Grant College Program
    Publication Date: 2021-07-10
    Description: (PDF has 2 pages.)
    Keywords: Management ; Oceanography ; Aquaculture ; Biology ; commercial sponges ; Florida
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    Florida Sea Grant College Program | Gainesville, FL
    In:  http://aquaticcommons.org/id/eprint/285 | 3 | 2011-09-29 22:17:11 | 285 | Florida Sea Grant College Program
    Publication Date: 2021-06-28
    Description: The level of activity and interest in “marine biotechnology” among Florida universityfaculty and allied laboratory scientists is reported in this document. The information will beused to (1) promote networking and collaboration in research and education, (2) informindustry of possible academic partners, (3) identify contacts interested in potential new sourcesof funding, and (4) assist development of funding for a statewide marine biotechnologyresearch, training and development program.This document is the first of its kind. Institutions of higher learning were given theopportunity to contribute both an overview of campus capabilities and individual facultyExpressions of Scientific Interest. They are listed in the table of contents. (104pp.)
    Description: Office of Sea Grant, National Oceanic and Atmospheric Administration
    Keywords: Oceanography ; Biology ; Engineering
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    University of Florida, Gainesville, Department of Biology | Gainesville, FL
    In:  http://aquaticcommons.org/id/eprint/373 | 3 | 2011-09-29 22:09:11 | 373
    Publication Date: 2021-06-29
    Description: Production measurements at different times of the year indicate a linear relationship of light intensity and overall production at about 8% of the visible light energy reaching plant level. Measurements of a coral reef at Eniwetok indicate 6%. Further evidence of breeding at all seasons but with a quantitative pulse in the seasons of maximum light indicates that the seasonal fluctuation in primary production is routed through reproduction rather than through major changes in populations. The succession of plants and anmals of the aufwuchs has been shown with glass slides and counts from Sagittaria blades. Losss of oxygen bubbles during the day and emergence of aquatic insects at night have been measured with funnels. Bell jar measurements are reported for bacterial metabolism on mud surfaces. pH determined CO2 uptake agrees with titration determinations. A few rough estimates of herbivore production have been made from caged snails, aufwuchs succession, and fish tagging. Nitrate uptake a night by aufwuchs communities has been confirmed in a circulating microcosm experiment as well as in bell jars in the springs. Distributions of oxygen and organisms have been used to criticize the saprobe stream classification system. Theoretical consideration of maximum photosynthetic rates in teh literature data indicates logarithmic rate variation inversely with organismal size just as for respiratory metabolism. Extreme pyramid shapes are thus shown for communities in which organismal size decreases up the food chain and for other communities with the same energy influx but with organismal size increasing up the food chain. Literature data is used to further demonstrate the validity of the optimum efficiency-maximum power principle for photosynthesis. Work on plants by Dr. Delle Natelson indicates essential stability of aquatic plant communities after 3 years and about 10-20% reproducibility in previous biomass estimates by Davis. Work on an animal picture of the fishery characteristics by Caldwell, Barry, and Odum is half completed. The study of aquatic insects in relationship to spring gradients by W.C. Sloan has been completed an an M.S. thesis. J. Yount has begun a study of affect of total productivity on community composition using aufwuchs organisms on glass slides placed in different current and light conditions in Silver Springs. (49pp.)
    Keywords: Ecology ; Limnology ; Silver springs ; springs ; insects ; algae ; aufwuchs ; diatoms ; productivity ; Florida ; fishes
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    University of Florida. Department of Coastal and Oceanographic Engineering | Gainesville, FL
    In:  http://aquaticcommons.org/id/eprint/492 | 3 | 2020-08-24 03:00:51 | 492 | Oceanographic Engineering Program, Department of Civil and Coastal Engineering, University of Florida
    Publication Date: 2021-06-30
    Description: With the rapid growth and development of barrier islands, understanding the long-termstability of these islands is an integral part of future coastal planning. The overwash process isthe largest influence on the long-term stability of these islands and thus a correspondingunderstanding is of major importance. A laboratory experiment was undertaken to physicallymodel the wave and current forcing as they pertain to the overwash process. The physical modelwas subjected to various storm conditions common to the occurrence of the overwash.Combinations of wave height, wave period, and overwash depth were tested in an attempt toisolate the significant parameters. Water surface gradients were also applied to observe theirinfluence on the overwash process. Wave height, current, and bed profile measurements weretaken at different locations throughout the tank. In addition, wave height transformationmodeling and mean current prediction were performed and compared to the laboratory results inan attempt to model the overwash process through computer simulations. (Document has 132 pages)
    Description: Thesis, M.S. Engineering
    Keywords: Oceanography ; Engineering ; Barrier islands ; storms ; overwash
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    University of Florida, Coastal and Oceanographic Engineering Department | Gainesville, FL
    In:  http://aquaticcommons.org/id/eprint/497 | 3 | 2020-08-24 03:02:42 | 497 | Oceanographic Engineering Program, Department of Civil and Coastal Engineering, University of Florida
    Publication Date: 2021-06-30
    Description: The mechanism by which fluid mud is formed by water wave motion over coastal andestuarine cohesive soil beds is of evident interest in understanding and interpreting themicrofabric of flow-deposited fine sediments in shallow waters, and hence the erodibilityof muddy beds due to hydrodynamic forcing. This study investigated water wave-inducedfluidization of cohesive soil beds composed of a 50/50 (by weight) mixture of a commercialattapulgite and a kaolinite in a laboratory flume. Temporal and spatial changes of theeffective stress were measured during the course of wave action, and from these changesthe bed fluidization rate was calculated. A previously developed hydrodynamic wave-mudinteraction model of the two-layered water-mud system was employed to study the natureand the degree of wave dissipation, in terms of energy dissipation rate, during the bed fluidizationprocess. By evaluating the mud rheological properties separately, a mud viscositymodel was developed, which was then used in conjunction with the wave-mud interactionmodel to obtain an effective sheared thickness of the bed resulting from wave action. Thisthickness, considered to be a representative of the fluidized mud thickness, was comparedwith the latter obtained from pressure measurements. Also, through this wave-mud modelthe relationship between the rate of fluidization and the rate of wave energy dissipationduring fluidization was examined. In general, for a given wave frequency, a larger wave fluidized the bed at a faster rateand to a greater depth than a smaller one. Furthermore, increased bed consolidation timedecreased the rate of fluidization due to increased mud rigidity. The rate of bed fluidizationwas typically greater at the beginning of wave action and decreased with time. Eventuallythis rate approached zero, while in some cases the wave energy dissipation rate approached aconstant value, which increased with wave height. As the fluidization rate approached zero,there appeared to occur an equilibrium value of the bed elevation, and hence a fluid mudthickness, for a given wave condition. During the fluidization process the bed apparentlylost its structural integrity by loss of the effective stress through a build-up of the excesspore water pressure. After wave action ceased, the bed structure exhibited recovery bydissipation of the excess pore water pressure.Further studies will be required in which the hydrodynamic model must be improved viaa more realistic description of mud rheology and relaxation of the shallow water assumption,and better pressure data must be obtained than in the present study. Nevertheless, thisinvestigation has been instructive in demonstrating relationships between the degree of mudfluidization, wave energy dissipation and bed consolidation time, and thus offers insight intoan important mechanism by which coastal and estuarine muds are eroded by wave action. (Document has125 pages.)
    Description: Thesis, M.S., Engineering
    Keywords: Oceanography ; Engineering ; Earth Sciences ; Muds ; Rheology ; Waves
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    University of Florida. Department of Coastal and Oceanographic Engineering | Gainesville, FL
    In:  http://aquaticcommons.org/id/eprint/494 | 3 | 2020-08-24 03:01:30 | 494 | Oceanographic Engineering Program, Department of Civil and Coastal Engineering, University of Florida
    Publication Date: 2021-06-30
    Description: In this final report on the investigation of the potentialities of improvedcoastal engineering management of Jupiter Inlet, Florida, three management-guidingissues were considered: better control of the erosion of the south beach, betternavigation access and safety, and better control (reduction) of sediment influx into theinlet channel and upstream points in the Loxahatchee River estuary. The first twoissues have been particularly outstanding, due to persistent concern for the inherentdeficiencies in the protocol for sand pumping and placement on the beach that tends toerode away rapidly, and the concern for conditions for navigation of vessels in theproximity of the inlet in open waters. With regard to the third issue, despite thereasonably successful ongoing program to pump sand out of the borrow areas within theinlet channel, other areas such as some of the marinas in the inlet area, as well as theregion of the Loxahatchee River west of the Florida East Coast Railroad bridge, havebeen experiencing slow but persistent sedimentation.Contingent upon a series of coastal and environmental engineering investigations,a range of engineering actions that could mitigate erosion, navigation and sedimentationproblems were considered. Based on the physical and ecological impacts that would becaused by these actions, two sets of action options that have net beneficial impacts dueto action implementation have been proposed. The first is a set of interdependentaction options that must be instituted inherently in a time-wise phased manner. Thesecond is a set of independent action options which can be instituted as and when desired. For determining the overall feasibility of any action option, it will benecessary to weigh the technical benefits against costs, which are provided. It shouldbe emphasized however that, considering the overwhelmingly observational nature ofcoastal science, the estimates of potential benefits are essentially and inherentlysubjective, and the costs very approximate, especially in cases where the desiredtechnology is in the "bench" stage. (Document has 231 pages)
    Description: This publication is being made available as part of the report series written by the faculty, staff, and students of the Coastal and Oceanographic Program of the Department of Civil and Coastal Engineering.
    Keywords: Management ; Oceanography ; Engineering ; Beach erosion ; Inlet management ; Jupiter Inlet ; Loxahatchee River ; Tidal entrances ; Florida
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    University of Florida, Coastal and Oceanographic Engineering Department | Gainesville, FL
    In:  http://aquaticcommons.org/id/eprint/543 | 3 | 2020-08-24 03:06:11 | 543 | Oceanographic Engineering Program, Department of Civil and Coastal Engineering, University of Florida
    Publication Date: 2021-06-30
    Description: This thesis examines the historical shoreline response to inlet modifications and sealevel rise. Inlet modifications are considered to be the geographic stabilization and training(through the use of structures) of natural inlets and the creation and further modification ofartificial inlets. Shoreline response to natural and artificial processes must be understood inorder to predict the performance of the coastline. The tendency for creating and modifyinginlets increases as industry and population growth demands. Sea level rise is a natural processwhich cannot be controlled at this time. Current theoretical approaches to predictingshoreline response indicate that sea level rise and inlet modifications can cause substantialshoreline impact. Florida, with roughly a century of shoreline position and relative sea leveldata, provides a basis for examining past trends and comparing them with theory.The shoreline of Florida was found to be accreting with the greatest accretion alongthe east coast. Shoreline responses within the boundaries of the erosional influence of inletsdue to their creation and/or modification were examined for 19 inlets around the coast ofFlorida. The differences in the shoreline response before and after the initial modification ofeach inlet show the erosional strain that inlets apply on the nearby shoreline. The effect onshoreline response due to the human intervention (unnatural processes) of modifying inletswas isolated and examined. The shoreline response due to this "human intervention" was erosional, thereby showing the negative impact that modified inlets have on shorelines. Thisinduced erosion is responsible for the loss of roughly 21.6 million cubic yards of sand from theshoreline that is within the erosional influence of Florida's east coast inlets. Combining theshoreline changes due only to natural processes with sea level rise data allows for comparisonwith the commonly accepted Bruun Rule for shoreline response as a result of a changingsea level. This comparison and the effects of including a lag time between a rise in sea leveland a change in shoreline along the east coast of Florida during the last century show noagreement with the Bruun Rule and no correlation with a specific lag time. (153 pp.)
    Description: College of Engineering, M.S. Thesis
    Keywords: Oceanography ; Engineering ; Planning ; Sea level rise ; Inlets ; Florida
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    Florida Cooperative Fish and Wildlife Research Unit , University of Florida | Gainesville, FL
    In:  http://aquaticcommons.org/id/eprint/1076 | 3 | 2011-09-29 21:11:49 | 1076 | Florida Cooperative Fish and Wildlife Research Unit
    Publication Date: 2021-07-05
    Description: (113 page document)
    Description: Research Work Order no. 193
    Keywords: Management ; Conservation ; Pollution ; Biology ; Limnology ; endocrine disruption ; American alligator ; Florida ; reproduction
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    Florida Cooperative Fish and Wildlife Research Unit , University of Florida | Gainesville, FL
    In:  http://aquaticcommons.org/id/eprint/1065 | 3 | 2011-09-29 21:10:33 | 1065 | Florida Cooperative Fish and Wildlife Research Unit
    Publication Date: 2021-07-05
    Description: This Research Work Order includes three experiments to look at apple snail dry downsurvival as a function of age and season. Two of those experiments have been completedand the third one will likely run through February (depending on snail survival). The thirdexperiment began on September 2 1, 1998. The detailed results of Experiment # 1 and #2were reported in the update report of 10/15/98. The overall survival for Experiments #I and#2 are included herein for comparison with Experiment #3. (7 page document)
    Description: Research Work Order no. 182
    Keywords: Biology ; Limnology ; Florida Apple Snail ; Pomacea paludosa ; Say ; Florida ; dry down ; water levels
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    Type: monograph
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    Florida Cooperative Fish and Wildlife Research Unit , University of Florida | Gainesville, FL
    In:  http://aquaticcommons.org/id/eprint/1068 | 3 | 2011-09-29 21:11:03 | 1068 | Florida Cooperative Fish and Wildlife Research Unit
    Publication Date: 2021-07-05
    Description: The West Indian manatee's metabolic physiology constrains it to subtropical and tropicalregions. In waters of the United States, a manatee's ability to find reliable warm-water refugiaduring winter cold periods is critical to its survival. This report documents how radio-taggedmanatees used a network of 14 industrial and 3 "natural" warm-water sites along the east coastof Florida and Georgia duringwinter. Most industrial sites were powerplant discharges but alsoincluded pulp mill effluents. TheU. S. Geological Survey's SireniaProject tracked 71 manateesover 12 winter seasons (1986-1998) using field-based VHF radio-telemetry and Argos satellite based telemetry.Thirty-seven individuals weretracked over periodsofat least 100daysbetween November and March of a given winter, manyfor multiple years. Presence at a warmwaterrefugewasdefinedas a location occurring within 200m (for a VHF field observation) orwithin 1 km (for a satellite-determined location) ofthe site. (133 page document)
    Description: Sirenia Project, Florida Caribbean Science Center, U.S. Geological Survey
    Description: Final Report Prepared for: Florida Power and Light Company Environmental Services Dept. 700 Universe Blvd. Juno Beach, FL 33408 and U.S. Geological Survey, Florida Caribbean Science Center, Sirenia Project 412 NE 16th Ave., Rm. 250 Gainesville, FL 32601
    Keywords: Biology ; Limnology ; Information Management ; West Indian Manatee ; Trichechus manatus ; Florida ; tracking ; water temperature ; movements
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    Florida Cooperative Fish and Wildlife Research Unit , University of Florida | Gainesville, FL
    In:  http://aquaticcommons.org/id/eprint/1087 | 3 | 2011-09-29 21:10:01 | 1087 | Florida Cooperative Fish and Wildlife Research Unit
    Publication Date: 2021-07-05
    Description: The South Florida Ecosystem encompasses an area of approximately 28,000 km2 comprising at least 11major physiographic provinces, including the Kissimmee River Valley, Lake Okeechobee, the Immokalee Rise, theBig Cypress, the Everglades, Florida Bay, the Atlantic Coastal Ridge, Biscayne Bay, the Florida Keys, the FloridaReef Tract, and nearshore coastal waters. South Florida is a heterogeneous system of wetlands, uplands, coastalareas, and marine areas, dominated by the watersheds of the Kissimmee River, Lake Okeechobee, and theEverglades.Prior to drainage, wetlands dominated the ecosystem, covering most of central and southern Florida. Thelandscapes included swamp forests; sawgrass plains; mosaics of sawgrass, tree islands, and ponds; marl-formingprairies dominated by periphyton; wet prairies dominated by Eleocharis and Nymphaea; freshwater marshes;saltwater marshes; cypress strands; and a vast lake-river system draining into Lake Okeechobee. Elevated areasthat did not flood supported pine flatwoods, pine rocklands, scrub, tropical hardwood hammocks, and xerichammocks dominated by oaks. The natural seascapes of South Florida consisted of riverine and fringe mangroveforests; beaches and dunes; seagrass beds; intertidal flats; mud banks; hardbottom communities; coral reefs; andopen, inshore shallows. All these habitats were interconnected on an extremely low topographic gradient (2.8cm/km) with elevations ranging from about 6 m at Lake Okeechobee to below sea level at Florida Bay.The Science SUb-Group (1993) described the defining characteristics of the South Florida Ecosystem and the problems that resulted from hydrologic alterations and other anthropogenic changes.Restoration objectives were proposed for each sub-regionand the region as a whole.The overall goal of the restoration effort is to restore a sustainable South Florida Ecosystem that preservesthe valued properties of South Florida's natural systems and supports productive agriculture-, fishery-, and tourist.based economies and a high quality of urban life. Sustainability means high natural productivity, human andecosystem health, and resiliency to climatic extremes and catastrophic events. It also means accommodation ofneeds of human systems-flood control, irrigation, and drinking water supply.SCOPEThis section addresses the entire ecosystem, cutting across the artificial boundaries of designatedsubregions, as well as geopolitical and geomorphological boundaries, to present the broader issues of deVelopingan interagency and interdisciplinary ecosystem-based science program to support South Florida restoration. Herewe discuss the general premise and the general approach, with brief discussions on monitoring, modeling, andspecial studies. The latter two topics are covered in greater detail in other sections. (PDF contains 119 pages)
    Description: Research Work Order no. 139
    Description: Science sub-meeting, September 27, 1994
    Keywords: Management ; Limnology ; Planning ; South Florida Ecosystem Restoration Initiative ; objectives
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    Florida Sea Grant College Program | Gainesville, FL
    In:  http://aquaticcommons.org/id/eprint/1853 | 3 | 2011-09-29 19:59:28 | 1853 | Florida Sea Grant College Program
    Publication Date: 2021-07-10
    Description: Increased boating activities and new waterfront developments have contributed anestimated 3,000 dismantled, abandoned, junked, wrecked, derelict vessels to Floridacoastal waters. This report outlines a method of siting and prioritizing derelict vesselremoval using the Florida Keys as a test area. The data base was information on 240vessels, obtained from Florida Marine Patrol files. Vessel location was plotted on 1:250,000regional and 1:5,000 and 1:12,000 site maps. Type of vessel, length, hull material, engine,fuel tanks, overall condition, afloat and submerged characteristics, and accessibility, wereused to derive parametric site indices of removal priority and removal difficulty.Results indicate 59 top priority cases which should be the focus of immediate cleanup efforts in the Florida Keys. Half of these cases are rated low to moderate in removaldifficulty; the remainder are difficult to remove. Removal difficulty is a surrogate forremoval cost: low difficulty -low cost, high difficulty - high cost. The rating scheme offerscoastal planners options of focusing removal operations either on (1) specific areas withclusters of high priority derelict vessels or on (2) selected targeted derelicts at various,specific locations. (PDF has 59 pages.)
    Description: FLSGP-T-89-003 C2
    Keywords: Management ; Oceanography ; derelict vessels ; Florida Keys
    Repository Name: AquaDocs
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    Florida Sea Grant College Program | Gainesville, FL
    In:  http://aquaticcommons.org/id/eprint/2549 | 3 | 2011-09-29 18:52:17 | 2549 | Florida Sea Grant College Program
    Publication Date: 2021-06-25
    Description: Florida Sea Grant management and extension specialists developed a questionnaire to solicitinformation regarding the recipient’s county of residence, occupation, and primary coastalactivities. Survey recipients were also asked to select from a list the top five marine-relatedtopics that defined prior strategic plan themes (i.e., marine bio-technology, fisheries, aquaculture,seafood safety, coastal communities, ecosystem health, coastal hazards, and marine education).In addition, questionnaire recipients were asked to evaluate (on a scale of one to five) theimportance of a series of listed outcomes that characterize priority planning themes. Last, surveyrecipients identified up to three priority themes and outcomes that they felt were particularlyimportant and in need of resolution. (PDF contains 36 pages.)
    Keywords: Conservation ; Oceanography ; Planning ; coastal issues ; Florida
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    National River Authority North West | Bristol, UK
    In:  dis@fba.org.uk | http://aquaticcommons.org/id/eprint/8377 | 1256 | 2012-03-07 14:48:01 | 8377 | Environment Agency, UK (Freshwater Biological Association)
    Publication Date: 2021-07-02
    Description: The document reports on Phase 1 of a definition study to appraise the options to develop fish tracking equipment, in particular tags and data logging systems in order to improve the efficiency of the Environment Agency's tracking studies and to obtain a greater understanding of fish biology. Covered in this report are radio telemetry, audio telemetry, High Resolution Position Fixing, data storage and archival tags and other fish tracking systems such as biosonics.
    Description: Environment Agency Archives North West
    Keywords: Fisheries ; Limnology ; UK ; Tracking ; River fisheries ; Freshwater fish ; Migratory species ; Migrations ; Satellite communication ; Telemetry ; Tagging ; Data loggers
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    Type: monograph
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    National Rivers Authority | Bristol, UK
    In:  dis@fba.org.uk | http://aquaticcommons.org/id/eprint/8064 | 1256 | 2012-02-25 12:02:18 | 8064 | Environment Agency, UK (Freshwater Biological Association)
    Publication Date: 2021-06-28
    Description: This report considers the development of environmental quality standards (EQSs) for the salmonid fishery, cyprinid fishery, migratory fishery, commercial harvesting of marine fish for public consumption and commercial harvesting of shellfish for public consumption uses of controlled surface waters. Previous reports have been used to identify those parameters necessary for the maintenance of these five uses. Each water use is considered in a separate section within which identified parameters are discussed and standards proposed, a summary of the proposed standards is presented at the beginning of the relevant section. For salmonid, cyprinid and migratory fisheries, EQSs for substances in water have been proposed for the protection of these fisheries. For the commercial harvesting of marine fish and shellfish for public consumption uses 'Warning Levels' of substances in waters have been proposed. These 'Warning Levels' have been proposed by considering data on bioaccumulation and food standards and aim to prevent acceptable intake values and concentrations in fish/shellfish flesh exceeding statutory or recommended levels. For the commercial harvesting of marine fish for public consumption it has been concluded that the current EQSs for most List II substances for the protection of salt water life should be adequately stringent to protect this use, however for the commercial harvesting of shellfish for public consumption, these List II EQSs do not appear adequate to protect this use and more stringent 'Warning Levels' have been proposed. For all five uses considered in this report there has been found to be limited information on a number of the parameters considered and in general for indigenous species, this has been found to be especially so when considering migratory fisheries and the commercial harvesting of marine fish and shellfish.
    Description: Environment Agency Archives North West
    Keywords: Environment ; Fisheries ; Limnology ; UK ; Fisheries ; Environment management ; Standards ; Water quality ; Legislation ; Environmental assessment
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    National Rivers Authority | Bristol, UK
    In:  dis@fba.org.uk | http://aquaticcommons.org/id/eprint/8529 | 1256 | 2012-12-21 15:22:29 | 8529 | Environment Agency, UK (Freshwater Biological Association)
    Publication Date: 2021-07-03
    Description: Fish tracking is a valuable technique for the provision of detailed information on thebehaviour patterns of individual fish especially during estuarine and riverine migration.2. Tracking studies help in the provision of a comprehensive description of the variety offishbehaviour patterns in response to factors such as water flow, obstructions and waterquality.3. There are advantages to be gained by complementing fish tracking studies with datacollected from fish counters and vice versa.4. An overall evaluation of NRA fish tracking projects is presented in the wider context ofNRA strategic research objectives.5. The requirement for future development of tracking equipment, improved data analysistechniques, better communication and more immediate report preparation is identified.6. Individual project evaluation is given for NRA (or the appropriate Water Authoritypredecessor) tracking studies conducted on the Ribble estuary, the River Tamar, RiverTorridge, Rivers Test and Itchen, River Lodden, the Welsh River Dee, River Glaslyn,River Taff, River Tawe, River Tywi, River Usk, Rivers Avon and Stour and the RiverFrome.7. An outline for future strategic research is provided which identifies particular areas forstudy:-i) Identification of environmental factors which control the entry of fish into rivers.ii) Improvement of the understanding of the relationship between water flow andupstream movement of salmonids.iii) Examination of the detailed movements and behaviour of fish in relation toobstructions.iv) Closer definition of water quality requirements for salmonid fish.v) Definition of habitat preferences of salmonids in rivers.vi) Subsidiary topics such as the movements of non-salmonid fish and the downstreammigration of kelts and juvenile salmonids.
    Description: Environment Agency Archives North West
    Keywords: Fisheries ; Limnology ; Management ; UK ; Rivers ; River fisheries ; Salmo salar ; Salmo trutta ; Stream flow ; Tracking ; Water quality ; Fishery management
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    Type: monograph
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    National Rivers Authority | Bristol, UK
    In:  dis@fba.org.uk | http://aquaticcommons.org/id/eprint/8556 | 1256 | 2021-02-27 19:44:35 | 8556 | Environment Agency, UK (Freshwater Biological Association)
    Publication Date: 2021-07-03
    Description: The study began on the 7th January 1991 and was completed in June 1991. Two reports have been produced. This report published as R&D Note 33 describes NRA trackingstudies, tracking techniques and fish counter technology. The second report published as R&D Note 34 evaluates NRA tracking studies and recommends future research. The latterwill be used solely for NRA management purposes. This report briefly outlines the programme of the NRA, placing the Fisheries programme in the context of the work of the NRA as a whole, and viewing the tracking work against thebroader requirements of the NRA Fisheries research programme. Two techniques currently exist for studying the detailed timing and extent of movements of adult salmon: tracking of individually identifiable fish, and counting the numbers of fish moving past a fixed point in the river. Further details of these techniques and their development are given in Sections 2 and 3. Section 4 summarises and assesses completed and current NRA tracking Studies. Completeproject descriptions for the studies are contained in Appendix A. Section 5 discusses the scientific content of these studies in relation to similar work carried out elsewhere in the UK. Section 6 details the future development of tracking techniques. Tracking work on migratory salmonids has tended to concentrate largely upon the movements of adult salmon. Much of this report will therefore be concerned with salmon trackingstudies. NRA studies involving sea trout are referred to where appropriate. The methodological problems of sea trout tracking studies are summarised in Section 2.1.3.
    Description: Environment Agency Archives North West
    Keywords: Fisheries ; Limnology ; UK ; Rivers ; River Fisheries ; Salmo salar ; Salmo trutta ; Migratory species ; Tracking ; Tagging ; Fish counters ; Stream flow ; Water quality
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    National Rivers Authority | Bristol, UK
    In:  dis@fba.org.uk | http://aquaticcommons.org/id/eprint/8571 | 1256 | 2012-12-20 20:51:52 | 8571 | Environment Agency, UK (Freshwater Biological Association)
    Publication Date: 2021-07-03
    Description: In Britain, many birds eat fish in fresh waters but only three species, cormorant, red-breasted merganser and goosander, are commonly perceived to present serious problems for freshwater fisheries. Complaints are mainly that cormorants eat large fish and that all three bird species eat so many juvenile fish, that there are subsequently fewer fish to be harvested or angled, but alsothat persistent predation by birds changes fish behaviour so that they are less 'catchable'.To this end, this report reviews existing information on the current status, foraging ecology, and population biologyof the three bird species as background to their potential impact on fisheries. Discusses fish population dynamics within the context of predation effects. Reviews existing experimental evidence for impacts on fish populations and fisheries; and describes current legislation, discusses potential criteria for serious damage to a fishery, andsuggests ways forward for NRA policy and research.
    Description: Environment Agency Archives North West
    Description: R and D Project Record 461/8/N and Y
    Keywords: Environment ; Fisheries ; Limnology ; Great Britain ; Europe ; River fisheries ; Freshwater fish ; Predators ; Predator control ; Fish populations ; Environmental assessment
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