Zobrazeno 1 - 10
of 41
pro vyhledávání: '"Don W. Schloesser"'
Publikováno v:
Journal of Great Lakes Research. 42:1070-1083
Freshwater polychaetes are relatively rare and little-studied members of the benthos of lakes and rivers. We studied one polychaete species (Manayunkia speciosa) in Lake Erie near the mouth of the Detroit River. Abundances at one site were determined
Publikováno v:
Journal of Invertebrate Pathology. 137:49-53
We used PCR to screen pooled individuals of Manayunkia speciosa from western Lake Erie, Michigan, USA for myxosporean parasites. Amplicons from positive PCRs were sequenced and showed a Ceratonova species in an estimated 1.1% (95% CI=0.46%, 1.8%) of
Publikováno v:
Journal of Great Lakes Research. 41:348-357
Previous studies have indicated that burrow-irrigating infauna can increase sediment oxygen demand (SOD) and impact hypolimnetic oxygen in stratified lakes. We conducted laboratory microcosm experiments and computer simulations with larvae of the bur
Publikováno v:
Journal of Great Lakes Research. 40:80-91
After an absence of 50 years, burrowing mayflies ( Hexagenia spp.) colonized western Lake Erie which led to interest in whether this fauna can be used to measure recovery in nearshore waters throughout the Great Lakes. However, in many areas we do no
Autor:
Don W. Schloesser
Publikováno v:
Journal of Great Lakes Research. 39:308-316
Manayunkia speciosa has been a taxonomic curiosity for 150 years with little interest until 1977 when it was identified as an intermediate host of a fish parasite ( Ceratomyxa shasta ) responsible for fish mortalities (e.g., chinook salmon). Manayunk
Autor:
Don W. Schloesser, Christine Schmuckal
Publikováno v:
Journal of Shellfish Research. 31:1205-1263
Dreissenid mussels invaded and colonized waters of the Laurentian Great Lakes during the late 1980s. Their colonization and resulting impact have been characterized as one of the most important ecological changes in freshwater systems in North Americ
Publikováno v:
Journal of Great Lakes Research. 35:507-516
Previous studies support the hypothesis that large numbers of infaunal burrow-irrigating organisms in the western basin of Lake Erie may increase significantly the sediment oxygen demand, thus enhancing the rate of hypolimnetic oxygen depletion. We c
Autor:
Kennon Johnson, Johann Biberhofer, Janice L. Metcalfe-Smith, Gerald L. Mackie, Teresa J. Newton, Emy M. Monroe, Michael T. Arts, Don W. Schloesser, Daryl J. McGoldrick
Publikováno v:
Journal of Great Lakes Research. 35:137-146
The Lake St. Clair delta (∼100 km2) provides an important refuge for native freshwater mussels (Unionidae) wherein 22 of the ∼35 historical species co-occur with invasive dreissenids. A total of 1875 live unionids representing 22 species were fou
Autor:
Bruce A. Manny, Don W. Schloesser
Publikováno v:
Journal of Great Lakes Research. 33:8-19
American wildcelery (Vallisneria americana Michx.) is a valuable submersed aquatic plant that was negatively affected by pollution and urban runoff in the lower Detroit River for much of the 20th century. Following 25 years of water-pollution and urb
Publikováno v:
Biological Sciences Publications
Burrowing mayflies (Hexagenia limbata and H. rigida) recolonized sediments of the western basin of Lake Erie in the 1990s following decades of pollution abatement. We predicted that Hexagenia would also disperse eastward or expand from existing local