7 results on '"Hetherington, Amy L."'
Search Results
2. A global database of lake surface temperatures collected by in situ and satellite methods from 1985–2009
- Author
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Sharma, Sapna, Gray, Derek K, Read, Jordan S, O’Reilly, Catherine M, Schneider, Philipp, Qudrat, Anam, Gries, Corinna, Stefanoff, Samantha, Hampton, Stephanie E, Hook, Simon, Lenters, John D, Livingstone, David M, McIntyre, Peter B, Adrian, Rita, Allan, Mathew G, Anneville, Orlane, Arvola, Lauri, Austin, Jay, Bailey, John, Baron, Jill S, Brookes, Justin, Chen, Yuwei, Daly, Robert, Dokulil, Martin, Dong, Bo, Ewing, Kye, de Eyto, Elvira, Hamilton, David, Havens, Karl, Haydon, Shane, Hetzenauer, Harald, Heneberry, Jocelyne, Hetherington, Amy L, Higgins, Scott N, Hixson, Eric, Izmest’eva, Lyubov R, Jones, Benjamin M, Kangur, Külli, Kasprzak, Peter, Köster, Olivier, Kraemer, Benjamin M, Kumagai, Michio, Kuusisto, Esko, Leshkevich, George, May, Linda, MacIntyre, Sally, Müller-Navarra, Dörthe, Naumenko, Mikhail, Noges, Peeter, Noges, Tiina, Niederhauser, Pius, North, Ryan P, Paterson, Andrew M, Plisnier, Pierre-Denis, Rigosi, Anna, Rimmer, Alon, Rogora, Michela, Rudstam, Lars, Rusak, James A, Salmaso, Nico, Samal, Nihar R, Schindler, Daniel E, Schladow, Geoffrey, Schmidt, Silke R, Schultz, Tracey, Silow, Eugene A, Straile, Dietmar, Teubner, Katrin, Verburg, Piet, Voutilainen, Ari, Watkinson, Andrew, Weyhenmeyer, Gesa A, Williamson, Craig E, and Woo, Kara H
- Abstract
Global environmental change has influenced lake surface temperatures, a key driver of ecosystem structure and function. Recent studies have suggested significant warming of water temperatures in individual lakes across many different regions around the world. However, the spatial and temporal coherence associated with the magnitude of these trends remains unclear. Thus, a global data set of water temperature is required to understand and synthesize global, long-term trends in surface water temperatures of inland bodies of water. We assembled a database of summer lake surface temperatures for 291 lakes collected in situ and/or by satellites for the period 1985-2009. In addition, corresponding climatic drivers (air temperatures, solar radiation, and cloud cover) and geomorphometric characteristics (latitude, longitude, elevation, lake surface area, maximum depth, mean depth, and volume) that influence lake surface temperatures were compiled for each lake. This unique dataset offers an invaluable baseline perspective on global-scale lake thermal conditions as environmental change continues.
- Published
- 2015
3. The importance of lake-specific characteristics for water quality across the continental United States
- Author
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Read, Emily K., Patil, Vijay P., Oliver, Samantha K., Hetherington, Amy L., Brentrup, Jennifer A., Zwart, Jacob A., Winters, Kirsten M., Corman, Jessica R., Nodine, Emily R., Woolway, R. Iestyn, Dugan, Hilary A., Jaimes, Aline, Santoso, Arianto B., Hong, Grace S., Winslow, Luke A., Hanson, Paul C., and Weathers, Kathleen C.
- Published
- 2015
4. From concept to practice to policy: modeling coupled natural and human systems in lake catchments.
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Cobourn, Kelly M., Carey, Cayelan C., Boyle, Kevin J., Duffy, Christopher, Dugan, Hilary A., Farrell, Kaitlin J., Fitchett, Leah, Hanson, Paul C., Hart, Julia A., Henson, Virginia Reilly, Hetherington, Amy L., Kemanian, Armen R., Rudstam, Lars G., Shu, Lele, Soranno, Patricia A., Sorice, Michael G., Stachelek, Joseph, Ward, Nicole K., Weathers, Kathleen C., and Weng, Weizhe
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WATERSHEDS ,WATER pollution laws ,WATER Quality Act of 1987 (U.S.) ,ECOSYSTEMS ,WATER management - Abstract
Recent debate over the scope of the U.S. Clean Water Act underscores the need to develop a robust body of scientific work that defines the connectivity between freshwater systems and people. Coupled natural and human systems (CNHS) modeling is one tool that can be used to study the complex, reciprocal linkages between human actions and ecosystem processes. Well-developed CNHS models exist at a conceptual level, but the mapping of these system representations in practice is limited in capturing these feedbacks. This article presents a paired conceptual--empirical methodology for functionally capturing feedbacks between human and natural systems in freshwater lake catchments, from human actions to the ecosystem and from the ecosystem back to human actions. We address extant challenges in CNHS modeling, which arise from differences in disciplinary approach, model structure, and spatiotemporal resolution, to connect a suite of models. In doing so, we create an integrated, multi-disciplinary tool that captures diverse processes that operate at multiple scales, including land-management decision-making, hydrologic-solute transport, aquatic nutrient cycling, and civic engagement. In this article, we build on this novel framework to advance cross-disciplinary dialogue to move CNHS lake-catchment modeling in a systematic direction and, ultimately, provide a foundation for smart decision-making and policy. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2018
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
5. Transparency, Geomorphology and Mixing Regime Explain Variability in Trends in Lake Temperature and Stratification across Northeastern North America (1975-2014).
- Author
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Richardson, David C., Melles, Stephanie J., Pilla, Rachel M., Hetherington, Amy L., Knoll, Lesley B., Williamson, Craig E., Kraemer, Benjamin M., Jackson, James R., Long, Elizabeth C., Moore, Karen, Rudstam, Lars G., Rusak, James A., Saros, Jasmine E., Sharma, Sapna, Strock, Kristin E., Weathers, Kathleen C., and Wigdahl-Perry, Courtney R.
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WATER temperature ,GEOMORPHOLOGY ,LAKE ecology ,CLIMATE change ,LAKES - Abstract
Lake surface water temperatures are warming worldwide, raising concerns about the future integrity of valuable lake ecosystem services. In contrast to surface water temperatures, we know far less about what is happening to water temperature beneath the surface, where most organisms live. Moreover, we know little about which characteristics make lakes more or less sensitive to climate change and other environmental stressors. We examined changes in lake thermal structure for 231 lakes across northeastern North America (NENA), a region with an exceptionally high density of lakes. We determined how lake thermal structure has changed in recent decades (1975-2012) and assessed which lake characteristics are related to changes in lake thermal structure. In general, NENA lakes had increasing near-surface temperatures and thermal stratification strength. On average, changes in deepwater temperatures for the 231 lakes were not significantly different than zero, but individually, half of the lakes experienced warming and half cooling deepwater temperature through time. More transparent lakes (Secchi transparency >5 m) tended to have higher near-surface warming and greater increases in strength of thermal stratification than less transparent lakes. Whole-lake warming was greatest in polymictic lakes, where frequent summer mixing distributed heat throughout the water column. Lakes often function as important sentinels of climate change, but lake characteristics within and across regions modify the magnitude of the signal with important implications for lake biology, ecology and chemistry. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2017
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6. Long‐term population dynamics of dreissenid mussels (Dreissena polymorpha and D. rostriformis): a cross‐system analysis.
- Author
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Strayer, David L., Adamovich, Boris V., Adrian, Rita, Aldridge, David C., Balogh, Csilla, Burlakova, Lyubov E., Fried‐Petersen, Hannah B., G.‐Tóth, László, Hetherington, Amy L., Jones, Thomas S., Karatayev, Alexander Y., Madill, Jacqueline B., Makarevich, Oleg A., Marsden, J. Ellen, Martel, André L., Minchin, Dan, Nalepa, Thomas F., Noordhuis, Ruurd, Robinson, Timothy J., and Rudstam, Lars G.
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BIOLOGICAL invasions ,ZEBRA mussel ,POPULATION dynamics ,PERNA ,MUSSELS ,BODY size ,WATER temperature ,INTRODUCED species - Abstract
Dreissenid mussels (including the zebra mussel Dreissena polymorpha and the quagga mussel D. rostriformis) are among the world's most notorious invasive species, with large and widespread ecological and economic effects. However, their long‐term population dynamics are poorly known, even though these dynamics are critical to determining impacts and effective management. We gathered and analyzed 67 long‐term (>10 yr) data sets on dreissenid populations from lakes and rivers across Europe and North America. We addressed five questions: (1) How do Dreissena populations change through time? (2) Specifically, do Dreissena populations decline substantially after an initial outbreak phase? (3) Do different measures of population performance (biomass or density of settled animals, veliger density, recruitment of young) follow the same patterns through time? (4) How do the numbers or biomass of zebra mussels or of both species combined change after the quagga mussel arrives? (5) How does body size change over time? We also considered whether current data on long‐term dynamics of Dreissena populations are adequate for science and management. Individual Dreissena populations showed a wide range of temporal dynamics, but we could detect only two general patterns that applied across many populations: (1) Populations of both species increased rapidly in the first 1–2 yr after appearance, and (2) quagga mussels appeared later than zebra mussels and usually quickly caused large declines in zebra mussel populations. We found little evidence that combined Dreissena populations declined over the long term. Different measures of population performance were not congruent; the temporal dynamics of one life stage or population attribute cannot generally be accurately inferred from the dynamics of another. We found no consistent patterns in the long‐term dynamics of body size. The long‐term dynamics of Dreissena populations probably are driven by the ecological characteristics (e.g., predation, nutrient inputs, water temperature) and their temporal changes at individual sites rather than following a generalized time course that applies across many sites. Existing long‐term data sets on dreissenid populations, although clearly valuable, are inadequate to meet research and management needs. Data sets could be improved by standardizing sampling designs and methods, routinely collecting more variables, and increasing support. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
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- 2019
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7. A multi-lake comparative analysis of the General Lake Model (GLM): Stress-testing across a global observatory network.
- Author
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Bruce, Louise C., Frassl, Marieke A., Arhonditsis, George B., Gal, Gideon, Hamilton, David P., Hanson, Paul C., Hetherington, Amy L., Melack, John M., Read, Jordan S., Rinke, Karsten, Rigosi, Anna, Trolle, Dennis, Winslow, Luke, Adrian, Rita, Ayala, Ana I., Bocaniov, Serghei A., Boehrer, Bertram, Boon, Casper, Brookes, Justin D., and Bueche, Thomas
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PSYCHOLOGICAL stress testing , *CLIMATIC zones , *ERROR analysis in mathematics , *PARAMETER estimation , *PARAMETERIZATION - Abstract
The modelling community has identified challenges for the integration and assessment of lake models due to the diversity of modelling approaches and lakes. In this study, we develop and assess a one-dimensional lake model and apply it to 32 lakes from a global observatory network. The data set included lakes over broad ranges in latitude, climatic zones, size, residence time, mixing regime and trophic level. Model performance was evaluated using several error assessment metrics, and a sensitivity analysis was conducted for nine parameters that governed the surface heat exchange and mixing efficiency. There was low correlation between input data uncertainty and model performance and predictions of temperature were less sensitive to model parameters than prediction of thermocline depth and Schmidt stability. The study provides guidance to where the general model approach and associated assumptions work, and cases where adjustments to model parameterisations and/or structure are required. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2018
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
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