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Dive into the research topics where Adam E. Cohen is active.

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Featured researches published by Adam E. Cohen.


PLOS ONE | 2011

Assessing historical fish community composition using surveys, historical collection data, and species distribution models.

Ben J. Labay; Adam E. Cohen; Blake Sissel; Dean A. Hendrickson; F. Douglas Martin; Sahotra Sarkar

Accurate establishment of baseline conditions is critical to successful management and habitat restoration. We demonstrate the ability to robustly estimate historical fish community composition and assess the current status of the urbanized Barton Creek watershed in central Texas, U.S.A. Fish species were surveyed in 2008 and the resulting data compared to three sources of fish occurrence information: (i) historical records from a museum specimen database and literature searches; (ii) a nearly identical survey conducted 15 years earlier; and (iii) a modeled historical community constructed with species distribution models (SDMs). This holistic approach, and especially the application of SDMs, allowed us to discover that the fish community in Barton Creek was more diverse than the historical data and survey methods alone indicated. Sixteen native species with high modeled probability of occurrence within the watershed were not found in the 2008 survey, seven of these were not found in either survey or in any of the historical collection records. Our approach allowed us to more rigorously establish the true baseline for the pre-development fish fauna and then to more accurately assess trends and develop hypotheses regarding factors driving current fish community composition to better inform management decisions and future restoration efforts. Smaller, urbanized freshwater systems, like Barton Creek, typically have a relatively poor historical biodiversity inventory coupled with long histories of alteration, and thus there is a propensity for land managers and researchers to apply inaccurate baseline standards. Our methods provide a way around that limitation by using SDMs derived from larger and richer biodiversity databases of a broader geographic scope. Broadly applied, we propose that this technique has potential to overcome limitations of popular bioassessment metrics (e.g., IBI) to become a versatile and robust management tool for determining status of freshwater biotic communities.


Southwestern Naturalist | 2005

AQUATIC INVERTEBRATES OF CUATRO CIÉNEGAS, COAHUILA, MÉXICO: NATIVES AND EXOTICS

Eric C. Dinger; Adam E. Cohen; Dean A. Hendrickson; Jane C. Marks

Abstract A recent survey of benthic macroinvertebrates of the Cuatro Cienegas basin found 118 species in the 21 sites collected. Four exotic macroinvertebrates that could threaten the native biota were found within or near the basin.


Environmental Management | 2015

Can Species Distribution Models Aid Bioassessment when Reference Sites are Lacking? Tests Based on Freshwater Fishes

Ben J. Labay; Dean A. Hendrickson; Adam E. Cohen; Timothy H. Bonner; Ryan S. King; Leroy J. Kleinsasser; Gordon W. Linam

Recent literature reviews of bioassessment methods raise questions about use of least-impacted reference sites to characterize natural conditions that no longer exist within contemporary landscapes. We explore an alternate approach for bioassessment that uses species site occupancy data from museum archives as input for species distribution models (SDMs) stacked to predict species assemblages of freshwater fishes in Texas. When data for estimating reference conditions are lacking, deviation between richness of contemporary versus modeled species assemblages could provide a means to infer relative biological integrity at appropriate spatial scales. We constructed SDMs for 100 freshwater fish species to compare predicted species assemblages to data on contemporary assemblages acquired by four independent surveys that sampled 269 sites. We then compared site-specific observed/predicted ratios of the number of species at sites to scores from a multimetric index of biotic integrity (IBI). Predicted numbers of species were moderately to strongly correlated with the numbers observed by the four surveys. We found significant, though weak, relationships between observed/predicted ratios and IBI scores. SDM-based assessments identified patterns of local assemblage change that were congruent with IBI inferences; however, modeling artifacts that likely contributed to over-prediction of species presence may restrict the stand-alone use of SDM-derived patterns for bioassessment and therefore warrant examination. Our results suggest that when extensive standardized survey data that include reference sites are lacking, as is commonly the case, SDMs derived from generally much more readily available species site occupancy data could be used to provide a complementary tool for bioassessment.


Southwestern Naturalist | 2014

Population of variable platyfish (Xiphophorus variatus) established in Waller Creek, Travis County, Texas

Adam E. Cohen; Laura E. Dugan; Dean A. Hendrickson; F. Douglas Martin; Jonathan Huynh; Ben J. Labay; Melissa Casarez

Abstract The variable platyfish (Xiphophorus variatus), native to Gulf Coast drainages of northern Mexico, is a popular aquarium fish with a long history of introduction globally. We document the first Texas occurrence of this species, and its persistence in highly urban Waller Creek in the city of Austin since at least 2004. The population appears to be limited to Waller Creek, having not yet been found in neighboring creeks where similar habitat exists. We observed individuals in situ and in the lab surviving in 7°C water, well below published thermal minima, and report its persistence through one of the coldest winters in Austins recorded history. Its persistence may be due to a combination of its cold tolerance and the presence of thermal refuges. In the lab we found that individuals purchased in a local pet store and individuals from Waller Creek had the same cold tolerance.


Archive | 2018

Temporal Changes in the Fishes of Waller Creek and Invasion of the Variable Platyfish

Adam E. Cohen; Dean A. Hendrickson; Robert J. Edwards

This poster was presented at the second Waller Creek Symposium held on the University of Texas campus at the Recreational Sports Center on May 7, 2018.


Archive | 2018

Conserving Texas Biodiversity: Status, Trends, and Conservation Planning for Fishes of Greatest Conservation Need

Adam E. Cohen; Gary P. Garrett; Melissa Casarez; Dean A. Hendrickson; Benjamin J. Labay; Tomislav Urban; John Gentle; Dennis Wylie; David Walling

Texas Parks and Wildlife Department through U.S. Fish and Wildlife Service State Wildlife Grant Program, grant TX T-106-1 (CFDA# 15.634)


Archive | 2017

Conservation status assessment of the endangered Mexican Blindcat, Prietella phreatophila

Laura E. Dugan; Dean A. Hendrickson; Antonio Hernández-Espriú; Gary P. Garrett; Adam E. Cohen; Brad D. Wolaver; Ryan P. Smith

content from an oral presentation July 15, 2017 at the annual Joint Meeting of Ichthyologists and Herpetologists in Austin, Texas, USA (http://conferences.k-state.edu/JMIH-Austin-2017/)


Archive | 2017

Update on the Fishes of Texas Project

Adam E. Cohen; Dean A. Hendrickson; Tomislav Urban; David Walling; John Gentle; Gary P. Garrett; Melissa Casarez; F. Douglas Martin

Poster presentation presented at the 2017 Texas Academy of Sciences annual meeting in Belton, Texas on March 4, 2017.


Archive | 2017

Discovery of Endangered Mexican Blindcat, Prietella phreatophila, in Texas: Implications for International Groundwater Management and Evolution of the Regional Karst Aquifer Biota

Dean A. Hendrickson; Antonio Hernández-Espriú; Laura E. Dugan; Peter Sprouse; José Antonio Dávila Paulín; Jean K. Krejca; Andrew Gluesenkamp; James R. Reddell; Ryan P. Smith; Sarah Howard; Jack Johnson; Gary P. Garrett; Adam E. Cohen; Francisco León; Brad D. Wolaver; Danté B. Fenolio

Paper presented July 15, 2017 at the annual Joint Meeting of Ichthyologists and Herpetologists in Austin, Texas, USA (http://conferences.k-state.edu/JMIH-Austin-2017/). The oral presentation of this content mentioned questions about the taxonomy and phylogenetic position of Prietella lundbergi and the only specimens attributed to P. lundbergi apart from the holotype. Since the presentation, we obtained high resolution CT scans of both the holotype and a specimen (TNHC 25767) from Cueva del Nacimiento del Rio Frio, not far north of the type locality. The anatomy revealed in those CT scans suggests that these specimens represent a single species, and that P. lundbergi is only remotely related to Prietella phreatophila, which would be consistent with results of Wilcox, T.P., F.J. Garcia de Leon, Dean A. Hendrickson, and D.M. Hillis. 2004. “Convergence among Cave Catfishes: Long-Branch Attraction and a Bayesian Relative Rates Test.” Molecular Phylogenetics and Evolution 31 (3): 1101–13. doi:10.1016/j.ympev.2003.11.006). Thus, further research is in progress by Hendrickson, Lundberg, Luckenbill and Arce that may result in taxonomic revision removing P. lundbergi from Prietella.


Archive | 2016

American Eel in Texas – what we do, don’t, and need to, know

Dean A. Hendrickson; Adam E. Cohen; Ben J. Labay; Gary P. Garrett; Melissa Casarez; F. Douglas Martin

Copy of the oral presentation made by the first author to the January 2016 meeting of the Texas Chapter of American Fisheries Society in Kerrville, Texas. Presentation is provided in several file formats. Data mapped in the presentation are also included in kml format (Google Earth).

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Dean A. Hendrickson

University of Texas at Austin

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Ben J. Labay

University of Texas at Austin

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F. Douglas Martin

University of Texas at Austin

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Gary P. Garrett

Texas Parks and Wildlife Department

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Sahotra Sarkar

University of Texas at Austin

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Andrew Gluesenkamp

Texas Parks and Wildlife Department

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Blake Sissel

University of Texas at Austin

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Brad D. Wolaver

University of Texas at Austin

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David Walling

University of Texas at Austin

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