Anne G. Ernst
United States Geological Survey
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Featured researches published by Anne G. Ernst.
North American Journal of Fisheries Management | 2008
Barry P. Baldigo; Dana R. Warren; Anne G. Ernst; Christiane I. Mulvihill
Abstract Many streams and rivers throughout North America have been extensively straightened, widened, and hardened since the middle 1800s, but related effects on aquatic ecosystems have seldom been monitored, described, or published. Beginning in the early 1990s, reach-level restoration efforts began to base projects on natural channel design (NCD) techniques and Rosgens (1994b, 1996) river classification system in an effort to duplicate or mimic stable reference reach geomorphology. Four reaches in three streams of the Catskill Mountains, New York, were restored from 2000 to 2002 using NCD techniques to decrease bed and bank erosion rates, decrease sediment loads, and improve water quality. The effects of restoration on the health of fish assemblages were assessed through a before–after, control–impact (BACI) study design to quantify the net changes in population and community indices at treatment reaches relative to index changes at unaltered reference reaches from 1999 to 2004. After restoration, com...
Transactions of The American Fisheries Society | 2010
Barry P. Baldigo; Anne G. Ernst; Dana R. Warren; Sarah J. Miller
Abstract Natural-channel-design (NCD) restorations were recently implemented within large segments of five first- and second-order streams in the Catskill Mountains of New York in an attempt to increase channel stability, reduce bed and bank erosion, and sustain water quality. In conjunction with these efforts, 54 fish and habitat surveys were done from 1999 to 2007 at six restored reaches and five stable control reaches to evaluate the effects of NCD restoration on fish assemblages, habitat, and bank stability. A before–after–control–impact study design and two-factor analysis of variance were used to quantify the net changes in habitat and fish population and community indices at treatment reaches relative to those at unaltered control reaches. The density and biomass of fish communities were often dominated by one or two small prey species and no or few predator species before restoration and by one or more trout (Salmonidae) species after restoration. Significant increases in community richness (30%),...
Scientific Investigations Report | 2005
Christiane I. Mulvihill; Anne G. Ernst; Barry P. Baldigo
Restoration Ecology | 2012
Anne G. Ernst; Dana R. Warren; Barry P. Baldigo
Archive | 2006
Barry P. B Aldigo; Anne G. Ernst; Walter Keller; Dana R. Warren; Sarah J. Miller; Daniel Davis; Thomas P. B Audanza; Douglas Dekoskie; Jake R. Buchanan; Greene County Soil
Scientific Investigations Report | 2014
Barry P. Baldigo; Patrick J. Phillips; Anne G. Ernst; James L. Gray; Jocelyn D.C. Hemming
Scientific Investigations Report | 2009
Christiane I. Mulvihill; Barry P. Baldigo; Anne G. Ernst
Open-File Report | 2007
Barry P. Baldigo; Anne G. Ernst; George E. Schuler; Colin D. Apse
Scientific Investigations Report | 2016
Scott D. George; Anne G. Ernst; Barry P. Baldigo; Dale C. Honeyfield
Open-File Report | 2015
Anne G. Ernst; Barry P. Baldigo; Fred J. Calef; Douglas A. Freehafer; Robert L. Kremens