Daniel T. Button
United States Geological Survey
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Featured researches published by Daniel T. Button.
Environmental Science & Technology | 2011
Paul M. Bradley; Douglas A. Burns; Karen Riva Murray; Mark E. Brigham; Daniel T. Button; Lia C. Chasar; Mark Marvin-DiPasquale; Mark A. Lowery; Celeste A. Journey
We assessed methylmercury (MeHg) concentrations across multiple ecological scales in the Edisto (South Carolina) and Upper Hudson (New York) River basins. Out-of-channel wetland/floodplain environments were primary sources of filtered MeHg (F-MeHg) to the stream habitat in both systems. Shallow, open-water areas in both basins exhibited low F-MeHg concentrations and decreasing F-MeHg mass flux. Downstream increases in out-of-channel wetlands/floodplains and the absence of impoundments result in high MeHg throughout the Edisto. Despite substantial wetlands coverage and elevated F-MeHg concentrations at the headwater margins, numerous impoundments on primary stream channels favor spatial variability and lower F-MeHg concentrations in the Upper Hudson. The results indicated that, even in geographically, climatically, and ecologically diverse streams, production in wetland/floodplain areas, hydrologic transport to the stream aquatic environment, and conservative/nonconservative attenuation processes in open water areas are fundamental controls on dissolved MeHg concentrations and, by extension, MeHg availability for potential biotic uptake.
Environmental Science & Technology | 2012
Paul M. Bradley; Celeste A. Journey; Mark A. Lowery; Mark E. Brigham; Douglas A. Burns; Daniel T. Button; Francis H. Chapelle; Michelle A. Lutz; Mark Marvin-DiPasquale; Karen Riva-Murray
Fluvial methylmercury (MeHg) is attributed to methylation in up-gradient wetland areas. This hypothesis depends on efficient wetland-to-stream hydraulic transport under nonflood and flood conditions. Fluxes of water and dissolved (filtered) mercury (Hg) species (FMeHg and total Hg (FTHg)) were quantified in April and July of 2009 in a reach at McTier Creek, South Carolina to determine the relative importance of tributary surface water and shallow groundwater Hg transport from wetland/floodplain areas to the stream under nonflood conditions. The reach represented less than 6% of upstream main-channel distance and 2% of upstream basin area. Surface-water discharge increased within the reach by approximately 10%. Mean FMeHg and FTHg fluxes increased within the reach by 23–27% and 9–15%, respectively. Mass balances indicated that, under nonflood conditions, the primary supply of water, FMeHg, and FTHg within the reach (excluding upstream surface water influx) was groundwater discharge, rather than tributary transport from wetlands, in-stream MeHg production, or atmospheric Hg deposition. These results illustrate the importance of riparian wetland/floodplain areas as sources of fluvial MeHg and of groundwater Hg transport as a fundamental control on Hg supply to Coastal Plain streams.
Environmental Science & Technology | 2013
Karen Riva-Murray; Paul M. Bradley; Christopher D. Knightes; Celeste A. Journey; Mark E. Brigham; Daniel T. Button
Mercury (Hg) bioaccumulation factors (BAFs) for game fishes are widely employed for monitoring, assessment, and regulatory purposes. Mercury BAFs are calculated as the fish Hg concentration (Hg(fish)) divided by the water Hg concentration (Hg(water)) and, consequently, are sensitive to sampling and analysis artifacts for fish and water. We evaluated the influence of water sample timing, filtration, and mercury species on the modeled relation between game fish and water mercury concentrations across 11 streams and rivers in five states in order to identify optimum Hg(water) sampling approaches. Each model included fish trophic position, to account for a wide range of species collected among sites, and flow-weighted Hg(water) estimates. Models were evaluated for parsimony, using Akaikes Information Criterion. Better models included filtered water methylmercury (FMeHg) or unfiltered water methylmercury (UMeHg), whereas filtered total mercury did not meet parsimony requirements. Models including mean annual FMeHg were superior to those with mean FMeHg calculated over shorter time periods throughout the year. FMeHg models including metrics of high concentrations (80th percentile and above) observed during the year performed better, in general. These higher concentrations occurred most often during the growing season at all sites. Streamflow was significantly related to the probability of achieving higher concentrations during the growing season at six sites, but the direction of influence varied among sites. These findings indicate that streamwater Hg collection can be optimized by evaluating site-specific FMeHg-UMeHg relations, intra-annual temporal variation in their concentrations, and streamflow-Hg dynamics.
Open-File Report | 2015
Celeste A. Journey; Peter C. Van Metre; Amanda H. Bell; Daniel T. Button; Jessica D. Garrett; Naomi Nakagaki; Sharon L. Qi; Paul M. Bradley
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Environmental Science and Technology Letters | 2016
Paul M. Bradley; Celeste A. Journey; Daniel T. Button; Daren M. Carlisle; Jimmy M. Clark; Barbara J. Mahler; Naomi Nakagaki; Sharon L. Qi; Ian R. Waite; Peter C. VanMetre
Environmental Pollution | 2013
Paul M. Bradley; Celeste A. Journey; Mark E. Brigham; Douglas A. Burns; Daniel T. Button; Karen Riva-Murray
Data Series | 2008
Mark E. Brigham; Joseph W. Duris; Dennis A. Wentz; Daniel T. Button; Lia C. Chasar
Ecotoxicology | 2013
Karen Riva-Murray; Paul M. Bradley; Lia C. Chasar; Daniel T. Button; Mark E. Brigham; Celeste A. Journey; Michelle A. Lutz
Journal of Environmental Quality | 2016
Peter C. Van Metre; Jeffrey W. Frey; MaryLynn Musgrove; Naomi Nakagaki; Sharon L. Qi; Barbara J. Mahler; Michael Wieczorek; Daniel T. Button
Scientific Investigations Report | 2012
Celeste A. Journey; Douglas A. Burns; Karen Riva-Murray; Mark E. Brigham; Daniel T. Button; Toby D. Feaster; Matthew D. Petkewich; Paul M. Bradley