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Dive into the research topics where David W. Bolgrien is active.

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Featured researches published by David W. Bolgrien.


Science of The Total Environment | 2010

Persistent organic pollutants in fish tissue in the mid-continental great rivers of the United States

Karen A. Blocksom; David M. Walters; Terri M. Jicha; James M. Lazorchak; Theodore R. Angradi; David W. Bolgrien

Great rivers of the central United States (Upper Mississippi, Missouri, and Ohio rivers) are valuable economic and cultural resources, yet until recently their ecological condition has not been well quantified. In 2004-2005, as part of the Environmental Monitoring and Assessment Program for Great River Ecosystems (EMAP-GRE), we measured legacy organochlorines (OCs) (pesticides and polychlorinated biphenyls, PCBs) and emerging compounds (polybrominated diphenyl ethers, PBDEs) in whole fish to estimate human and wildlife exposure risks from fish consumption. PCBs, PBDEs, chlordane, dieldrin and dichlorodiphenyltrichloroethane (DDT) were detected in most samples across all rivers, and hexachlorobenzene was detected in most Ohio River samples. Concentrations were highest in the Ohio River, followed by the Mississippi and Missouri Rivers, respectively. Dieldrin and PCBs posed the greatest risk to humans. Their concentrations exceeded human screening values for cancer risk in 27-54% and 16-98% of river km, respectively. Chlordane exceeded wildlife risk values for kingfisher in 11-96% of river km. PBDE concentrations were highest in large fish in the Missouri and Ohio Rivers (mean>1000 ng g(-1) lipid), with congener 47 most prevalent. OC and PBDE concentrations were positively related to fish size, lipid content, trophic guild, and proximity to urban areas. Contamination of fishes by OCs is widespread among great rivers, although exposure risks appear to be more localized and limited in scope. As an indicator of ecological condition, fish tissue contamination contributes to the overall assessment of great river ecosystems in the U.S.


Environmental Monitoring and Assessment | 2009

A bioassessment approach for mid-continent great rivers: the Upper Mississippi, Missouri, and Ohio (USA)

Theodore R. Angradi; David W. Bolgrien; Terri M. Jicha; Mark S. Pearson; Brian H. Hill; Debra L. Taylor; E. W. Schweiger; L. Shepard; A. R. Batterman; Mary F. Moffett; Colleen M. Elonen; Leroy E. Anderson

The objectives of the Environmental Monitoring and Assessment Program for Great River Ecosystems (EMAP-GRE) are to (1) develop and demonstrate, in collaboration with states, an assessment program yielding spatially unbiased estimates of the condition of mid-continent great rivers; (2) evaluate environmental indicators for assessing great rivers; and (3) assess the current condition of selected great river resources. The purpose of this paper is to describe EMAP-GRE using examples based on data collected in 2004–006 with emphasis on an approach to determining reference conditions. EMAP-GRE includes the Upper Mississippi River, the Missouri River, and the Ohio River. Indicators include biotic assemblages (fish, macroinvertebrates, plankton, algae), water chemistry, and aquatic and riparian physical habitat. Reference strata (river reaches for which a single reference expectation is appropriate) were determined by ordination of the fish assemblage and examination of spatial variation in environmental variables. Least disturbed condition of fish assemblages for reference strata was determined by empirical modeling in which we related fish assemblage metrics to a multimetric stressor gradient. We inferred least disturbed condition from the y-intercept, the predicted condition when stress was least. Thresholds for dividing the resource into management-relevant condition classes for biotic indicators were derived using predicted least disturbed condition to set the upper bound on the least disturbed condition class. Also discussed are the outputs of EMAP-GRE, including the assessment document, multimetric indices of condition, and unbiased data supporting state and tribal Clean Water Act reporting, adaptive management, and river restoration.


Environmental Monitoring and Assessment | 2000

Assessing Landscape Condition Relative to Water Resources in the Western United States: A Strategic Approach

K. Bruce Jones; Daniel T. Heggem; Timothy G. Wade; Anne C. Neale; Donald W. Ebert; Maliha S. Nash; Megan Mehaffey; Karl A. Hermann; Anthony R. Selle; Scott Augustine; Iris A. Goodman; Joel A. Pedersen; David W. Bolgrien; J. Max Viger; Dean Chiang; Cindy J. Lin; Yehong Zhong; Joan P. Baker; Rick D. Van Remortel

The Environmental Monitoring and Assessment Program (EMAP) is proposing an ambitious agenda to assess the status of streams and estuaries in a 12-State area of the western United States by the end of 2003. Additionally, EMAP is proposing to access landscape conditions as they relate to stream and estuary conditions across the west. The goal of this landscape project is to develop a landscape model that can be used to identify the relative risks of streams and estuaries to potential declines due to watershed-scale, landscape conditions across the west. To do so, requires an understanding of quantitative relationships between landscape composition and pattern metrics and parameters of stream and estuary conditions. This paper describes a strategic approach for evaluating the degree to which landscape composition and pattern influence stream and estuary condition, and the development and implementation of a spatially-distributed, landscape analysis approach.


Hydrobiologia | 2009

Effect of main-stem dams on zooplankton communities of the Missouri River (USA)

John E. Havel; Kim A. Medley; Kelli D. Dickerson; Theodore R. Angradi; David W. Bolgrien; Paul A. Bukaveckas; Terri M. Jicha

The persistence of plankton in flowing water presents an enigma, i.e., how can populations be sustained while constantly losing individuals downriver? We examined the distribution and abundance of zooplankton from 146 sites on the Missouri River (USA) and found large shifts in the dominance of major taxa between management zones of this regulated river. Crustacean zooplankton were dominant in the inter-reservoir zone of the river, and their taxonomic composition was similar to regional lakes and reservoirs. The exponential decline of cladocerans and copepods with distance from main-stem dams suggests that conditions within the river are adverse to population growth and that reservoirs are the main source of these crustaceans in the river. Rotifers dominated in the channelized zone of the river. High algal biomass and rapid population growth rates likely allow persistence of rotifers in segments of the river that do not receive direct reservoir inputs. Rotifers were less abundant in the inter-reservoir zone, suggesting that their numbers are limited by internal processes, such as food or predators. Since zooplankton are known to be an important food for larval fishes in rivers, this shift of major taxa in regulated rivers has implications for river food webs.


Journal of The North American Benthological Society | 2009

Multimetric macroinvertebrate indices for mid-continent US great rivers

Ted R. Angradi; Mark S. Pearson; David W. Bolgrien; Terri M. Jicha; Debra L. Taylor; Brian H. Hill

Abstract We developed a set of great-river macroinvertebrate indices of condition (GRMINs) for the littoral benthos of mid-continent great rivers in the US (Missouri, Upper Mississippi, and Ohio). We used a multiscale (site, reach, landscape), multimetric abiotic stressor gradient to select macroinvertebrate assemblage metrics sensitive to human disturbance. We used the same stressor gradient to derive reference expectations by empirical modeling. We developed GRMINs for each of 5 reaches: the upper Missouri River, the lower Missouri River, the unimpounded Upper Mississippi River, the impounded Upper Mississippi River, and the Ohio River. We created 2 versions of each index. One version was based on the absolute value (AV) of the correlation between invertebrate metrics and the stressor gradient and potentially included all types of metrics (e.g., diversity, composition, tolerance to pollution, feeding guild). The second version included no tolerance-value-based metrics (NTV). Each index included up to 10 metrics. The indices were reliable for general assessment of great-river aquatic conditions except in the unimpounded Upper Mississippi River. The AV and NTV versions of the GRMIN were highly correlated (r  =  0.94). The indices revealed longitudinal variation in condition on great-river reaches and among-river variation in relative condition. No sites near or <100 km downriver of Kansas City, Missouri, on the Missouri River or Minneapolis–St. Paul, Minnesota, on the Upper Mississippi River were in least-disturbed condition. GRMIN indices are an indicator of biotic response to general human disturbance. They are appropriate for local and regional-scale ecological assessments and long-term monitoring.


Journal of The North American Benthological Society | 2009

Multispatial-scale variation in benthic and snag-surface macroinvertebrate assemblages in mid-continent US great rivers

Ted R. Angradi; David W. Bolgrien; Terri M. Jicha; Mark S. Pearson; Debra L. Taylor; Brian H. Hill

Abstract We sampled macroinvertebrate assemblages in the littoral benthos and on the surface of snags in the Upper Mississippi, Missouri, and Ohio rivers. Snag assemblages differed from benthic assemblages. Tubificids, Caenis, Tanytarsus, Cryptochironomus, Limnodrilus, and Chironomini were consistently more abundant in the benthos; Nais, Cricotopus/Orthocladius, Nematoda, and Rheotanytarsus were consistently more abundant on snags. Filterers were more abundant and gatherers were less abundant on snags than in the benthos. Snag assemblages differed among rivers and among reaches within rivers. Variation among reaches was the result of direct and indirect effects of high-dam reservoir impoundments (upper vs lower Missouri River) and low-dam impoundment for navigation (impounded vs free-flowing Upper Mississippi River). The maximum relative abundance of filterers in the lower Missouri River, which was the only long unregulated reach we studied, was related to particulate organic C and sestonic chlorophyll a concentration, which increased with distance downriver from the lowest main-stem dam. Snag diameter, snag-surface characteristics, and water depth did not affect the composition of snag assemblages, but the dominant taxa on snags in fast-velocity locations were different from the dominant taxa on snags in slow-velocity locations. Relatively few taxa showed strong longitudinal patterns in relative abundance within a reach, and only on the Missouri River. We hypothesize that the many navigation dams on the Ohio and Upper Mississippi rivers suppress the development of environmental gradients and inhibit the formation of longitudinal patterns in macroinvertebrate assemblages. Snag assemblages were dominated by a few taxa (genus-level and higher), a characteristic that might constrain the sensitivity of the assemblages to some human impacts. Sampling snag assemblages has potential for great-river bioassessment, but further research is necessary on sampling methods and sensitivity of assemblages to stressors.


Environmental Science & Technology | 2010

Mercury Contamination in Fish in Midcontinent Great Rivers of the United States: Importance of Species Traits and Environmental Factors

David M. Walters; Karen A. Blocksom; James M. Lazorchak; Terri M. Jicha; Theodore R. Angradi; David W. Bolgrien

We measured mercury (Hg) concentrations in whole fish from the Upper Mississippi, Missouri, and Ohio Rivers to characterize the extent and magnitude of Hg contamination and to identify environmental factors influencing Hg accumulation. Concentrations were generally lower (80% of values between 20-200 ng g(-1) wet weight) than those reported for other regions (e.g., upper Midwest and Northeast U.S.). Mercury exceeded the risk threshold for belted kingfisher (Ceryle alcyon, the most sensitive species considered) in 33-75% of river length and 1-7% of river length for humans. Concentrations were lower in the Missouri than in the Mississippi and Ohio Rivers, consistent with continental-scale patterns in atmospheric Hg deposition. Body size and trophic guild were the best predictors of Hg concentrations, which were highest in large-bodied top predators. Site geochemical and landscape properties were weakly related with fish Hg. Moreover, relationships often ran contrary to conventional wisdom, and the slopes of the relationships (positive or negative) were inconsistent among fish guilds and rivers. For example, sulfate is positively associated with fish Hg concentrations but was negatively correlated with Hg in five of six regression models of tissue concentrations. Variables such as pH, acid neutralizing capacity, and total phosphorus did not occur at levels associated with high fish Hg concentrations, partially explaining the relatively low Hg values we observed.


River Systems | 2011

An assessment of stressor extent and biological condition in the North American mid-continent great rivers (USA)

Ted R. Angradi; David W. Bolgrien; Terri M. Jicha; Mark S. Pearson; Debra L. Taylor; Mary F. Moffett; Karen A. Blocksom; David M. Walters; Colleen M. Elonen; Leroy E. Anderson; James M. Lazorchak; Euan D. Reavie; Amy R. Kireta; Brian H. Hill

We assessed the North American mid-continent great rivers (Upper Mississippi, Missouri, and Ohio). We estimated the extent of each river in most- (MDC) or least-disturbed condition (LDC) based on multiple biological response indicators: fish and macroinvertebrate, trophic state based on chlorophyll a, macrophyte cover, and exposure of fish-eating wildlife to toxic contaminants in fish tissue (Hg, total chlordane, total DDT, PCBs). We estimated the extent of stressors on each river including nutrients, suspended solids, sediment toxicity, invasive species, and land use (agriculture and impervious surface). All three rivers had a greater percent of their river length in MDC than in LDC based on fish assemblages. The Upper Mississippi River had the greatest percent of river length with eutrophic status. The Ohio River had the greatest percent of river length with fish with tissue contaminant levels toxic to wildlife. Overall, condition indices based on fish assemblages were more sensitive to stress than macroinvertebrate indices. Compared to the streams in its basin, more of the Upper Mississippi and Missouri Rivers were in MDC for nutrients than the Ohio River. Invasive species (Asian carp and Dreissenid mussels) were less widespread and less abundant on the Missouri River than on the other great rivers. The Ohio River had the most urbanized floodplains (greatest percent impervious surface). The Missouri River had the most floodplain agriculture. The effect of large urban areas on river condition was apparent for several indicators. Ecosystem condition based in fish assemblages, trophic state, and fish tissue contamination was related to land use on the floodplain and at the subcatchment scale. This is the first unbiased bioassessment of the mid-continent great rivers in the United States. The indicators, condition thresholds, results, and recommendations from this program are a starting point for improved future great river assessments.


Fundamental and Applied Limnology | 2010

Macroinvertebrate assemblage response to urbanization in three mid-continent USA great rivers

Ted R. Angradi; David W. Bolgrien; Terri M. Jicha; Mary F. Moffett

We sampled macroinvertebrates in the benthos and on the surface of woody snags in three mid-continent USA great rivers, the Upper Mississippi River, the Lower Missouri River, and the Ohio River, all of which flow through several large urban areas. We defined urban and non-urban zones of each river based on mean percent impervious surface extracted from recent land cover data. We estimated that 28-36 % of the rivers, by length, was urbanized. Based on multivariate ordination, the overall structure of the great river assemblages was not different between urban and non-urban zones for either the benthos or snags in any river. Most taxa (82 %) did not exhibit a significant positive or negative effect of urbanization in either river. Many of the taxa that were responsive to zone type were relatively rare (river- and habitat-specific relative abundance < 5 %). For responsive taxa, the effects of urbanization were generally weaker on the Upper Mississippi and Ohio Rivers than on the Lower Missouri River and weaker for snag-surface assemblages than for the littoral benthos. Among the taxa that were more abundant in urban sections were several insect taxa generally considered intolerant of pollution. We speculate that urbanization, possibly due to nutrient enrichment and resulting increased food resources (algae, seston), may improve conditions for these taxa. There appeared to be a threshold in mean percent impervious surface for a great river subcatchment near 5 % above which urban-intolerant taxa were always rare and urban tolerant taxa were often abundant.


Lake and Reservoir Management | 2009

Trophic status of three large Missouri River reservoirs

David W. Bolgrien; Jill V. Scharold; Ted R. Angradi; Tim D. Corry; E. William Schwieger; John R. Kelly

Abstract Bolgrien, D.W., J.V. Scharold, T.R. Angradi, T.D. Corry, E.W. Schwieger and J.R. Kelly. 2009. Trophic status of three large Missouri River reservoirs. Lake Reserv. Manage. 25:176–190. Probability-based surveys conducted between 2001–2004 characterized the three large reservoirs of the Missouri River—Lake Oahe, Lake Sakakawea, and Fort Peck Lake—as mesotrophic to eutrophic, phosphorus (P) limited, and generally supporting cold water habitat (bottom waters <15°C and dissolved oxygen [DO] concentrations >5 mg/L) in midsummer. Riverine zones were shallower, warmer, more eutrophic, and had lower DO and higher suspended matter concentrations than lacustrine zones. Similar, although more variable, differences were found between bays and open-water areas. Between sampling years, water levels decreased in each reservoir. In the first year of sampling, area-weighted mean reservoir trophic status index based on chlorophyll (TSIchl) was about 37 in all three reservoirs. Sixty percent of Oahe and Sakakawea and 40% of Fort Peck had TSIchl> 50. Trophic status index based on Secchi depth (TSISD) averaged about 50 in each reservoir across years. Because mean TSIchl< TSISD, light attenuation was considered to be silt, not algae, dominated. Trophic status index based on total P (TSITP) and the ratio of N:P concentrations indicated that the reservoirs were very P limited. Mean bottom temperature and DO concentration in Oahe were unchanged between years at about 19°C and 7.5 mg/L, respectively. Bottom temperatures in Sakakawea increased (from 15°C to 21°C) and DO concentration decreased (from 7.3 mg/L to 6.0 mg/L) with lower water levels. In Fort Peck, bottom temperature remained about 18°C, but DO concentration fell from 7.23 mg/L to 4.96 mg/L. Results show that surveys successfully characterized important environmental conditions throughout these large reservoirs.

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Ted R. Angradi

United States Environmental Protection Agency

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Terri M. Jicha

United States Environmental Protection Agency

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Brian H. Hill

United States Environmental Protection Agency

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Mark S. Pearson

United States Environmental Protection Agency

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Mary F. Moffett

United States Environmental Protection Agency

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Debra L. Taylor

Natural Resources Research Institute

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Theodore R. Angradi

United States Environmental Protection Agency

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Karen A. Blocksom

United States Environmental Protection Agency

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Brent J. Bellinger

United States Environmental Protection Agency

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Colleen M. Elonen

United States Environmental Protection Agency

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