G. Lynn Wingard
United States Geological Survey
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Featured researches published by G. Lynn Wingard.
Estuaries and Coasts | 2012
G. Lynn Wingard; Joel W. Hudley
A molluscan analogue dataset is presented in conjunction with a weighted-averaging technique as a tool for estimating past salinity patterns in south Florida’s estuaries and developing targets for restoration based on these reconstructions. The method, here referred to as cumulative weighted percent (CWP), was tested using modern surficial samples collected in Florida Bay from sites located near fixed water monitoring stations that record salinity. The results were calibrated using species weighting factors derived from examining species occurrence patterns. A comparison of the resulting calibrated species-weighted CWP (SW-CWP) to the observed salinity at the water monitoring stations averaged over a 3-year time period indicates, on average, the SW-CWP comes within less than two salinity units of estimating the observed salinity. The SW-CWP reconstructions were conducted on a core from near the mouth of Taylor Slough to illustrate the application of the method.
Developments in Quaternary Science | 2012
Thomas M. Cronin; G. Lynn Wingard; Gary S. Dwyer; Peter K. Swart; Debra A. Willard; Jessica Albietz
Abstract An 800-year-long environmental history of Biscayne Bay, Florida, is reconstructed from ostracod faunal and shell geochemical (oxygen, carbon isotopes, Mg/Ca ratios) studies of sediment cores from three mudbanks in the central and southern parts of the bay. Using calibrations derived from analyses of modern Biscayne and Florida Bay ostracods, palaeosalinity oscillations associated with changes in precipitation were identified. These oscillations reflect multidecadal- and centennial-scale climate variability associated with the Atlantic Multidecadal Oscillation during the late Medieval Climate Anomaly (MCA) and the Little Ice Age (LIA). Evidence suggests wetter regional climate during the MCA and drier conditions during the LIA. In addition, twentieth century anthropogenic modifications to Everglades hydrology influenced bay circulation and/or processes controlling carbon isotopic composition.
Archive | 2017
G. Lynn Wingard; Donna Surge
Molluscs possess a number of attributes that make them an excellent source of past environmental conditions in estuaries: they are common in estuarine environments; they typically have hard shells and are usually well preserved in sediments; they are relatively easy to detect in the environment; they have limited mobility as adults; they grow by incremental addition of layers to their shells; and they are found in all the major environments surrounding estuaries—terrestrial, freshwater, brackish, and marine waters. Analysis of molluscan assemblages can contribute information about past changes in sea level, climate, land use patterns, anthropogenic alterations, salinity, and other parameters of the benthic habitat and water chemistry within the estuary. High-resolution (from less than a day to annual) records of changes in environmental parameters can be obtained by analyzing the incremental growth layers in mollusc shells (sclerochronology). The shell layers retain information on changes in water temperature, salinity, seasonality, climate, river discharge, productivity, pollution and human activity. Isotopic analyses of mollusc shell growth layers can be problematic in estuaries where water temperatures and isotopic ratios can vary simultaneously; however, methods are being developed to overcome these problems. In addition to sclerochronology, molluscs are important to Holocene and Pleistocene estuarine palaeoenvironmental studies because of their use in the development of age models through radiocarbon dating, amino acid racemization, uranium-thorium series dating, and electron spin resonance (ESR) dating.
Archive | 2017
G. Lynn Wingard
Paleoecological analyses of biotic assemblages from cores collected throughout south Florida’s estuaries indicate gradually increasing salinities over approximately the last 2000 years, consistent with rising sea level. Around the beginning of the twentieth century these gradual patterns of change began to shift, corresponding to the beginning of human alteration of the environment via canal construction, railroad construction and other land use changes. Between 1950 and 1960, at a time of significant construction of water management structures another distinctive shift in the biological assemblages occurred. Analysis of the assemblages provides essential information on long-term patterns of change in the estuaries and provides a basis for predicting future trajectories of change. Paleosalinity estimates derived from the cores are providing input to linear regression models to determine related freshwater flow into the estuaries of south Florida. These analyses are being used to help establish performance measures and targets for the Comprehensive Everglades Restoration, established following an Act of Congress in 2000. Restoration of south Florida’s ecosystems is slated to be a 30–50 year effort that will require detailed knowledge of past decadal to centennial-scale changes in climate, freshwater flow and salinity. This historical perspective provides information that allows land managers to set realistic and sustainable goals for restoration, and provides insight into the potential response of south Florida’s ecosystem to various future scenarios of global change.
Estuaries and Coasts | 2009
Frank E. Marshall; G. Lynn Wingard; Patrick A. Pitts
Ecological Indicators | 2014
G. Lynn Wingard; Jerome J. Lorenz
Estuaries and Coasts | 2014
Frank E. Marshall; G. Lynn Wingard; Patrick A. Pitts
Global and Planetary Change | 2017
Jessica Rodysill; Lesleigh Anderson; Thomas M. Cronin; Miriam C. Jones; Robert S. Thompson; David B. Wahl; Debra A. Willard; Jason A. Addison; J. R. Alder; Katherine H. Anderson; Lysanna Anderson; John A. Barron; Christopher E. Bernhardt; Steven W. Hostetler; Natalie Kehrwald; Nicole S. Khan; Julie N. Richey; Scott W. Starratt; Laura E. Strickland; Michael R. Toomey; Claire C. Treat; G. Lynn Wingard
US Geological Survey professional paper | 2005
Lucy E. Edwards; John A. Barren; David Bukry; Laurel M. Bybell; Thomas M. Cronin; C. Wylie Poag; Robert E. Weems; G. Lynn Wingard
Open-File Report | 2005
G. Lynn Wingard; Thomas M. Cronin; Charles W. Holmes; Debra A. Willard; Carlos A. Budet; Ruth E. Ortiz