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Dive into the research topics where Gwynne L. Chandler is active.

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Featured researches published by Gwynne L. Chandler.


Ecological Applications | 2010

Effects of climate change and wildfire on stream temperatures and salmonid thermal habitat in a mountain river network

Daniel J. Isaak; Charles H. Luce; Bruce E. Rieman; David E. Nagel; Erin E. Peterson; Dona L. Horan; Sharon Parkes; Gwynne L. Chandler

Mountain streams provide important habitats for many species, but their faunas are especially vulnerable to climate change because of ectothermic physiologies and movements that are constrained to linear networks that are easily fragmented. Effectively conserving biodiversity in these systems requires accurate downscaling of climatic trends to local habitat conditions, but downscaling is difficult in complex terrains given diverse microclimates and mediation of stream heat budgets by local conditions. We compiled a stream temperature database (n = 780) for a 2500-km river network in central Idaho to assess possible trends in summer temperatures and thermal habitat for two native salmonid species from 1993 to 2006. New spatial statistical models that account for network topology were parameterized with these data and explained 93% and 86% of the variation in mean stream temperatures and maximas, respectively. During our study period, basin average mean stream temperatures increased by 0.38 degrees C (0.27 degrees C/decade), and maximas increased by 0.48 degrees C (0.34 degrees C/decade), primarily due to long-term (30-50 year) trends in air temperatures and stream flows. Radiation increases from wildfires accounted for 9% of basin-scale temperature increases, despite burning 14% of the basin. Within wildfire perimeters, however, stream temperature increases were 2-3 times greater than basin averages, and radiation gains accounted for 50% of warming. Thermal habitat for rainbow trout (Oncorhynchus mykiss) was minimally affected by temperature increases, except for small shifts towards higher elevations. Bull trout (Salvelinus confluentus), in contrast, were estimated to have lost 11-20% (8-16%/decade) of the headwater stream lengths that were cold enough for spawning and early juvenile rearing, with the largest losses occurring in the coldest habitats. Our results suggest that a warming climate has begun to affect thermal conditions in streams and that impacts to biota will be specific to both species and context. Where species are at risk, conservation actions should be guided based on considerations of restoration opportunity and future climatic effects. To refine predictions based on thermal effects, more work is needed to understand mechanisms associated with biological responses, climate effects on other habitat features, and habitat configurations that confer population resilience.


Climatic Change | 2012

Climate change effects on stream and river temperatures across the northwest U.S. from 1980–2009 and implications for salmonid fishes

Daniel J. Isaak; Sherry P. Wollrab; Dona L. Horan; Gwynne L. Chandler

Thermal regimes in rivers and streams are fundamentally important to aquatic ecosystems and are expected to change in response to climate forcing as the Earth’s temperature warms. Description and attribution of stream temperature changes are key to understanding how these ecosystems may be affected by climate change, but difficult given the rarity of long-term monitoring data. We assembled 18 temperature time-series from sites on regulated and unregulated streams in the northwest U.S. to describe historical trends from 1980–2009 and assess thermal consistency between these stream categories. Statistically significant temperature trends were detected across seven sites on unregulated streams during all seasons of the year, with a cooling trend apparent during the spring and warming trends during the summer, fall, and winter. The amount of warming more than compensated for spring cooling to cause a net temperature increase, and rates of warming were highest during the summer (raw trend = 0.17°C/decade; reconstructed trend = 0.22°C/decade). Air temperature was the dominant factor explaining long-term stream temperature trends (82–94% of trends) and inter-annual variability (48–86% of variability), except during the summer when discharge accounted for approximately half (52%) of the inter-annual variation in stream temperatures. Seasonal temperature trends at eleven sites on regulated streams were qualitatively similar to those at unregulated sites if two sites managed to reduce summer and fall temperatures were excluded from the analysis. However, these trends were never statistically significant due to greater variation among sites that resulted from local water management policies and effects of upstream reservoirs. Despite serious deficiencies in the stream temperature monitoring record, our results suggest many streams in the northwest U.S. are exhibiting a regionally coherent response to climate forcing. More extensive monitoring efforts are needed as are techniques for short-term sensitivity analysis and reconstructing historical temperature trends so that spatial and temporal patterns of warming can be better understood. Continuation of warming trends this century will increasingly stress important regional salmon and trout resources and hamper efforts to recover these species, so comprehensive vulnerability assessments are needed to provide strategic frameworks for prioritizing conservation efforts.


Water Resources Research | 2017

The NorWeST Summer Stream Temperature Model and Scenarios for the Western U.S.: A Crowd-Sourced Database and New Geospatial Tools Foster a User Community and Predict Broad Climate Warming of Rivers and Streams

Daniel J. Isaak; Seth J. Wenger; Erin E. Peterson; Jay M. Ver Hoef; David E. Nagel; Charles H. Luce; Steven W. Hostetler; Jason B. Dunham; Brett B. Roper; Sherry P. Wollrab; Gwynne L. Chandler; Dona L. Horan; Sharon Parkes-Payne

Thermal regimes are fundamental determinants of aquatic ecosystems, which makes description and prediction of temperatures critical during a period of rapid global change. The advent of inexpensive temperature sensors dramatically increased monitoring in recent decades, and although most monitoring is done by individuals for agency-specific purposes, collectively these efforts constitute a massive distributed sensing array that generates an untapped wealth of data. Using the framework provided by the National Hydrography Dataset, we organized temperature records from dozens of agencies in the western U.S. to create the NorWeST database that hosts >220,000,000 temperature recordings from >22,700 stream and river sites. Spatial-stream-network models were fit to a subset of those data that described mean August water temperatures (AugTw) during 63,641 monitoring site-years to develop accurate temperature models (r2 = 0.91; RMSPE = 1.10°C; MAPE = 0.72°C), assess covariate effects, and make predictions at 1 km intervals to create summer climate scenarios. AugTw averaged 14.2°C (SD = 4.0°C) during the baseline period of 1993–2011 in 343,000 km of western perennial streams but trend reconstructions also indicated warming had occurred at the rate of 0.17°C/decade (SD = 0.067°C/decade) during the 40 year period of 1976–2015. Future scenarios suggest continued warming, although variation will occur within and among river networks due to differences in local climate forcing and stream responsiveness. NorWeST scenarios and data are available online in user-friendly digital formats and are widely used to coordinate monitoring efforts among agencies, for new research, and for conservation planning.


North American Journal of Fisheries Management | 2003

Influences of Temperature and Environmental Variables on the Distribution of Bull Trout within Streams at the Southern Margin of Its Range

Jason B. Dunham; Bruce E. Rieman; Gwynne L. Chandler


Canadian Journal of Fisheries and Aquatic Sciences | 2011

Role of climate and invasive species in structuring trout distributions in the interior Columbia River Basin, USA

Seth J. Wenger; Daniel J. Isaak; Jason B. Dunham; Kurt D. Fausch; Charles H. Luce; Helen M. Neville; Bruce E. Rieman; Michael K. Young; David E. Nagel; Dona L. Horan; Gwynne L. Chandler


Ecological Applications | 2009

EFFECTS OF CLIMATE CHANGE AND RECENT WILDFIRES ON STREAM TEMPERATURE AND THERMAL HABITAT FOR TWO SALMONIDS IN A MOUNTAIN RIVER NETWORK

Daniel J. Isaak; Charles H. Luce; Bruce E. Rieman; David E. Nagel; Erin E. Peterson; Dona L. Horan; Sharon Parkes; Gwynne L. Chandler


Fisheries | 2018

Crowd-Sourced Databases as Essential Elements for Forest Service Partnerships and Aquatic Resource Conservation

Daniel J. Isaak; Michael K. Young; Callie McConnell; Brett B. Roper; Eric Archer; Brian P. Staab; Christine Hirsch; David E. Nagel; Michael K. Schwartz; Gwynne L. Chandler


Transactions of The American Fisheries Society | 2018

Global Warming of Salmon and Trout Rivers in the Northwestern U.S.: Road to Ruin or Path Through Purgatory?

Daniel J. Isaak; Charles H. Luce; Dona L. Horan; Gwynne L. Chandler; Sherry P. Wollrab; David E. Nagel


Archive | 2001

DEVELOPMENT OF FIELD-BASED MODELS OF SUITABLE THERMAL REGIMES FOR INTERIOR COLUMBIA BASIN SALMONIDS

Jason B. Dunham; Bruce E. Rieman; Gwynne L. Chandler


Hydrology and Earth System Sciences Discussions | 2018

Principle components of thermal regimes in mountain river networks

Daniel J. Isaak; Charles H. Luce; Gwynne L. Chandler; Dona L. Horan; Sherry P. Wollrab

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Daniel J. Isaak

United States Forest Service

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Dona L. Horan

United States Forest Service

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Charles H. Luce

United States Department of Agriculture

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David E. Nagel

United States Forest Service

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Bruce E. Rieman

United States Forest Service

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Jason B. Dunham

United States Geological Survey

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Sherry P. Wollrab

United States Forest Service

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Erin E. Peterson

Queensland University of Technology

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Brett B. Roper

United States Forest Service

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