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Dive into the research topics where J. Jeffery Isely is active.

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Featured researches published by J. Jeffery Isely.


Transactions of The American Fisheries Society | 1998

Diel Movement of Brown Trout in a Southern Appalachian River

David B. Bunnell; J. Jeffery Isely; Kyle H. Burrell; David H. Van Lear

Abstract Radio telemetry was used to monitor the diel movement of 22 brown trout Salmo trutta (268–446 mm in total length, TL) in the Chattooga River watershed. Forty-seven diel tracks, locating individuals once per hour for 24 consecutive hours, were collected for four consecutive seasons. High variability in movement both within and among individual brown trout resulted in similar seasonal means in total distance moved, diel range, and displacement. The majority of fish moved a total distance of less than 80 m within a diel range of less than 80 m and had a displacement of less than 10 m. Brown trout were more likely to occur in pool habitat independent of season or period of the day. Hourly movement patterns differed among seasons. During the winter and fall, trout moved only around sunrise; during the spring, they moved around sunrise, sunset, and intermittently throughout the night. Large brown trout (>375 mm, TL) were found to move greater total distances and establish wider diel ranges than small b...


Transactions of The American Fisheries Society | 2000

Effects of Implantation Method and Temperature on Mortality and Loss of Simulated Transmitters in Hybrid Striped Bass

Maureen G. Walsh; Kimberly A. Bjorgo; J. Jeffery Isely

Abstract To determine the effects of surgical implantation method and temperature on mortality and transmitter loss, we compared two antenna placements (trailing antenna versus shielded needle) and two suture materials (absorbable versus nonabsorbable) in hybrid striped bass Morone saxitilis × Morone chrysops (227–410 mm total length) that had been surgically implanted with simulated transmitters and held at high (22–29°C) and low (12–18°C) temperatures for 120 d. Fish were individually examined after 7, 30, 60, 90, and 120 d to evaluate suture and wound condition as well as transmitter loss. Neither suture material nor antenna placement affected transmitter loss, mortality, or growth at either high or low temperatures. Absorbable sutures were lost more quickly than were nonabsorbable sutures, but they persisted beyond incision closure at both high and low temperatures. At high temperatures, 50% suture loss occurred by 30 d for absorbable sutures and by 60 d for nonabsorbable sutures. Mortality occurred o...


Transactions of The American Fisheries Society | 2000

Seasonal movement of brown trout in a southern Appalachian river

Kyle H. Burrell; J. Jeffery Isely; David B. Bunnell; David H. Van Lear; C. Andrew Dolloff

Abstract Radio telemetry was used to evaluate the seasonal movement, activity level, and home range size of adult brown trout Salmo trutta in the Chattooga River watershed, one of the southernmost coldwater stream systems in the United States. In all, 27 adult brown trout (262–452 mm total length) were successfully monitored from 16 November 1995 to 15 December 1996. During the day, adult brown trout were consistently found in small, well-established home ranges of less than 270 m in stream length. However, 8 of a possible 18 study fish made spawning migrations during a 2-week period in November 1996. The daytime locations of individual fish were restricted to a single pool or riffle−pool combination, and fish were routinely found in the same location over multiple sampling periods. Maximum upstream movement during spawning was 7.65 km, indicating that brown trout in the Chattooga River have the ability to move long distances. Spawning brown trout returned to their prespawning locations within a few days ...


North American Journal of Aquaculture | 2001

Toxicity of Nitrite to Nile Tilapia: Effect of Fish Size and Environmental Chloride

Heidi L. Atwood; Q. C. Fontenot; Joseph R. Tomasso; J. Jeffery Isely

Abstract Small (4.4 ± 1.50 g; mean ± SD) Nile tilapias Oreochromis niloticus were more tolerant of nitrite than large (90.7 ± 16.43 g) fish. The 96-h median lethal concentration of nitrite-N to small fish was 81 mg/L (95% confidence interval = 35–127 mg/L) compared with 8 mg/L (4–11 mg/L) for large fish. Addition of chloride to test water (as either calcium chloride or sodium chloride) protected both small and large fish from nitrite. Sodium chloride and calcium chloride appeared to be similarly effective in inhibiting nitrite toxicity.


Environmental Toxicology and Chemistry | 2004

Influence of multiple water‐quality characteristics on copper toxicity to fathead minnows (Pimephales promelas)

Katherine Lynne Sciera; J. Jeffery Isely; Jr. Joseph R. Tomasso; Stephen J. Klaine

Water quality influences the bioavailability and toxicity of copper to aquatic organisms. Understanding the relationships between water-quality parameters and copper toxicity may facilitate the development of site-specific criteria for water quality and result in better protection of aquatic biota. Many studies have examined the influence of a single water-quality parameter on copper toxicity, but the interactions of several characteristics have not been well studied in low-hardness water. The goal of the present research was to examine the interactions among water-quality characteristics and their effects on copper toxicity to larval fathead minnows (Pimephales promelas). The effects of dissolved organic carbon (DOC) concentration, DOC source, pH, and hardness on acute copper toxicity were determined using a complete factorially designed experiment. Hardness, pH, DOC, and interaction of pH and DOC all significantly affected copper toxicity. A predictive model based on these data described 88% of the variability in copper toxicity. This model also explained 58% of the variability in copper toxicity for an independent dataset of South Carolina (USA) waters. The biotic ligand model underpredicted the acute copper toxicity to fathead minnows when compared with observed values.


Transactions of The American Fisheries Society | 2004

Movement and Population Size of American Shad near a Low-Head Lock and Dam

Michael M. Bailey; J. Jeffery Isely; William C. Bridges

Abstract We investigated the population size and the proportion of the population of American shad Alosa sapidissima that passed through the New Savannah Bluff Lock and Dam, a low-head lock and dam on the Savannah River in South Carolina and Georgia. We fitted 110 American shad with radio transmitters in 2001 and 2002. All but two fish moved downstream after transmitter implantation. In 2001, a smaller proportion of American shad implanted with radio transmitters earlier in the season returned to the dam than fish released later. Of the fish that returned to the dam, over 50% in 2001 and 9% in 2002 passed through the lock and continued migrating upstream. In both years, the modal daily movement distance was less than 1 km. Movements greater than 5 km/d were generally associated with fish rapidly returning upstream after their initial downstream movement. Continuous diel monitoring indicated that movements greater than 0.1 km/h were more frequent at night than during the day. In both years, American shad w...


Transactions of The American Fisheries Society | 2006

Seasonal and Diel Movements and Habitat Use of Robust Redhorses in the Lower Savannah River, Georgia and South Carolina

Timothy B. Grabowski; J. Jeffery Isely

Abstract The robust redhorse Moxostoma robustum is a large riverine catostomid whose distribution is restricted to three Atlantic Slope drainages. Once presumed extinct, this species was rediscovered in 1991. Despite being the focus of conservation and recovery efforts, the robust redhorses movements and habitat use are virtually unknown. We surgically implanted pulse-coded radio transmitters into 17 wild adults (460–690 mm total length) below the downstream-most dam on the Savannah River and into 2 fish above this dam. Individuals were located every 2 weeks from June 2002 to September 2003 and monthly thereafter to May 2005. Additionally, we located 5–10 individuals every 2 h over a 48-h period during each season. Study fish moved at least 24.7 ± 8.4 river kilometers (rkm; mean ± SE) per season. This movement was generally downstream except during spring. Some individuals moved downstream by as much as 195 rkm from their release sites. Seasonal migrations were correlated to seasonal changes in water tem...


Transactions of The American Fisheries Society | 1998

Tag Retention, Growth, and Survival of Red Swamp Crayfish Procambarus clarkii Marked with Coded Wire Tags

J. Jeffery Isely; Arnold G. Eversole

Abstract Juvenile red swamp crayfish (or crawfish), Procambarus clarkii (20–41 mm in total length) were collected from a crayfish culture pond by dipnetting and tagged with sequentially numbered, standard length, binary-coded wire tags. Four replicates of 50 crayfish were impaled perpendicular to the long axis of the abdomen with a fixed needle. Tags were injected transversely into the ventral surface of the first or second abdominal segment and were imbedded in the musculature just beneath the abdominal sternum. Tags were visible upon inspection. Additionally, two replicates of 50 crayfish were not tagged and were used as controls. Growth, survival, and tag retention were evaluated after 7 d in individual containers, after 100 d in aquaria, and after 200 d in field cages. Tag retention during each sample period was 100%, and average mortality of tagged crayfish within 7 d of tagging was 1%. Mortality during the remainder of the study was high (75–91%) but was similar between treatment and control samples...


North American Journal of Fisheries Management | 2001

Tag Retention, Growth, and Survival of Red Swamp Crayfish Marked with a Visible Implant Tag

J. Jeffery Isely; Patricia E. Stockett

Abstract Eighty juvenile (means: 42.4 mm total length, 1.6 g) red swamp crayfish Procambarus clarkii were implanted with sequentially numbered visible implant tags and held in the laboratory. Tags were injected transversely into the musculature just beneath the exoskeleton of the third abdominal segment from the cephalothorax; tags were visible upon inspection. An additional 20 crayfish were left untagged and served as controls. After 150 d, tag retention was 80% and all tags were readable. No tagged crayfish died during the study, and no differences in total length or weight were detected between tagged and control crayfish. All individuals molted at least three times during the 150-d study, and some individuals molted up to six times, suggesting that most tags would be permanently retained. The readability in the field without specialized equipment makes the visible implant tag ideal for studies of crayfish ecology, management, and culture.


Transactions of The American Fisheries Society | 2000

Seasonal movement and habitat use by striped bass in the Combahee River, South Carolina

Kimberly A. Bjorgo; J. Jeffery Isely; Christopher S. Thomason

Abstract Adult striped bass Morone saxatilis (N = 30, 656–906 mm total length) were captured by electrofishing during January–March 1998 in the Combahee River, South Carolina, and fitted with radio transmitters. Their exact locations were recorded biweekly through December. From January to early April, striped bass were located in the tidally influenced lower region of the river in water temperatures ranging from 9°C to 18°C. The fish then moved an average of 38.5 km upstream from late April to the end of May when water temperatures ranged from 18°C to 26°C. Striped bass remained in the upper region of the river from late May to September when water temperatures were as much as 5°C lower than in the rivers lower regions. Striped bass began to move downstream and were spread throughout the river during September and October in water temperatures ranging from 19°C to 27°C. Combahee River striped bass appear to follow a migratory pattern typical of other southern striped bass stocks. Habitat preference appe...

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Douglas W. Cooke

South Carolina Department of Natural Resources

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David B. Bunnell

United States Geological Survey

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