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Featured researches published by John Vavrinec.


Environmental Management | 2009

Multiscale Analysis of Restoration Priorities for Marine Shoreline Planning

Heida L. Diefenderfer; Kathryn L. Sobocinski; Ronald M. Thom; Christopher W. May; Amy B. Borde; Susan L. Southard; John Vavrinec; Nichole K. Sather

Planners are being called on to prioritize marine shorelines for conservation status and restoration action. This study documents an approach to determining the management strategy most likely to succeed based on current conditions at local and landscape scales. The conceptual framework based in restoration ecology pairs appropriate restoration strategies with sites based on the likelihood of producing long-term resilience given the condition of ecosystem structures and processes at three scales: the shorezone unit (site), the drift cell reach (nearshore marine landscape), and the watershed (terrestrial landscape). The analysis is structured by a conceptual ecosystem model that identifies anthropogenic impacts on targeted ecosystem functions. A scoring system, weighted by geomorphic class, is applied to available spatial data for indicators of stress and function using geographic information systems. This planning tool augments other approaches to prioritizing restoration, including historical conditions and change analysis and ecosystem valuation.


Archive | 2007

Evaluating Cumulative Ecosystem Response to Restoration Projects in the Columbia River Estuary, Annual Report 2006

Gary E. Johnson; Amy B. Borde; Earl M. Dawley; Heida L. Diefenderfer; Blaine D. Ebberts; Douglas A. Putman; G. C. Roegner; Ronald M. Thom; John Vavrinec; Allan Whiting

The goal of this multi-year study (2004-2010) is to develop a methodology to evaluate the cumulative effects of multiple habitat restoration projects intended to benefit ecosystems supporting juvenile salmonids in the lower Columbia River and estuary. Literature review in 2004 revealed no existing methods for such an evaluation and suggested that cumulative effects could be additive or synergistic. Field research in 2005, 2006, and 2007 involved intensive, comparative studies paired by habitat type (tidal swamp vs. marsh), trajectory (restoration vs. reference site), and restoration action (tide gate vs. culvert vs. dike breach). The field work established two kinds of monitoring indicators for eventual cumulative effects analysis: core and higher-order indicators. Management implications of limitations and applications of site-specific effectiveness monitoring and cumulative effects analysis were identified.


North American Journal of Fisheries Management | 2009

Influence of the Hyporheic Zone on Supersaturated Gas Exposure to Incubating Chum Salmon

Evan V. Arntzen; David R. Geist; Katherine J. Murray; John Vavrinec; Earl M. Dawley; Dennis E. Schwartz

Abstract Hydroelectric dam operation causes total dissolved gas (TDG) to be seasonally elevated in the lower Columbia River, as surface water concentrations approach 120%. Federally protected chum salmon Oncorhynchus keta embryos incubating in nearby spawning areas could be affected if depth-compensated TDG concentrations within the hyporheic zone exceed 103%. The objective of this study was to determine whether TDG of the hyporheic zone in two chum salmon spawning areas—one in a side channel near Ives Island, Washington, and another on the main-stem Columbia River near Multnomah Falls, Oregon—was affected by the elevated TDG of the surface water. Depth-compensated hyporheic TDG did not exceed 103% at the Multnomah Falls site. However, in the Ives Island area, chum salmon redds were exposed to TDG greater than 103% for more than 300 h. In response to river depth fluctuations, TDG varied significantly in the Ives Island area, suggesting increased interaction between the hyporheic zone and surface water at ...


Archive | 2009

Evaluation of Cumulative Ecosystem Response to Restoration Projects in the Lower Columbia River and Estuary, 2010

Gary E. Johnson; Heida L. Diefenderfer; Amy B. Borde; Earl M. Dawley; Blaine D. Ebberts; G. Curtis Roegner; Micah T. Russell; John R. Skalski; Ronald M. Thom; John Vavrinec; Shon A. Zimmerman

Draft annual report for the Cumulative Effects Study for the US Army Corps of Engineers, Portland District


Archive | 2009

Total Dissolved Gas Effects on Incubating Chum Salmon Below Bonneville Dam

Evan V. Arntzen; Kristine D. Hand; Kathleen M. Carter; David R. Geist; Katherine J. Murray; Earl M. Dawley; Valerie I. Cullinan; Ralph A. Elston; John Vavrinec

At the request of the U.S. Army Corps of Engineers (USACE; Portland District), Pacific Northwest National Laboratory (PNNL) undertook a project in 2006 to look further into issues of total dissolved gas (TDG) supersaturation in the lower Columbia River downstream of Bonneville Dam. In FY 2008, the third year of the project, PNNL conducted field monitoring and laboratory toxicity testing to both verify results from 2007 and answer some additional questions about how salmonid sac fry respond to elevated TDG in the field and the laboratory. For FY 2008, three objectives were 1) to repeat the 2006-2007 field effort to collect empirical data on TDG from the Ives Island and Multnomah Falls study sites; 2) to repeat the static laboratory toxicity tests on hatchery chum salmon fry to verify 2007 results and to expose wild chum salmon fry to incremental increases in TDG, above those of the static test, until external symptoms of gas bubble disease were clearly present; and 3) to assess physiological responses to TDG levels in wild chum salmon sac fry incubating below Bonneville Dam during spill operations. This report summarizes the tasks conducted and results obtained in pursuit of the three objectives. Chapter 1 discusses the field monitoring, Chapter 2 reports the findings of the laboratory toxicity tests, and Chapter 3 describes the field-sampling task. Each chapter contains an objective-specific introduction, description of the study site and methods, results of research, and discussion of findings. Literature cited throughout this report is listed in Chapter 4. Additional details on the monitoring methodology and results are provided in Appendices A and B included on the compact disc bound inside the back cover of the printed version of this report.


Archive | 2007

Laboratory Assessment of Potential Impacts to Dungeness Crabs from Disposal of Dredged Material from the Columbia River

John Vavrinec; Walter H. Pearson; Nancy P. Kohn; John R. Skalski; Cheegwan Lee; Kathleen D. Hall; Brett A. Romano; Martin C. Miller; Tarang Khangaonkar

Dredging of the Columbia River navigation channel has raised concerns about dredging-related impacts on Dungeness crabs (Cancer magister) in the estuary, mouth of the estuary, and nearshore ocean areas adjacent to the Columbia River. The Portland District, U.S. Army Corps of Engineers engaged the Marine Sciences Laboratory (MSL) of the U.S. Department of Energy’s Pacific Northwest National Laboratory to review the state of knowledge and conduct studies concerning impacts on Dungeness crabs resulting from disposal during the Columbia River Channel Improvement Project and annual maintenance dredging in the mouth of the Columbia River. The present study concerns potential effects on Dungeness crabs from dredged material disposal specific to the mouth of the Columbia River.


Archive | 2012

Annual Adaptive Management Report for Compensatory Mitigation at Keyport Lagoon: Mitigation of Pier B Development at the Bremerton Naval Facilities - Compensatory Mitigation at Keyport Lagoon - Naval Underwater Warfare Center Division - Keyport, Washington

John Vavrinec; Amy B. Borde; Dana L. Woodruff; Jill M. Brandenberger; Ronald M. Thom; Cynthia L. Wright; Valerie I. Cullinan

Unites States Navy capital improvement projects are designed to modernize and improve mission capacity. Such capital improvement projects often result in unavoidable environmental impacts by increasing over-water structures, which results in a loss of subtidal habitat within industrial areas of Navy bases. In the Pacific Northwest, compensatory mitigation often targets alleviating impacts to Endangered Species Act-listed salmon species. The complexity of restoring large systems requires limited resources to target successful and more coordinated mitigation efforts to address habitat loss and improvements in water quality that will clearly contribute to an improvement at the site scale and can then be linked to a cumulative net ecosystem improvement.


Estuaries and Coasts | 2012

Restoring Resiliency: Case Studies from Pacific Northwest Estuarine Eelgrass (Zostera marina L.) Ecosystems

Ronald M. Thom; Heida L. Diefenderfer; John Vavrinec; Amy B. Borde


Archive | 2014

20% More Eelgrass in Puget Sound by 2020: Restoration Site Selection

Ronald M. Thom; Jeffrey Gaeckle; Lara Aston; Amy B. Borde; Kate Buenau; Lyle F. Hibler; Jim Kaldy; Tarang Khangaonkar; John Vavrinec; Wen Long; Dana L. Woodruff; Chaeli Judd


Archive | 2007

Third Annual Report: 2006 Pre-Construction Eelgrass Monitoring and Propagation for King County Outfall Mitigation

Dana L. Woodruff; Nancy P. Kohn; Valerie I. Cullinan; Susan S. Southard; John Vavrinec

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Amy B. Borde

Pacific Northwest National Laboratory

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Ronald M. Thom

Pacific Northwest National Laboratory

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Lara Aston

Pacific Northwest National Laboratory

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Dana L. Woodruff

Pacific Northwest National Laboratory

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Kate Buenau

Pacific Northwest National Laboratory

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Earl M. Dawley

National Oceanic and Atmospheric Administration

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Heida L. Diefenderfer

Pacific Northwest National Laboratory

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Valerie I. Cullinan

Pacific Northwest National Laboratory

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Jeffrey Gaeckle

United States Department of State

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Tarang Khangaonkar

Pacific Northwest National Laboratory

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