K. John Scott
Science Applications International Corporation
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Ecological Indicators | 2001
John F. Paul; K. John Scott; Daniel E. Campbell; John H. Gentile; Charles S. Strobel; Raymond M. Valente; Stephen B. Weisberg; A.F. Holland; J. Ananda Ranasinghe
A benthic index of estuarine condition was constructed for the Virginian Biogeographic Province (from Cape Cod, Massachusetts, to the mouth of Chesapeake Bay, Virginia) with data collected during summers of 1990 through 1993 by the US EPA’s Environmental Monitoring and Assessment Program (EMAP). Forty-eight metrics, based on attributes of the macrobenthos, were considered for the index, including measures of biodiversity, community condition, individual health, functional organization, and taxonomic composition. Salinity was correlated significantly with some of the metrics. Therefore, some metrics were normalized for salinity. The data used to develop the index (the calibration data) included equal numbers of reference and degraded sites, distributed equally across three salinity zones ( 18‰). An independent set of data was used for validation. Linear discriminant analysis identified combinations of metrics that could best discriminate reference from degraded sites. The targets for correct classification were 90% of the sites for the calibration data and 80% for the validation data. Six combinations of metrics were identified. The final index was based on the ecological interpretation and relevance of the individual metrics and the ability to meet the calibration and validation targets. The final index consisted of three metrics: a positive contribution from salinity-normalized Gleason’s D (a biodiversity metric), and negative contributions from two taxonomic composition metrics, abundances of spionid polychaetes and of salinity-normalized tubificid oligochaetes. The index correctly classified 87% of reference and 90% of degraded sites in the calibration data and 88% of reference and 81% of degraded sites in the validation data. The index correctly classified sites over the full range of salinity (tidal-fresh to marine waters) and across grain sizes (silt–clay to sand).
Chemistry and Ecology | 1992
John F. Paul; K. John Scott; A. Fred Holland; Steven B. Weisberg; J. Kevin Summers; Andrew Robertson
Abstract The US Environmental Protection Agencys Office of Research and Development has initiated the Environmental Monitoring and Assessment Program (EMAP) to monitor status and trends in the condition of the nations near coastal waters, forests, wetlands, agro-ecosystems, surface waters, deserts and rangelands. the programme is also intended to evaluate the effectiveness of Agency policies at protecting ecological resources occurring in these systems. Monitoring data collected for all ecosystems will be integrated for regional and national status and trends assessments. the near coastal component of EMAP consists of estuaries, coastal waters, and the Great Lakes. Near coastal ecosystems have been regionalized and classified, and an integrated sampling strategy has been developed. EPA and NOAA have agreed to coordinate and, to the extent possible, integrate the near coastal component of EMAP with the NOAA National Status and Trends Program. A demonstration project was conducted in estuaries of the mid-...
Estuaries | 1989
Michele S. Redmond; K. John Scott
Survival of the tubicolous amphipodAmpelisca abdita in a sediment toxicity test was negatively correlated with the presence of indigenousNephtys incisa. The gut contents ofN. incisa held in uncontaminated sediment included identifiable portions of the amphipods.A. abdita andMicrodeutopus gryllotalpa. Although most nephtyid polychaete worms are active predators,Nephtys incisa has been considered a nonselective deposit-feeder. We coclude thatN. incisa will prey upon amphipods under laboratory conditions. This predation may be a factor in the exclusion of surface-dwelling amphipods from theNephtys-Nucula community common in southern New England.
Chemistry and Ecology | 1995
Douglas A. Wolfe; K. John Scott; John R. Clayton; John Lunz; James R. Payne; Timothy A. Thompson
Abstract Standardized tests were applied to aromatic and polar fractions of sediment extracts to determine whether polar constituents or oxidative degradation products contributed significantly to the toxicity of sediments oiled by the Exxon Valdez spill. Intertidal sediment and pore-water samples were collected in September 1990 from two heavily oiled sites and an unoiled site in Prince William Sound (PWS). Methylene chloride extracts from these samples were fractionated by liquid chromatography into aliphatic, aromatic and polar fractions, and the aromatic and polar fractions were tested for toxicity using the MicrotoxR test, bivalve larval mortality and development (Mytilus); several measures of genotoxicity in Mytilus, including SOS ChromotestR, anaphase aberrations and sister chromatid exchange; and survival, anaphase aberrations and teratogenicity in coho salmon (Onchorhynchus kisutch). MicrotoxR and SOS ChromotestR protocols were applied in a screening mode to all samples, whereas other tests were ...
Environmental Toxicology and Chemistry | 1997
Glen B. Thursby; James F. Heltshe; K. John Scott
Archive | 1999
Edward R. Long; Gail M. Sloane; Geoffrey I. Scott; Brian Thompson; R. Scott Carr; James M. Biedenbach; Terry L. Wade; Bobby J. Presley; K. John Scott; Cornelia Mueller; Geri Brecken-Fols; Barbara Albrecht; Jack W. Anderson; G. Thomas Chandler
Environmental Toxicology and Chemistry | 1994
Michele S. Redmond; Jill K. P. Jones; K. John Scott; Richard C. Swartz
Archive | 2002
Edward R. Long; Margaret Dutch; Sandra Aasen; Kathy Welch; Jawed Hameedi; Stuart Magoon; R. Scott Carr; Tom Johnson; James M. Biedenbach; K. John Scott; Cornelia Mueller; Jack W. Anderson
Environmental Toxicology and Chemistry | 2000
Glen B. Thursby; Eric A. Stern; K. John Scott; James F. Heltshe
Archive | 1999
Edward R. Long; M. Jawed Hameedi; Michelle Harmon; Gail M. Sloane; R. Scott Carr; James M. Biedenbach; Tom Johnson; K. John Scott; Cornelia Mueller; Jack W. Anderson; Terry L. Wade; Bobby J. Presley