Kevin D. Richards
United States Geological Survey
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Featured researches published by Kevin D. Richards.
Environmental Science & Technology | 2010
Steven R. Corsi; David J. Graczyk; Steven W. Geis; Nathaniel L. Booth; Kevin D. Richards
A new perspective on the severity of aquatic toxicity impact of road salt was gained by a focused research effort directed at winter runoff periods. Dramatic impacts were observed on local, regional, and national scales. Locally, samples from 7 of 13 Milwaukee, Wisconsin area streams exhibited toxicity in Ceriodaphnia dubia and Pimephales promelas bioassays during road-salt runoff. Another Milwaukee stream was sampled from 1996 to 2008 with 72% of 37 samples exhibiting toxicity in chronic bioassays and 43% in acute bioassays. The maximum chloride concentration was 7730 mg/L. Regionally, in southeast Wisconsin, continuous specific conductance was monitored as a chloride surrogate in 11 watersheds with urban land use from 6.0 to 100%. Elevated specific conductance was observed between November and April at all sites, with continuing effects between May and October at sites with the highest specific conductance. Specific conductance was measured as high as 30 800 μS/cm (Cl = 11 200 mg/L). Chloride concentrations exceeded U.S. Environmental Protection Agency (USEPA) acute (860 mg/L) and chronic (230 mg/L) water-quality criteria at 55 and 100% of monitored sites, respectively. Nationally, U.S. Geological Survey historical data were examined for 13 northern and 4 southern metropolitan areas. Chloride concentrations exceeded USEPA water-quality criteria at 55% (chronic) and 25% (acute) of the 168 monitoring locations in northern metropolitan areas from November to April. Only 16% (chronic) and 1% (acute) of sites exceeded criteria from May to October. At southern sites, very few samples exceeded chronic water-quality criteria, and no samples exceeded acute criteria.
Science of The Total Environment | 2016
Austin K. Baldwin; Steven R. Corsi; Laura A. De Cicco; Peter L. Lenaker; Michelle A. Lutz; Daniel J. Sullivan; Kevin D. Richards
Organic compounds used in agriculture, industry, and households make their way into surface waters through runoff, leaking septic-conveyance systems, regulated and unregulated discharges, and combined sewer overflows, among other sources. Concentrations of these organic waste compounds (OWCs) in some Great Lakes tributaries indicate a high potential for adverse impacts on aquatic organisms. During 2010-13, 709 water samples were collected at 57 tributaries, together representing approximately 41% of the total inflow to the lakes. Samples were collected during runoff and low-flow conditions and analyzed for 69 OWCs, including herbicides, insecticides, polycyclic aromatic hydrocarbons, plasticizers, antioxidants, detergent metabolites, fire retardants, non-prescription human drugs, flavors/fragrances, and dyes. Urban-related land cover characteristics were the most important explanatory variables of concentrations of many OWCs. Compared to samples from nonurban watersheds (<15% urban land cover) samples from urban watersheds (>15% urban land cover) had nearly four times the number of detected compounds and four times the total sample concentration, on average. Concentration differences between runoff and low-flow conditions were not observed, but seasonal differences were observed in atrazine, metolachlor, DEET, and HHCB concentrations. Water quality benchmarks for individual OWCs were exceeded at 20 sites, and at 7 sites benchmarks were exceeded by a factor of 10 or more. The compounds with the most frequent water quality benchmark exceedances were the PAHs benzo[a]pyrene, pyrene, fluoranthene, and anthracene, the detergent metabolite 4-nonylphenol, and the herbicide atrazine. Computed estradiol equivalency quotients (EEQs) using only nonsteroidal endocrine-active compounds indicated medium to high risk of estrogenic effects (intersex or vitellogenin induction) at 10 sites. EEQs at 3 sites were comparable to values reported in effluent. This multifaceted study is the largest, most comprehensive assessment of the occurrence and potential effects of OWCs in the Great Lakes Basin to date.
American Fisheries Society Symposium | 2005
Faith A. Fitzpatrick; Matthew W. D Iebel; Mitchell A. Harris; Terri L. Arnold; Michelle A. Lutz; Kevin D. Richards
Scientific Investigations Report | 2010
Kevin D. Richards; Barbara C. Scudder; Faith A. Fitzpatrick; Jeffery J. Steuer; Amanda H. Bell; Marie C. Peppler; Jana S. Stewart; Mitchell A. Harris
Scientific Investigations Report | 2007
Judith C. Thomas; Michelle A. Lutz; Jennifer L. Bruce; David J. Graczyk; Kevin D. Richards; David P. Krabbenhoft; Stephen M. Westenbroek; Barbara C. Scudder; Daniel J. Sullivan; Amanda H. Bell
Open-File Report | 2001
Debbie L. Adolphson; Terri L. Arnold; Faith A. Fitzpatrick; Mitchell A. Harris; Kevin D. Richards; Barbara C. Scudder; Jana S. Stewart
Scientific Investigations Report | 2013
Austin K. Baldwin; Steven R. Corsi; Kevin D. Richards; Steven W. Geis; Christopher Magruder
Water-Resources Investigations Report | 2001
Herbert S. Garn; Barbara C. Scudder; Kevin D. Richards; Daniel J. Sullivan
Water-Resources Investigations Report | 2000
Morgan A. Schmidt; Barbara C. Scudder; Kevin D. Richards
Water-Resources Investigations Report | 1998
Kevin D. Richards; Daniel J. Sullivan; Jana S. Stewart