Network


Latest external collaboration on country level. Dive into details by clicking on the dots.

Hotspot


Dive into the research topics where Steven B. Slater is active.

Publication


Featured researches published by Steven B. Slater.


Science of The Total Environment | 2015

Contaminant and food limitation stress in an endangered estuarine fish.

Bruce G. Hammock; James A. Hobbs; Steven B. Slater; Shawn Acuña; Swee J. Teh

The abundance of Delta Smelt (Hypomesus transpacificus), a fish species endemic to the upper San Francisco Estuary (SFE), is declining. Several causes for the population decline have been proposed, including food limitation and contaminant effects. Here, using juvenile Delta Smelt collected from throughout their range, we measured a suite of indices across three levels of biological organization (cellular, organ, individual) that reflect fish condition at temporal scales ranging from hours to weeks. Using these indices, the relative conditions of fish collected from five regions in the SFE were compared: Cache Slough, Sacramento River Deep Water Ship Channel, Confluence, Suisun Bay and Suisun Marsh. Fish sampled from Suisun Bay and, to a lesser extent the Confluence, exhibited relatively poor short-term nutritional and growth indices and morphometric condition, while fish from the freshwater regions of the estuary, and Cache Slough in particular, exhibited the most apparent histopathological signs of contaminant exposure. In contrast, fish from the Suisun Marsh region exhibited higher short-term nutrition and growth indices, and better morphometric and histopathological condition. For instance, fish collected from Suisun Marsh had a mean stomach fullness, expressed as a percentage of fish weight, that was 3.4-fold higher than fish collected from Suisun Bay, while also exhibiting an incidence of histopathological lesions that was 11-fold lower than fish collected from Cache Slough. Thus, our findings support the hypothesis that multiple stressors, including food limitation and contaminants, are contributing to the decline of Delta Smelt, and that these stressors influence Delta Smelt heterogeneously across space.


PLOS ONE | 2013

SmeltCam: Underwater Video Codend for Trawled Nets with an Application to the Distribution of the Imperiled Delta Smelt

Frederick Feyrer; Donald E. Portz; Darren Odum; Ken B. Newman; Ted Sommer; Dave Contreras; Randall D. Baxter; Steven B. Slater; Deanna Sereno; Erwin Van Nieuwenhuyse

Studying rare and sensitive species is a challenge in conservation biology. The problem is exemplified by the case of the imperiled delta smelt Hypomesus transpacificus, a small delicate fish species endemic to the San Francisco Estuary, California. Persistent record-low levels of abundance and relatively high sensitivity to handling stress pose considerable challenges to studying delta smelt in the wild. To attempt to overcome these and other challenges we have developed the SmeltCam, an underwater video camera codend for trawled nets. The SmeltCam functions as an open-ended codend that automatically collects information on the number and species of fishes that pass freely through a trawled net without handling. We applied the SmeltCam to study the fine-scale distribution of juvenile delta smelt in the water column in the upper San Francisco Estuary. We learned that during flood tides delta smelt were relatively abundant throughout the water column and that during ebb tides delta smelt were significantly less abundant and occurred only in the lower half and sides of the water column. The results suggest that delta smelt manipulate their position in the water column to facilitate retention in favorable habitats. With the application of the SmeltCam we increased the survival of individual delta smelt by 72% compared to using a traditional codend, where all of the fish would have likely died due to handling stress. The SmeltCam improves upon similar previously developed silhouette photography or video recording devices and demonstrates how new technology can be developed to address important questions in conservation biology as well as lessen the negative effects associated with traditional sampling methods on imperiled species.


PLOS ONE | 2017

Foraging and metabolic consequences of semi-anadromy for an endangered estuarine fish

Bruce G. Hammock; Steven B. Slater; Randall D. Baxter; Nann A. Fangue; Dennis E. Cocherell; April Hennessy; Tomofumi Kurobe; Christopher Y. Tai; Swee J. Teh

Diadromy affords fish access to productive ecosystems, increasing growth and ultimately fitness, but it is unclear whether these advantages persist for species migrating within highly altered habitat. Here, we compared the foraging success of wild Delta Smelt—an endangered, zooplanktivorous, annual, semi-anadromous fish that is endemic to the highly altered San Francisco Estuary (SFE)—collected from freshwater (<0.55 psu) and brackish habitat (≥0.55 psu). Stomach fullness, averaged across three generations of wild Delta Smelt sampled from juvenile through adult life stages (n = 1,318), was 1.5-fold higher in brackish than in freshwater habitat. However, salinity and season interacted, with higher fullness (1.7-fold) in freshwater than in brackish habitat in summer, but far higher fullness in brackish than freshwater habitat during fall/winter and winter/spring (1.8 and 2.0-fold, respectively). To examine potential causes of this interaction we compared mesozooplankton abundance, collected concurrently with the Delta Smelt, in freshwater and brackish habitat during summer and fall/winter, and the metabolic rate of sub-adult Delta Smelt acclimated to salinities of 0.4, 2.0, and 12.0 psu in a laboratory experiment. A seasonal peak in mesozooplankton density coincided with the summer peak in Delta Smelt foraging success in freshwater, and a pronounced decline in freshwater mesozooplankton abundance in the fall coincided with declining stomach fullness, which persisted for the remainder of the year (fall, winter and spring). In brackish habitat, greater foraging ‘efficiency’ (prey items in stomachs/mesozooplankton abundance) led to more prey items per fish and generally higher stomach fullness (i.e., a higher proportion of mesozooplankton detected in concurrent trawls were eaten by fish in brackish habitat). Delta Smelt exhibited no difference in metabolic rate across the three salinities, indicating that metabolic responses to salinity are unlikely to have caused the stomach fullness results. Adult migration and freshwater spawning therefore places young fish in a position to exploit higher densities of prey in freshwater in the late spring/summer, and subsequent movement downstream provides older fish more accessible prey in brackish habitat. Thus, despite endemism to a highly-altered estuary, semi-anadromy provided substantial foraging benefits to Delta Smelt, consistent with other temperate migratory fish.


Transactions of The American Fisheries Society | 2017

Pelagic Nekton Abundance and Distribution in the Northern Sacramento–San Joaquin Delta, California

Frederick Feyrer; Steven B. Slater; Donald E. Portz; Darren Odom; Tara Morgan-King; Larry R. Brown

AbstractKnowledge of the habitats occupied by species is fundamental for the development of effective conservation and management actions. The collapse of pelagic fish species in the Sacramento–San Joaquin Delta, California, has triggered a need to better understand factors that drive their distribution and abundance. A study was conducted in summer–fall 2014 in an attempt to identify physical and biological habitat conditions that drive the abundance and distribution of pelagic species in the northern region of the system. The study was conducted in the three largest channels in the northern Sacramento–San Joaquin Delta by dimension, volume, and flow capacity. The pelagic community was dominated by three nonnative species, Siberian prawn Exopalaemon modestus, which comprised 56% of the total number of organisms, and two fish species, Threadfin Shad Dorosoma petenense and Mississippi Silversides Menidia audens, which together comprised 43% of the total number of organisms. Total fish and total shrimp abun...


San Francisco Estuary and Watershed Science | 2014

Diet, Prey Selection, and Body Condition of Age-0 Delta Smelt, Hypomesus transpacificus, in the Upper San Francisco Estuary

Steven B. Slater; Randall D. Baxter


San Francisco Estuary and Watershed Science | 2009

Old School vs. New School: Status of Threadfin Shad (Dorosoma petenense) Five Decades After Its Introduction to the Sacramento-San Joaquin Delta

Frederick Feyrer; Ted Sommer; Steven B. Slater


CTIT technical reports series | 2015

An updated conceptual model of Delta Smelt biology: Our evolving understanding of an estuarine fish

Randy Baxter; Larry R. Brown; Gonzalo Castillo; Louise Conrad; Steven D. Culberson; Matthew P. Dekar; Melissa Dekar; Frederick Feyrer; Thaddeus Hunt; Kristopher Jones; Joseph Kirsch; Anke Mueller-Solger; Matthew L. Nobriga; Steven B. Slater; Ted Sommer; Kelly Souza; Gregg Erickson; Stephanie Fong; Karen Gehrts; Lenny Grimaldo; Bruce Herbold


Scientific Investigations Report | 2014

Synthesis of studies in the fall low-salinity zone of the San Francisco Estuary, September-December 2011

Larry R. Brown; Randall D. Baxter; Gonzalo Castillo; Louise Conrad; Steven D. Culberson; Gregg Erickson; Frederick Feyrer; Stephanie Fong; Karen Gehrts; Lenny Grimaldo; Bruce Herbold; Joseph Kirsch; Anke Mueller-Solger; Steven B. Slater; Ted Sommer; Kelly Souza; Erwin Van Nieuwenhuyse


San Francisco Estuary and Watershed Science | 2014

Diet, Prey Selection, and Body Condition of Age-0 Delta Smelt, , in the Upper San Francisco Estuary

Steven B. Slater; Randall D. Baxter


San Francisco Estuary and Watershed Science | 2009

Old School vs. New School: Status of Threadfin Shad () Five Decades After Its Introduction to the Sacramento–San Joaquin Delta

Frederick Feyrer; Ted Sommer; Steven B. Slater

Collaboration


Dive into the Steven B. Slater's collaboration.

Top Co-Authors

Avatar

Frederick Feyrer

United States Geological Survey

View shared research outputs
Top Co-Authors

Avatar

Randall D. Baxter

California Department of Fish and Wildlife

View shared research outputs
Top Co-Authors

Avatar

Ted Sommer

California Department of Water Resources

View shared research outputs
Top Co-Authors

Avatar

Larry R. Brown

United States Geological Survey

View shared research outputs
Top Co-Authors

Avatar
Top Co-Authors

Avatar

Bruce Herbold

United States Environmental Protection Agency

View shared research outputs
Top Co-Authors

Avatar

Donald E. Portz

United States Bureau of Reclamation

View shared research outputs
Top Co-Authors

Avatar

Erwin Van Nieuwenhuyse

United States Bureau of Reclamation

View shared research outputs
Top Co-Authors

Avatar

Gonzalo Castillo

United States Fish and Wildlife Service

View shared research outputs
Top Co-Authors

Avatar

Lenny Grimaldo

California Department of Water Resources

View shared research outputs
Researchain Logo
Decentralizing Knowledge