PRESS-NEWS.org - Press Release Distribution
PRESS RELEASES DISTRIBUTION

Streamflow alteration impacts fish diversity in local rivers

2014-01-17
(Press-News.org) Contact information: Christian Quintero
cquintero@usgs.gov
813-498-5019
United States Geological Survey
Streamflow alteration impacts fish diversity in local rivers A new USGS study quantifies change in fish diversity in response to streamflow alteration in the Tennessee River basin.

The USGS study highlights the importance of the timing, magnitude, and variability of low streamflows and the frequency and magnitude of high streamflows as key characteristics critical to assessing how fish communities change in response to streamflow alteration. This study was completed using fish community data collected by the Tennessee Valley Authority, and predictions of streamflow characteristics at more than 600 locations.

The Tennessee River basin is one of the richest areas of aquatic diversity in the country, if not the world. However, expanding urban development, more than 600 privately held small dams on medium to small streams, and withdrawal of more than 700 million gallons of water each day threaten this diversity. Understanding the effect of streamflow alteration on aquatic ecology is increasingly important as change in land use and human population are projected.

One of the examples from the study shows that as maximum October streamflow deviates outside reference conditions by approximately 6 cubic feet per second per square mile, fish diversity may decline by almost nine species in the Blue Ridge ecoregion of eastern Tennessee and western North Carolina. Results such as this were identified across the Blue Ridge, Ridge and Valley, and Interior Plateau ecoregions for 11 categories of fish and will help resource managers identify when streamflow alteration may result in too much ecological degradation.

"Managing river flows to meet the needs of our growing communities and economies will become increasingly challenging in the future", said Sally Palmer, director of science for The Nature Conservancy in Tennessee. "Maintaining our rivers to support an abundance of natural wildlife, including our native fish, is an important goal as well. Studies like these give us better information to make management decisions which more effectively balance all the demands placed on our river resources."

The National Park Service, responsible for the protection and management of Big South Fork National River and Recreation Area and the Obed Wild and Scenic River in Tennessee, has a need to assess potential impacts to the resources they are charged with protecting. "This research enhances our ability to respond to current development pressures and serves as the foundation to develop a decision support tool to address future water resource issues" said Jeff Hughes, hydrologist with the NPS.

### Additional information regarding environmental flows research in the Tennessee River basin can be found online. This work was completed as part of the USGS Cooperative Water Program in collaboration with the Tennessee Wildlife Resources Agency, Tennessee Department of Environment and Conservation, and The Nature Conservancy.

The study can be found at http://onlinelibrary.wiley.com/doi/10.1002/eco.1460/pdf


ELSE PRESS RELEASES FROM THIS DATE:

Fetal exposure to nicotine increases long-term risk of obesity

2014-01-17
Fetal exposure to nicotine increases long-term risk of obesity Many women are encouraged to quit smoking when they become pregnant using nicotine replacement therapy (NRT) whether as gum, transdermal patches, nasal spray or lozenges. But new research ...

Kids teased in PE class exercise less a year later

2014-01-17
Kids teased in PE class exercise less a year later A new study found that children who were bullied during P.E. class or other physical activities were less likely to participate in physical activity one year later. Overweight or obese children who experienced ...

Study finds troubling relationship between drinking and PTSD symptoms in college students

2014-01-17
Study finds troubling relationship between drinking and PTSD symptoms in college students BUFFALO, N.Y. – The estimated 9 percent of college students who have symptoms of post-traumatic stress disorder (PTSD) are likely to drink more alcohol than peers without ...

Survival rates of kids suffering cardiac arrest improve with new training approach

2014-01-17
Survival rates of kids suffering cardiac arrest improve with new training approach STANFORD, Calif. — Researchers at the Stanford University School of Medicine and Lucile Packard Children's Hospital Stanford have found a new way to boost the survival ...

Natural 3D counterpart to graphene discovered

2014-01-17
Natural 3D counterpart to graphene discovered Researchers at Berkeley Lab's Advanced Light Source find new form of quantum matter The discovery of what is essentially a 3D version of graphene – the 2D sheets of carbon through which electrons race at ...

Urban night shift police more likely to suffer long-term job injuries, study finds

2014-01-17
Urban night shift police more likely to suffer long-term job injuries, study finds BUFFALO, N.Y. – Police officers working the night shift are significantly more likely to suffer long-term on-the-job injuries than officers on day and afternoon shifts, according ...

Silencing inhibitor of cell replication spurs beta cells to reproduce

2014-01-17
Silencing inhibitor of cell replication spurs beta cells to reproduce PHILADELPHIA — Klaus Kaestner, PhD, professor of Genetics and postdoctoral fellow Dana Avrahami, PhD, from the Perelman School of Medicine, University of Pennsylvania, ...

EARTH Magazine: Humans are influencing some extreme weather events, but not all

2014-01-17
EARTH Magazine: Humans are influencing some extreme weather events, but not all Alexandria, VA – It has often been said that individual weather events cannot be attributed to global climate change, but recent advances in the science of attribution are challenging ...

Fathers' diet, bodyweight and health at conception may contribute to obesity in offspring

2014-01-17
Fathers' diet, bodyweight and health at conception may contribute to obesity in offspring New research in The FASEB Journal suggests that obese fathers cause altered gene expression in pancreas and fat of offspring, possibly leading ...

Special yeast reduce alcohol, improve wine

2014-01-17
Special yeast reduce alcohol, improve wine A team of Australian researchers has taken a giant step towards controlling a growing problem in the wine community. They have identified special yeast that produce a lower level of alcohol, helping to preserve the ...

LAST 30 PRESS RELEASES:

Parts of the brain that are needed to remember words identified

Anti-amyloid drug shows signs of preventing Alzheimer’s dementia

Sharing mealtimes with others linked to better wellbeing

New DESI results: Evidence mounts for evolving dark energy

New DESI results strengthen hints that dark energy may evolve

DESI opens access to the largest 3D map of the universe yet

New study reveals high levels of fusarium mycotoxins in seized cannabis from Arizona and California

Sleepier during the day? For some older people, it’s linked to twice the dementia risk

Is increased sleepiness in our 80s tied to higher dementia risk?

South Africa and China establish record-breaking 12,900 km ultra-secure quantum satellite link

A rule-changer for ceramic fuel cells

Good vibrations: Scientists discover a groundbreaking method for exciting phonon-polaritons

CNIC scientists discover a type of immune cell that produces defensive "shields" in the skin

Science behind “Polly want a cracker” could guide future treatment design for speech disorders

Brain imaging reveals surprises about learning

Scientists see the first steps of DNA unwinding

Earliest stages and possible new cause of stomach cancer revealed

Unique cell shape keeps lymphatic vessels and plant leaves stable

New understanding of B cell mutation strategies could have implications for vaccines

Sea level rise after the last ice age: More knowledge

New mechanism behind adaptive immunity revealed. It could impact how we design vaccines.

Hyperuricemia: Current state and prospects

What happens in the male mouse brain during sex

Prescription stimulant use, misuse, and use disorder among US adults ages 18 to 64

Suicide and self-harm events with GLP-1 receptor agonists in adults with diabetes or obesity

Pregnancy irreversibly remodels the mouse intestine

Blocking gut cannabinoids may prevent leaky gut

Plant patch can detect stress signals in real time

NFL’s Buffalo Bills continue CPR education kicking off year 3 of the HeartBEAT initiative

Team finds regional, age-related trends in exposure to drug-resistant pathogen

[Press-News.org] Streamflow alteration impacts fish diversity in local rivers