E-Book, Englisch, 603 Seiten, eBook
Proceedings of the Third Symposium on the Environmental Monitoring and Assessment Program (EMAP) Albany, NY, U.S.A., 8–11 April, 1997
E-Book, Englisch, 603 Seiten, eBook
ISBN: 978-94-011-4976-1
Verlag: Springer Netherland
Format: PDF
Kopierschutz: 1 - PDF Watermark
Zielgruppe
Research
Autoren/Hrsg.
Weitere Infos & Material
Preface.- Environmental Monitoring and Research Initiative: A Priority Activity for the Committee on Environmental and Natural Resources.- Environmental Data in Decision Making in EPA Regional Offices.- Development and Validation of Ecological Indicators: An ORD Approach.- A Zooplankton-N:P-Ratio Indicator for Lakes.- Implications of Seasonal and Regional Abundance Patterns of Daphnia on Surface Water Monitoring and Assessment.- The Role of Biological Indicators in a State Water Quality Management Process.- Maryland Biological Stream Survey: Development of a Fish Index of Biotic Integrity.- Diatom Indicators of Stream and Wetland Stressors in a Risk Management Framework.- The Occurrence and Impact of Sedi-mentation in Central Pennsylvania Wetlands.- Towards a Regional Index of Biological Integrity: The Example of Forested Riparian Ecosystems.- A Bird Community Index of Biotic Integrity for the Mid-Atlantic Highlands.- Acid Runoff Caused Fish Loss as an Early Warning of Forest Decline.- Forest Integrity at Anthropogenic Edges: Air Pollution Disrupts Bioindicators.- Common Patterns of Ecosystem Breakdown under Stress.- Vegetation, Soil, and Animal Indicators of Rangeland Health.- Monitoring Changes in Stressed Ecosystems Using Spatial Patterns of Ant Communities.- Parasites of Fish as Indicators of Environmental Stress.- Relating Benthic Infaunal Community Structure to Environmental Variables in Estuaries Using Nonmetric Multidimensional Scaling and Similarity Analysis.- Seed Clam Growth: An Alternative Sediment Bioassay Developed During EMAP in the Carolinian Province.- Benthic Biological Processes and EH as a Basis for a Benthic Index.- State of the Estuaries in the Mid-Atlantic Region of the United States.- A Framework for a Delaware Inland Bays Environmental Classification.- Maryland Biological Stream Survey: A State Agency Program to Assess the Impact of Anthropogenic Stresses on Stream Habitat Quality and Biota.- Assessment of the Condition of Agricultural Lands in Five Mid-Atlantic States.- An Interactive, Spatial Inventory of Envi-ronmental Data in the Mid-Atlantic Region.- Sediment Quality of Estuaries in the Southeastern U.S..- Evaluation of R-EMAP Techniques for the Measurement of Ecological Integrity of Streams in Washington State’s Coast Range Ecoregion.- Site Access and Sample Frame Issues for R-EMAP Central Valley, California, Stream Assessment.- Linking Monitoring and Effects Research: EMAP’s Intensive Site Network Program.- Determining the Causes of Benthic Condition.- A Regional Analysis of Lake Acidification Trends for the Northeastern U.S., 1982-1994.- Regional Land Cover Characterization Using Landsat Thematic Mapper Data and Ancillary Data Sources.- Managing Scientific Data: The EMAP Approach.- Exploring Environmental Data in a Highly Immersive Virtual Reality Environment.- Prototyping a Vision for Inter-Agency Terrestrial Inventory and Monitoring: A Statistical Perspective.- Genetic Patterns as a Tool for Monitoring and Assessment of Environmental Impacts: The Example of Genetic Ecotoxicology.- Preliminary Studies on the Population Genetics of the Central Stoneroller (Campostoma anomalum) from the Great Miami River Basin, Ohio.- Genetic Impact of Low-Dose Radiation on Human and Non-Human Biota in Chernobyl, Ukraine.- Human Carrying Capacity as an Indicator of Regional Sustainability.- The Ecological Footprint: An Indicator of Progress toward Regional Sustainability.- Emergy Analysis of Human Carrying Capacity and Regional Sustainability: An Example Using the State of Maine.- Resource Use Rates and Efficiencyas Indicators of Regional Sustainability: An Examination of Five Countries.- Canada’s Ecological Monitoring and Assessment Network: Where We Are At And Where We Are Going.