Tibor T. Polgar Fellowship 25th Anniversary Celebration
Transcription
Tibor T. Polgar Fellowship 25th Anniversary Celebration
Tibor T. Polgar Fellowship 25th Anniversary Celebration Fellowship Program Directory Tibor T. Polgar Fellowship th 25 Anniversary Celebration Fellowship Program Directory Hudson River Foundation September 2009 Preface The Hudson River estuary stretches from its tidal limit at the Federal Dam at Troy, New York, to its merger with the New York Bight, south of New York City. Within that reach, the estuary displays a broad transition from tidal freshwater to marine conditions that are reflected in its physical composition and the biota it supports. These characteristics present a major opportunity and challenge for researchers to describe the makeup and workings of a complex and dynamic ecosystem. The Tibor Polgar Fellowship Program provides funds for graduate and undergraduate students to study selected aspects of the physical, chemical, biological, and public policy realms of the estuary. Since its inception in 1985, the program has provided approximately $1 million in funding to 189 students and can boast the involvement of 116 advisors from 64 institutions. The program is named in memory of Dr. Tibor T. Polgar, an estuarine biologist who was a key advisor to the Hudson River Foundation for Science and Environmental Research when the fellowship program was created. The program is conducted jointly by the Hudson River Foundation and the New York State Department of Environmental Conservation. The fellowships are funded by the Foundation. i Table of Contents Preface……………………………………………………………………….. i Table of Contents……………………………………………………………. iii Introduction………………………………………………………………….. v Tibor T. Polgar Fellows……………………………………………………... 1 Tibor T. Polgar Fellowship Advisors…………………………....................... 29 Tibor T. Polgar Administrators…………………………………………….... 37 Reports of the Tibor T. Polgar Fellowship…………………………………... 39 List of Publications by Tibor T. Polgar Fellows…………………………….. 53 iii Introduction The Tibor T. Polgar Fellowship Program is 25 years old this year, a “quatricentennial” coincidentally aligning with the great Henry Hudson Quadricentennial. Reflection in 2009 on all things Hudson is irresistible. As a scientist working in the world of estuarine and aquatic biology for the entire period since the “Polgars” were created, I have often encountered former fellows in a wide range of research and resource management activities. But perhaps the reach of the program was most vividly illustrated recently when I was attending a World Bank workshop on Caspian Sea sturgeon held in a small city in eastern Turkey. As the meeting began, a youngish scientist from Moscow informed me cryptically, “We’ve met before.” He did look familiar and I nodded and assumed we both had attended some international sturgeon gathering. A day later he quizzed me as to where we had met. I failed badly: He was a 1994 Polgar Fellow (from Rutgers) who had performed a fine genetics study on Hudson River killifish. Killifish are one of the myriad subjects tackled by Polgar Fellows since 1984. A hallmark of the program has been its diversity, an unusual simultaneous openness to undergraduates, Master’s, and doctoral students, and topics that have run from basic geology and hydrochemistry through contaminants, archaeology, autecology, food webs, fish communities, and public perceptions and policy concerning the river. The consequence has been an annual production of work, contained in yearly monographs, yielding an enormous amount of useful information. Some of the projects also have served as pilot studies for larger Hudson River Foundation grants, and many have produced quality peer-reviewed journal articles on their own. Moreover, in addition to making a significant contribution to our knowledge of the Hudson estuary, students have been trained in and well exposed to the realities—including the considerable pleasures—of studying estuarine biology. Whether clomping through muck in the marshes, running samples through equipment back in the lab, or both, these students have been privileged to take the measure of this remarkable estuary and, likely, to some degree, themselves. A quarter-century is a convenient marker for taking stock of a student program and celebrating its achievements. Enough time has elapsed for early graduates to have journeyed halfway through their professional careers, yet the beginning is still keenly recalled. The program sprang from the efforts of Betsy Blair of the New York State Department of Environmental Conservation and Dr. Jon Cooper, then the Science Officer of the Hudson River Foundation, to use federal funding associated with NOAA’s National Estuarine Research Reserve System to launch student summer fellowships in 1985. Dr. Tibor T. Polgar, a young but already influential and distinguished estuarine biologist, was advising the Hudson River Foundation at that time, and when he died suddenly in 1986, it seemed fitting to name this new program in his memory. In 1986, I became co-director of the program with Ms. Blair (and later, Chuck Nieder). During the first three years of the program, because of the particular federal funding source, all of the projects were required to be undertaken within the four Research Reserve sites in the Hudson. When direct federal underwriting ended in 1988, HRF began shouldering all the costs of the fellowships, with continuing and very supportive in-kind co-direction by NYSDEC, and the program was opened to projects anywhere within the Hudson estuary. v To scan the biographies included in this report is to come to know a cadre of competent and dedicated scientists and managers. The list of 203 projects undertaken by the Fellows demonstrates the extent to which the Polgar Program has advanced understanding of the Hudson ecosystem in crucial ways. The roster of fellowship advisors is a veritable pantheon of estuarine scientists working on the Hudson ecosystem. The extensive bibliography of Polgar participants’ continuing contributions to the scientific literature illustrates the impact of talent emanating from the careers of men and women who share a history of at least one student summer on and in the Hudson River. Without presuming too much credit for their success, the Polgar Program has surely been for each of them one of the stepping stones, those formative experiences that simultaneously inform and inspire and on which any successful scientific career is built. With luck, 25 new cohorts of eager students will learn about the river and then make a difference in the larger realm of environmental understanding by the time of the Polgar semicentennial, a quarter-century from now. John Waldman September 1, 2009 vi Fellows Tibor T. Polgar Fellows John Albertson 1992 John Albertson is currently Professor and W. H. Gardner, Jr., Department Chair of Civil and Environmental Engineering at Duke University. He received his B.S. in civil engineering from SUNY Buffalo; an MBA in Finance from the University of Hartford; a Masters in hydrology from Yale (where he was a Tibor T. Polgar fellow); and a Ph.D. in hydrologic science from the University of California at Davis. Before coming to Duke, he was an Associate Professor in the Department of Environmental Sciences at the University of Virginia. Albertson’s research interests include surface hydrology, the effects of climate on semi-arid landscapes and water resources, hydroclimatic controls on infectious disease dynamics, and large eddy simulation of turbulence and turbulent transport in the lower atmosphere. He is currently leading an NSF study of climate impacts to water resources on Sardinia, a NASA study of climate impacts to the African savanna, and a NASA project on drought persistence in the southwestern US. Albertson is also adviser to the Irish EPA effort to develop a national assessment of the threats that land use and climate changes pose to Irish soil resources. ● Duke University ● Professor and W.H. Gardner Jr. Department Chair, Civil and Environmental Engineering ● Email: [email protected] ● Allan Barth Anderson 1988 Barth Anderson participated in several ecological research projects at the Institute for Ecosystems Studies (Millbrook, NY) after 1988, but his work transitioned to the private sector with land planning and design work around 1990. In 1993, he co-founded a coffee roasting business called the Barrington Coffee Roasting Company (www.barringtoncoffee.com) located in the Berkshires of Massachusetts (Lee, MA). Barrington Coffee is now in its sixteenth year. Barth has a wife, Lisa, a son, Aidan, and they live in Alford, MA. ● Email: [email protected] Kristin Arend 1995 Kristin Arend is an aquatic ecologist with an interest in freshwater fish communities and food web dynamics. She received her B.A. in biology from Oberlin College, M.S. in aquatic ecology from The Ohio State University, and Ph.D. in aquatic ecology from Cornell University. Dr. Arend’s research is aimed at understanding how natural and human-influenced environmental features (e.g., morphometry, nutrient loading, habitat type and availability) influence aquatic community structure, trophic interactions, and the flow of energy and other materials through the food web. She enjoys working on collaborative projects that span disciplines including hydrodynamics, biogeochemistry, and limnology. One of the most rewarding aspects of her career is mentoring undergraduates (certainly an outcome of her own undergraduate experiences conducting research on the Hudson River!). Starting August 2009, she will be an Assistant Professor in the Department of Biological Sciences at Lake Superior State University, in Sault Ste. Marie, MI. In her free time, she enjoys running, playing soccer, skiing, and kayaking. ● Lake Superior State University ● Assistant Professor, Department of Biological Sciences ● Email: [email protected] or [email protected] 3 Tibor T. Polgar Fellows H. Kay Austin 1986 Following completion of her Polgar Fellowship studying bacterial biomass and production in Hudson River sediments, H. Kay Austin continued work in microbial ecology focusing on the impact of genetically modified microorganisms on higher trophic level organisms. Dr. Austin held a postdoctoral fellowship at Virginia Polytechnic Institute (VPI) and State and later assumed a position with the U.S. Environmental Protection Agency (EPA), Washington, D.C., as a microbiologist assessing the impact of genetically modified organisms as well as new and existing chemicals in commerce on the environment and human health. Kay worked for many years at the EPA, including service to the Office of Research and Development as a Senior Ecology Adviser in the National Center for Environmental Assessment. She assumed a position at the International Joint Commission (IJC; U.S. Dept. of State), a binational treaty organization (Boundary Waters Treaty of 1909) designed to prevent and resolve disputes around the shared waters between Canada and the U.S. When she joined the IJC, Kay served under Dr. Gerry Galloway, a former member of the Board of Directors of the Hudson River Foundation, who contacted the Polgar research program director to ask about her work during that time. Currently, Dr. Austin is back at the EPA where she serves as Associate Director for the Economics, Exposure and Technology Division, in the Office of Pollution Prevention and Toxics. Dr. Austin is the mother of two children, Moriah (13) and Mason (10), and is married to Gene Brantly, program director with Research Triangle International. ● Environmental Protection Agency, Office of Pollution Prevention and Toxics ● Associate Director Economics, Exposture and Technology Division ● Email: [email protected] Jeb Barrett 1993 Jeb Barrett studied ecology at Cook College, Rutgers University where he earned a B.S. with high honors in 1994. His undergraduate thesis on the effects of aquatic vegetation on nutrient cycling and sediment dynamics was supported by his Polgar Fellowship. He earned a Ph.D. from Colorado State University for research on nitrogen cycling in grassland ecosystems, and accepted a postdoctoral research position in 1999 at Dartmouth College, studying biogeochemical cycling in Antarctic desert ecosystems. Later, Dr. Barrett became an adjunct faculty member in the Environmental Studies Program at Dartmouth. In 2007, he accepted an assistant professor position at Virginia Tech in the Department of Biological Sciences where he currently teaches ecology and advanced courses on global environmental change. Dr. Barrett’s research addresses the influences of climate variability, hydrology and biodiversity on ecosystem processes from the scale of microorganisms to landscape gradients and regions. Presently, most of his research is conducted in polar desert ecosystems of Antarctica where he focuses on how changes in climate affect ecological processes and soil organisms. In other ongoing projects he is studying the roles of physicochemical gradients and microorganisms in facilitating transformation and transport of nitrogencompounds across terrestrial-aquatic interfaces. ● Virginia Tech ● Assistant Professor, Department of Biological Sciences ● Email: [email protected] “From my experience, I have learned that nothing ever goes as planned when it comes to field work…” – Shahriar Caesar Rahman 4 Tibor T. Polgar Fellows Michael Bednarski 2004 Michael Bednarski is currently a graduate student working in the Warnell School of Forestry and Natural Resources at the University of Georgia. His dissertation research concerns habitat use, population dynamics, and foraging habits of Atlantic sturgeon in the Altamaha River, Georgia. He received his B.S. in environmental and forest biology at SUNY-ESF in 2005, and completed his M.A. in biology at CUNY-Queens College in 2007 by conducting research on the overwintering habits of striped bass in the Thames River, Connecticut. Michael has worked with fish and aquatic invertebrates throughout New York, New England, and the southeastern United States. His other interests include riverine invertebrates, the effects of tournament fishing on fish populations, estuarine fish communities, and spatial analysis of fish habitat use. ● University of Georgia ● Graduate Student, Warnell School of Forestry and Natural Resources ● Email: [email protected] Andrew J. Bernick 2004 & 2005 Andrew Bernick attended the University of Rhode Island (B.S. in Wildlife Biology, 1994) and the City University of New York-Graduate Center (Ph.D in Biology, 2007). He was the recipient of both Graduate and Tibor T. Polgar Fellowships from the Hudson River Foundation. Andrew’s research interests include foraging ecology, population dynamics and conservation of wading birds in urban ecosystems and wildlife telemetry. Andrew’s graduate research focused on Black-crowned Night-Heron foraging ecology in New York /New Jersey Harbor. He has been involved with New York City Audubon’s Harbor Herons Project since 1999, as the nesting survey leader from 2005 to 2008. Andrew presently resides in Alexandria, Virginia and is employed as an ecologist with the environmental consulting firm AKRF, Inc. He is responsible for wildlife surveys design and natural resources impact assessments, particularly assessment and avoidance of bird mortality due to collision with buildings, communication towers, transmission lines and wind energy systems. ● AKRF, Inc. ● Email: [email protected] John Brzorad 1989 Since receiving the Polgar Fellowship in 1989, John Brzorad completed his Ph.D. at Rutgers University and has worked in academia and in workforce development. Currently, he is the director of the Reese Institute for Conservation of Natural Resources at Lenoir-Rhyne University in Hickory, North Carolina. This position entails working to develop sustainability on the campus and in that region of the state. His Polgar Fellowship supported his work with estuarine birds and he continues that work today, although he has shifted his focus to avian energetics as it relates to ecosystem productivity. In addition to the Polar Fellowship, Dr. Brzorad has received Hudson River Fund research grants at various times from 1997 to 2002. ● Lenoir-Rhyne University ● Director, Reese Institute for Conservation of Natural Resources ● Email: [email protected] 5 Tibor T. Polgar Fellows David J. Burke 1999 David Burke attended graduate school at Rutgers University from 1997-2001 where he earned a Ph.D. in Biology with a concentration in Ecology and Evolution. David was awarded a Polgar Fellowship for the summer of 1999 and conducted research into the ecology of salt marsh plants and how mycorrhizal fungi affect plant growth and bacterial communities in soil. This work was conducted at Piermont Marsh, located along the Hudson River south of Nyack, New York. After graduating from Rutgers, David worked as a postdoctoral associate at the Boyce Thompson Institute for Plant Research at Cornell University where he studied the ecology of mycorrhizal fungi on loblolly pine. David subsequently worked as a postdoctoral associate at SUNY-ESF studying the relationship between mycorrhizal fungi and bacteria on roots of Douglas fir. David is currently employed as an assistant scientist at the Holden Arboretum in Kirtland Ohio and has an adjunct position in the Department of Biology at Case Western Reserve University. His research focuses on the interactions between plant roots and soil organisms with a particular emphasis on mycorrhizal ecology. ● Case Western Reserve University, Department of Biology ● Holden Arboretum, Assistant Scientist ● Email: [email protected] Katherine Cagen 2008 Katherine Cagen is an undergraduate at Harvard University concentrating in Electrical Engineering and Computer Science, with a Language Citation in Japanese. A New York City native, she graduated cum laude from the Horace Mann School in Riverdale, New York. Together with Dr. Dallas Abbott at the LamontDoherty Earth Observatory of Columbia University, she has investigated submarine asteroid impact events, focusing on an event in the Hudson River area approximately 2300 years ago that formed the basis of her Polgar Fellowship. The results of Cagen’s research earned her semifinalist status in the 2008 Intel Science Talent Search, as well as a Second Place Grand Award in Earth Science and a First Place Special Award from the Geological Society of America at the 2008 Intel International Science and Engineering Fair. Her future plans include travel to Japan to pursue her interest in Japanese language and culture, followed by a career in scientific and engineering research. ● Harvard University, undergraduate student ● Email: [email protected] Cleo Chou 2009 Cleo is an undergraduate at Columbia University. She will be graduating in May 2010 with a major in environmental biology and a concentration in environmental science. She first began her research on the marshes of the Hudson River the summer after her freshman year as a Lamont-Doherty Earth Observatory summer intern under the guidance of Dr. Tim Kenna and Dr. Dorothy Peteet. After continuing her research with Drs. Kenna and Peteet as an Earth Institute research assistant her sophomore and junior years, Cleo is again working with Dr. Peteet this summer through the Polgar Fellowship. She is reconstructing the environmental history of Iona Island marsh by analyzing macrofossils and will be building on this research for her senior thesis. Upon the completion of her degree, Cleo plans to attend graduate school in ecology and evolution. ● Columbia University, undergraduate student ● Email: [email protected] “I was a fellow in the Early Egyptian era, around 1986” – Kathy Schmidt 6 Tibor T. Polgar Fellows Thomas Coote 2000 & 2008 Currently completing his doctorate in landscape ecology at UMass-Amherst, Tom has worked at Bard College at Simon’s Rock since 1999, teaching as an adjunct, advising thesis students, and working with students on summer research internships. He has taught at Waynesburg College and California University of Pennsylvania, built and operated a state-of-the-art recirculating fish farm in Waynesburg, PA, and has recently been a residence supervisor/visiting scientist at the Jackson Laboratory in Bar Harbor, ME. His doctoral work focuses on the phylogeny and biogeography of a relatively rare snail, Marstonia lustrica, which is protected in the state of Massachusetts. Currently, he is the director of the Berkshire Environmental Research Center in Great Barrington, MA. ● Bard College at Simon’s Rock ● Director, Berkshire Environmental Research Center ● Email: [email protected] Chris Cotroneo 2007 Chris Cotroneo is currently pursuing a Master of Arts in Biology and Environmental Science at Western Connecticut State University, with a focus on Aquatic Ecology. He is employed as a Junior Environmental Scientist at HDR. Chris’s Polgar research led to presentations at the Atlantic Estuarine Research Society spring meeting in March 2008 and the 10th Northeastern Natural History Conference in April 2008. ● HDR, Inc. ● Email: [email protected] William Dalton 2006 Since finishing his Tibor T. Polgar Fellowship, William Dalton has left academic life entirely to pursue a career as a full-time hunting and fishing guide. Currently, he is working as an Atlantic salmon and grouse/woodcock guide at the Old River Lodge on the Miramichi River in New Brunswick, Canada. In addition to guiding, he is a vendor at the W.W. Boyce Farmers’ Market in Fredericton, New Brunswick where he has been selling freshly squeezed orange juice for over 25 years. “Although I enjoyed academic life,” he says, “it really was not the right fit for me, especially when I know there are 40lb salmon in the river waiting for me to catch (and release) them.” ● Email: [email protected] Sara DeLeon 2006 Sara DeLeon is currently finishing her fourth year as a graduate student in the Department of Ecology and Evolutionary Biology at Cornell University. She received her Tibor T. Polgar Fellowship during her first summer as a graduate student, which helped finance and direct her thesis project of investigating the effects of polychlorinated biphenyls (PCBs) on birdsong. She is now finishing her fourth field season of recording bird songs and collecting blood and feather samples along the Hudson River. In the upcoming years she plans to further explore the relationship between PCBs and birdsong through captive studies. ● Cornell University ● Graduate Student, Department of Ecology and Evolutionary Biology ● Email: [email protected] ● 7 Tibor T. Polgar Fellows Sabrina Drill 1987 Sabrina Drill is the Natural Resources Advisor for UC Cooperative Extension in Los Angeles and Ventura Counties, where she conducts directed research and education in watershed management, restoration of aquatic habitats, and regional conservation planning. She is also co-authoring a curriculum about Southern California environments for English language learners. Her prior research experience includes work on the ecology of streams and wetlands in the northeastern United States, conservation genetics of endangered fishes in the American Southwest, and community based fisheries management and conservation in East African lakes. She holds a Ph.D. in Geography and a M.S. in Biology, both from UCLA, a B.S. in Biology from Virginia Polytechnic Institute and State University, and a A.A. in Natural Science from Simon’s Rock College. She has worked at the Hudson River National Estuarine Research Reserve, the Woods Hole Oceanographic Institution, Harvard University, the University of Malawi Centre for Social Research, and the Los Angeles and San Gabriel Rivers Watershed Council. As a Polgar fellow, Dr. Drill studied the zooplankton community in Tivoli Bay, a tidal bay of the Hudson River. The experience helped shape her later research throughout the US and East Africa, and her current work as she examines the effect of invasive New Zealand mudsnails on the invertebrate community in streams and riparian wetlands in southern California. ● University of California Cooperative Extension ● Natural Resources Advisor, Los Angeles and Ventura Counties ● Email: [email protected] M. E. Dueker 2005 & 2008 M. Elias Dueker is a graduate student in the Department of Earth and Environmental Sciences at the Lamont Doherty Earth Observatory of Columbia University. In 2008, he wrote a Master’s Thesis entitled “The Effect of Surface Dissolved Oxygen Gradients on Microbial Communities and Nutrient Concentrations in the Hudson River Estuary,” and in 2009 wrote a Master of Philosophy Thesis called “Assessing the Potential Marine Contribution of Inorganic Nutrients and Bacteria to Coastal Fog.” ● Lamont Doherty Earth Observatory of Columbia University ● Graduate Student, Department of Earth and Environmental Sciences; ● Email: [email protected] Anne Cooper Ellefson 2007 Anne Cooper Ellefson is currently continuing her doctorate degree in Marine and Atmospheric Sciences at Stony Brook University. After completing her undergraduate education at the University of South Carolina, graduating with a degree in chemistry and a minor in environmental studies, Anne Cooper went on to Stony Brook University to begin her doctoral work. The first summer spent at Stony Brook was funded by the Polgar Fellowship Program to research phthalate di-esters, a common plasticizer, and their metabolites in New York Harbor. This research has been continued with funding through the EPA Science to Achieve Results (STAR) fellowship. Anne Cooper hopes to graduate in 2011. ● Stony Brook University ● Doctoral Student, School of Marine and Atmospheric Sciences ● Email: [email protected] 8 Tibor T. Polgar Fellows Caroline B. Girard 2009 Caroline Girard is a graduate student at the University at Albany, SUNY, pursuing a Master’s of Science degree in Biodiversity Conservation and Policy. She received her Bachelor of Science degree in Biology with an emphasis on organismal/environmental biology from the State University of New York at New Paltz in 1998. Her passion for biodiversity and conservation was sparked by her work with wildlife as a naturalist for an environmental outreach program, as an educator for the Wildlife Conservation Society and as a professional wildlife rehabilitator for the SPCA of Monterey County, California. Her current research interests include the use of livestock for managing invasive plant species and restoring native ecosystems. ● University at Albany ● Graduate Student, Department of Biological Sciences ● Email: [email protected] Kevin Grieser 2005 After completing his Polgar Fellowship in 2005 entitled “Quantification and Characterization of Recreational Paddling on Tivoli Bays and Constitution Marsh,” Kevin Grieser accepted a position with the New York State Office of Parks, Recreation and Historic Preservation/Palisades Interstate Park Commission as a Junior Landscape Architect/Real Property Manager. In February 2007, Kevin began his current position with the New York State Department of Environmental Conservation Hudson River Estuary Program as the Riparian Buffer Coordinator through a partnership with the New York State Water Resources Institute at Cornell University. His primary focus is furthering the goals and objectives of the Hudson River Action Agenda's section on "Streams and Tributaries of the Hudson River Estuary Watershed." The majority of his work has dealt with developing and implementing a new initiative called "Trees for Tribs," focusing on replanting riparian buffers in the Hudson River Estuary Watershed. In just two years the "Trees for Tribs" initiative has been responsible for planting more than 36,000 feet of stream buffers along the estuary’s tributaries with 14,000 native trees, shrubs, and grasses. Over 90 projects have been completed to date with the help of some 1,500 volunteers. ● New York State Department of Environmental Conservation ● Riparian Buffer Coordinator, Hudson River Estuary Program ● Email: [email protected] David Griffith 2006 David Griffith hails from Ann Arbor, MI and received his B.A. in chemistry from Bowdoin College. Since then, David has spent two years teaching science at The Taft School and a year working for the Property and Environment Research Center (PERC) where he investigated the ecological role of rights-based fishery management systems. In 2007, he received a Master’s degree in environmental science from the School of Forestry and Environmental Studies at Yale University. David’s master’s thesis research, with Dr. Peter Raymond, used carbon isotope measurements to determine how carbon is cycled within the lower Hudson River estuary and how wastewater treatment plants influence these cycles. His research was funded in part through a Tibor T. Polgar Fellowship. Currently David is pursuing a Ph.D. in chemical oceanography at the Massachusetts Institute 9 Tibor T. Polgar Fellows of Technology and Woods Hole Oceanographic Institution Joint Program. His work there is broadly focused on understanding how human activities impact coastal ocean carbon cycling. In the future, David hopes to pursue a career teaching environmental chemistry and aquatic science. In his free time David enjoys playing bluegrass music, fly-fishing, and biking. ● Massachussetts Institute of Technology/Woods Hole Oceanographic Institute ● Doctoral Student, Joint Program in Oceanography ● Email: [email protected] Colin Grubel 2008 In the year since receiving the Polgar Fellowship in 2008, Colin Grubel has continued his studies at the CUNY Graduate Center and Queens College, completing his first year in the Ph.D. program. The Fellowship was instrumental in allowing him to further his research into the diet of cormorants by expanding the scope of his current field work and conducting feeding trials with captive birds. He is now continuing this work for a second year, thanks to a Graduate Fellowship from the Hudson River Foundation, which he recently received. In particular, an extended series of feeding trials is planned for the winter of 2009/10, and Colin is very excited by the insights this will offer into the biology of Double-crested Cormorants, Phalacrocorax auritus. ● City University of New York Graduate Center and Queens College ● Doctoral Student, Department of Biology ● Email: [email protected] Nancy Haley 1995 A Polgar Fellowship was very much the springboard for Nancy’s Master’s research on resource use patterns of Atlantic and shortnose sturgeon in the Hudson River estuary. Following the completion of her graduate degree program, Nancy continued to work as a fisheries biologist for the National Marine Fisheries Service (NMFS), finalizing a recovery plan for Shortnose Sturgeon and evaluating the impact of coastal development activities on other threatened and endangered species under NMFS purview. In 2000, Nancy began consulting independently as a fishery scientist from home. Her efforts included working with CoastalVision (Newport, RI) on fisheries data analyses for dredged material disposal sites studies in Buzzards Bay and Long Island Sound and marine policy analyses for NOAA’s Office of Habitat Conservation (Silver Spring, MD). More recently, Nancy has explored other passions for teaching and fitness, becoming a group fitness instructor and high school biology teacher. She lives in Acton, MA, with her husband and three boys. ● Email: [email protected] Stephanie Hanson 1998 Since completing her Polgar Fellowship, Stephanie Hanson has served as a Project Manager and Environmental Scientist for Comprehensive Environmental Inc. (CEI), a civil and environmental engineering firm providing consulting services for municipal, federal, state and private clients in the New England area. Over the past 10-years, Ms. Hanson has managed the resource area evaluation and permitting division at CEI working in a wide array of areas. Her projects have involved resource area improvement and protection, watershed restoration, water supply, stormwater, wastewater and hazardous waste. She has worked extensively on grant management as well as public education and outreach for a number of cities and towns focusing on nonpoint source pollution and drinking water related issues. Along with her ongoing project work, Ms. Hanson also serves as Director of Marketing for the firm, reaching out to new clients and bringing CEI’s services to new market areas. Ms. Hanson currently resides in Auburn, NH with her husband Andrew, daughter Jasmine, and son Luke. ● Comprehensive Environmental Inc., Project Manager/Scientist ● Email: [email protected] ● 10 Tibor T. Polgar Fellows Cornelia Harris 2009 Cornelia Harris has been an Ecology Educator at the Cary Institute of Ecosystem Studies since 2006, designing and implementing a high school, place-based curriculum focused on the Hudson River. Ms. Harris received a B.A. in Biology from Vassar College in 2000, and then taught middle school science in Baltimore, MD with Teach for America. She received her M.A. in Teaching from Johns Hopkins University, and spent several years abroad teaching in a variety of countries, from Japan to Kenya to Germany. She is currently working towards an M.S. in Biodiversity, Conservation, and Policy from the State University of New York at Albany. ● Cary Institute of Ecosystem Studies, Education Program Leader ● Email: [email protected] Drew Hopkins 1988 Following his Polgar Fellowship in the summer of 1988, Drew Hopkins completed his A.S. in Biology from Columbia-Greene Community College, winning the Natural History Student of the Year award. In 1992, he received his B.S. in Recreation Education with an Outdoor Education emphasis from SUNY Cortland, and then taught for two years at SUNY New Paltz's Ashokan Field Campus, where he used his research background to improve the overall curriculum. Drew attended Southern Oregon University where he completed an M.S. in Environmental Education in 1997, followed by Upper Valley Education Institute, where he was certified to teach science 7-12 and general elementary in both New Hampshire and Vermont. For 5 years, he taught in Proctor, VT, where he utilized his Polgar experiences to conduct various citizen science programs, like Cornell's Project Feeder Watch and The Amphibian Census, and to write scientific papers on the students' own original research. Drew was interested to note that while students at that time did not have science taught in the elementary school, about 10% of the those graduates whom he had taught went on to study science. They loved the research! In 2005 Drew completed an M.A. in School Leadership from Castleton State College in Vermont, and currently serves as principal of Webutuck Jr./Sr.High School in Dutchess County. ● Email: [email protected] Erin Horn 2007 Since participating in the Polgar Fellowship Program, Erin Horn has completed her research on the diamondback terrapins of Jamaica Bay. Currently, she is finalizing her thesis, which explores the differences among diamondback terrapins of Jamaica Bay and those from other sites. At one year posthatching, her terrapins were released to their original sites, including over 50 very large yearlings to Jamaica Bay. These releases were PIT tagged and she sincerely hopes that Dr. Russ Burke’s turtle crew comes in contact with them again. After Erin collected all of her data, she returned to the Tidewater area of Virginia, her hometown where she currently is working as a Clinical Research Coordinator for Virginia Clinical Research, contributing to the data collection of over 15 clinical trials. Although she wishes to pursue a career in conservation biology, she has found this opportunity to be both challenging and rewarding. She hopes that after the economic turmoil settles, there will be more conservation career opportunities for her to pursue that will allow her to utilize her education and the experience that the Polgar Fellowship Program helped her to receive. ● Email: [email protected] Her Polgar research taught her not only “about wetland ecology, but also how to organize and conduct a field study, and about the patience required to key out freshwater copepods!” – Sabrina Drill 11 Tibor T. Polgar Fellows David Howe 1999 & 2000 David Howe received a B.S. in Wildlife and Fisheries Conservation and an M.S. Natural Resources Conservation from the University of Massachusetts, Amherst in 2000, and 2002, respectively, under the mentorship of Francis Juanes. The following year, he worked for the Department of Ecology and Evolutionary Biology at Princeton University as an Educational Media and Information Technology Specialist, interim Teaching Lab Coordinator, and Assistant Instructor. For the 2003 academic year, he taught Physical Sciences and Biochemistry labs at Elizabeth City State University in North Carolina. Presently, as an Educational Technologist for the Program in Science Learning, David serves as a lecturer for the Department of Ecology, Evolution, and Natural Resources at Rutgers University, School of Environmental and Biological Sciences, where his primary teaching duties include Limnology and Invertebrate Zoology. ● Rutgers, the State University of New Jersey ● Educational Technology, Program in Science Learning ● Email: [email protected] George Jackman 2009 Having grown up on the south shore of Long Island, George Jackman was constantly exploring the wetlands and tidal reaches of the Great South Bay. Swimming, fishing, and hunting were the foundation of his formative years and have been instilled in him as some of his finest memories. Fish, crabs, and shellfish were plentiful and places to swim and fish abounded. Unfortunately, those special places have mostly been developed and many of the fish have since declined. Soon after high school, George entered the NYPD Police Academy and began a career in law enforcement in earnest. He worked in some of the roughest neighborhoods in Brooklyn at the time, and he was eventually promoted to the rank of lieutenant. Though he had a wonderful and adventuresome career assigned to some fine details, including patrolling the streets of NYC with the Mounted Unit via horseback, something was missing in his life. George enrolled in night classes at the local community college and found that school was dynamic and fulfilling as never before. The pursuit of his education inspired and impelled him to follow a lifelong but long forgotten dream of being a biologist. As time passed, and way turned unto way, the words of Henry David Thoreau, “Go confidently in the direction of your dreams and live the life you always imagined,” resonated with him and kindled a desire to recreate his life. Upon receiving his bachelor’s degree from Queens College, George subsequently retired from the NYPD and enrolled in the Master’s Program. He became an adjunct instructor with Queens College and the CUNY School of Professional Studies. Currently, George is in the CUNY Doctoral Program working on elemental uptake in winter flounder. His goals are to help restore and conserve fisheries, and blaze a path for his young daughter with the hopes that she will follow her educational dreams too. ● City University of New York Graduate Center and Queens College ● Doctoral Student, Department of Biology ● Email: [email protected] “The experience was one that was pivotal in developing my understanding of science. Without it I could never have become the educator (environmental, outdoor, or classroom) that I am.” – Drew Hopkins 12 Tibor T. Polgar Fellows Rebecca Jordan 1998 Dr. Rebecca Jordan received her M.Sc. and Ph.D. in Organismic and Evolutionary Biology at the University of Massachusetts. Her dissertation research investigated visually guided mating behavior in fish. Rebecca took a post-doctoral position as a Science and Technology Council Fellow at Princeton University. There she expanded her interests to animal learning in general and incorporated work with undergraduate science learning. After two years at Princeton, Rebecca took a Visiting Assistant Professor position at Elizabeth City State University as part of a partnership with the University of North Carolina at Chapel Hill. In Elizabeth City, Rebecca continued her work with fishes in the capacity of providing undergraduates with research experience, and broadened her study of science learning to incorporate informal audiences. Rebecca is currently an Assistant Professor of Environmental Education and Citizen Science in the Department of Ecology, Evolution, and Natural Resources at Rutgers University School of Environmental and Biological Sciences in New Brunswick, New Jersey. Here she works with graduate students and undergraduates in the study of learning and behavior in fishes and people. As director of the Program in Science Learning, she devotes much of her research effort to investigating public learning of science. ● Rutgers, the State University of New Jersey ● Assistant Professor, Environmental Education and Citizen Science, Department of Ecology, Evolution, and Natural Resources ● Director, Program in Science Learning ● Email: [email protected] Alexandra Konstantinovna Kanonik 2009 Born in Moscow, Russia and raised in Brooklyn, New York, Alexandra Kanonik received a B.A. in Biology from Eckerd College in St. Petersburg, Florida. While doing her undergraduate work, Alexandra gained a huge interest in herpetology and has participated in several research projects involving freshwater turtle and tortoise species. Currently, she is completing a mark-recapture study with the Diamondback Terrapins (Malaclemys terrapin) of Jamaica Bay Wildlife Refuge in Queens, NY. Her goal is to understand the demographic changes within this population from the time that this project was started by Dr. Russell L. Burke in 1998 to the present. She hopes to gain information that would be useful in assisting the management and conservation of this beautiful estuarine turtle species. ● Hofstra University ● Graduate Student, Biology Department ● Email: [email protected] Robert Kerr 1985 Robert Kerr is President of Kerr Environmental Services Corporation, located in Virginia Beach, Virginia, and provides environmental services throughout Virginia, North Carolina and Maryland. Kerr Environmental Services provides all services related to natural resource investigations, environmental due diligence, contaminant studies, stormwater management, National Environmental Policy Act (NEPA) document preparation; watershed inventories; sustainable habitat assessments and design; stormwater management and Low Impact Development design. Kerr Environmental Services is recognized as a leader in stream restoration and wetland mitigation design. Mr. Kerr received his B.S. in Biology & Limnology with a 13 Tibor T. Polgar Fellows concentration in Aquatic Sciences from SUNY at Fredonia, graduating Magna cum Laude in 1983, and his M.S. in Marine Environmental Sciences from SUNY Stony Brook in 1986. ● Kerr Environmental Services Corporation, President ● Email: [email protected] Kristen Kuhn 2003 Kristen Kuhn received a Master’s degree in Marine Biology from the University of Maine with a focus on population genetics of an anadromous fish species, the alewife (Alosa pseudoharengus). This work utilized both microsatellite and mtDNA markers to identify routes of invasion and potential sources of origin for recently introduced populations. Her Doctoral research at the University of Delaware focused on population genetics of Southern Ocean fishes. The main focus of the research was to identify both nuclear DNA (nDNA) and mitochondrial DNA (mtDNA) single nucleotide polymorphisms (SNPs) that could be used as diagnostic and identifying markers for both management and conservation purposes. Dr. Kuhn’s postdoctoral research at Yale University focuses on population genetics and phylogenetics of notothenioid fishes, endemic to the waters surrounding Antarctica. In the near-shore Antarctic marine habitats notothenioid fishes comprise over 75% of the species diversity, 91% of the abundance and 92% of the biomass. This is a pattern that is entirely unique to the Southern Ocean surrounding Antarctica. Given the dynamic history of climate change in the Southern Ocean and the associated adaptations to avoid freezing expressed in species comprising the Antarctic notothenioid adaptive radiation, a key problem is to determine the timing of notothenioid diversification relative to the paleoclimatic history of the Southern Ocean. This research explores the timing and pattern of diversification in notothenioids through the analysis of time calibrated molecular phylogenies inferred from multiple mitochondrial and single-copy nuclear genes, in addition to numerous population genetic and phylogenetic studies. She is also looking at large scale phylogenetic relationships among various groups of labroid fishes. ● Yale University ● Postdoctoral Associate, Department of Ecology and Evolutionary Biology ● Email: [email protected] Thomas R. Lake 1996 & 1997 Tom Lake is the Estuary Naturalist for the New York State Department of Environmental Conservation's Hudson River Estuary Program. He lives in Dutchess County, Wappinger Falls, at Hudson River mile 67. In addition to monitoring Bald Eagles and teaching the ecology of the estuary, he edits the Hudson River Almanac, an online natural history journal now in its 16th year. He also teaches anthropology, archaeology, and the Prehistory of the Hudson Valley at SUNY Dutchess Community College in Poughkeepsie. The research opportunities afforded by the Tibor T. Polgar Fellowships have provided the foundation for subsequent studies in both natural history and the ancestral relationship between people and the Hudson River watershed. ● New York State Department of Environmental Conservation ● Estuary Naturalist, Hudson River Estuary Program ● Email: [email protected] “It is not easy being a terrapin. I bet if one of our girls could talk she would tell a tale that sounds very much like a story of an alien abduction.” – Alexandra Kanonik 14 Tibor T. Polgar Fellows Karin E. Limburg 1987 & 1990 Karin Limburg is an Associate Professor in the Department of Environmental and Forest Biology at the College of Environmental Science and Forestry, State University of New York. She works at the interface of several disciplines, including fisheries science, ecosystems science, ecological economics, and biogeochemistry. A good deal of her research focuses on fisheries and subwatersheds in the Hudson River estuary, but she also conducts research in the Great Lakes drainage, the Baltic Sea, and the Colorado River. She teaches courses in fisheries science, watershed ecology, and advanced graduate seminars. Karin is perhaps the only Polgar alum who personally knew Tibor T. Polgar. She held two Polgar fellowships while working on her doctorate at Cornell University, and has mentored or co-mentored four Polgar fellows. ● SUNY College of Environmental Science and Forestry ● Associate Professor, Department of Environmental and Forest Biology ● Email: [email protected] ● Web: www.esf.edu/EFB/limburg/ Sara Lupton 2007 Sara Lupton received her B.S. degree in Chemistry from Northland College, Ashland, WI in May 2005. While there, she received the Outstanding Undergraduate Chemistry Award from the Lake Superior Section of the American Chemical Society and worked as a laboratory/teaching assistant for the general chemistry labs. After graduating, Sara entered into the University at Buffalo, Department of Chemistry graduate program, where she currently is a Ph.D. candidate and will be finishing her degree in May of 2010. While at the University at Buffalo, she has worked as a teaching assistant for general chemistry and honors general chemistry, as well as a research assistant for Dr. Troy Wood and Dr. Diana Aga. She received the Mattern-Tyler Teaching award (Fall 2006-Spring 2007) from the Department of Chemistry and the Mark Diamond Research Fund Grant (April 2008-March 2009) from the Graduate Student Association at the University at Buffalo, as well as the Tibor T. Polgar Fellowship (Summer 2007) from the Hudson River Foundation. Her current research encompasses several different areas within environmental analytical chemistry, including human metabolism of polybrominated diphenyl ethers (PBDEs), analysis of hydroxylated PBDE metabolites by liquid chromatography mass spectrometry (LC/MS), and the analysis of unknown contaminants by bioassays, LC/MS, and gas chromatography mass spectrometry (GC/MS). ● University at Buffalo ● Doctoral Candidate, Department of Chemistry ● Email: [email protected] Sean Madden 2003 After graduating from the University of Vermont with a degree in wildlife biology, Sean took an AmeriCorps position with Riverkeeper, developing classroom outreach programs about Hudson River fisheries and beginning a decade long interest and affection for the Hudson River. Sean then took to the river on board the Hudson River Sloop Clearwater, spending three years sharing his enthusiasm for the river with audiences of all ages. Ready for a new chapter, Sean enrolled in the University at Albany’s Biodiversity, Conservation, and Policy graduate program. The Polgar Fellowship he received helped to fund his study of the relationship between land use and water quality in the Ten Mile Creek watershed (Rensselaerville, Albany County, NY) and a comparison between the rural Ten Mile Creek and the urban Patroon Creek (Albany, Albany County, NY). After graduating, Sean spent a year putting his master’s degree to use teaching zoology and environmental studies at Hudson Valley Community College before coming to the New York State Department of Environmental Conservation. While with DEC, Sean has been responsible for evaluating fish and wildlife impacts at numerous hazardous waste sites throughout New York State. Currently, Sean is responsible for coordinating studies investigating the effects of PCBs 15 Tibor T. Polgar Fellows on Hudson River biota as part of the Hudson River Natural Resource Damage Assessment. ● New York State Department of Environmental Conservation ● Biologist 1 (Ecology), Bureau of Habitat, Division of Fish, Wildlife & Marine Resources ● Email: [email protected] Christopher Marchesi 1991 Christopher Marchesi received his B.S. degree in Natural Resources Management & Engineering in 1989 from the University of Connecticut. In 1992, he completed his M.S. in Environmental Science at Yale University. Subsequently, he worked in environmental consulting firms and in 1996 founded Triton Environmental, Inc. where he has served as president since. Triton Environmental is a full-service firm specializing in environmental consulting and engineering services. Triton is committed to practical solutions to environmental challenges experienced by industrial and manufacturing operations, developers, landowners, municipalities, and state and federal governments throughout the United States. ● Triton Environmental Inc., President ● Email: [email protected] ● Margaret E. McArdle 1998 Margaret McArdle is currently a Senior Scientist in Exponent’s EcoSciences practice. Ms. McArdle has 10 years of experience in evaluating the effects of heavy metals and organic contaminants in aquatic, wetland and terrestrial systems to ecological receptors. She has conducted numerous ecological risk assessments in compliance with state and federal regulatory requirements. Ms. McArdle has worked on Superfund, RCRA, and state-led hazardous waste site projects across the country. She specializes in analysis of toxicity test data and field assessment data as well as developing conceptual models, toxicity reference values for aquatic life and wildlife, and wildlife exposure models for ecological risk assessments. Her other areas of expertise include endocrine disruption in aquatic life and the bioavailability of contaminants present in sediments and surface water. In her graduate research, Ms. McArdle performed chronic laboratory exposures and field studies to assess estrogenic effects (a form of endocrine disruption) and other effects of organic pollutants on fish. Ms. McArdle is a member of the Society of Environmental Toxicology and Chemistry (SETAC) and a past board member of the North Atlantic Chapter of SETAC. She is a member and past chairperson of the Education Committee of the Licensed Site Professionals Association. She is an active member of the Massachusetts Department of Environmental Protection’s Ecological Risk Assessment Workgroup. Ms. McArdle holds a M.S. in marine environmental sciences from Stony Brook University/SUNY and a B.S. in zoology from the University of Rhode Island. ● Exponent, Senior Scientist ● Email: [email protected] Richard McBride 1994 Richard McBride is a research biologist at NOAA Fisheries’ “Northeast Fisheries Science Center.” In 2006, he became the Branch Chief for the Center’s “Population Biology Branch,” which has programs located in Woods Hole, MA, (Fish Biology Program, Food Web Dynamics Program) and Narragansett, RI (Apex Predator Investigation). These programs pursue basic and applied research on the biology and ecology of fishes in the North Atlantic Ocean. Research products from the Branch are used in original research publications, as data in stock assessment models, and for management advice. The principal species of interest for such investigations are groundfishes (cods, hakes, and flounders), pelagic fishes (mackerel, herring), elasmobranchs (sharks, skates, and rays), and select invertebrates (surfclam, squid, and 16 Tibor T. Polgar Fellows northern shrimp). Additionally, feeding data analyses and trophic modeling studies investigate ecosystemlevel processes and management. Dr. McBride’s own research interests include fish population dynamics (i.e., abundance, distribution, and subpopulation structure of fishes), and life history (i.e., age, growth, and reproduction). He has worked with a variety of commercial, recreational, and unexploited species, in tropical, subtropical, temperate, and boreal regions. He received his B.S. from Eckerd College (Biology), M.S. from Stony Brook University (Marine Science), and Ph. D. from Rutgers University (Ecology & Evolution). Prior to joining NOAA Fisheries, Dr. McBride spent 12 years as a scientist with the Florida Marine Research Institute (now known as the Fish & Wildlife Research Institute of the Florida Fish & Wildlife Conservation Commission) in St. Petersburg, Florida. ● National Oceanic and Atmospheric Administration, National Marine Fisheries Service ● Research Biologist, Northeast Fisheries Science Center ● Email: [email protected] Catherine A. McGlynn 1999 Catherine McGlynn received her Ph.D. in 2006 from the Department of Ecology and Evolution at the State University of New York at Stony Brook. Her dissertation focused on the effects of Phragmites australis and Lythrum salicaria on native plants, small mammals and birds in Hudson River freshwater tidal wetlands. Since her graduation Catherine has assisted with the update of Significant Coastal Fish and Wildlife Habitat (New York State Department of Environmental Conservation/New York State Department of State) boundaries, worked as a habitat mapper for Hudsonia, Ltd. (2008-2009) and has been the Volunteer Coordinator for the Hudson River Submerged Aquatic Vegetation Project (New York State Department of Environmental Conservation / Hudson River National Estuarine Research Reserve/Cornell Institute for Resource Information Sciences/Cary Institute of Ecosystem Studies) (2007 to present). Catherine served as Guest Editor of the Final Reports of the Tibor T. Polgar Fellowship Program in 2007. ● Email: [email protected] Sarah McGrath 2007 Sarah McGrath graduated cum laude from Columbia University with a Bachelor of Arts in Environmental Biology in 2008. Her Polgar Fellowship research provided the basis for her senior thesis on microbial ecology in the Hudson River, which was completed in late 2007. After graduation, Sarah continued her study of the Hudson at the Lamont-Doherty Earth Observatory, focusing on sewageindicating microorganisms and bioaerosols in areas of human contact with river water. Sarah has shifted her career focus from scientific research to developing expertise in international environmental policy and sustainable business practices. She has researched China's environmental issues for a major foreign policy think tank, and currently works at an environmental marketing consultancy. Sarah resides in the New York City area. ● Email: [email protected] Daria Merwin 2002 Daria E. Merwin (Ph.D., Stony Brook University, 2009) is Project Director at the Institute for Long Island Archaeology. Following background research undertaken as a Polgar Fellow, she directed two seasons of underwater archaeological field investigations in Croton Bay and off Sandy Hook, searching for submerged evidence of early human occupation in the New York Bight. Stone artifacts dating between approximately 4000 and 8000 years old were recovered from the banks of the now-drowned Hudson River in New Jersey, while more recent remains (roughly 2000 to 4000 years old) were found in Croton Bay, suggesting that beneath the river’s surface lies a record of a lengthy and rich prehistoric past. Since 2002, Daria has also been part of a multi-institutional team investigating numerous shipwrecks and 17 Tibor T. Polgar Fellows other archaeological sites in the Hudson River that were discovered during benthic mapping between New York City and Troy. ● Institute for Long Island Archaeology, Project Director ● Email: [email protected] Sarah Mount 2009 Sarah Mount is anticipated to graduate with a Bachelor's degree in Biology from Bard College in December, 2009. She received her Associate's Degree from Bard High School Early College in 2007. Her research interests are in aquatic ecology, invasive ecology, and restoration ecology. During her current summer as a Polgar Fellow, she is working on a project investigating interactions between American eels (Anguilla rostrata), the native spinycheek crayfish (Orconectes limosus), and the invasive rusty crayfish (O. rusticus). In the summer of 2008, she worked on a project looking at the impacts of an eel restoration project on the other organisms in the stream, specifically other fish, crayfish, and aquatic macroinvertebrates. During her time at Bard, she also worked on projects studying the effects of the invasive plant garlic mustard on human risk of tick-borne diseases, and caste determination in acorn ants. ● Bard College, undergraduate student ● Email: [email protected] Steven B. Nack 1986 As the son of a Hudson River commercial fisherman/environmentalist (and a commercial fisherman himself), it was only natural that Steve Nack would be interested in fisheries of the Hudson. In 1986, he was the recipient of a Polgar Fellowship to study spawning and nursery habitats of largemouth bass in the Stockport Component of the Hudson River National Estuarine Research Reserve.” Upon the conclusion of the Fellowship, Steve was approached and hired as a research support specialist by a Cornell University investigator, who was interested in expanding his original Polgar research. After completion of this research project, he continued to work for another Cornell researcher investigating Hudson River Atlantic and shortnose sturgeon. Steve currently works as a Natural Resource Specialist for the Columbia County Soil and Water Conservation District and continues to work and consult with various government and academic agencies to gain a better understanding of Hudson River fisheries. ● Columbia County Soil and Water Conservation District ● Email: [email protected] David Nemazie 1987 David Nemazie received a B.S. (1988) in Environmental Science from SUNY at Purchase College and a M.S. (1991) in Marine Estuarine Environmental Sciences while studying the ecology of gelatinous zooplankton through the University of Maryland College Park. He has extensive experience in aquatic research, science and policy interface, university administration, partnership development, and public relations. He has developed new partnerships with the public, private, and non-profit sector, locally as well as internationally. Mr. Nemazie is passionate about environmental science: both communicating its relevance to the public and its impact on the decision-making process. He currently serves as the Associate Vice President for External Affairs with the University of Maryland Center for Environmental Science. In this capacity he represents UMCES on many state-wide initiatives such as the Governor’s Chesapeake Bay Workgroup and Cabinet, BayStat, and the State Legislature. ● University of Maryland Center for Environmental Science, Associate Vice President for External Affairs ● Email: [email protected] 18 Tibor T. Polgar Fellows Jonelle Orridge 2008 Jonelle Orridge is a fifth-year doctoral student in the Ecology, Evolution and Animal Behavior sub-division of the Biology program at the Graduate School of the City University of New York. Jonelle received her Bachelor's of Science from St. John's University and an en route Master's degree in Biology at the CUNY Graduate Center. She has been instructing laboratories for introductory courses in biology for the last five years. Jonelle was a 2008 Polgar Fellow and has gone on to receive two CUNY GK-12 fellowships for 2008 and 2009. She is presently developing an aquatic ecosystems course for a CUNY College Now Authentic Research Module for 10th and 11th grade high school students based on her research on clam shrimp. ● City University of New York Graduate Center ● Doctoral Candidate, Ecology, Evolution and Animal Behavior Program, Biology Department, Queens College ● Email: [email protected] Tara Parsons 1991 Tara Parsons is an artist who lives and works in New York City. She creates installations, sculpture, and participatory art projects. Her work challenges audiences to become part of the creation process, and engages viewers through action. Thematically she draws upon her own experiences and reacts to an inner and outer emotional life that often delves into current political, socio-economic, and/or environmental issues. Despite underlying serious themes, the work plays with a lighter, more amusing duality. She has presented participatory projects in DUMBO, Brooklyn, on Governor’s Island in New York Harbor, and in Grand Central Terminal. Parsons has shown her work at Washington Square Windows, White Box Annex, and Denise Bibro in Manhattan, McCaig Welles and Dam Stuhltrager in Brooklyn, and places further afield such as Rochester Contemporary in Rochester, NY, The Annenberg Center in Philadelphia, PA, Aljira in Newark, NJ, and the Medizinhistorisches Museum der Charite, in Berlin, Germany. She received her MFA from Pratt Institute and her BA from Bard College. ● Email: [email protected] ● Web: www.taraparsons.com Shahriar Caesar Rahman 2009 Currently, Shahriar Rahman is finishing his undergraduate work in Biology at Brooklyn College. His interests include herpetology with a special interest in the natural history of snake and turtle species and conservation, as well as the interactions between invasive and native species. His current research at Jamaica Bay Wildlife Refuge focuses on understanding the potential negative effects of nest protectors on hatchling Diamondback Terrapins (Malaclemys terrapin). By testing different designs that have been used in previous studies, Shahriar plans to provide a better understanding of the impacts these devices may have on conservation efforts pertaining to turtles. In addition, he works on a continuing study dealing with the effects of invasive Red-eared sliders (Trachemys scripta elegans) on the native Painted turtle (Chrysemys sp.) population of Alley Pond Environmental Center in Queens, NY. ● Brooklyn College, undergraduate student ● Email: [email protected] 19 Tibor T. Polgar Fellows Peter Raymond 1993 Peter Raymond received his B.A. in Environmental Chemistry, with a minor in Biology, from Marist College in 1993. After two years as a research assistant for Dr. Jon Cole at the Cary Institute of Ecosystem Studies, Peter went on to complete his Ph.D in Marine Biogeochemistry at the Virginia Institute of Marine Science of the College of William and Mary. Dr. Raymond served as a Post-Doctoral Scientist with the Ecosystems Center of the Marine Biological Laboratory in Woods Hole, MA and the Woods Hole Oceanographic Institution before arriving at Yale University. Currently, Dr. Raymond is an Associate Professor in the School of Forestry and Environmental Studies at Yale. His lab’s research focuses on the biogeochemistry of natural systems. In particular, they are interested in the carbon and nitrogen cycles within aquatic systems, often utilizing the watershed approach and natural isotopes, to determine major sources, sinks, and ages of various carbon and nitrogen pools, in the natural environment. ● Yale University ● Associate Professor, School of Forestry and Environmental Studies ● Email: [email protected] Elizabeth Reichheld 1991 Elizabeth Reichheld has been fortunate to be among those in on the “ground floor” of developing watershed protection programming for the New York City Department of Environmental Protection’s Bureau of Water Supply. Her role has been in stream and floodplain management, as the Program Manager for the Stream Management Program (SMP). This program works to facilitate the long term stewardship of streams and floodplains in the West of Hudson NYC Watershed by partnering with local agencies to design and implement projects and plans that address not only water quality for the City’s needs, but also integrate the enhancement of fisheries habitat, ecological integrity and infrastructure protection and reduction of flood hazard risks wherever possible. Elizabeth graduated from Bowdoin College in 1984 with a Bachelor’s degree in biochemistry and environmental studies, and went on to earn a Master’s degree in Forest Science at Yale University in 1992. In between, she worked in the environmental nonprofit arena in Washington, D.C. and in environmental education in Maine. She moved to the NYCDEP in 1992, settled in Woodstock, NY, and has been civically active on town zoning and comprehensive planning committees, helping develop a local watercourse and wetland protection law, and serving on the Board of the Woodstock Land Conservancy for several years. Elizabeth has a daughter, Leah, who is 5 years old, and whenever she gets the chance, she can be found working in her garden or on her home, or exploring wilderness by foot or canoe. ● New York City Department of Environmental Protection ● Director, Stream Management Program ● Email: [email protected] Audrey Reifler 1999 Audrey received a Polgar Fellowship while working on a B.A. degree in Community, Regional, and Environmental Studies at Bard College. Working with Professor Christopher Lindner, she undertook a faunal analysis of macroremains from the Tufano Site in Greene County, New York, to investigate the importance of riverine resources, specifically Hudson River sturgeon species, to Native Americans during the time period immediately preceding agriculture in the region. Audrey continued her studies at Bard, obtaining a M.S. degree in Environmental Studies in 2004. Her unpublished thesis, Prehistoric Hudson Valley Riverine Adaptation: A Use-Wear Analysis of Petalas Blades to Explore Their Proposed Role as Sturgeon-Processing Tools, continues the research supported by awards she received from the Hudson River Foundation and the Educational Foundation of America. Audrey has been the Board Administrator and Grants Manager for the Friends of Clermont since 2007 and serves as 20 Tibor T. Polgar Fellows co-editor of their membership publication, Views from Clermont. Previously, she worked as an Operations Manager for Hudson River Heritage, Rhinebeck and as a Project Manager for Ecosystems Strategies, Poughkeepsie. She lives in Catskill, NY. ● Friends of Clermont, Board Administrator and Grants Manager ● Email: [email protected] Hudson Roditi 1994 Dr. Hudson Roditi is Director of the Urban Advantage Middle School Science Initiative at the American Museum of Natural History, where he coordinates collaboration among 8 science-rich cultural institutions, 205 science teachers, 129 schools, and the NYC Department of Education. He has worked extensively with The GLOBE Program as a workshop facilitator and designer, and as Regional Director of 18 GLOBE countries in Latin America and the Caribbean. He has also taught inquiry-based science courses for educators at Bank Street College. He received his degree in Oceanography from the State University of New York at Stony Brook. ● American Museum of Natural History ● Director, Urban Advantage Middle School Science Initiative ● Email: [email protected] Michael Rubbo 1998 Dr. Rubbo is the Director of Environmental Stewardship at Teatown Lake Reservation, an environmental non-profit, where he oversees the management of Teatown’s 834-acre preserve and directs its scientific research program. Mike received his Ph.D. in Biology from The Pennsylvania State University in 2004, his M.S. in Biology from the University of Louisiana at Lafayette in 2000 and his B.S. from the SUNY- College of Environmental Science and Forestry in 1995. He also held a post-doctoral appointment at the Virginia Polytechnic Institute and State University. Dr. Rubbo’s research has focused on the ecology of vernal pool ecosystems. He has authored numerous articles on ecology and conservation in international scientific journals as well as in the popular press. Mike has also previously worked as an environmental consultant where he specialized in biodiversity assessments and conservation planning. ● Teatown Lake Reservation, Director of Environmental Stewardship ● Email: [email protected] Jennifer Samson 1997 Dr. Samson earned her Ph.D. in Biological Sciences from Rutgers University, Newark, NJ, in 2002 where she conducted ecotoxicology-based independent research. She followed her graduate work with a two-year National Research Council funded Post-doctoral Fellowship at the National Marine Fisheries Services' James J. Howard Marine Science Laboratory at Sandy Hook, NJ. Her research investigated the condition of young-of-the-year bluefish from two estuaries (Hackensack River-contaminated and Great Bay- relatively pristine) to identify adverse impacts of pollution to essential fish habitat and understand the role of habitat quality on fish health. Jennifer Samson obtained her Master’s Degree from Florida Institute of Technology in Melbourne, FL, studying the effects of teratogenic (embryonic) exposure of methyl mercury on early development of the zebra fish, and was also Principal Investigator in numerous other studies to assess impacts from pollutants to fish species. Her work has been published in several research journals, including Aquatic Toxicology 21 Tibor T. Polgar Fellows and Marine Environmental Research and Journal, among others. Jennifer's experiences in academia, government, and industry have been instrumental in her current position as Science Director for Clean Ocean Action where she uses her skills and expertise in marine science to advocate for the protection of the marine ecosystem. ● Clean Ocean Action, Science Director ● Email: [email protected] Fred Scharf 1995 & 1996 Fred received a Bachelor of Science in Biology/Marine Science from the State University of New York at Stony Brook in 1994. He started his fisheries career at the Marine Sciences Research Center assisting with a bluefish research project in the lower Hudson River that was partially supported by the Hudson River Foundation. He then moved on to the Department of Forestry and Wildlife Management at the University of Massachusetts, Amherst and received his MS degree in 1997. It was during his M.S. degree that Fred received a Polgar Fellowship to study bluefish predator-prey relationships in the Hudson River. After finishing his M.S., he took a job as a fisheries biologist for the Coastal Fisheries Division of Texas Parks and Wildlife. He returned to UMass, Amherst in 1998 for a Ph.D. and conducted most of his dissertation research at the James J. Howard Marine Sciences Laboratory in Sandy Hook, NJ. His Ph.D. work focused on size-dependent behavioral interactions between piscivorous fishes and schooling forage fishes. Beginning in 2001, Fred started a National Research Council postdoctoral fellowship at the Howard Laboratory. In January of 2003, he joined the faculty of the Department of Biology and Marine Biology at the University of North Carolina at Wilmington. He is currently an Associate Professor and teaches zoology, fisheries biology, population ecology, and biostatistics. His research projects include an examination of recruitment processes in age-0 juvenile red drum, estimation of fishing mortality rates in southern flounder, quantifying consumption rates of red drum and the potential for impact on blue crab mortality, and determining batch fecundity and spawning frequency of black sea bass and red porgy in the US South Atlantic. Fred has been a member of the American Fisheries Society since 1994 and is currently the President of the Tidewater Chapter of AFS. ● University of North Carolina Wilmington ● Associate Professor, Department of Biology and Marine Biology ● Email: [email protected] Alec Schmidt 2006 The summer after completing his Polgar Fellowship research on banded killifish, Alec Schmidt was granted an internship in the organic chemistry laboratory in Bard College at Simon's Rock where he was responsible for synthesizing transcyclooctene. In the summer of 2008, as an intern at the Wolf Hollow wildlife rehabilitation center in Friday Harbor, Washington, he learned to care for many interesting animals, including bald eagles, harbor seals, and river otters. Alec wrote his thesis about fluid dynamics and fish locomotion entitled "My Fish is Swim: Analysis of Fish Locomotion through Fluid Dynamics, Physiology and Applied Robotics" before graduating magna cum laude with a dual bachelor's degree in biology and chemistry from Bard College at Simon's Rock in May 2009. Alec is currently applying to graduate schools for Ph.D. programs in functional anatomy and zoology, and eventually wishes to teach at the university level. ● Email: [email protected] “Although I am an artist now, I do think fondly of my time doing field research, and slowly, certain environmental issues have crept back into my artwork.” – Tara Parsons 22 Tibor T. Polgar Fellows Kathleen A. Schmidt 1985 Kathleen Schmidt has been a scientific illustrator for the last 30 years. She originally got a dual M.S. in Entomology and Scientific Illustration from the University of Connecticut. Kathy worked for the American Museum of Natural History for seven years and then did free-lance illustration and also entomological work for Cornell, Hudsonia, and many others. She is currently illustrating A Field Guide to the Land Snails of New York State with authors Kenneth Hotopp (Appalachian Conservation Biology) and Timothy Pearce (Assistant Curator, Department of Mollusks, Carnegie Museum of Natural History). She and her husband, fisheries biologist Robert Schmidt, and are also slowly compiling a book, the working title of which is Larval Fishes of the Hudson River Drainage. ● Email: [email protected] Karl Schoeberl 1987 Karl Schoeberl is currently Director of Environmental Affairs at Central Hudson Gas & Electric Corporation. Karl has enjoyed his career as an environmental professional for 22 years. He has been at Central Hudson for 17 years and previously worked in environmental consulting. He received an AAS in Fisheries & Wildlife Technology from SUNY Cobleskill, a B.S. in Natural Resources from Cornell University and recently earned an M.A. in Biology at SUNY New Paltz. Karl is a native New Yorker, now settled in the Hudson Valley where he enjoys hunting, fishing, hiking, camping and watching his kids play sports. He is married and has two wonderful boys, who make sure he stays on the go! ● Central Hudson Gas & Electric Corporation, Director of Environmental Affairs ● Email: [email protected] or [email protected] David R. Seebaugh 2004 & 2007 David Seebaugh holds a B.A. in Biology from Skidmore College, an M.A. in Biology from Hofstra University, an M.S. in Environmental Science from The College of Staten Island/CUNY and is currently a Ph.D. candidate in Biology (Ecology, Evolutionary Biology and Behavior) at The Graduate Center/CUNY. His research interests include factors that influence the transfer of metals (e.g., cadmium and mercury) along estuarine food chains as well as pollutant-induced changes in the digestive physiology (e.g., gut residence time, digestive enzymes activities and gut pH) of the daggerblade grass shrimp, Palaemonetes pugio. ● The Graduate Center/City University of New York ● Doctoral Candidate, Department of Biology ● Email: [email protected] “…the funding of this original project as well as the opportunity to publish the work as part of a dedicated journal issue certainly helped set the stage for a productive and fruitful line of research.” – William G. Wallace 23 Tibor T. Polgar Fellows Rafael Sierra-Castro 2005 & 2006 Born and raised in San Juan, Puerto Rico, Rafael Sierra-Castro completed a dual undergraduate degree in Environmental Sciences and Chemistry at Universidad Metropolitana in San Juan under the NSF funded Model Institute for Excellence (MIE) scholarship, studying the ecology and biodiversity of the Karst topography of Puerto Rico, and conducting research in atmospheric and environmental sciences in the United States and Japan. After finishing his undergraduate studies he interned at Brookhaven National Laboratory studying the effect of CO2 and O3 on soybeans as well as the distribution and localization of tiger salamander egg masses. After enrolling in the graduate program at Hofstra University, he was granted the Public Service Leaders Scholarship by the US Department of Agriculture Natural Resources Conservation Service, where his research (supported by the Hudson River Foundation) focused on the diet of the diamondback terrapins (Malaclemys terrapins) at Jamaica Bay Wildlife Refuge in Brooklyn. In 2006 he enrolled in an environmental management master’s program in Conservation and Management of Natural Resources at the Universidad Metropolitana in San Juan. Currently, Rafael is working on the comparative study of population trends, abundance and ecological niche interaction between the red eared slider turtle (Trachemys scripta scripta) and Puerto Rican slider (Trachemys stejnegeri stejnegeri) at Humacao Wildlife Refuge and Botanical Garden of San Juan. He ultimately hopes to pursue a Ph.D. in Wildlife and Fishery Conservation. ● Universidad Metropolitana ● Email: [email protected] Jose Simoes 1997 As a biology student at Fairfield University, Jose Simoes was granted a Tibor T. Polgar Fellowship to study the diamondback terrapins of Piermont Marsh. Working for the Fairfield Physics Department, he conducted research on far-infrared semiconductors for the European Space Agency. In 1998 he graduated Suma Cum Laude with a BS in Biology and minors in Physics and Environmental Studies. A Barry M. Goldwater Scholar, he earned the Bellarmine Medal for graduating with the highest grade point average and was inducted into the Phi Beta Kappa, Alpha Epsilon Delta and Pi Sigma Pi honor societies. He went on to study Environmental Planning at the University of Virginia where he worked for the Institute for Environmental Negotiation. There, he coordinated workshops and conducted research for the Chesapeake Bay Commission Bi-State Blue Crab Advisory Committee to develop joint Maryland-Virginia fisheries management of the blue crab. He graduated with his Master’s in Urban and Environmental Planning in 2000. Mr. Simoes joined the Rockland County Planning Department in 2000, where he helped found and is currently president of the Rockland Riverfront Communities Council (RRCC). As the Coordinator of the organization, he planned a Greenway Trail along Rockland’s riverfront and developed the Rockland County Hudson River Valley Greenway Compact. Since 2003, he has been the Town Planner for the Town of Clarkstown. ● Town of Clarkstown, NY ● Email: [email protected] Karen M. Stainbrook 2000 Karen Stainbrook received her B.S. from Unity College (Unity, Maine) in 1998 and her M.S. from SUNY College of Environmental Science and Forestry in 2004. She has worked as a Fish & Wildlife Technician for the New York State Department of Environmental Conservation and done research for the SUNY Research Foundation. Following the completion of her master’s, Karen worked in Zion, IL for the University of Illinois’s Illinois Natural History Survey as an Assistant Research Scientist. She returned to New York in 2008 where she served as an Aquatic Ecosystem Consultant for The Nature Conservancy 24 Tibor T. Polgar Fellows Eastern New York. She currently is a Research Scientist for Watershed Assessment Associates, LLC in Schenectady, NY. Karen’s research interests include ecosystem based research, aquatic insect taxonomy, fisheries, biotic indicators, human impact on aquatic ecosystems, ecological economics, and the application of geographic information systems to natural resource research. ● Watershed Assessment Associates, LLC., Research Scientist ● Email: [email protected] Joseph C. Steinbacher 2001 Joe Steinbacher is a Regional Manager at Versar, Inc., where Tibor Polgar worked as the Technical Director of Versar’s Ecological Sciences and Analysis Division from 1979 to 1986. As Regional Manager, Mr. Steinbacher is responsible for financial and supervisory project management and execution for technical programs at various government agencies. His primary areas of specialization include: emergency response, sustainability, natural resource liability, ecological restoration and ecotoxicology. Before joining Versar, Mr. Steinbacher worked for the National Oceanic and Atmospheric Administration (NOAA), where he managed Natural Resource Damage Assessment (NRDA) cases at some of the largest oil spills and Superfund Sites in the country. For his efforts, he was awarded the Department of Commerce Bronze Medal and the United States Coast Guard Meritorious Team Commendation. He is a Leadership in Energy and Environmental Design (LEED) accredited professional and certified by the Project Management Institute (PMI) as a Project Management Professional. Mr. Steinbacher is an accomplished author and speaker, having presented over 30 papers at numerous national and international conferences, seminars and symposia. ● Versar, Inc., Regional Manager and LEED AP ● Email: [email protected] Laura Steinberg 1992 Dr. Steinberg is Dean of the LCS College of Engineering and Computer Science at Syracuse University. She holds appointments in the Department of Civil and Environmental Engineering College and in the Public Administration Department of the Maxwell School of Citizenship and Public Affairs. She received a B.S.E. in Civil and Urban Engineering from the University of Pennsylvania and an M.S. and Ph.D. in Environmental Engineering from Duke University. Prior to joining Syracuse University, Dr. Steinberg was Professor and Department Chair of Environmental and Civil Engineering at Southern Methodist University, and Assistant and Associate Professor of Civil and Environmental Engineering at Tulane University. Dr. Steinberg’s research focuses on environmental modeling, risk assessment, and natural hazards management. She investigated the environmental and infrastructure impacts of Hurricane Katrina in 2005 and the industrial infrastructure impacts of the devastating earthquake of 1999 in Turkey. In 2005, Dr. Steinberg held joint appointments as a Faculty Scholar in the Critical Infrastructure Protection Group of the U.S. Department of Homeland Security, and as a Visiting Scientist at George Washington University in the Institute of Crisis, Disaster, and Risk Management. Dr. Steinberg is a member of the EPA Science Advisory Board, Drinking Water Committee. She is an Associate Editor of the Natural Hazards Review, and was formerly Associate Editor of the Journal of Environmental Engineering and the Journal of Water Resources Planning and Management. Dr. Steinberg has consulted to the Environmental Protection Agency on technology diffusion, the Department of Energy on risk assessment, and Los Alamos National Labs and the Department of Homeland Security on critical infrastructure protection. ● Syracuse University ● Dean, LCS College of Engineering and Computer Science ● Email: [email protected] 25 Tibor T. Polgar Fellows David G. Stormer 2008 David is an ardent steward of the Hudson River and has been since he was a child growing up fishing and boating on the Hudson River and its tributaries. After receiving a bachelor of science from SUNY New Paltz, David joined Americorps and dedicated his service to the conservation of the Hudson River estuary. Following his work with Americorps, he worked as a marine fisheries biologist for the Florida Fish and Wildlife Conservation Commission in St. Petersburg. David completed his Master’s Degree at Auburn University where he studied the population dynamics and assessed the status of the shoal bass (Micropterus cataractae). David returned to the northeast in 2007 to begin his Ph.D. research at the University of Massachusetts, Amherst. As a 2008 Tibor T. Polgar Fellow, David studied juvenile bluefish (Pomatomus saltatrix) growth and condition during the critical period of summer residency in the lower Hudson River. As the recipient of an American Fisheries Society travel award, David recently presented the results of his fellowship research at meetings of the American Society of Ichthyologists and Herpetologists and the Southern New England Division of the American Fisheries Society. David was recently awarded a Hudson River Graduate Fellowship to continue his study of juvenile bluefish ecology. David’s self described ‘Get Grit’ attitude and strong work ethic will serve the Hudson River Foundation’s mission well in the effort to conserve and better understand this extraordinary resource. ● University of Massachusetts, Amherst ● Doctoral Student, Department of Natural Resources Conservation ● Email: [email protected] Lisa Suatoni 1996 Lisa Suatoni is a senior scientist in the oceans program at the Natural Resources Defense Council. She works on a variety of topics including fisheries, marine-ecosystem based management, climate change impacts on marine ecosystems, and ocean acidification. Dr. Suatoni has a master’s degree in Environment Studies from the Yale School of Forestry and Environmental Studies and a Ph.D. in Ecology and Evolutionary Biology from Yale University. Her scientific research focused on the rapid evolution of cadmium resistance in an aquatic oligochaete and speciation and the evolution of reproductive isolation. ● Natural Resources Defense Council, Senior Scientist ● Email: [email protected] Pamela Templer 1995 Pamela Templer is currently an Assistant Professor in the Department of Biology at Boston University. Her lab focuses on ecosystem ecology and the influence that plant-microbial interactions have on carbon exchange and nutrient cycling, retention and loss. She is particularly interested in the impacts that human activities, such as fossil fuel combustion, humaninduced climate change and land use change have on forest ecosystems. Her lab currently examines a variety of nitrogen sources including rain, snow, fog water and anthropogenic nitrogen deposition and work in a variety of natural and managed ecosystems. They currently work in temperate forests of the northeastern United States, redwood forests of California and tropical rainforests in Puerto Rico. Before arriving at Boston University, Pamela completed her Ph.D. at Cornell University and the Institute of Ecosystem Studies in 2001. From there, she went to the University of California Berkeley for a postdoctoral fellowship (2001-2005) in the labs of Drs. Whendee Silver and Mary Firestone. For her postdoc, she worked in the Luquillo Forest of Puerto Rico to understand the impacts of plant-microbial interactions on rainforest nitrogen retention and loss. ● Boston University ● Assistant Professor, Department of Biology ● Email: [email protected] ● Web: http://people.bu.edu/ptempler 26 Tibor T. Polgar Fellows Craig Thompson 1999 Craig Thompson received his undergraduate degree in ecology at the University of California San Diego in 1993. Upon graduation, he immediately began a six-year nomadic journey through a variety of ecological and conservation oriented field projects, working in California, Oregon, South Dakota, New York, and Colorado. In 1999, he entered graduate school at the University of Massachusetts Amherst, where support from the Tibor T. Polgar fellowship helped him conduct research on the factors facilitating a natural recovery of bald eagles to the Hudson River. Following that, he received his Ph.D. from Utah State University in 2006, where he conducted research for the US Army looking at the impacts of mechanized training activities on sensitive grassland species. In particular, he is interested in how changes in habitat structure, either natural or anthropogenic, can alter predator-prey dynamics and how land management activities can be modified to reduce negative impacts on species of concern. Today, along with his wife and three sons, he lives in the Sierra Nevada foothills and works for the US Forest Service Pacific Southwest Research Station, conducting research on the impacts of fuel management on forest carnivores. ● US Fish & Wildlife Service Pacific Southwest Research Station ● Research Wildlife Ecologist, Sierra Nevada Research Center ● Email: [email protected] Amy M. Villamagna 2008 Amy Villamagna recently earned her Ph.D. in Fisheries and Wildlife Sciences from Virginia Tech, Blacksburg, Virginia. Her doctoral research focused on the effects of water hyacinth, a non-native floating plant, on the ecology of Lake Chapala, Mexico. Amy was a 2008 Polgar Fellow during which time she investigated the effects of artificial substrate roughness on ecological function (i.e. accumulation of organic matter, chlorophyll a, and macroinvertebrate colonization) in the Hudson River. Currently, Amy is a post-doctoral research associate at Virginia Tech researching the relationships between freshwater conservation efforts and ecosystem services in the Albemarle-Pamlico Basin (VA, NC). Amy is also the instructor of the Conservation Biology course at Virginia Tech. ● Virginia Polytechnic Institute & State University, Fisheries & Wildlife Sciences Department ● Email: [email protected] William G. Wallace 1992 William Wallace received his Polgar Fellowship in the summer of 1992. The project was an offshoot of his M.S. research (at SUNY Stony Brook) and ultimately formed the basis of his Ph.D. work from the same institution. The focus of the project was to determine if exposure to a toxic metal (Cd) altered the trophic transfer of Cd from an aquatic oligochaete to a predator (grass shrimp). The results of this Polgar funded work were published in a special “Hudson River” issue of the journal Estuaries. After receiving his Ph.D. in 1996 in Coastal Oceanography, William was a National Research Council Post-doctoral Fellow at the United States Geological Survey where he conducted research on San Francisco Bay and is currently a tenured faculty at CUNY (College of Staten Island) focusing on the impacts of metals in the Arthur Kill and New York Harbor region. At present, Dr. Wallace has about twenty research articles of which a large majority link back to ideas and hypotheses set forth in his Polgar research. Dr. Wallace said that he will “always be grateful to the Hudson River Foundation and 27 Tibor T. Polgar Fellows associated staff… for their support and encouragement during the data collection and final write-up of this project.” ● City University of New York/College of Staten Island ● Associate Professor, Department of Biology ● Email: [email protected] Bethia Waterman 1990 Beth Waterman recently retired after 17 years with the Hudson River Estuary Program at the New York State Department of Environmental Conservation. During her tenure with the Estuary Program she administered the estuary grants program, implemented the access goals of the Estuary Action Agenda and contributed to numerous publications and management plans. The Polgar Fellowship during her studies for a Master’s of Science degree at Bard College gave her a long-range perspective on human uses of the Hudson River and appreciation of its environmental history and ecology that provided valuable insight for current management of natural resources. ● Email: [email protected] Kristin Westad 1985 Kristin Westad works with private landowners to restore wildlife habitat in eastern Ohio through the US Fish & Wildlife Service's Partners for Fish & Wildlife program. She graduated from Bard College with a B.A. in Anthropology in 1987. In 1995, she received an M.S. in Conservation Biology and Sustainable Development from the University of Wisconsin, where her thesis concerned fire ecology in the New Jersey Pine Plains. Kristin has worked for a number of Midwestern natural resource organizations as a botanist and conservation biologist, including the Wisconsin State Herbarium, Chequamegon-Nicolet National Forest, the Wisconsin Chapter of the Nature Conservancy, the Natural Heritage Inventory and Military Ridge Prairie Heritage Area. ● US Fish & Wildlife Service ● Biologist, Ohio Private Lands Office ● Email: [email protected] David J. Yozzo 1987 & 1989 Dave Yozzo is a Senior Project Manager at HDR, and an Adjunct Professor of Environmental Sciences at Purchase College. Dr. Yozzo received his Ph.D. in Environmental Sciences from the University of Virginia in 1994. Dr. Yozzo’s professional and research interests include community ecology of tidal wetlands and coastal habitat restoration. He has conducted research on invasive species ecology in the Hudson River Estuary and Long Island Sound, and has participated in the planning and evaluation of coastal habitat restoration projects in New England, Jamaica Bay, Chesapeake Bay, the Gulf of Mexico, South Florida’s Everglades and East Anglia, England. Dr. Yozzo is active in the local environmental community as a member of the Conservation Advisory Board of the Town of Hurley, NY. He is Past-President of the Atlantic Estuarine Research Society, and has served on the Governing Board of the Coastal and Estuarine Research Federation. ● HDR, Inc., Senior Project Manager ● Email: [email protected] 28 Advisors Tibor T. Polgar Fellowship Advisors Paul Barten: 1990; 1991(2); 1992; 1993; 1996; 1997(2) Associate Professor Department of Natural Resources Conservation, University of Massachusetts, Amherst Dallas Abbott: 2008 Adjunct Research Scientist Lamont-Doherty Earth Observatory, Columbia University Kenneth W. Able: 1994; 1998 Professor Institute of Marine and Coastal Sciences, Rutgers, the State University of New Jersey Barbara Bedford: 1995 Senior Research Associate Department of Natural Resources, Cornell University Diana S. Aga: 2007 Associate Professor Department of Chemistry, University at Buffalo, State University of New York Gaboury Benoit: 1992 Associate Dean for Research, Grinstein Class of 1954 Professor of Environmental Chemistry & Professor of Environmental Engineering School of Forestry and Environmental Studies, Yale University Robert C. Ahlert: 1991 RAMS Environmental Inc. Ormond Beach, FL David J. Bernstein: 2002 Director, Institute for Long Island Archaeology, Department of Anthropology, Stony Brook University, State University of New York Katherine T. Alben: 1999 Research Scientist Division of Environmental Health Sciences, Wadsworth Center, NYS Department of Health Assistant Professor Department of Environmental Health Sciences, School of Public Health, University at Albany, State University of New York Henry J. Bokuniewicz: 1991; 1992; 1999 Professor School of Marine and Atmospheric Sciences, Stony Brook University, State University of New York David E. Armstrong: 1996 Professor Emeritus Department of Civil & Environmental Engineering, University of Wisconsin Richard F. Bopp: 1985 Associate Professor, Environmental Geochemistry Department of Earth & Environmental Sciences, Rensselaer Polytechnic Institute Roger Armstrong*: 1985 Department of Chemistry, Russell Sage College John Boreman: 1995 Director Office of Science & Technology, National Marine Fisheries Service, National Oceanic and Atmospheric Administration Mark B. Bain: 1995 Associate Professor of Aquatic Systems Ecology Department of Natural Resources, Cornell University Peter Bower: 2007 Senior Lecturer Department of Environmental Science, Barnard College Joel E. Baker: 2001 Professor and Port of Tacoma Chair in Environmental Science Environmental Program, University of Washington-Tacoma 31 Tibor T. Polgar Fellowship Advisors Randolph M. Chambers: 1997; 2000 C.B. Talbot Associate Professor of Biology Director, Keck Environmental Lab, College of William and Mary Ellen Braun-Howland: 2004 Research Scientist, Environmental Biology Wadsworth Center, NYS Department of Health Assistant Professor Department of Environmental Health Sciences, School of Public Health, University at Albany, State University of New York R. Christopher Chambers: 2000; 2001; 2002 Research Fish Biologist James Howard Laboratory, National Marine Fisheries Service, National Oceanic and Atmospheric Administration Edward B. Brothers: 1990 EFS Consultants Ithaca, NY Jonathan J. Cole: 1993 G. E. Hutchinson Chair in Ecology Cary Institute of Ecosystem Studies Bruce J. Brownawell: 1993; 1995, 2001, 2007 Associate Professor School of Marine and Atmospheric Sciences, Stony Brook University, State University of New York Michele Collins*: 2001 Environmental Studies Policy Program New Jersey Institute of Technology Joanna Burger: 1989 Professor Department of Cell Biology and Neuroscience, Division of Life Sciences, Rutgers, the State University of New Jersey William Cook: 1986 Professor of Biological Sciences Director, Natural History Institute, Columbia Greene Community College Russell Burke: 2005(2); 2006; 2007; 2009(2) Associate Professor Department of Biology, Hofstra University James Corrigan: 1992 Professor Department of Biology and Health Promotions, St. Francis College Douglas G. Capone: 1985 William and Julie Wrigley Chair in Environmental Studies and Professor of Biological Sciences Department of Biological Sciences & Wrigley Institute for Environmental Studies, University of Southern California Shawn Dalton: 2005; 2006 Director Environment and Sustainable Development Research Centre, Faculty of Forestry and Environmental Management, University of New Brunswick Nina Caraco: 2000 Biogeochemist Cary Institute of Ecosystem Studies Robert A. Daniels: 1991; 1994 Curator of Ichthyology Assistant Director of Research and Collections, New York State Museum James T. Carlton: 1992 Professor of Marine Sciences Biology Department, Williams College Director of the Williams-Mystic Program Mystic Seaport Museum Rob DeSalle: 2003 Curator and Professor Division of Invertebrate Zoology, American Museum of Natural History 32 Tibor T. Polgar Fellowship Advisors Calvin DeWitt: 1986 Professor Gaylord Nelson Institute of Environmental Studies, University of Wisconsin Yuri Gorokhovich: 2002 Assistant Professor Department of Environmental, Geographic and Geological Sciences, Lehman College, City University of New York Barbara Dexter *: 1986; 1987 Environmental Studies Program School of Natural and Social Sciences, Purchase College, State University of New York J. Frederick Grassle: 1992 Professor Institute of Marine and Coastal Sciences, Rutgers, the State University of New Jersey André Dhondt: 2006 Edwin H. Morgens Professor of Ornithology Department of Ecology and Evolutionary Biology and Director of "Bird Population Studies" at Laboratory of Ornithology, Cornell University David M. Green: 1988; 1990 Adjunct Professor Department of Natural Resources, Cornell University Peter M. Groffman: 1993; 2006 Microbial Ecologist Cary Institute of Ecosystem Studies Janet T. Duffy-Anderson: 1998 Research Fish Biologist Alaska Fisheries Science Center National Marine Fisheries Service National Oceanic and Atmospheric Administration Dittmar Hahn: 1999 Associate Professor, Molecular Microbial Ecology Department of Biology, Texas State University Adria A. Elskus: 1998 Fishery Research Biologist/Toxicologist USGS, Maine Field Office Associate Professor, Biological Sciences & Cooperating Associate Professor School of Marine Sciences, University of Maine Malcolm Hill *: 2000 Assistant Professor Department of Biology, Fairfield University Marjorie M. Holland: 1985(2) Professor Department of Biology, University of Mississippi Stuart E. G. Findlay: 1986(2); 1987(3); 1988; 1990; 1991; 1993; 1995(2); 2005; 2008 Aquatic Ecologist Cary Institute of Ecosystem Studies Robert W. Howarth: 1988 David R. Atkinson Professor of Ecology and Environmental Biology Department of Ecology & Evolutionary Biology, Cornell University Roger D. Flood: 2003 Professor School of Marine and Atmospheric Sciences, Stony Brook University, State University of New York Nancy L. Jackson: 2001 Professor Department of Chemistry and Environmental Science, New Jersey Institute of Technology Wayne R. Gilchrest*: 2003 Dutchess Academy of Environmental Studies Dutchess County BOCES 33 Tibor T. Polgar Fellowship Advisors Michael Lemke: 1998 Associate Professor Department of Biology, University of Illinois at Springfield Francis Juanes: 1995; 1996; 1998; 1999; 2000; 2003; 2004; 2005; 2008 Professor Department of Natural Resources Conservation, University of Massachusetts, Amherst Simon Levin: 1990 Professor of Ecology and Evolutionary Biology Department of Ecology and Evolutionary Biology, Princeton University Steven H. Jury: 2004 Senior Research Scientist Department of Marine Sciences, University of New England Jeffrey S. Levinton: 1994; 1996; 1998; 2002; 2004 Distinguished Professor Department of Ecology and Evolution, Stony Brook University, State University of New York Raymond Kepner: 2000 Associate Professor of Biology School of Science, Marist College Erik Kiviat: 1985(2); 1989; 1992; 1995; 1996(2); 1998 Executive Director, Hudsonia, Ltd., Bard College Karin E. Limburg: 1995; 2000; 2003; 2004; 2009 Associate Professor Department of Environmental and Forest Biology, State University of New York College of Environmental Science and Forestry Gary Kleppel: 2009 Professor of Biological Sciences Director of Biodiversity, Conservation and Policy Program, University at Albany, State University of New York Christopher Linder: 1990; 1999 Archaeologist in Residence Anthropology Program, Bard College Robert Knecht *: 1997 Co-Director Center for the Study of Marine Policy, University of Delaware Paul Linsalata*: 1989 Department of Environmental Medicine New York University School of Medicine Henry Knizeski, Jr.: 1987; 1988 Professor of Biology School of Health and Natural Sciences, Mercy College Romuald N. Lipcius: 1993 Professor of Marine Science Virginia Institute of Marine Science Irv Kornfield: 2003 Professor School of Marine Sciences, University of Maine John H. Long: 1994 Professor Department of Biology, Vassar College David S. Kosson: 1991 Professor of Chemical Engineering Chair, Department of Civil and Environmental Engineering, Vanderbilt University Glenn R. Lopez: 1992 Professor School of Marine and Atmospheric Sciences, Stony Brook University, State University of New York 34 Tibor T. Polgar Fellowship Advisors Gregory O’Mullan: 2007; 2008 Adjunct Associate Research Scientist Lamont-Doherty Earth Observatory, Columbia University Gary M. Lovett: 1991 Ecosystem Ecologist Cary Institute of Ecosystem Studies Thomas R. Lynch: 1994 Department Chair and Associate Professor Department of Environmental Science & Policy, Marist College Catherine O’Reilly: 2009 Assistant Professor of Biology Bard College David Osgood: 1998; 2002 Associate Professor Department of Biology, Albright College Anne E. McElroy: 1998; 2001 Associate Professor School of Marine and Atmospheric Sciences, Stony Brook University, State University of New York Richard Ostfeld: 1999 Animal Ecologist Cary Institute of Ecosystem Studies Kevin McGarigal: 1999 Associate Professor Department of Natural Resources Conservation, University of Massachusetts, Amherst Reid McLean: 2006 GIS Analyst C-Zone Consulting, Inc. Fredericton, New Brunswick, Canada Michael L. Pace: 1995; 2008 Adjunct Senior Scientist Cary Institute of Ecosystem Studies Aquatic Ecologist Department of Environmental Sciences, University of Virginia, Heinz Meng: 1990 Professor Department of Biology, State University of New York at New Paltz Robert Parsons: 1996 Associate Professor - retired Department of Biology, Rensselaer Polytechnic Institute Kathleen Nolan: 2006 Professor and Chair Department of Biology and Health Promotions, St. Francis College William Perrotte*: 1988 Department of Biology Marist College Dorothy M. Peteet: 1998; 2009 Adjunct Senior Research Scientist Lamont-Doherty Earth Observatory, Columbia University Owen A. O’Connor: 1991 Associate Professor of Medicine Director of the Lymphoid Development and Malignancy Program, Columbia University Chief of the Lymphoma Service College of Physicians and Surgeons, New York Presbyterian Hospital, Columbia University Peter Raymond: 2006 Associate Professor of Ecosystem Ecology School of Forestry and Environmental Studies, Yale University Carol S. Rietsma: 1996 Associate Professor Department of Biology, State University of New York at New Paltz William E. Odum: 1989 Professor (Deceased) Department of Environmental Science, University of Virginia 35 Tibor T. Polgar Fellowship Advisors Donald Squires: 1989 Professor Emeritus Marine Sciences Institute, University of Connecticut George R. Robinson: 2003; 2007 Associate Professor Department of Biology, University at Albany, State University of New York Joseph Stabile: 1997; 2000; 2004 Associate Professor Department of Biology, Iona College Rodney Rountree: 2003, 2004 Adjunct Assistant Professor Department of Natural Resources Conservation University of Massachusetts, Amherst Senior Scientist Marine Ecology and Technology Applications, Inc. Paul L. Steineck: 1987 Professor Emeritus of Environmental Studies School of Natural and Social Sciences, Purchase College, State University of New York Raymond Sambrotto: 2005 Doherty Research Scientist Lamont-Doherty Earth Observatory, Columbia University David L. Strayer: 1987(2); 1994(2); 1997; 2000; 2008(2); 2009 Aquatic Ecologist Cary Institute of Ecosystem Studies John Sanders*: 1985 Barnard College Jay Shiro Tashiro: 1988 Associate Professor Faculty of Health Sciences, University of Ontario Institute of Technology W.R. Schell*: 1985 Department of Radiation Health, University of Pittsburgh Rodger D. Titman: 2001 Associate Professor of Wildlife Biology Department of Natural Resource Sciences, McGill University Robert E. Schmidt: 1986(2); 1987(2); 1988(2); 1989; 1990; 1991; 1992(2); 1993; 1994; 1996; 1997(2); 2000; 2003; 2004; 2005; 2006; 2008 Professor of Environmental Studies and Zoology Bard College at Simon’s Rock Associate Director and Co-Founder Hudsonia, Ltd. Klement Tockner*: 2005 Floodplain Biology and Biodiversity Department of Limnology, Swiss Federal Institute for Environmental Science and Technology Eric T. Schultz: 1999; 2001; 2002 Associate Professor Department of Ecology and Evolutionary Biology, University of Connecticut Richard Veit: 2004; 2005 Professor, Department Chair Department of Biology, College of Staten Island, City University of New York Kimberly Schulz: 2006 Associate Professor Department of Environmental and Forest Biology, State University of New York College of Environmental Science and Forestry Russell Waines: 1986 Professor (Deceased) Department of Geological Sciences, State University of New York at New Paltz Teresa Snyder-Leiby*: 2002 Biology Department, State University of New York at New Paltz 36 Tibor T. Polgar Fellowship Advisors John Waldman: 2008(2); 2009 Professor Department of Biology, Queens College, City University of New York Isaac I. Wirgin: 1989; 1990; 1993; 1997; 2000 Associate Professor Department of Environmental Medicine, New York University School of Medicine William G. Wallace: 2004; 2007 Associate Professor Department of Biology, College of Staten Island David A. Witting: 2000; 2001 Fish Biologist Office of Habitat Conservation, National Marine Fisheries Service, National Oceanic and Atmospheric Administration John Wehr: 1989 Professor & Director Louis Calder Center – Biological Field Station, Fordham University Troy D. Wood: 2007 Associate Professor Department of Chemistry, University at Buffalo, State University of New York Judith S. Weis: 1994; 1997 Professor Department of Biological Sciences, Rutgers University-Newark David J. Yozzo: 2001; 2002; 2007 Senior Project Manager HDR, Inc. Adjunct Associate Professor Department of Natural and Social Sciences, Purchase College, State University of New York Cathleen Wigand: 1995 Wetland Ecologist Environmental Effects Research Laboratory, Atlantic Ecology Division/Office of Research and Development, US Environmental Protection Agency *Last known affiliation Years = years served as advisor Kim A. Wilson*: 1991 Department of Biological Sciences, Central Connecticut State University Number in parentheses = number of students advised Tibor T. Polgar Fellowship Administrators: Betsy Blair (1985 – 1995) Hudson River National Estuarine Research Reserve, New York State Department of Environmental Conservation David Yozzo (2008, 2009) Senior Project Manager HDR, Inc. Adjunct Associate Professor Department of Natural and Social Sciences Purchase College, State University of New York Jon C. Cooper (1985, 1986) Executive Vice President International Management Communications Corporation Sarah Fernald (2008, 2009) Hudson River National Estuarine Research Reserve New York State Department of Environmental Conservation John R. Waldman (1987 – 2007) Professor Department of Biology, Queens College, City University of New York Helena Andreyko (2008, 2009) Hudson River Foundation for Science and Environmental Research William C. Nieder (1994 – 2007) Bureau of Habitat, New York State Department of Environmental Conservation 37 38 Reports of the Tibor T. Polgar Fellowship Reports of the Tibor T. Polgar Fellowship Program 1985 Projects Comparison of Vascular Plant Zonation at Iona Island Marsh (Hudson River Estuary) and Lord's Cove Marsh (Connecticut River Estuary) - Patricia Senechia-Nardone, Anne Reilly and Marjorie M. Holland Flora of Freshwater Tidal Swamps at Tivoli Bays Hudson River National Estuarine Sanctuary - Kristin E. Westad and Eric Kiviat A Survey of Lepidoptera in Tivoli North Bay (Hudson River Estuary) - Spider Barbour and Eric Kiviat The Life History of the Chrysomelid Beetle Pyrrhalta nymphaeae (Galerucinae) on Water Chestnut, Trapa natans (Hydrocariaceae),in Tivoli South Bay, Hudson River, NY - Kathleen A. Schmidt Geological History of Marshes in the Hudson River National Estuarine Sanctuary - Sloane Six and John Sanders Recent Sediment and Pollutant Accumulation in the Hudson River National Estuarine Sanctuary - Pearl Peller and Richard Bopp Chronological Determination of Mercury, Lead, and Cadmium in Two Hudson River Freshwater Tidal Marshes - Karen A. Stevenson, Roger Armstrong and W. R. Schell Salinity Effects on Naphathalene and Anthracene Mineralization by Sediment Microbes in the Hudson River Estuary and Two Coastal Environments of Long Island - Robert P. Kerr and Douglas G. Capone 1986 Projects Feeding Ecology of the Banded Killifish (Fundulus diaphanus) at Tivoli North Bay, Hudson River, New York - Ellen Richard and Robert E. Schmidt Feeding Biology of Tessellated Darter (Etheostoma olmstedi atromaculatum) at Tivoli North Bay, Hudson River, New York - Maria Duryea and Robert E. Schmidt Characterization of Spawning and Nursery Habitats of Largemouth Bass (Micropterus salmoides) in the Stockport Component of the Hudson River National Estuarine Research Reserve - Steven Nack and William Cook The Contribution of Bacteria to Benthic Processes in the Hudson River Estuary - H. Kay Austin Gill and Stuart G. Findlay Identification, Distribution and Abundance Patterns of Aquatic Algae and Herbivores in Marshlands of the Hudson River National Estuarine Research Reserve (Stockport Flats Component) - Matthew Campbell and Barbara L. Dexter Colonization of Artificial Substrate by the Chironomidae (Diptera) of Tivoli South Bay - Bruce Wagner and Stuart G. Findlay Geology, Hydrology and Related Historical Aspects of the Tivoli Bays, Cruger Island and Magdalen Island, Town of Red Hook, Dutchess County, New York, and of Stockport Flats, Town of Stockport, Columbia County New York, Including a Study of the Relationship of a Proposed Landfill and Stockport Flats - Katherine M. Carey and Russell H. Waines Freshwater Tidal Wetlands Community Description and Relation of Plant Distribution to Elevation and Substrate - Caryl DeVries and Calvin B. DeWitt Addendum to Flora of Freshwater Tidal Swamps at Tivoli Bays - Kristin E. Wested 41 Reports of the Tibor T. Polgar Fellowship Program 1987 Projects Summer Zooplankton Ecology of Piermont Marsh - David A. Nemazie and Barbara L. Dexter The Composition of the Summer Zooplankton Community in Tivoli Bays, Hudson River, New York Sabrina Drill and Robert E. Schmidt The Taxonomy, Distribution and Abundance of Ostracodes in the Freshwater, Tidal Wetlands of the Stockport Flats Component of the Hudson River National Estuarine Research Reserve, Columbia County, New York - David Yozzo, Paul L. Steineck, and Koen Martens Macroinvertebrates of the Piermont Marsh Component of the Hudson River National Estuarine Research Reserve - Anthony S. Perrone and Henry M. Knizeski Composition, Abundance, and Dynamics of Macroinvertebrates in Tivoli South Bay, with Emphasis on the Chironomidae (Diptera) - Karl L. Schoeberl and Stuart Findlay Trophic Status of the Spottail Shiner, (Notropis hudsonius) in Tivoli North Bay, a Hudson River Freshwater Tidal Marsh - Sean Smith and Robert E. Schmidt Studies of Young-of-the-Year River Herring and American Shad in the Tivoli Bays, Hudson River, New York - Karin E. Limburg and David Strayer Estimation of Suspended Material Flux Between a Trapa natans Stand and the Hudson River Estuary Allan Goldhammer and Stuart Findlay Modeling Carbon Flow in Tivoli South Bay, Hudson River, NY - Stuart Findlay, Karin Limburg, and David Strayer 1988 Projects Sediment Metabolism at Tivoli South Bay and a Vallisneria Bed in the Hudson River - Erik McCarron and Stuart Findlay The Physical, Chemical and Biological Components of Two Tidal Creeks in the Piermont Marsh System of the Hudson River - Kimala D. Ramnarace, Elisa B. Garcia and Henry M. Knizeski Metabolism of Submersed Aquatic Macrophyte Beds in a Freshwater Portion of the Hudson River Estuary - Robert H. Garritt and Robert W. Howarth The Epiphytic Invertebrates of Trapa natans and Myriophyllum at Roosevelt Cove, Hyde Park, NY Michele Kelly and William Perrotte Studies of the Life History and Trophic Connections of a Population of Palaemonetes pugio in the Croton River - Irene Wallhausser and Jay Shiro Tashiro A Survey of Larval and Juvenile Fish Populations in Waterchestnut (Trapa natans) Beds in Tivoli South Bay, a Hudson River Tidal Marsh - Allan Barth Anderson and Robert E. Schmidt Larval Fish Flux Between a Freshwater Tidal Marsh and the Hudson River Estuary - Catherine Bohne and Robert E. Schmidt Evaluation of Potential Sources of Recruitment of Largemouth Bass to the Hudson River - Drew Hopkins and David M. Green 42 Reports of the Tibor T. Polgar Fellowship Program 1989 Projects Human Manipulation of the Historical Hudson Shoreline - Jennifer A. Young and Donald F. Squires Feasibility Study of Determining Trace Metal Concentrations in the Water Column of the Hudson River Estuary Based on Archived Samples - Scott Morris and Paul Linsalata The Bryophytes of the Tivoli Bays Freshwater Tidal Swamps - Lorinda Leonardi and Erik Kiviat Composition of Planktonic Rotifer Fauna and Temporal Variation in the Abundance of Rotifers and their Food Supply in the Hudson River - Norman Reyes and John D. Wehr Trophic Significance of Ostracoda in Tivoli South Bay - David J. Yozzo and William E. Odum Larval Fish Foods in Water-Chestnut Beds – MariLynn Sidari and Robert E. Schmidt The Extraction of DNA from Formaldehyde-Preserved Samples of Hudson River Tomcod (Microgadus tomcod) - Matthew D'Amore and Isaac I. Wirgin Egret Feeding Behavior and Prey Ecology in the Lower Hudson River Estuary - John Brzorad and Joanna Burger 1990 Projects Hydrology of a Tidal Freshwater Marsh Along the Hudson River Estuary - Mark R. Lickus and Paul K. Barten Changes in Interstitial Water Chemistry Along a Salinity Gradient in the Hudson River – Kimberly I. Gould and Stuart Findlay The Inducibility of P-450IA mRNA Expression by PCB Mixtures, PCB Congeners, and a PAH in Hudson River Tomcod and Hogchoker - Jennifer Bergoine and Isaac I. Wirgin Estimation of Age and Growth Rates in Juvenile Hudson River Shad: Validation and Field Study - Karin E. Limburg, Simon A. Levin, and Edward B. Brothers Evaluation of a Pop Net for Sampling Fishes from Water-Chestnut Beds in the Tidal Hudson River Keith Pelczarski and Robert E. Schmidt Forage Behavior Analysis of Nesting Peregrine Falcons (Falco peregrinus) Along the Lower Hudson River Estuary in the New York City Harbor - Christopher Nadareski and Heinz Meng Characterization of Angling Activity on the Hudson River Estuary - Jody Jackson and David M. Green Evaluation of Tivoli Bays Archaeology and Assessment of its Potential to Provide Paleoenvironmental Information - Bethia Waterman and Christopher Linder 1991 Projects Development of Tidal Discharge and Sediment Flux Prediction Functions at the Tivoli Bays--Hudson River National Estuarine Research Reserve - Christopher E. Marchesi and Paul K. Barten Characterization of Streamflow and Sediment Source Areas for the Saw Kill Watershed - Elizabeth A. Reichheld and Paul K. Barten Observations on the Suspended Sediment Distribution in the Hudson River Estuary - Stacey Seplow and Henry Bokuniewicz Development of Bacterial Cultures which can Metabolize Structural Analogs of Dioxin - Carol D. Rugge, Owen A. O'Connor, David S. Kosson, and Robert C. Ahlert 43 Reports of the Tibor T. Polgar Fellowship Program The Photosynthetic Response of Several Submersed Macrophyte Species to Light Conditions in the Tidal Freshwater Hudson River - Michael T. Harley and Stuart Findlay Blue Crab (Callinectes sapidus) Distribution and Habitat Utilization in the Lower Hudson River and Tributaries - Jeremy J. Stein and Kim A. Wilson Reproductive Biology of the Redbreast Sunfish (Lepomis auritus) - Scott Orringer and Robert A. Daniels Standing Crop of Fishes in Water Celery Beds in the Tidal Hudson River - Nick Hankin and Robert E. Schmidt Land Use Effects on Hudson River Tributaries - Tara L. Parsons and Gary M. Lovett 1992 Projects Development of a Method for Calculating Groundwater Flux into the Tivoli Bays - John D. Albertson and Paul K. Barten Chronological Variations in Concentrations of Heavy Metals in Sediments of the Tivoli Bays - Xu Wang and Gaboury Benoit Estimation of Polychlorinated Biphenyl Rates from the Hudson River - Laura Steinberg and Henry Bokuniewicz Antibiotic Resistance in Bacteria from 13 Sites in New York Harbor - Marianna Sala and James Corrigan Habitats of the Monkeyflowers Mimulus alatus and Mumulus ringens on the Hudson River - Valerie Sharma and Erik Kiviat The Role of Contamination History in the Trophic Transfer of Cadmium - William G. Wallace and Glenn R. Lopez Potential Competition and Other Interactions Between the Dreissenid Mussels, Dreissena polymorpha and Mytilopsis leucophaeta, in the Hudson River Estuary - William C. Walton, Fred Grassle, and James Carlton An Investigation into the Feeding Biology of Adult Carp in Tivoli South Bay - Charles Montgomery and Robert Schmidt Significance of the Fishes Collected by Gill Net in the Tivoli South Bay Ecosystem – Alison Hamilton and Robert Schmidt 1993 Projects The Use of Direct Carbon Dioxide Measurements on the Hudson River - Peter Raymond and John Cole Nutrient and Sediment Yield in the Saw Kill Watershed: Partitioning the Impact of Multiple Land Uses Jennifer Pitt and Paul K. Barten The Effects of Ammonium and Sulfate Additions on Methane Fluxes in Two Tidal Freshwater Wetlands of the Hudson River Estuary - Meadow B. Goldman and Peter Groffman Predator-Mediated Biological Control of the Zebra Mussel in the Hudson River Estuary – Larry C. Boles and Romuald N. Lipcius Characterization of Mitochondrial DNA Genotypes in Atlantic Sturgeon (Acipenser oxyrinchus) from the Hudson River: the Extent of Spatial and Temporal Heterogeneity - John T. Hart and Isaac Wirgin 44 Reports of the Tibor T. Polgar Fellowship Program Diets of Larval White Perch and Striped Bass in the Kingston Region of the Hudson River Estuary, with Comments on the Significance of the Bosmina Bloom - Rachel Bridgewater and Robert E. Schmidt Tests of Bioaccumulation Models for PCBs: A Study of Young-of-the-Year Bluefish in the Hudson River Estuary - Lawrence A. LeBlanc and Bruce J. Brownawell Ecosystem Effects of Submersed Aquatic Vegetation in the Tidal Freshwater Hudson River - John E. Barrett and Stuart E.G. Findlay 1994 Projects Costs of Adaptation to Cadmium in Limnodrilus hoffmeisteri, a Common Hudson River Invertebrate Consuelo Montero and Jeffrey S. Levinton The Uptake of PCBs by Zebra Mussels - LaLaneya Weaver and Thomas R. Lynch The Impact of the Zebra Mussel (Dreissena polymorpha) on the Availability of Organic Carbon Nutrients at the Sediment Surface of the Hudson River - Hudson A. Roditi and David L. Strayer Fishes Consuming Zebra Mussels in the Tidal Hudson River - Wolf E. Chandler, Robert E. Schmidt and David Strayer A Rapid Increase in Water Temperature Alters the Swimming Performance of Striped Bass (Morone saxatilis) - Matthew J. McHenry and John H. Long Perennial Occurrence and Fast Growth Rates by Crevalle Jacks (Carangidae: Caranx hippos) in the Hudson River Estuary - Richard S. McBride and Kenneth W. Able Population Genetics of Fundulus heteroclitus in the Hudson River and North New Jersey Estuaries: Evaluation of Subspecies Boundary and Hybridization with F. diaphanus - Nikolai Mugue and Judith S. Weis Microhabitat Use by Fish of the Riffle Zone of Catskill Creek - Derek A. Bloomquist and Robert A. Daniels 1995 Projects Sources and Characterization of Dissolved Organic Carbon in the Tivoli Bays Freshwater Tidal Wetlands - Brian Raphael and Stuart Findlay Sediment Chemistry Associated with Native and Non-Native Emergent Macrophytes of the Hudson River Marsh Ecosystem - Pamela Templer, Stuart Findlay, and Cathleen Wigand Comparison of the Relative Desorption and Bioavailability of Polychlorinated Biphenyls, Polycyclic Aromatic Hydrocarbons, and Linear Alkybenzenes from Hudson River Sediments - Elizabeth M. Lamoureux and Bruce J. Brownawell Estimating Piscine Prey Size from Partial Remains: Testing for Shifts in Foraging Mode by Bluefish in the Hudson River - Frederick S. Scharf and Francis Juanes Recruitment of Juvenile Morone saxatilis Reflected in Otolith Microstructure - Kristin Arend, Karin Limburg, and Michael Pace Patterns of Wetland Ownership and Permit Applications in the Hudson River Basin: Implications for Policy - Noel P. Gurwick and Barbara L. Bedford A Low Density, Tidal Marsh, Painted Turtle Population - Christine Rozycki and Erik Kiviat Juvenile Sturgeon Habitat Use in the Hudson River - Nancy Haley, John Boreman, and Mark Bain 45 Reports of the Tibor T. Polgar Fellowship Program 1996 Projects The Effects of the Restoration of Foundry Cove on the Dominant, Resident Oligochaete, Limnodrilus hoffmeisteri - Lisa Suatoni and Jeffrey Levinton Mercury Dynamics in Sediments of Tivoli South Bay, Hudson River, NY – Linda M. Zelewski and David E. Armstrong Bacteria as a Direct Food Source for Zebra Mussels - Kanda Vathanodorn and Robert H. Parsons Foraging Tactics of Young-of-the-Year Bluefish in the Hudson River: the Influence of Body Size on Predator Mode Choice and Prey Profitability - Frederick S. Scharf and Francis Juanes Terrestrial Insects Associated with Lythrum salicaria, Phragmites australis, and Typha angustifolia in a Hudson River Tidal Marsh - Lisa Hutton Krause, Carol Rietsma, and Erik Kiviat Invasion of Phragmites australis in the Tidal Marshes of the Hudson River - Han G. Winogrond and Erik Kiviat Seasonal Presence and Movements of Fish Populations in the Tidal Reach of Quassaic Creek, a Hudson River Tributary (HRM 60): Documentation of Potamodromy, Anadromy, and Residential Components Thomas R. Lake and Robert E. Schmidt Characterization of Livestock Management Practices in the Tivoli Bays Watersheds - David A. K. Pinney and Paul K. Barten 1997 Projects A Population Study of Diamondback Terrapins of Piermont Marsh, Hudson River, NY - Jose C. Simoes and Randolph M. Chambers The Relationship Between Fecundity of an Alewife (Alosa pseudoharengus) Spawning Population and Egg Productivity in Quassaic Creek, a Hudson River Tributary (HRM 60) in Orange County, New York Thomas R. Lake and Robert E. Schmidt Investigations into Cadmium Resistance in Fundulus from a Metals Contaminated Site - Jennifer C. Samson and Judith S. Weis The Development of a New Approach to Evaluate Environmentally Induced Genetic Damage in Hudson River Biota - Stacy Zimmerman, Joseph Stabile, and Isaac Wirgin Land Use, Soil Erosion, and Sediment in Two Hudson River Valley Watersheds - Craig A. Hart and Paul K. Barten Characterization of Demographics and Attitudes of Farmers in Dutchess County, New York - David A. K. Pinney and Paul K. Barten The New York/New Jersey Harbor Dredging Conflic - Naomi Brown and Robert W. Knecht Assessing the Effects of Land Use on Water Quality and Biotic Integrity in the Saw Kill (Red Hook, NY) using Two Macroinvertebrate Indices and Chemical Data - Mary Pat Budd and David L. Strayer Comparison of Fish Communities in Open and Occluded Freshwater Tidal Wetlands in the Hudson River Estuary - Wayne R. Gilchrest and Robert E. Schmidt 46 Reports of the Tibor T. Polgar Fellowship Program 1998 Projects Estrogenic Potential of Organic Contaminants in New York Harbor - Margaret E. McArdle, Anne E. McElroy and Adria A. Elskus The Effect of PCBs and Vascular Plants on the Microbial Assemblage of Lower Hudson River Sediment Kurt H. Jerke and Michael J. Lemke Environmental History of Piermont Marsh, Hudson River, NY - Jennifer K. Wong and Dorothy Peteet Relative Habitat Value of Phragmites australis for Marsh Resident Nekton in Piermont Marsh, Hudson River, New York - Stephanie R. Hanson and David T. Osgood A Study on the Impact of Zebra Mussel (Dreissena polymorpha) on the Recruitment of Benthic MacroInvertebrates on Artificial Substrates in the Hudson River - Eun Joo Yi and Jeffrey Levinton Ontogenetic Shifts in Feeding Habits of Juvenile Striped Bass (Morone saxatilis) in the Mid-Hudson River Estuary - Rebecca C. Jordan and Francis Juanes Effects of a Municipal Pier on Growth of Young-of-the-Year Atlantic Tomcod: A Study in the Lower Hudson River Estuary - Charles V. Metzger, Janet Duffy-Anderson, and Kenneth W. Able A Herpetological Survey of Tivoli Bays and Stockport Flats - Michael J. Rubbo and Erik Kiviat 1999 Projects Sedimentary Environment Adjacent to Tivoli Bays - JoAnn Thissen and Henry Bokuniewicz The Effect of Mycorrhizae on Nitrogen-Fixing Bacteria Associated with the Salt Marsh Grass Spartina patens - David J. Burke and Dittmar Hahn Characteristics of Dissolved Organic Carbon from Trapa Natans Wetlands and the Hudson River - Justin R. George and Katherine T. Alben Habitat Variation and the Diet, Growth, and Condition of Juvenile Striped Bass (Morone saxatilis) in the Mid-Hudson River Estuary - David V. Howe and Francis Juanes Does Otolith Composition Reflect Early Life History? A Prospective Analysis in Atlantic Tomcod Microgadus tomcod and Weakfish Cynoscion regalis from the Hudson River Estuary - Jennifer M. Martin and Eric T. Schultz The Importance of Sturgeon Along the Middle Hudson River During Prehistoric Times: A Faunal Analysis of the Tufano Site - Audrey Reifler and Christopher Lindner Impacts of Scale on Breeding Bald Eagles, (Haliaeetus leucocephalus), Along the Hudson River, New York - Craig Thompson and Kevin McGarigal A Study of the Effects of Invasive Plant Species on Small Mammals in Hudson River Freshwater Marshes - Catherine A. McGlynn and Richard S. Ostfeld 2000 Projects Evaluation of Water, Sediment, and Prey as Routes of Exposure of Atlantic Tomcod to Aromatic Hydrocarbon Pollutants in the Hudson River - Allyce E. Nowak, Joseph Stabile, and Isaac Wirgin Coliphage in the Hudson River as Agents of Coliform Mortality and Indicators of Water Quality Kathryn M. Docherty and Raymond L. Kepner, Jr. 47 Reports of the Tibor T. Polgar Fellowship Program Macroinvertebrates Associated with Vallisneria americana and Trapa natans in Tivoli South Bay - Colleen Lutz and David Strayer Use of a Periodically Anoxic Trapa natans Bed by Fishes in the Hudson River - Thomas W. Coote, Robert E. Schmidt, and Nina Caraco Preliminary Studies of Larval and Juvenile Gizzard Shad and Atlantic Menhaden in the Hudson River Karen M. Stainbrook and Karin E. Limburg Availability, Consumption and Preference of Prey in Juvenile Striped Bass (Marone saxatilis) in the Hudson River - David V. Howe and Francis Juanes Effects of Summer Temperatures on the Growth and Condition of Juvenile Atlantic Tomcod, Microgadus tomcod - Anne F. Bonvegna, David A. Witting, and R. Christopher Chambers Genetic Diversity of Diamondback Terrapins (Malaclemys terrapin) from Piermont Marsh, Hudson River, NY - Dominik M. Wiktor, Malcolm Hill, and Randolph M. Chambers 2001 Projects The Distribution of Polychlorinated Biphenyls and Polybrominated Diphenyl Ethers in the Benthic Food Web of the Hudson River - Joseph C. Steinbacher and Joel E. Baker Public Participation, Risk Perception, and the EPA's PCB Remediation Plan for the Upper Hudson River - Jennifer M. Coffey, Nancy Jackson, and Michele Collins Measurements of Pharmaceuticals in a Sewage-Impacted Estuary - Mark Benotti and Bruce Brownawell Effects of Sewage-Impacted Sediments from Jamaica Bay, NY, on Growth and Reproduction in the Benthic Crustacean Leptocheirus plumulosus - Ann M. Zulkosky and Anne E. McElroy Distribution of the Spotfin Killifish (Fundulus luciae) in the Lower Hudson River Estuary - Frederick Ottman and David J. Yozzo An Assessment of Predation Risk of Juvenile Atlantic Tomcod, Microgadus tomcod, to Piscivorous Fishes of the Lower Hudson River - Daniela Zima, R. Christopher Chambers, and David A. Witting Feeding Ecology of Larval and Juvenile Weakfish (Cynoscion regalis) in the Hudson River Estuary Jennifer M. Martin and Eric T. Schultz Demography and Life History of a Wood Turtle (Clemmys insculpta) Population in the Hudson River Todd W. Hunsinger and Rodger D. Titman 2002 Projects Reconstruction of Paleogeographic History of the Hudson River at Newly Exposed Pleistocene Strata at Bear Mountain - Lawrence C. Cusick and Yuri Gorokhovich Occurrence of Vesicular-Arbuscular Mycorrhizae on Phragamites australis, Lythrum salicaria, and Typha angustifolia Along a Wide Hydrologic Gradient on the Hudson River - Dwane Decker and Teresa SnyderLeiby Cadmium Resistance in Limnodrilus hoffmeisteri in Foundry Cove Following a Super Fund Cleanup Ruth A. Junkins and Jeffrey S. Levinton 48 Reports of the Tibor T. Polgar Fellowship Program Effects of Phragmites australis on the Early Life History Stages of Fundulus heteroclitus at Iona Island Marsh, Hudson River, New York - Lisa Harms, Ellen Salak, and David Osgood Distribution, Abundance, and Reproductive Season of Sticklebacks (Gasterosteidae) in the Hudson River Marsh Preserves - Jerry J. Kelley and Eric T. Schultz An Analysis of the Frequency and Duration of Spawning of Local Weakfish, Cynoscion regalis, Based on Age and Size Structure of Young-of-the Year from the Hudson River, New York - Donald D. Shrump, Jr., and R. Christopher Chambers A GIS-Based Model for Predicting the Location of Submerged Prehistoric Archaeological Sites in New York Harbor – Daria E. Merwin and David J. Bernstein 2003 Projects A Comparison of Water Quality in an Urban and a Well Forested Stream: Patroon Creek and Tenmile Creek, Albany County, New York - Sean S. Madden and George R. Robinson From West Point to the Battery: Bacterial Diversity Along the Lower Hudson Estuary - Jean Rothe and Rob DeSalle Waterscaping Water Chestnuts: A Test of Improving Habitat for Fish - Jeremy Frenzel and Karin Limburg Evaluation of Fish Community Structure in Trapa natans Beds in the Middle Hudson River Estuary Jacqueline R. Anderson and Wayne R. Gilchrest Genetic Differentiation of the Alewife, Alosa pseudoharengus, in the Hudson River - Kristen L. Kuhn and Irv Kornfield The Distribution and Behavior of Soniferous Fishes in the Hudson River Focusing on Striped Cusk-Eel, Ophiodon marginatum - Katie A. Anderson, Rodney Rountree, and Francis Juanes Movements of American Eel (Anguilla rostrata) in the Saw Kill, a Hudson River Tributary - Rome Petersson and Robert E. Schmidt A Baseline Inventory of Multibeam Acoustic Targets from the Hudson River between 'New York Harbor and Wappingers Falls - Matthew F. Napolitano and Roger D. Flood 2004 Projects Assessment of Genetic Variation in Phragmites australis Populations Along the Hudson River Using Inter Simple Sequence (ISSR) Analysis - Michele Maltz and Joseph Stabile Effects of Light on Microcystin Synthetase Gene Expression in the Toxic Cyanobacterium Microcystis aeruginosa in a Controlled Field Study - Heidi Langer Atkinson and Ellen Braun-Howland Observations on the Biology of the Spinycheek Crayfish Orconectes limosus Associated with Water Chestnut in the Tidal Hudson River - Michael Bednarski, Karin Limburg, and Robert E. Schmidt Soniferous Fishes in Tidal Freshwater Tivoli Bay of the Hudson River - Katie A. Anderson, Rodney Rountree, and Francis Juanes Dispersal and Colonization of Limnodrilus hoffmeisteri in a Hudson River Tidal Marsh Cove - Maggie Fung and Jeffrey S. Levinton Salinity Preferences of Hudson River Adult Male Blue Crabs Callinectes sapidus - Angie W. Cornwell and Steven H. Jury 49 Reports of the Tibor T. Polgar Fellowship Program Foraging Ecology of Black-Crowned Night Herons Nycticorax nycticorax in the New York City Area Andrew James Bernick and Richard R. Veit Absorption of Dietary Cd by Grass Shrimp, Palaemonetes spp., Collected Along an Environmental Impact Gradient - David R. Seebaugh and William G. Wallace 2005 Projects Hydrological Exchange Processes in Hudson River Tidal Wetlands - Alicia S. Arrigoni, Stuart Findlay, and Klement Tockner Summer Microbial Populations in the Lower Hudson River Estuary and their Relationship to Dissolved Organic Nutrients - M.E. Dueker and Raymond Sambrotto Significance of Small Impoundments to American Eel (Anguilla rostrata) - Jacqueline Anderson and Robert E. Schmidt Development of an Upper Hudson River Estuary GIS-Based Fish Data Resource - Megan P. O'Connor and Francis Juanes Dietary Habits of Diamondback Terrapins, Jamaica Bay Wildlife Refuge, New York - Rafael Sierra and Russell Burke A Study of Temperature-Dependent Sex Determination in the Diamondback Terrapins of Jamaica Bay Amanda L. Widrig and Russell L. Burke Using Telemetry to Assess Foraging Ecology and Habitat Use of Black-Crowned Night Herons (Nycticorax nycticorax) in New York City - Andrew James Bernick and Richard R. Veit Quantification and Characterization of Recreational Paddling on Tivoli Bays and Constitution Marsh Kevin A. Grieser and Shawn E. Dalton 2006 Projects The Upside-Down Hudson River Estuary: Evidence of 14C-depleted Seaward End-member OC Source Fueling pCO2 Super-saturation in an Urbanized Estuary - David R. Griffith and Peter A. Raymond Ecological Stoichiometry of the Salt Marsh: Si:N Ratios and Effects on the Algal Community - Cheryl Whritenour and Kimberly L. Schulz Effects of Road Salt Pollution on the Mayfly Tricorythodes - Justin Halsey and Peter Groffman Population and Migration of Banded Killifish in Tivoli South Bay, Hudson River, NY - Alec Schmidt and Robert E. Schmidt The Effect of Polychlorinated Biphenyls (PCBs) on Song Production of the Black-Capped Chickadee (Poecile atricapillus) - Sara DeLeon and André Dhondt An Estimate of Gene Flow in Hudson River and Jamaica Bay Grass Shrimp (Palaemonetes pugio) and Sand Shrimp (Crangon septemspinosa) - Manusha Phoolbosseea and Kathleen A. Nolan Dietary Habits of Diamondback Terrapin Malaclemys terrapin in the Jamaica Bay Wildlife Refuge, New York - Rafael Sierra and Russell Burke The Hudson River Watershed Management Regime: An Inventory and Analysis of Organizational Stakeholders - William G. Dalton, Jr., Shawn Dalton, and Reid McLean 50 Reports of the Tibor T. Polgar Fellowship Program 2007 Projects Significance of Estuarine Hypoxia to Altered Nutrient Cycling and Toxic Nitrite Accumulation - Sarah L. McGrath and Gregory O’Mullan Measurements of Enterococci Bacteria in the Hudson River: Environmental Health Issues and Policy Recommendations for Combined Sewer Overflow - Suzanne Young and Peter Bower Effectiveness of Riparian Wetlands in Improving Water Quality in an Urban Stream - Christine M. Vanderlan and George R. Robinson New Tools for Assessing the Exposure of Phthalate Esters in the Lower Hudson Estuary - Anne C. Ellefson and Bruce J. Brownawell Applying an Effect-Directed Strategy to Identify Previously Unrecognized Toxic Chemicals in Hudson River Sediments - Sara J. Lupton, Diana S. Aga, and Troy D. Wood Assimilation and Subcellular Distribution of Dietary Hg by Grass Shrimp, Palaemonetes pugio, Collected Along an Environmental Impact Gradient - David R. Seebaugh and William G. Wallace Possible Effects of Endocrine Disrupting Chemicals on Diamondback Terrapins (Malaclemys terrapin) from Jamaica Bay, NY - Erin E. Horn and Russell L. Burke Fish Species-Habitat Associations in New York’s Great Swamp - Chris Cotroneo and David J. Yozzo 2008 Projects Evidence for a Tsunami Generated by an Impact Event in the New York Metropolitan Area Approximately 2300 Years Ago - Katherine Cagen and Dallas Helen Abbott Gastropods of the Hudson River Shoreline: Subtidal, Intertidal, and Upland Communities - Thomas W. Coote and David Strayer Capturing the Nutrient Overenrichment-Eutrophication-Hypoxia Cycle at Newton Creek - M. Elias Dueker and Gregory O’Mullan Feeding Habits and the Effects of Prey Morphology on Pellet Production in Double-crested Cormorants, Phalacrocorax auritus auritus - Colin Grubel and John Waldman Genetic, Morphological and Ecological Relationships Among Hudson Valley and a Massachusetts Population of the Clam Shrimp, Caenestheriella gynecia – Jonelle Orridge, John Waldman, and Robert Schmidt Did the Zebra Mussel (Dreissena polymorpha) Alter the Thermal Balance of the Hudson River? - David Seekell and Michael L. Pace Cohort Structure, Growth, and Energy Dynamics of Juvenile Bluefish in the Hudson River Estuary David G.Stormer and Francis Juanes Effects of Surface Roughness on Ecological Function: Implications for Engineered Structures in the Hudson River Shore Zone - Amy M. Villamagna, David Strayer, and Stuart Findlay 51 Reports of the Tibor T. Polgar Fellowship Program 2009 Projects Population Structure of Winter Flounder Pseudopleuronectes americanus in the Hudson River Estuary Investigated Through Otolith Microchemistry - George Jackman, John Waldman, and Karin Limburg Environmental Change in the Hudson Valley as Recorded by Iona Marsh, NERR Wetland - Cleo Chou and Dorothy Peteet Effectiveness of Intensive Rotational Sheep Grazing as a Control on the Spread of Persicaria perfoliata Caroline Girard and Gary Kleppel The Ecology of Wrack along Hudson River Shorelines: Decomposition Rates and Use by Invertebrates Cornelia Harris and David Strayer Demographic Analysis of the Jamaica Bay Diamondback Terrapin (Malaclemys terrapin) Population: Implications for Survival in an Urban Habitat - Alexandra Kanonik and Russell Burke Evaluating the Effects of Nest Protectors for Turtle Conservation - Shahriar Rahman and Russell Burke American Eel, Anguilla rostrata, as a Possible Biocontrol for the Invasive Crayfish, Orconectes rusticus Sarah Mount and Catherine O’Reilly 52 List of Publications List of Publications by Tibor T. Polgar Fellows Albertson, John D. Books and Edited Volumes Lakshmi, V., J.D. Albertson, and J. Schaake, Editors, Land Surface Hydrology, Meteorology, and Climate: Observations and Modeling, AGU Press, 246pp, 2001. Journal Articles Kim,T.-Y., M. Cassiani, J.D. Albertson, J.E. Dolbow, E. Fried, and M. E. Gurtin, Impact of the inherent separation of scales in the Navier-Stokes-αβ equations, Physical Review E. Huang J, M. Cassiani and J.D. Albertson, Analysis of coherent structures within the atmospheric boundary layer, Boundary-Layer Meteorology, 131(2): 147-171, 2009. Detto, M., Katul, G., Mancini, M., Montaldo, N., Albertson, J.D., Surface heterogeneity and its signature in higher-order scalar similarity relationships, Agricultural and Forest Meteorology, 148 (6-7): 902-916, 2008. Cassiani M., G.G. Katul, J.D Albertson, The effects of canopy leaf area index on airflow across forest edges: Large-eddy simulation and analytical results, Boundary-Layer Meteorology, 126, 3, 433460, 2008. Bertoldi G, W.P., Kustas, J.D. Albertson, Estimating spatial variability in atmospheric properties over remotely sensed land surface conditions, Journal of Applied Meteorology and Climatology, 47, 8, 2147-2165, 2008. Montaldo N., J. D. Albertson, and M. Mancini, Vegetation Dynamics and Soil Water Balance in a Waterlimited Mediterranean Ecosystem on Sardinia, Italy, Hydrol. Earth Syst. Sci., 12:6, 1257-1271, 2008. Timmermans, W.J., G. Bertoldi, J.D. Albertson, A. Olioso, Z. Su, A.S.M. Gieske, Accounting for Atmospheric Boundary Layer variability on flux estimation from RS Observations, International Journal of Remote Sensing, 29, 5275-5290, 2008. Bertoldi, G., J. D. Albertson, W. P. Kustas, F. Li, and M. C. Anderson, On the opposing roles of air temperature and wind speed variability in flux estimation from remotely sensed land surface states, Water Resources Research, VOL. 43, W10433, doi:10.1029/2007WR005911, 2007. Cassiani, M., A. Radicchi, J.D. Albertson, U. Giostra, An efficient algorithm for scalar PDF modelling in incompressible turbulent flow; numerical analysis with evaluation of IEM and IECM micromixing models, Journal of Computational Physics, 223, 519-550, 2007. Montaldo, N., J.D. Albertson, and M. Mancini, Dynamic Calibration with an Ensemble Kalman Filter based data assimilation approach for root zone moisture predictions, J. Hydrometeorology, 8(4): 910, 2007. Cassiani, M., A. Radicchi, and J.D. Albertson, Modelling of Concentration Fluctuations in Canopy Turbulence, Boundary-Layer Meteorology, 122 (3): 655-681 Mar 2007. Poggi, D., G.G. Katul, J.D. Albertson, and L. Ridolfi, An Investigation of Turbulent Flows Over a Hilly Surface, Physics of Fluids, 19, 036601, 12pp, 2007. Williams, C.A., T.M. Scanlon, J.D. Albertson, Influence of surface heterogeneity on scalar dissimilarity in the roughness sublayer, Boundary-Layer Meteorol (2007) 122:149–165. Jaksic V, G. Kiely, J. Albertson, R. Oren, G. Katul, P. Leahy, K. Byrne. Net ecosystem exchange of grassland in contrasting wet and dry years, Agricultural and Forest Meteorology 139 (3-4): 323334 OCT 12 2006. Drewry, D., and J.D. Albertson, Diagnosing Model Error in Canopy-Atmosphere Exchange Using Empirical Orthogonal Function Analysis, Water Resources Research, 42, W06421, doi:10.1029/2005WR004496, 2006. Detto, M., N. Montaldo, J.D. Albertson, M. Mancini, and G. Katul, Soil moisture and vegetation controls on evapotranspiration in an heterogeneous Mediterranean ecosystem on Sardinia, Italy, Water Resources Research, 42 (8): Art. No. W08419 AUG 11 2006. 55 List of Publications by Tibor T. Polgar Fellows Emanuel, R. E., J. D. Albertson, H. E. Epstein, and C. A. Williams, Carbon dioxide exchange and early old-field succession, J. Geophys. Res. - Biogeosciences, 111, G01011, doi:10.1029/2005JG000069, 2006. Montaldo, N., R. Rondena, J.D. Albertson, and M. Mancini, Parsimonious Modeling of Vegetation Dynamics for Ecohydrologic Studies of Water-Limited Ecosystems, Water Resources Research, 41, W10416, 2005. Oren, R., C.-I. Hsieh, P. Stoy, J.D. Albertson, H.R. McCarthy, P. Harrell, and G. G. Katul, Estimating the uncertainty in annual net ecosystem carbon exchange: spatial variation in turbulent fluxes and sampling errors in eddy-covariance measurements, Global Change Biology, Volume 12, Page 883, doi:10.1111/j.1365-2486.2006.01131.x, 2006. Williams, C.A., and J.D. Albertson, Dynamical effects of the statistical structure of annual rainfall on dryland vegetation, Global Change Biology, Volume 12, Page 777, doi:10.1111/j.13652486.2006.01111.x, 2006. Williams, C.A., and J.D. Albertson, Contrasting short- and long-timescale effects of vegetation dynamics on water and carbon fluxes in water-limited ecosystems, Water Resources Research, 41, (6), W06005, 2005. Shi, B., B. Vidakovic, G.G. Katul, and J.D. Albertson, Assessing the Effects of Atmospheric Stability on the Fine Structure of Surface Layer Turbulence using Local and Global Multi-scale Approaches, Physics of Fluids, 17, 055104, 2005. Poggi, D., Katul, G.G., and J.D. Albertson, Scalar Dispersion within a Model Canopy: Measurements and Three-Dimensional Lagrangian Models, Advances in Water Resources, 29(2): 326-335, 2006. Williams, C.A., and J.D. Albertson, Soil moisture controls on canopy-scale water and carbon fluxes in an African savanna, Water Resources Research 40, (9): Art. No. W09302, 2004. Poggi, D., A. Porporato, L. Ridolfi, J.D. Albertson, G.G. Katul, Interaction between large and small scales in the canopy sublayer, Geophys. Res. Lett., Vol. 31, No. 5, L05102, 2004. Montaldo,N., V. Toninelli, J. D. Albertson, M. Mancini, and P. A. Troch, The effect of background hydrometeorological conditions on the sensitivity of evapotranspiration to model parameters: analysis with measurements from an Italian alpine catchment, Hydrology and Earth System Sciences, 7 (6): 848-861, 2003. Poggi, D., G.G. Katul, and J.D. Albertson, A note on the contribution of dispersive fluxes to momentum transfer within canopies, Boundary-Layer Meteorology, 111 (3): 615-621, 2004. Poggi, D., G.G. Katul, and J.D. Albertson, Momentum transfer and turbulent kinetic energy budgets within a dense model canopy, Boundary-Layer Meteorology, 111 (3): 589614, 2004. Poggi, D. A. Porporato, L. Ridolfi, J.D. Albertson, G.G. Katul, The effect of vegetation density on canopy sub-layer turbulence, Boundary-Layer Meteorology, 111 (3): 565-587, 2004. Scanlon, T.M., and J.D. Albertson, Canopy scale measurements of CO2 and water vapor exchange along a precipitation gradient in southern Africa, Global Change Biology, 10 (3): 329-341, 2004. Scanlon, T.M., and J.D. Albertson, Water availability and the spatial complexity of CO2, water, and energy fluxes over a heterogeneous sparse canopy, Journal of Hydrometeorology, 4 (5): 798-809, 2003. Montaldo, N., and J.D. Albertson, Temporal Dynamics of Soil Moisture Variability: 2. Implication for Land Surface Models, Water Resources Research, 39 (10): Art. No. 1275, 2003. Albertson, J.D. and N. Montaldo, Temporal Dynamics of Soil Moisture Variability: 1. Theoretical Basis, Water Resources Research, 39 (10): Art. No. 1274, 2003. Scanlon, T.M., and J.D. Albertson, Inferred controls on tree/grass composition in a savanna ecosystem: combining 16 year NDVI data with a dynamic soil moisture model, Water Resources Research, 39 (8): Art. No. 1224, 2003. Kustas, W.P., and J.D. Albertson, Effects of surface temperature contrast on land-atmosphere exchange: A case study from Monsoon90, Water Resources Research, 39 (6): Art. No. 1159, 2003. 56 List of Publications by Tibor T. Polgar Fellows Katul, G.G., C. Angelini, C. De Canditiis, B. Vidakovic, J.D. Albertson, and U. Amato, Are the effects of large scale flow conditions really lost through the turbulent cascade?, Geophysical Research Letters, 30 (4): art. no. 1164, 2003. Montaldo, N., and J.D. Albertson, Multi-scale assimilation of surface soil moisture data for root zone moisture predictions, Advances in Water Resources, 26, 33-44, 2003. Scanlon, T.M., J.D. Albertson, K.K. Caylor, and C.A. Williams, Determining land surface fractional cover components from NDVI and rainfall time series for a savanna ecosystem, Remote Sensing of Environment, 82(2-3), 376-388, 2002. Katul, G.G., P. Wiberg, J.D. Albertson, and G.W. Hornberger, A mixing layer theory for flow resistance in shallow streams, Water Resources Research, 38 (11): art. no. 1250, 2002. Oltchev A, Cermak J, Gurtz J, Tishenko A, Kiely G, Nadezhdina N, Zappa M, Lebedeva N, Vitvar T, Albertson JD, Tatarinov F, Tishenko D, Nadezhdin V, Kozlov B, Ibrom A, Vygodskaya N, Gravenhorst G, The response of the water fluxes of the boreal forest region at the Volga's source area to climatic and land-use changes, Physics And Chemistry of the Earth, 27 (9-10): 675-690 2002 Katul, G., C.-T. Lai, K. Schafer, B, Vidakovic, J. Albertson, D. Ellsworth, and R. Oren, Multiscale analysis of vegetation surface fluxes: from seconds to years, Advances in Water Resources, 24 (910): 1119-1132, 2001. Montaldo, N., and J.D. Albertson, On the use of the Force-Restore SVAT model formulation for stratified soils, Journal of Hydrometeorology, 2(6), 571-578, 2001. Montaldo, N., J.D. Albertson, M. Mancini, and G. Kiely, Robust prediction of root zone soil moisture from assimilation of surface soil moisture data, Water Resources Research, 37(12), 2889-2900, 2001. Albertson, J.D., G.G. Katul, and P. Wiberg, Relative importance of local and regional controls on coupled water, carbon, and energy fluxes, Advances in Water Resources, 24 (9/10), 1103-1118, 2001. Katul, G.G., C.-T. Lai, J.D. Albertson, B. Vidakovic, K. Schafer, C.-I. Hsieh and R. Oren, Quantifying the complexity in mapping energy inputs and hydrologic state variables into land-surface fluxes, Geophysical Research Letters, 28(17), 3305-3307, 2001. Albertson, J.D., and G. Kiely, On the structure of soil moisture time series in the context of land surface models, Journal of Hydrology, 243(1-2), 101-119, 2001. Scanlon, T.M., and J.D. Albertson, Turbulent transport of carbon dioxide and water within vegetation canopies during unstable conditions: Identification of episodes using wavelet analysis, J. Geophysical Research – Atmospheres, 106, 7251-7262, 2001. Albertson, J.D., W.P. Kustas, and T.M. Scanlon, Large-eddy simulation over heterogeneous terrain with remotely sensed land surface conditions, Water Resources Research, 37, 1939-1953, 2001. Katul, G.G., B. Vidakovic, and J.D. Albertson, Estimating global and local scaling exponents in turbulent flows using wavelet transformations, Physics of Fluids, 13, 241250, 2001. Vidakovic, B., G. Katul, and J.D. Albertson, Multiscale denoising of self-similar processes, Journal of Geophysical Research – Atmospheres, 105 (D22): 27049-27058, 2000. Katul, G., C.-I. Hsieh, D. Bowling, K. Clark, N. Shurpali, A. Turnipseed, J. Albertson, K. Tu, D. Hollinger, R. Evans, B. Orff, D. Anderson, D. Ellsworth, R. Oren, and C. Vogel, Spatial variability of turbulent fluxes in the roughness sublayer of a uniform pine forest, Boundary-Layer Meteorology, 93, 1-28,1999. Kiely, G., M. Parlange, J. Albertson, Water resources and climate change processes – Preface, Advances in Water Resources. 23(2):101-103, 1999. Albertson, J.D., and M.B. Parlange, Surface length scales and shear stress: Implications for landatmosphere interaction over complex terrain, Water Resources Research, 35, 2121-2132, 1999. Szilagyi, J., M.B. Parlange, G.G. Katul, and J.D. Albertson, An objective method for determining principal time scales of coherent eddy structures using orthonormal wavelets, Advances in Water Resources, 22(6), 561-566, 1999. 57 List of Publications by Tibor T. Polgar Fellows Katul, G.G., and J.D. Albertson, Modeling CO2 sources, sinks, and fluxes within a forested canopy, Journal of Geophysical Research, 104 , D6 , 6081-6092, 1999. Albertson, J.D., and M.B. Parlange, Natural integration of scalar fluxes from complex terrain, Advances in Water Resources, 23, 239-252, 1999. Katul, G.G., and J.D. Albertson, An investigation of higher order closure models for a forested canopy, Boundary Layer Meteorology, 89, 47-74, 1998. Szilagyi, J., M.B. Parlange, and J.D. Albertson, On the application of recession flow analysis for aquifer parameter estimation, Water Resources Research, 34, 1851-1857, 1998. Kiely, G., J.D. Albertson, M.B. Parlange, Recent trends in diurnal variations of precipitation at Valentia on the west coast of Ireland, Journal of Hydrology, 207, 270-279, 1998. E. Zanini, E. Bonifacio, J. D. Albertson, and D.R. Nielsen, Topsoil aggregate breakdown under watersaturated conditions, Soil Science, 163, 288-298, 1998. Albertson, J.D., G.G. Katul, M.B. Parlange, and W.E. Eichinger, Spectral scaling of static pressure fluctuations in the atmospheric surface layer: The interaction between large and small scales, Physics of Fluids, 10, 1725-1732, 1998. Kiely, G., J.D. Albertson, M.B. Parlange, and R.W. Katz, Conditioning stochastic properties of daily precipitation on indices of atmospheric circulation, Meteorological Applications 5, 75-87, 1998. Tyler, S.W., S. Kranz, M.B. Parlange, J.D. Albertson, G.G. Katul, G. Cochran, B. Lyles, and G.Holder, Estimation of groundwater evaporation and salt flux from Owens Dry Lake, California, USA, Journal of Hydrology, 200(1-4), 110-135, 1997. Cahill, A.T., M.B. Parlange, J.D. Albertson, On the Brutsaert temperature roughness length model for sensible heat flux estimation, Water Resources Research, 33(10), 23152324, 1997. Albertson, J.D., M.B. Parlange, G. Kiely, and W.E. Eichinger, The average dissipation rate of turbulent kinetic energy in the neutral and unstable atmospheric surface layer, Journal of Geophysical Research, 102(D12), 13423-13432, 1997. Chu, C.-R., M.B. Parlange, G.G. Katul, and J.D. Albertson, Probability density functions of turbulent velocity and temperature in the atmospheric surface layer, Water Resources Research, 32, 16811688, 1996. Katul, G.G., J.D. Albertson, C.-I. Hsieh, P.S. Conklin, J.T. Sigmon, M.B. Parlange, and K.N. Knoerr, The “inactive” eddy-motion and the large-scale turbulent static pressure fluctuations in the dynamic sublayer, J. Atmospheric Sciences, 53, 2512-2524, 1995. Szilagyi, J., G.G. Katul, M.B. Parlange, J.D. Albertson, and A.T. Cahill, The local effect of intermittency on the inertial subrange energy spectrum of the atmospheric surface layer, Boundary-Layer Meteorology, 79, 35-50, 1996. Kiely, G., J.D. Albertson, M.B. Parlange, and W.E. Eichinger, Convective scaling of the average dissipation rate of temperature variance in the atmospheric surface layer, Boundary-Layer Meteorology, 77, 267-284, 1996. Katul, G.G., M.B. Parlange, J.D. Albertson, and C.-R. Chu, An investigation of the sweeping decorrelation hypothesis in atmospheric surface layer flows, Fluid Dynamics Research, 16, 275295, 1995. Parlange, M.B., W.E. Eichinger, and J.D. Albertson, Regional evaporation into the atmospheric boundary layer, Reviews of Geophysics, 33, 99-124, 1995. Katul, G.G., M.B. Parlange, J.D. Albertson, and C.-R. Chu, Local isotropy and anisotropy in the sheared and heated atmospheric surface layer, Boundary-Layer Meteorology, 72, 123-148, 1995. Albertson, J.D., M.B. Parlange, G.G. Katul, C.-R. Chu, H. Stricker, and S. Tyler, Sensible heat flux from arid regions: A simple flux-variance method, Water Resources Research, 31, 969-973, 1995. Katul, G.G., C.R. Chu, M.B. Parlange, J.D. Albertson, and T. Ortenburger, Low wavenumber spectral characteristics of velocity and temperature in the atmospheric surface layer, Journal of Geophysical Research, 100, 7, 14243-14255, 1995. 58 List of Publications by Tibor T. Polgar Fellows Katul, G.G., J.D. Albertson, M.B. Parlange, C.-R. Chu, and H. Stricker, Conditional sampling, bursting, and the intermittent structure of sensible heat flux, Journal of Geophysical Research, 99, 2286922876, 1994. Katul, G.G., J. D. Albertson, C.-R. Chu, M.B. Parlange, H. Stricker, and S. Tyler, Sensible and latent heat flux predictions using conditional sampling methods, Water Resources Research, 30, 3053-3059, 1994. Book Chapters (Refereed) Albertson, J.D., C.A. Williams, T.M. Scanlon, and N. Montaldo, Soil Moisture Controls on Water vapor and carbon Fluxes in Semi-Arid Regions, in: Dryland Ecohydrology, Eds. P. D’Odorico and A. Porporato, Springer, pp67-83, 2006. Katul, G.G., D. Cava, D. Poggi, J.D. Albertson, and L. Mahrt, Stationarity, homogeneity, and ergodicity in canopy turbulence, in Handbook of Micrometeorology: A Guide for Surface Flux Measurements, Eds: X. Lee and W. Massman, Elsevier, 2005. Albertson, J.D., T.M. Scanlon, A.T. Cahill, and W.P. Kustas, Estimating surface energy fluxes with remotely sensed data, Remote Sensing in Hydrology 2000, IAHS Publ. No. 267(M. Owe, K. Brubaker, J. Ritchie and A. Rango Eds.), pp 145-150. Kustas, W.P., J.D. Albertson, T.M. Scanlon, and A.T. Cahill, Issues in monitoring evapotranspiration with radiometric temperature observations, Remote Sensing in Hydrology 2000, IAHS Publ. No. 267 (M. Owe, K. Brubaker, J. Ritchie and A. Rango Eds.), pp 239-245. Scanlon, T.M., J.D. Albertson, and W. P. Kustas, Scale effects in estimating large eddy-driven sensible heat fluxes over heterogeneous terrain, Remote Sensing in Hydrology 2000, IAHS Publ. No. 267 (M. Owe, K. Brubaker, J. Ritchie and A. Rango Eds.), pp 175-180. Katul, G.G. and J.D. Albertson, Low-dimensional turbulent transport mechanics near the forestatmosphere interface, Bayesian inference in wavelet based models, Springer-Verlag, 1999. Parlange, M.B., J.D. Albertson, W.E. Eichinger, A.T. Cahill and T.J. Jackson, Evaporation: Use of fast response turbulence sensors, raman lidar and passive microwave remote sensing, in: Vadose Zone Hydrology: Cutting Across Disciplines, M.B. Parlange and JW Hopmans (eds.), pp260-278, Oxford University Press, 1999. Albertson, J.D. , G. Kiely, and M.B. Parlange, Surface fluxes of momentum, heat, and water vapor, in: Radiation and Water in the Climate System, NATO ASI Series 1: Global Environmental Change, Vol.45, (E.Raschke, Editor), pp59-82, Springer-Verlag, 1996. Katul, G.G., J. D. Albertson, C.-R. Chu, and M.B. Parlange, Intermittency in atmospheric surface layer turbulence: The orthonormal wavelet representation, in: Wavelets in Geophysics, (E. FoufoulaGeorgiou and P. Kumar, Editors.), pp81-105, Academic Press, 1994. Arend, Kristin Arend, K.K. and M.B. Bain. 2008. Lake Ontario embayment fish community structure: the role of embayment physical and chemical features. BMC Ecology 8:23. doi:10.1186/1472-6785-8-23 Bremigan, M.T., P.A. Soranno, M.J. Gonzalez, D.B. Bunnell, K.K. Arend, W.H. Renwick, R.A. Stein, and M.J. Vanni. 2008. Hydrogeomorphic features mediate the effects of land use on reservoir productivity and food webs. Limnology and Oceanography 53:1420-1433. Bain, M.B., N. Haley, D.L. Peterson, K.K. Arend, K.E. Mills, and P.J. Sullivan. 2007. Recovery of a US endangered fish. PLoS ONE 2: e168. doi:10.1371/journal.pone.0000168 (online publication: www.plosone.org). Meixler, M.S., K.K. Arend and M.B. Bain. 2005. Fish community support in wetlands within protected embayments of Lake Ontario. Journal of Great Lakes Research 31: 188-196. 59 List of Publications by Tibor T. Polgar Fellows Vanni, M.J., K.K. Arend, D.B. Bunnell, M.T. Bremigan, D.B. Bunnell, J.E. Garvey, M.J. González, W.H. Renwick, P.A. Soranno, R.A. Stein. 2005. Linking Landscapes and Food Webs: Interactive Effects of Omnivorous Fish and Watersheds on Reservoir Ecosystems. BioScience 55: 155-167. Bain, M.B., N. Haley, D.L. Peterson, J. Waldman, and K.K. Arend. 2000. Harvest and habitats of Atlantic sturgeon Acipenser oxyrinchus Mitchill, 1815 in the Hudson River estuary: lessons for sturgeon conservation. Boletín.Instituto Español de Oceanografía 16: 65-75. Arend, K.K. Classification of streams and reaches. 1999. Pages 57-74 in Bain, M.B., and N.J. Stevenson, editors. 1999. Aquatic Habitat assessment: common methods. American Fisheries Society, Bethesda, Maryland. Arend, K.K. Macrohabitat classification. 1999. Pages 75-94 in Bain, M.B., and N.J. Stevenson, editors. Aquatic Habitat assessment: common methods. American Fisheries Society, Bethesda, Maryland. Arend, K.K., and M.B. Bain. 1999. Stream reach surveys and measurements. Pages 47-56 in Bain, M.B., and N.J. Stevenson, editors. Aquatic Habitat assessment: common methods. American Fisheries Society, Bethesda, Maryland. Limburg, K.E., M.L. Pace, and K.K. Arend. 1999. Growth, mortality, and recruitment of larval Morone spp. in relation to food availability and temperature in the Hudson River. Fishery Bulletin 97: 8091. Limburg, K.E., M.L. Pace, D. Fischer, and K.K. Arend. 1997. Consumption, selectivity, and use of zooplankton by larval striped bass and white perch in a seasonally pulsed estuary. Transactions of the American Fisheries Society 125:607-621. Austin, H. Kay Austin, H.K. and S.E.G. Findlay. 1989. Benthic bacterial biomass and production in the Hudson River Estuary. Microbial Ecology. 18:105-116. Austin Gill, H.K. and S.E.G. Findlay, 1987. The contribution of bacteria to benthic processes in the Hudson River Estuary. Hudson River Foundation Polgar Report. Barrett, John Barrett, J. E., R. A. Virginia, D. H. Wall, P. T. Doran, A. G. Fountain, K. A. Welch and W. B. Lyons. 2008. Persistent effects of a discrete climate event on a polar desert ecosystem. Global Change Biology 14: 2249-2261. Barrett, J. E., R. A. Virginia, D. H. Wall and B. J. Adams. 2008. A decline of a dominant invertebrate species contributes to altered carbon cycling in low diversity soil ecosystem. Global Change Biology 14: 1734-1744. Barrett, J. E., R. A. Virginia, W. B. Lyons, D. M. McKnight, J. C. Priscu, P. T. Doran, A. G. Fountain, D. H. Wall, and D. L. Moorhead. 2007. Biogeochemical stoichiometry of Antarctic Dry Valley ecosystems. Journal of Geophysical Research: Biogeosciences 112: G01010. Barrett, J. E., R. A. Virginia, D. H. Wall, S. C. Cary, B. J. Adams, A. L. Hacker and J. M. Aislabie. 2006. Co-variation in soil biodiversity and biogeochemistry in northern and southern Victoria Land, Antarctica. Antarctic Science 18:535-548. Barrett, J. E., R. A. Virginia, D. W. Hopkins, J. Aislabie, R. Bargagli, J. G. Bockheim, I. B. Campbell, W. B. Lyons, D. Moorhead, J. Nkem, R. Sletten, H. Steltzer, D. H. Wall, and M. Wallenstein. 2006. Terrestrial ecosystem processes of Victoria Land, Antarctica. Soil Biology and Biochemistry 38: 3019-3034. Barrett, J. E., D. H. Wall, R. A. Virginia, A. N. Parsons, L. E. Powers, and M. B. Burkins. 2004. Variation in biogeochemistry and soil biodiversity across spatial scales in a polar desert ecosystem. Ecology 85: 3105-3118. 60 List of Publications by Tibor T. Polgar Fellows Barrett, J. E., R. L. McCulley, D. R. Lane, I. C. Burke and W. K. Lauenroth. 2002. Influence of annual and seasonal climate variability on plant production and N mineralization in the U.S. Central Grasslands region. Journal of Vegetation Science 13:383-394. Barrett, J. E., and I. C. Burke. 2002. Nitrogen retention in semiarid ecosystems across a soil organic matter gradient. Ecological Applications 12:878-890. Barrett, J. E., D. W. Johnson and I. C. Burke. 2002. Abiotic nitrogen uptake in semiarid grassland soils. Soil Science Society of America Journal 66:979-987. Barrett, J. E., and I. C. Burke. 2000. Potential nitrogen immobilization in grassland soils across a soil organic matter gradient. Soil Biology and Biochemistry 32:1707-1716. Bernick, Andrew Bernick, A.J. In prep. Black-crowned Night-Heron foraging ecology in an urban system. Bernick, A.J. In prep. Harassment and predation of adult Black-crowned Night-Herons by Great blackbacked gulls at an urban breeding colony. Bernick, A.J. In prep. Use of a drop net to capture Black-crowned Night-Heron adults on urban foraging grounds. Bernick, A.J. and S. Elbin. In prep. New York City Audubon's Harbor Herons Project: Population trends in New York/New Jersey Harbor, 1985-2008. Elbin, S. and A. Bernick. In prep. Double-crested Cormorant nesting activity in the NY/NJ Harbor Estuary, 1985-2008. Bernick, A.J. and E. Craig. 2008. NYC Audubon’s Harbor Herons Project: 2008 Interim Nesting Survey. NYC Audubon. New York, NY. 42pp. Bernick, A.J. 2007. Foraging ecology of Black-crowned Night-Herons (Nycticorax nycticorax) in the New York City area. Ph.D. Dissertation. City University of New York – Graduate School and University Center. New York, NY. 236pp. Bernick, A.J. 2007. Prall’s Island and Asian Longhorned Beetles. The Tidal Exchange – The NY/NJ Harbor Estuary Program Newsletter, Autumn 2007. Bernick, A.J. 2007. New York City Audubon Society’s Harbor Herons Project: 2007 Nesting Survey. NYC Audubon. New York, NY. 48pp. Bernick, A.J. 2006. New York City Audubon Society’s Harbor Herons Project: 2006 Interim Nesting Survey. NYC Audubon. New York, NY. 23pp. Bernick, A.J. 2005. New York City Audubon Society’s Harbor Herons Project: 2005 Interim Nesting Survey. NYC Audubon. New York, NY.26pp. Brzorad, John Maccarone, A.D. and J.N. Brzorad. 2007. Foraging behavior and energetics of great egrets and snowy egrets at interior rivers and weirs. J. Field Ornithol. 78(4): 411-419. Maccarone, A.D. and J.N.Brzorad. 2005. Foraging microhabitat selection by wading birds in a tidal estuary with implications for conservation. Waterbirds 28: 384-392. Brzorad, J.N., A.D. Maccarone, and K.J. Conley. 2004. Foraging energetics of great egrets and snowy egrets. J. Field Ornithol. 75(3): 266-280. Maccarone, A.D. and J.N. Brzorad. 2000. Wading bird foraging: Response and recovery from an oil spill. Waterbirds 23(2) 246-257. Maccarone, A.D. and J. Brzorad. 1995. Changes in the foraging habitats used by breeding wading birds after a series of major oil spills into the New York-New Jersey estuary. Wetlands.15:(4) 397-407. Brzorad, J.N. and J. Burger. 1994. Fish and shrimp populations in the Arthur Kill. In Before and After an Oil Spill: the Arthur Kill, J. Burger (ed.), Rutgers University Press. Burger, J., J.N. Brzorad, and M. Gochfeld. 1994. Fiddler crabs (Uca sp.) as bioindicators for oil spills. In Before and After an Oil Spill: the Arthur Kill, J.Burger (ed.), Rutgers University Press. 61 List of Publications by Tibor T. Polgar Fellows Maccarone, A.D., J.N. Brzorad. 1994. Gull and waterfowl populations in the Arthur Kill. In .Before and after an oil spill: the Arthur Kill, J. Burger (ed.), Rutgers University Press. Maccarone, A.D., J.N. Brzorad, and K. Parsons. 1993. Nest site selection by herring gulls in an urban estuary. Colonial Waterbirds 16(2): 216-220. Burger, J., J.N. Brzorad, and M. Gochfeld. 1992. Effects of an oil spill on emergence and mortality in fiddler crabs Uca pugnax. Envir. Monit. and Assess. 22:107-115. Burger, J., J.N. Brzorad, and M. Gochfeld. 1991. Immediate effects of an oil spill on behavior of fiddler crabs Uca pugnax. Archiv. Envir. Contam. Toxicol. 20:404-407. Parsons, K., A.D. Maccarone, and J. Brzorad. 1991. First breeding record of double-crested cormorant (Phalacrocorax auritus) in New Jersey. Records of New Jersey Birds 17:51-53. Brzorad, J.N. and J. Burger. 1990. Egret foraging behavior and prey ecology in the lower Hudson River Estuary. Publication of the Hudson River Foundation's Polar Fellowship Program. Ricker, J., J. Brzorad, and J. Hirsch. 1986. A demonstration of discriminative conditioning in the Blow Fly (Phormia regina). Bull. Psychonomic Society 24(3): 240-243. Burke, David Burke DJ, Kretzer AM, Rygiewicz PT & Topa MA (2006) Soil bacterial diversity in a loblolly pine plantation: Influence of ectomycorrhizas and fertilization. FEMS MicrobiologyEcology, 57: 409419. Burke DJ, Martin KJ, Rygiewicz PT & Topa MA (2006) Relative abundance of ectomycorrhizas in a managed loblolly pine (Pinus taeda L.) genetics plantation as determined through terminal restriction fragment length polymorphism (TRFLP) profiles. Canadian Journal of Botany, 84(6): 924-932. Burke DJ, Martin KJ, Rygiewicz PT & Topa MA (2005) Ectomycorrhizal fungi identification in single and pooled root samples: terminal restriction fragment length polymorphism (TRFLP) and morphotyping compared. Soil Biology and Biochemistry, 37: 1683-1694. Burke DJ, Hamerlynck EP & Hahn D (2003) Interactions between the salt marsh grass Spartina patens, arbuscular mycorrhizal fungi and sediment bacteria during the growing season. Soil Biology and Biochemistry, 35: 501-511. Weis P, Windham L, Burke DJ & Weis JS (2002) Release into the environment of metals by two vascular salt marsh plants. Marine Environmental Research, 54: 1-5. Burke DJ, Hamerlynck EP & Hahn D (2002) Effect of AM mycorrhizae on soil microbial populations and associated plant performance of the salt marsh grass Spartina patens. Plant and Soil, 239: 141154. Burke DJ, Hamerlynck EP & Hahn D (2002) Interactions among plant species and microorganisms in salt marsh sediments. Applied and Environmental Microbiology, 68:1157-1164. Burke DJ, Weis JS & Weis P (2000) Release of metals by the leaves of the salt marsh grasses Spartina alterniflora and Phragmites australis. Estuarine, Coastal and Shelf Science, 51: 153-159. Burke DJ (1997) Donor wetland soil promotes re-vegetation in wetland trials. Restoration and Management Notes, 15: 168–172. Cagen, Katherine Cagen, K.T., D. Abbott, F. Nitsche, A. West, T. Bunch, D. Breger, A. Slagle, S. Carbotte (2008), Evidence for a tsunamigenic impact event in the New York metropolitan area approximately 2300 B.P., Eos Trans. AGU, 89(53), Fall Meet. Suppl. Abstract P31A-1381 Cagen, K. and D. Abbott. 2009. Evidence for a tsunami generated by an impact event in the New York metropolitan area approximately 2300 years ago. Section I: 23 pp. In S.H. Fernald, D. Yozzo and H. Andreyko (eds.), Final Reports of the Tibor T. Polgar Fellowship Program, 2008. Hudson River Foundation. 62 List of Publications by Tibor T. Polgar Fellows Coote, Thomas Schmidt, R., J. Anderson, T. Coote, J. Frenzel, W. Gilchrest, and K. Limburg. In prep. Fish Communities in Hudson River Water Chestnut. Hudson River Environmental Society. Schmidt, R., T. Hunsinger, T. Coote, E. Griffin-Noyes, and E. Kiviat. 2004. Mudpuppy (Necturus maculosus) in the Tidal Hudson River with Comments on its Status as Native. Northeastern Naturalist 11(2): 179-188. Coote, T., R. Schmidt, and N. Caraco. 2000. Use of Periodically Anoxic Trapa natans Beds by Fishes in the Hudson River. The Hudson River Foundation. Coote, T. and D. Roeder. 2000. The Distribution of Pyrgulopsis lustrica in Western Massachusetts, JuneAugust 2000. The Massachusetts Natural Heritage Program. Coote, T. 2000. The Relative Abundance of Pyrgulopsis lustrica and its Movements in Stockbridge Bowl, MA, September-December, 1999. Berkshire Environmental Research Center, Gt. Barrington, MA. Cotroneo, Chris Cotroneo, C., and D.J. Yozzo. W-fold: A folding, transportable 1 m2 throw trap for use in densely vegetated aquatic habitats. Journal of Freshwater Ecology. In review. DeLeon, Sara DeLeon, S. and A. Dhondt. 2007. The effect of polychlorinated biphenyls (PCBs) on song production of the Black-capped Chickadee (Poecile atricapillus). Section V: 21pp. In J.R. Waldman & W.C. Nieder (eds.), Final Reports of the Tibor T. Polgar Fellowship Program, 2006. Hudson River Foundation. Drill, Sabrina Accepted: Drill. S.L., Aliaga, P. , Cox, F. Environment and Community: Caring for our Natural Resources. An English-as-a-Second Language Curriculum. Unit 1: Water. UCANR Press. 97pp. Drill, S.L., Surls, R. Aliaga, P., DiGiovanni, F.C., 2009. Bringing the Environment into the English-as-aSecond-Language Classroom. Journal of Extension, 47:3:#3IAW3 Dagit. R, Drill, S., Adams, S. 2009. Die off and current status of southern steelhead trout (Oncorhynchus mykiss) in Malibu Creek, Los Angeles County, USA. Bulletin of the Southern California Academy of Science, 108:1-15 Swift, C. Drill, S., and McAdams, L. 2008. Section 1: Native Species, pp. 5-22 in McAdams, L., Brooks, J., Backlar, S., eds. State of the River 2: The Fish Study. Friends of the Los Angeles River, 38 pp. Drill. S.L. 2008. The use of protected areas for biodiversity and stock conservation. Pages 1253-1262 in J.L. Nielsen, J. J.Dodson, K. Friedland, T. R. Hamon, J. Musick, and E. Verspoor, editors. Reconciling Fisheries with Conservation: proceedings of the Fourth World Fisheries Congress. American Fisheries Society, Symposium 49, Bethesda, Maryland. Drill, S.L., Borel, V.T., Ready, D., Casanova, J, Todd, J, Nash, B., Quarles S., and Schoustra, J. 2008. Sustainable and Fire Safe (SAFE) Landscapes 2009 Calendar and Guidebook (Ventura and Los Angeles County Editions). UCCE-Los Angeles County and the Los Angeles and San Gabriel Rivers Watershed Council. 18 pp. Drill. S. 2008. Sustainable and Fire Safe Landscaping. Newsletter of the Ventura County Farm Bureau. August, 2008 edition. 63 List of Publications by Tibor T. Polgar Fellows Drill, S. 2008. Sustainable Fire Preparation and Fuel Management. WatershedWise, Newsletter of the Los Angeles and San Gabriel River Watershed Council, Spring edition. Drill, S.L. 2007. New Zealand Mudsnails Invade Southern California. The Smilodon, Newsletter of the Southern California Academy of Science. Spring 2007 Drill, S.L. 2007. Cooperative Extension Programs in Natural Resource Management and Land Use Planning. Abstracts of the 13th International Symposium on Society and Resource Management, Park City, Utah, June 17-21 Drill, S.L., Borel, V.T., Ready, D., Casanova, J, and Todd, J. 2007. Sustainable and Fire Safe (SAFE) Landscapes 2008 Calendar and Guidebook. UCCE-Los Angeles County and the Los Angeles and San Gabriel Rivers Watershed Council. 18 pp. Drill, S.L., and Borel, V.T. 2007. SAFE Landscapes in the WUI. SAFE Landscape Fact Sheet Series. UCCE-Los Angeles County Borel, V.T., and Drill, S.L. 2007. Making Your Property Fire Safe. SAFE Landscape Fact Sheet Series. UCCE-Los Angeles County Drill, S.L. 2007. Rapid Fish Die-off in Malibu Creek. Sea Grant Fisheries Newsletter, Spring 2007 Borel V.T., Drill S.L. editors. 2006. Santa Clara River Times newsletter, Vol. 1, Winter 2006 Surls, R., Aliaga, P., Cox, F., Drill, S. 2006. Environmental Literacy Among Recent Immigrants. Abstracts of California and the World Ocean, 2006. Sept. 17-20, Long Beach, CA. Drill, S.L. 2005. Book Review: Marine Reserves: A Guide to Science, Design, and Use. Edited by Jack Sobel and Craig Dahlgren. Reviews in Fish Biology and Fisheries, 15:159-151. Tjete, W.D., Prucell, K., and Drill, S.L. 2005. Oak Woodland as Wildlife Habitat in G. Guisti, editor: A Planner’s Guide to Oak Woodlands, 2nd Edition. Integrated Hardwood Range Management Program and DANR Press, University of California. Dagit, R., Drill, S., and Meyer, B. 2005. Historic Distribution of Southern Steelhead Trout in the Santa Monica Bay Region. Pacific States Marine Fisheries Commission, Contract No. AWIP-S-4. 235pp. Pratt, J. and Drill, S. 2005. Matilija Dam Ecosystem Restoration Project. State of the Bay Conference, Santa Monica Bar Restoration Commission, Jan. 13th, Los Angeles, California Drill, S. L. 2004. West Nile Virus and Managing Mosquitoes. Website of Los Angeles County Cooperative Extension, http://celosangeles.ucdavis.edu Pritchett, D.A., S.L. Drill and M. Larson. 2002. Southern California Steelhead: A Living Legacy. Southern California Steelhead Recovery Coalition, UC Cooperative Extension, and California Department of Fish and Game. Drill, S.L. 2002. A toolbox for watershed management. Natural Resources Program, Los Angeles and Ventura Counties, University of California Cooperative Extension. http://celosangeles.ucdavis.edu/natural_resources/toolbox.html Drill, S.L. 2002. Southern California Species Profiles: Least Bell’s vireo, California Red-legged frog, Arroyo toad, Arroyo chub, Santa Ana sucker, Unarmored 3-spine stickleback, Los Angeles sunflower, San Fernando Valley spineflower, Arundo. Natural Resources Program, Los Angeles and Ventura Counties, University of California Cooperative Extension. http://celosangeles.ucdavis.edu/natural_resources/species_profile.html Drill, S.L., D.L. Haver and J.N. Kabashima. 2002. Water Pollution and Regulation. Natural Resources and Environmental Horticulture Programs, Ventura, Los Angeles, and Orange Counties, University of California Cooperative Exentsion Drill, S.L. 2002. Hydrology and Water Quality Sections in: Imhoff, C. The Los Angeles River Guide for Teachers and Group Leaders. Friends of the Los Angeles River, Los Angeles, California. 164 pp. Drill, S.L., and Reed, R. 2002. Stakeholder involvement: challenges and changes. Working at a Watershed Level: A Workshop on Water Resource Issues in California’s Central Valley, June 37 2002, California State University, Fresno 64 List of Publications by Tibor T. Polgar Fellows Drill, S.L. 2002. Conservation of the endangered Southern California Steelhead in the Ventura River: an update on the proposed removal of Matilija Dam. Annual Meeting of the Southern California Academy of Science, June 7-8, Claremont McKenna College, Claremont Drill, S.L. 2001. Community based fisheries management and conservation in Lake Malawi. Abstracts of the 81st Annual Meeting of the American Society of Ichthyologists and Herpetologists, July 5-10, Pennsylvania State University, State College Drill, S.L. 1998. Conservation and fisheries management in the African Great Lakes. Abstracts of the Annual Meeting of the Association of American Geographers, Boston Drill, S.L. 1996. A genetic analysis of hatchery propagation for management of the endangered razorback sucker, Xyrauchen texanus. Master’s Thesis, Department of Biology, University of California, Los Angeles. 58 pp. Drill, S.L. 1996. Hatchery propagation for management of the endangered razorback sucker: a genetic analysis. Isozyme Bulletin 29:27. Buth, D.G., T.R. Haglund, and S.L. Drill. 1996. Geographic patterns of allozyme divergence in the endangered Klamath basin catostomid fishes, Chasmistes brevirostris and Deltisites luxatus. Isozyme Bulletin 29:26. Buth, D.G., M.S. Gordon, I. Plaut, S.L. Drill, and L.G. Adams. 1995. Genetic heterogeneity in isogenic homozygous clonal zebrafish, Danio rerio. Proceedings of the National Academy of Science 92:12367-12369. Drill, S.L. 1995. A genetic analysis of artificial propagation of the endangered razorback sucker, Xyrauchen texanus. Proceedings of the Desert Fishes Council 27:29. D.G. Buth, T.R. Haglund, and S.L. Drill. 1994. Resolution of creatine kinase expression in catostomid fishes: starch makes a difference, Isozyme Bulletin 27:61. Dueker, M. Elias Dueker, M. and G. O’Mullan. 2009. Capturing the nutrient overenrichment-eutrophication-hypoxia cycle in Newtown Creek. Section II: 17 pp. In S.H. Fernald, D. Yozzo and H. Andreyko (eds.), Final Reports of the Tibor T. Polgar Fellowship Program, 2008. Hudson River Foundation. Dueker, M. and R. Sambrotto. 2006. Summer microbial populations in the lower Hudson River Estuary and their relationship to dissolved organic nutrients. Section X: 38pp. In W.C. Nieder & J.R. Waldman (eds.), Final Reports of the Tibor T. Polgar Fellowship Program, 2005. Hudson River Foundation. Ellefson, Anne Cooper Ellefson, A.C. and B. Brownawell. 2008. New Tools for assessing the exposure of phthalate esters in the Lower Hudson estuary. Section IV: 1-22. In C.A. McGlynn & J.R. Waldman (eds), Final Reports of the Tibor T. Polgar Fellowship Program, 2007. Hudson River Foundation He, Lijian; Ellefson, Anne C.; and Ferry, John L. Multifactorial laboratory modeling of the hydrolysis of simvastatin: a strategy for incorporating variable local conditions into aquatic degradation models. In Preparation Griffith, David Griffith, D. R., 2008. The ecological implications of individual fishing quotas and harvest cooperatives. Frontiers in Ecology and the Environment, 6, (4), 191-198. Griffith, D. R., 2008. Ownership and incentives: a response to Ban et al. Frontiers in Ecology and the Environment 2008, 6, (10), 521-522. Griffith, D. R.; Barnes, R. T.; Raymond, P. A., Inputs of fossil carbon from wastewater treatment plants to U.S. rivers and oceans. Environmental Science & Technology in press. 65 List of Publications by Tibor T. Polgar Fellows Griffith, D. R.; Raymond, P. A., The upside-down Hudson River estuary: multiple-source heterotrophy in an urbanized estuary. in review Grubel, Colin C. F. Grubel and J. R. Waldman. In Press. Feeding habits and the effects of prey morphologyon pellet production in Double-crested Cormorants, Phalacrocorax auritus. Section VIII:1-28 pp. In S.H. Fernald, D. Yozzo and H. Andreyko (eds.), Final Reports of the Tibor T. Polgar Fellowship Program, 2008. Hudson River Foundation C. F. Grubel. 2007. NYC Audubon New York City Raptor Census – Final Report. New York City Audubon Society, New York, NY. Unpub. Haley, Nancy Bain, M., N. Haley, D. Peterson, K. Arend, K. Mills, and P. Sullivan. 2007. Recovery of a US endangered fish. PLoS ONE 2(1): e168 Bain, M. B., N. Haley, D. Peterson, J. Waldman, and K. Arend. 2000. Harvest and habitats of Atlantic sturgeon (Acipenser oxyrinchus ) in the Hudson River estuary: lessons for sturgeon conservation. Instituto Español de Oceanografía Publicaciones Especiales, Madrid, Spain. Moser, M. L., M. Bain, M. R. Collins, N. Haley, B. Kynard, J. C. O'Herron II, G. Rogers, and T. S. Squiers. 2000. A protocol for use of shortnose and Atlantic sturgeons. National Marine Fisheries Service, National Oceanographic and Atmospheric Administration Technical Memorandum NMFS-OPR-18, Silver Spring, MD, 18 pages. Peterson, D. L., M. B. Bain, and N. Haley. 2000. Evidence of declining recruitment of Atlantic sturgeon in the Hudson River. North American Journal of Fisheries Management 20:231-138. National Marine Fisheries Service. 1998. Recovery plan for the shortnose sturgeon (Acipenser brevirostrum). Prepared by the Shortnose Sturgeon Recovery Team for the National Marine Fisheries Service, Silver Spring, MD. Haley, N. 1998. A gastric lavage technique for characterizing diets of sturgeons. North American Journal of Fisheries Management 18:978-981. Haley, N., J. Boreman, and M. Bain. 1996. Juvenile sturgeon habitat use in the Hudson River. Section VIII: 36 pp. In: J.R. Waldman, W.C. Nieder, and E.A. Blair (editors). Final Reports of the Tibor T. Polgar Fellowship Program, 1995. Hudson River Foundation, New York, NY. Haley, N.J. and A.J. Read. 1993. Summary of the workshop on harbor porpoise mortalities and human interactions. NOAA Technical Memorandum, Woods Hole, MA Hanson, Stephanie Hanson, S. R., D. T. Osgood, and D. J. Yozzo. 2002. Nekton use of a Phragmites australis marsh in the Hudson River, New York, USA. Wetlands 22:326–337 Horn, Erin Horn, E. and R. Burke. 2008. Possible effects of endocrine disrupting chemicals on diamondback terrapins (Malaclemys terrapin) from Jamaica Bay, NY. Section VII:26pp. In C. A. McGlynn & J.R. Waldman (eds.), Final Reports of the Tibor T. Polgar Fellowship Program, 2007. Hudson River Foundation. 66 List of Publications by Tibor T. Polgar Fellows Howe, David Howe, DV, Jordan RC and F Juanes. 2008. Selective feeding in a generalist invertivore, age-0 striped bass. Ecol. Fresh. Fish. 17: 495-501. Jordan, RC, S Gray, and DV Howe. 2007. Atlantic Ocean. Encyc. of Global Warming and Climate Change. Sage Publishing. Gray, S, RC Jordan, and DV Howe. 2007. Oceanic Changes. Encyc. of Global Warming and Climate Change. Sage Publishing. Jordan, RC, and DV Howe. 2007. Photopigment spectral absorbance of four Hudson River fishes. Journal of Freshwater Ecology 22:155-157. Jordan RC, Howe DV, Beavers, A, Dean A, Gould J (2006) Female associative behavior accompanies morphology distinction in two Panamanian populations of the molly Poecilia gilli (Kner). J Fresh Ecol 21:47-52 Jordan, RC, JM Rousch, and DV Howe. 2006. What do undergraduates think about science? Journal of Natural Resources and Life Sciences Education 35: 79-84. Jordan, RC, DV Howe, T Knight, and JL Gould. 2006 Female choice linked to male dorsal fin height in a shortfin molly Journal of Ethology 24: 301-304. Jordan, RC, DV Howe, K.A. Kellogg, F. Juanes, E.R. Loew, and J.R. Stauffer, Jr. 2004. Ultraviolet reflectivity and mate choice in Lake Malawi rock-dwellers (Cichlidae). Journal of Fish Biology 65: 876-882 Jordan, RC, DV Howe, F. Juanes, J.R. Stauffer, Jr., and E.R. Loew. 2004. The role of ultraviolet radiation in foraging in a group of Lake Malawi cichlids. African Journal of Ecology 42: 228-231 Jordan, RC, DV Howe, T.D. Hurst, and F. Juanes. 2003. Feeding Habits of juvenile (age-0) striped bass Morone saxatilis in the mid-Hudson River Estuary. Estuaries: 26, 1486-1493 Jordan, Rebecca Polgar Publications: Howe, DV, Jordan RC and F Juanes. 2008. Selective feeding in a generalist invertivore, age-0 striped bass. Ecol. Fresh. Fish. 17: 495-501. Jordan, R.C., D.V. Howe, T.D. Hurst, and F. Juanes. 2003. Feeding Habits of juvenile (age-0) striped bass Morone saxatilis in the mid-Hudson River Estuary Estuaries 26: 1486-1493. Select Other Recent Publications: Jordan, R.C., S. Gray, M. Demeter, L. Lui, and C. Hmelo-Silver. 2009. Systems and cycles: teaching ecology. Applied Environmental Education & Communication 8:40-48. Jordan, R.C. and R.G. Duncan. 2009. Preservice teachers’ image of science in ecology when compared to genetics. Journal of Biological Education 43:62-69. Jordan, R.C., F. Singer, J. Vaughan, and A. Berkowitz. 2008. What should every citizen know about ecology? Frontiers in Ecology and the Environment e-view: doi: 10.1890/070113 Jordan, R.C., K.A. Kellogg, F. Juanes, J.R. Stauffer, Jr., E. Garcia-Vasquez, and E.R. Loew. 2008.Variation along a depth gradient of a Lake Malawi cichlid. African Journal of Ecology 46:107-109. Jordan, R.C. 2008. Color based association among heterospecifics in Lake Malaŵi rock-dwelling cichlids. Ethology 112:272-278. Kerr, Robert Kerr, R. and D.G. Capone. The effect of salinity on the microbial mineralization of two polycyclic aromatic hydrocarbons in estuarine sediments. Mar. Environ. Res. 26:181-198. 67 List of Publications by Tibor T. Polgar Fellows Bauer, J., R. Kerr, M. Bautista, C.J. Decker and D.G. Capone. Interactive effects of Capitella colonization and chronic hydrocarbon exposure on sediment microbial activities in marine microcosms. Mar. Environ. Res. 25:63-84. Kuhn, Kristen Kuhn, K. L. and T.J. Near. In Press. Phylogeny of Trematomus (Notothenioidei: Nototheniidae) inferred from mitochondrial and nuclear gene sequences. Antarctic Science. Kuhn, K.L., T.J. Near, C.D. Jones, J.T. Eastman. 2009. In Press. Aspects of the biology and population genetics of the Antarctic nototheniid fish Trematomus nicolai. Copeia. 2: 320-327 Jones, C.D., Anderson, M.E., Balushkin, A.V., Duhamel, G., Eakin, R.R., Eastman, J.T., Kuhn, K.L., Lecointre, G., Near, T.J., North, A.W., Stein, D.L., Vacchi, M., Detrich, H.W. III. 2008. Abundance, new records and population structure of Antarctic demersal fishes from the northern Scotia Arc islands and Bouvetøya. Polar Biology. 31: 1481–1497. Kuhn, K.L. and P.M. Gaffney. 2008. Population subdivision in the Antarctic toothfish (Dissostichus mawsoni) revealed by mitochondrial and nuclear single nucleotide polymorphisms (SNPs). Antarctic Science 20: 327-338. Kuhn, K. L. and P. M. Gaffney. 2006. Preliminary assessment of population structure in the mackerel icefish (Champsocephalus gunnari). Polar Biology 29: 927-935. Kuhn, K.L. and I. Kornfield. 2004. Genetic differentiation of the alewife, Alosa pseudoharengus, in the Hudson River. Section V: In W.C. Neider and J.R. Waldman, (eds.), Final Reports of the Tibor T. Polgar Fellowship Program, 2004. Hudson River Foundation. Lage, C., K. L. Kuhn and I. Kornfield. 2004. Genetic structuring of Atlantic cod (Gadus morhua) from Browns Bank, Georges Bank, and Nantucket Shoals. Fisheries Bulletin 102: 289-297. Paradise, C. J. and K. L. Kuhn. 1999. Interactive effects of pH and leaf litter on a shredder, the Scirtid beetle, Helodes pulchella, inhabiting treeholes. Journal of Freshwater Biology 41: 43-49. Lake, Thomas Lake, T.R. and R.E. Schmidt. 1997. Seasonal presence and movement of fish populations in the tidal reach of Quassaic Creek, a Hudson River tributary (HRM 60) in Orange County, New York: Evidence for potamodromy, anadromy, and residential components. Tibor T. Polgar 1997 Fellowship, Hudson River Foundation, NYS Department of Environmental Conservation. Lake, T.R. and R.E. Schmidt. 1998. A correlation between fecundity of an alewife (Alosa pseudoharengus) spawning population and egg productivity in Quassaic Creek, a Hudson River tributary (HRM 60) in Orange County, New York. Tibor T. Polgar 1998 Fellowship, Hudson River Foundation, NYS Department of Environmental Conservation. Lake, T.R. 1999. What Is It? Alewife or Blueback Herring? New York Sea Grant/Cornell Cooperative Extension, Kingston, NY Lake, T.R. 2003. A Fluted Point From the Wallkill River Valley. The Bulletin 119:29-39. Limburg, K., I. Blackburn, R. Schmidt, T. Lake, J. Hasse, M. Elfman, P. Kristiansson. 2001. Otolith microchemistry indicates unexpected patterns of residency and anadromy in blueback herring in the Hudson and Mohawk River. Bull. Fr. Pêche Piscic (2001) 362/363:931-938 Schmidt, R. E., and T. R. Lake. 1999.Alewives in Hudson River Tributaries. Hudson River Foundation, Manhattan, New York. Schmidt, R. E., and T. R. Lake. 2000. Alewives in Hudson River Tributaries, Two Years of Sampling. Hudson River Foundation, Manhattan, New York. Schmidt, R. E., and T. R. Lake. 2001. A benthic juvenile scrawled cowfish (Acanthostracion quadricornis) from the lower Hudson River Estuary. Northeastern Naturalist 8(3):343-346. 68 List of Publications by Tibor T. Polgar Fellows Schmidt, R. E., and T. R. Lake. 2002. Migratory Fishes in the Tidal Pocantico River. Final report to the NYSDEC Hudson River National Estuarine Research Reserve, Bard College, Annandale, NY. Schmidt, R. E., and T. R. Lake. 2003. Young of year American Eel (Anguilla rostrada) in Hudson River Tributaries. Hudsonia Limited, Bard College, NYS Department of Environmental Conservation. Schmidt, R. E., and T. R. Lake. 2003-2007. Recruitment and Spawning Stock Characteristics of American Eel from the Marine District of New York State. Hudsonia, Ltd. Schmidt, R. E., and T. R. Lake. 2006. The Role of Tributaries in the Biology of Hudson River Fishes. The Hudson River Estuary, ed: Jeffrey S. Levinton and John R. Waldman, pp: 205-216. Cambridge University Press, NY. Limburg, Karin Limburg, K.E. 2009. Aquatic Ecosystem Services. In Gene E. Likens (editor) Encyclopedia of Inland Waters. Elsevier (forthcoming). Hong, B., K.E. Limburg, J.D. Erickson, J.M. Gowdy, A.A. Nowosielski, J.M. Polimeni, and K.A. Stainbrook. 2009. Connecting the ecological-economic dots in human-dominated watersheds: Models to link socio-economic activities on the landscape to stream ecosystem health. Landscape and Urban Planning (in press). Limburg, K.E., Y. Walther, B. Hong, C. Olson, and J. Storå. 2008. Prehistoric vs. modern Baltic Sea cod fisheries: observations across the millennia. Proceedings of the Royal Society –Section B DOI: 10.1098/rspb.2008.0711 (online). Olson, C., K.E. Limburg, and M. Söderblom. 2008. Stone Age fishhooks – how were they dimensioned, and why? Journal of Archaeological Science 35:2813-2823. Elsdon, T.S., B.K. Wells, S.E. Campana, B.M. Gillanders, C.M. Jones, K.E. Limburg, D.H. Secor, S.R. Thorrold, and B.D. Walther. 2008. Otolith chemistry to describe movements and life-history parameters of fishes: hypotheses, assumptions, limitations, and inferences. Oceanography and Marine Biology: an Annual Review 46: 297-330. Elsdon, T., and K.E. Limburg. 2008. Nutrients and their period of enhancement influence benthic cover and biomass in a freshwater system. Marine and Freshwater Research 59(6):467-476. Machut, L.S., K.E. Limburg, R. E. Schmidt, and D. Dittman. 2007. Anthropogenic impacts on American eel demographics in Hudson River tributaries, New York. Transactions of the American Fisheries Society 136: 1699-1713. Simonin, P.W., K.E. Limburg, and L.S. Machut. 2007. Bridging the energy gap: anadromous blueback herring feeding in the Hudson and Mohawk Rivers, New York. Transactions of the American Fisheries Society 136: 1614-1621. Hong, B., K.E.Limburg, M. Hall, and J.D. Erickson. 2007. Scenario Analysis of Economy-Ecology Interactions in the Hudson River Basin. Ch. 5 in Erickson et al. (Eds.), Ecological Economics of Sustainable Watershed Management. Elsevier Science. Limburg, K.E., R. Huang, and D.H. Bilderback. 2007. Fish otolith trace element maps: new approaches with synchrotron microbeam X-ray fluorescence. X-Ray Spectrometry 36:336-342. Waldman, J.R., K.E. Limburg, and D.L. Strayer, editors. 2006. Hudson River Fisheries and Their Environment. American Fisheries Society, Bethesda, MD. Stainbrook, K.M., K.E. Limburg, R.A. Daniels, and R.E. Schmidt. 2006. Long-term changes in ecosystem health of two Hudson Valley watersheds, New York, USA, 1936-2001. Hydrobiologia 571(1): 313-327 DOI 10.1007/s10750-006-0254-5. Swaney, D.P., K. E. Limburg, and K. M. Stainbrook. 2006. Some historical changes in the patterns of population and land use in the Hudson River watershed. American Fisheries Society Symposium 51: 75-112. Daverat, F., K.E. Limburg, I. Thibault, J.-C. Shiao, J.J. Dodson, F. Caron, W.-N. Tzeng, Y. Iizuka, and H. Wickström. 2006. Phenotypic plasticity of habitat use by three temperate eel species Anguilla anguilla, A. japonica and A. rostrata. Marine Ecology Progress Series 308: 231-241. 69 List of Publications by Tibor T. Polgar Fellows Limburg, K.E., and D.I. Siegel. 2006. The hydrogeochemistry of connected waterways, and the potential for tracing fish migrations. Northeastern Geology and Environmental Sciences 28(3): 254-265. Daniels, R.A., K.E. Limburg, R.E. Schmidt, D.L. Strayer, and R.C. Chambers. 2005. Changes in fish assemblages in the tidal Hudson River, New York. p. 471-503 In: Rinne, J. N., R. M. Hughes, and B. Calamusso (eds.). Historical changes in large river fish assemblages of America. American Fisheries Society. Bethesda, Maryland. Limburg, K.E., K.M. Stainbrook, J.D. Erickson, and J.M. Gowdy. 2005. Urbanization consequences: case studies in the Hudson Valley, pp. 23-37 In Brown, L.R., R.H. Gray, R.M. Hughes, and M. Meador, editors. The Effects of Urbanization on Stream Ecosystems. American Fisheries Society Symposium 47. Limburg, K.E. 2004. The biogeochemistry of strontium: a review of H.T. Odum’s contribution. Ecological Modelling 178(1-2): 31-33. Limburg, K.E. and J.R. Waldman, editors. 2003. Biodiversity, Status, and Conservation of the World's Shads. American Fisheries Society. Limburg, K.E., M. Elfman, P. Kristiansson, K. Malmkvist, and J. Pallon. 2003. New insights into fish ecology via nuclear microscopy of otoliths. Proc.17th International Conferemce on Applications of Accelerators in Research and Industry (J.Duggan, editor). AIP Conference Proc. 680: 339342. Limburg, K.E., R.V. O’Neill, R. Costanza, and S. Farber. 2002. Complex systems and valuation. Ecological Economics 41:409-420. Westin, L., and K.E. Limburg. 2003. Newly discovered reproductive isolation reveals sympatric populations of Esox lucius in the Baltic. Journal of Fish Biology 61: 1647-1652. Olson, C, K. Limburg, W. Patterson, M. Elfman, P. Kristiansson, and S. Ehrenberg. 2002. Reconstruction of Fisheries and Environment from the Stone Age: Preliminary Studies of Hard Parts of Codfish (Gadus morhua) from Ajvide, Gotland, Sweden. Remote Sensing II: 375-385. Limburg, K.E., P. Landergren, L. Westin, M. Elfman, and P. Kristiansson. 2001. Flexible modes of anadromy in Baltic sea-trout (Salmo trutta): Making the most of marginal spawning streams. Journal of Fish Biology 59: 682-695. Limburg, K.E. 2001. Through the gauntlet again: demographic restructuring of American shad by migration. Ecology 82 (6): 1584-1596. Limburg, K.E., M.L. Pace, and K.K. Arend. 1999. Growth, mortality, and recruitment of larval Morone spp. in relation to food availability and temperature in the Hudson River. Fishery Bulletin 97:8091. Limburg, K.E. and C. Folke, editors. Special issue of Ecological Economics on “The Ecology of Ecosystem Services.” (Volume 29, No.2 May 1999) Limburg, K.E. 1999. Estuaries, ecology, and economic decisions: an example of perceptual barriers and challenges to understanding. Ecological Economics 30: 185-188. Caraco, N.F., G. Lampman, J.J. Cole, K.E. Limburg, M.L.Pace, and D.Fischer. 1998. Microbial assimilation of DIN in a nitrogen rich estuary: implications for food quality and isotopestudies. Marine Ecology Progress Series 167: 59-71. Limburg, K.E. 1998. Anomalous migrations of anadromous herrings revealed with natural chemical tracers. Canadian Journal of Fisheries and Aquatic Sciences 55:431-437. Costanza, R., R. D’Arge, R. de Groot, S. Farber, M. Grasso, B. Hannon, K. Limburg, S. Naeem, R. V. O’Neill, J. Paruelo, R. G. Raskin, P. Sutton, and M. van den Belt. 1997. The value of the world’s ecosystem services and natural capital. Nature 387:253-260. Limburg, K.E., M.L. Pace, D. Fischer, and K.K. Arend. 1997. Consumption, selectivity, and utilization of zooplankton by larval Morone spp. in a seasonally pulsed estuary. Transactions of the American Fisheries Society 126:607-621. Limburg, K.E. 1996. Modeling the ecological constraints on growth and movement of juvenile American shad, Alosa sapidissima, in the Hudson River Estuary. Estuaries 19: 794-813. 70 List of Publications by Tibor T. Polgar Fellows Limburg, K.E. 1996. Growth and migration of 0-year American shad (Alosa sapidissima) in the Hudson River estuary: otolith microstructural analysis. Canadian Journal of Fisheries and Aquatic Sciences 53: 220-238. Limburg, K.E. 1995. Otolith strontium traces migratory histories of juvenile American shad, Alosa sapidissima. Marine Ecology Progress Series 119: 25-35. Limburg, K.E. and R.E. Schmidt. 1990 Patterns of fish spawning in the Hudson River watershed: biological response to an urban gradient? Ecology 71:1238-1245. Limburg, K. E., M. A. Moran, and W. H. McDowell. 1986. The Hudson River Ecosystem. SpringerVerlag, New York. 331 pp. Lupton, Sara Lupton, S.J., B. McGarrigle, J. Olson, T. D. Wood, and D. S. Aga. 2009. Metabolism of Brominated Diphenyl Ethers 47, 99, and 153 Explains Congener Bioaccumulation Patterns in Humans. Submitted Chemical Research in Toxicology Pérez-Fuentetaja, A., S. J. Lupton, M. Clapsadl, F. Samara, L. Gatto, and D. S. Aga. 2009. Differences in Bioaccumulative Response of Wild Common Carp (Cyprinus carpio) from Eastern Lake Erie to Ambient Levels of Polychlorinated Biphenyls and Polybrominated Diphenyl Ethers. In Preparation Lupton, S.J., T.D.Wood, and D. S. Aga. 2009. Analysis of Hydroxylated Polybrominated Diphenyl Ether Metabolites using Atmospheric Pressure Chemical Ionization Liquid Chromatography Mass Spectrometry (APCI LC/MS). In Preparation Madden, Sean Madden, S.S., G.R. Robinson, J.G. Arnason. 2007. Spatial variation in stream water quality in relation to riparian buffer dimensions in a rural watershed of eastern New York State. Northeastern Naturalist 14:605-618. Madden, S.S., L.C. Audette, G.R. Robinson, and J.G. Arnason. 2004. A Comparison of Water Quality Between an Urban and a Forested Stream, poster presentation at The Northeast Natural History Conference VIII, New York State Museum, Albany, NY. Madden, S.S. 2004. The New York City Drinking Water Memorandum of Agreement: The Policies, the Players, the Future. Rockefeller College Review 1(4): 63-79. Madden, S.S. and G.R. Robinson. 2004. A comparison of water quality in an urban and well forested stream: Patroon Creek and Tenmile Creek, Albany County, New York in Final Reports of the Tibor T. Polgar Fellowship Program, 2003. W.C. Nieder and J.R. Waldman, editors. Hudson River Foundation, New York, New York. Birkland, T.A. with S.S. Madden, J. Mapes, K. Roe and A. Stein. 2004. Environmental Policy in New York State, chapter in Governing New York State, Albany: State University of New York Press. McArdle, Margaret Ziccardi L, McArdle M, Lowney Y. The ecological effects of nanomaterials: A focus on aquatic life. Special Issue on Applications of Nanotechnologies in Environmental Protection and Pollution, Part 1. Schulte J, Vaseashta A (eds), NANO: Brief Reports and Reviews 2008; 3(4):251–255. McArdle ME, McElroy AE, Elskus AA. Enzymatic and estrogenic responses in fish exposed to organic pollutants in the New York-New Jersey (USA) Harbor complex. Environ Toxicol Chem 2004; 23(4):953–959. Cura JJ, Bridges TS, McArdle ME. Comparative risk assessment methods and their applicability to dredged material management decision-making. Hum Ecol Risk Assess 2004; 10:485–503. 71 List of Publications by Tibor T. Polgar Fellows McArdle ME, Elskus AA, McElroy AE, Larsen BK, Benson WH, Schlenk D. Estrogen and CYP1A response of mummichogs and sunshine bass to sewage effluent. Mar Environ Res 2000; 50(1– 5):175–179. Specker JL, Schreiber AM, McArdle ME, Poholek A, Henderson J, Bengtson DA. Metamorphosis in summer flounder: effects of acclimation to low and high salinities. Aquaculture 1999; 176:145– 154. McBride, Richard Manuscripts for peer-review (in review) Collins, A. B. and R. S. McBride. Unpubl. ms (1st draft complete). How habitat and depth affect the distribution, demography and sexual transition of the hogfish Lachnolaimus maximus. Trippel, N. A., M. S. Allen, and R. S. McBride. Unpubl. ms (1st draft complete). Importance of seasonal estuarine prey abundance to predators at the St. Johns River, Florida. McBride, R.S. and R. E. Matheson. unpubl. ms (1st draft complete). Florida’s diadromous fishes: biology, ecology, conservation, and management. For Gulf Caribbean Res. McBride, R. S., J. E. Harris, A. R. Hyle, and J. C. Holder. in review. The spawning run of blueback herring (Alosa aestivalis) in Florida’s St. Johns River. For ‘Trans. Am. Fish. Soc.’ McBride, R.S., C. Roche, R. Ruiz-Carus and B. W. Bowen. In review. A new species of Elops (Elopiformes: Elopidae) from the western Atlantic Ocean. Zootaxa. Peer-reviewed Journal Articles and Notes (in print) McBride, R. S., K. J. Sulak, P. E. Thurman, A. K. Richardson, and K. Sulak. Accepted/in press. Age, growth, mortality and reproduction of roughtongue bass, Pronotogrammus martinicensis (Serranidae), in the northeastern Gulf of Mexico. Gulf of Mexico Science (ms# 08-021). Maki, K. L., and R. S. McBride. 2009/in press. Reproductive biology of wahoo, Acanthocybium solandri, from the Atlantic coast of Florida and the Bahamas. Marine and Freshwater Research. (Ms# 08211) Harris, J. E., and R. S. McBride. 2009. American shad feeding on spawning grounds in the St. Johns River, Florida. Transactions of the American Fisheries Society. 138:888-898. McBride, R. S. and J. C. Holder. 2008. A review and updated assessment of Florida’s anadromous shads: American shad and hickory shad. North American Journal of Fisheries Management. 28(6): 1668-1686. McBride, R. S., A. K. Richardson, and K. L. Maki. 2008. Age, growth, and mortality of wahoo, Acanthocybium solandri, from the Atlantic coast of Florida and the Bahamas. Marine and Freshwater Research. 59(9): 799-807. (http://www.publish.csiro.au/nid/126.htm ) McBride, R. S., P. E. Thurman, and L. H. Bullock. 2008. Regional variations of hogfish (Lachnolaimus maximus) life history: consequences for spawning biomass and egg production models. Journal of Northwest Atlantic Fishery Science. 41: 1–12. (http://journal.nafo.int/41/41.html ) McBride, R.S. and M. Johnson. 2007. Sexual development and reproductive seasonality of hogfish (Labridae: Lachnolaimus maximus), an hermaphroditic reef fish. Journal of Fish Biology. 71(5): 1270-1292. (http://dx.doi.org/doi:10.1111/j.1095-8649.2007.01580.x) Harris, J. E., R. S. McBride, and R. O. Williams. 2007. Life history of hickory shad in the St. Johns River, Florida. Transactions of the American Fisheries Society. 136:1463–1471. Trippel, N. A., M. S. Allen, and R. S. McBride. 2007. Seasonal trends in abundance and size of juvenile American shad, hickory shad, and blueback herring in the St. Johns River, Florida, and comparison with historical data. Transactions of the American Fisheries Society. 136: 988-993. McBride, R. S. and A. K. Richardson. 2007. Evidence of size-selective fishing mortality from an age and growth study of hogfish (Labridae: Lachnolaimus maximus), a hermaphroditic reef fish. Bulletin of Marine Science. 80: 401-417 72 List of Publications by Tibor T. Polgar Fellows Bakenhaster, M. D., R. S. McBride and W. W. Price. 2006. Life history of Glossobius hemiramphi (Isopoda: Cymothoidae), development, reproduction, and symbiosis with its host Hemiramphus brasiliensis (Pisces: Hemiramphidae). Journal of Crustacean Biology. 26(3): 283-294. Able, K. W., M. P. Fahay, D. A. Witting, R. S. McBride, and S. M. Hagan. 2006. Fish settlement in the ocean vs. estuary: comparisons of pelagic larval and settled juvenile composition and abundance from southern New Jersey, U.S.A. Estuarine, Coastal and Shelf Science. 66(1-2): 280-290. McBride, R. S., M. L. Hendricks, and J. E. Olney. 2005. Testing the validity of Cating’s (1953) criteria for age determination of American shad using scales. Fisheries. 30(10): 10-18. (http://www.fisheries.org/afs/publications/fisheriesmag/3010.pdf ) Patterson, H. M., R. G. Taylor, and R.S. McBride. 2005. Coastal origin of common snook, Centropomus undecimalis, in Florida Bay. Gulf and Caribbean Research. 17: 25-30. McBride, R.S. and A.Z. Horodysky. 2004. Mechanisms maintaining sympatric distributions of two ladyfish (Elopidae: Elops) morphs in the Gulf of Mexico and western North Atlantic Ocean. Limnology and Oceanography. 49(4): 1173-1181. Patterson, H. M., R.S. McBride, and N. Julien. 2004. Population structure of red drum (Sciaenops ocellatus) as determined by otolith chemistry. Marine Biology. 144: 855-862. Olney, J.E. and R.S. McBride. 2003. Intraspecific variation in batch fecundity of American shad: revisiting the paradigm of reciprocal latitudinal trends in reproductive traits. American Fishery Society Special Symposium. 35: 185-192. McBride, R.S., J. Styer, and R. Hudson. 2003. Spawning cycles and habitats of ballyhoo (Hemiramphus brasiliensis) and balao (Hemiramphus balao) in south Florida. Fishery Bulletin, U. S. 101(3):583589. (http://fishbull.noaa.gov/1013/09mcbrid.pdf) McBride, R.S. and P. Thurman. 2003. Reproductive biology of Hemiramphus brasiliensis and H. balao (Hemiramphidae): maturation, spawning frequency, and fecundity. Biological Bulletin. 204:5767. McBride, R.S., and J. Styer. 2002. Species composition, catch rates, and size structure of fishes captured in the south Florida lampara net fishery. Marine Fisheries Review. 64(1): 21-27. (http://spo.nwr.noaa.gov/mfr641/mfr6413.pdf) McBride, R.S. 2002. Spawning, growth, and overwintering size of searobins (Prionotus carolinus and P. evolans). Fishery Bulletin, U. S. 100 (3): 641-647. (http://fishbull.noaa.gov/1003/20mcbrid.pdf) McBride, R.S., M.P. Fahay, and K.W. Able. 2002. Larval and settlement periods of the northern searobin (Prionotus carolinus) and the striped searobin (P. evolans). Fishery Bulletin, U.S. 100(1): 63-73. (http://fishbull.noaa.gov/1001/mcb.pdf). McBride, R.S., F.J. Stengard, and B. Mahmoudi. 2002. Maturation and diel reproductive periodicity for round scad, (Carangidae: Decapterus punctatus). Marine Biology. 140 (4): 713-722. McBride, R.S., T. MacDonald, R.E. Matheson, P. Hood, and D. Rydene. 2001. Nursery habitats for ladyfish, Elops saurus, along salinity gradients in two Florida estuaries. Fishery Bulletin, U. S. 99 (3): 443-458. (http://fishbull.noaa.gov/993/mcb.pdf) McBride, R.S. 2000. Florida's shad and river herrings (Alosa spp.): A review of population and fishery characteristics. Florida Marine Research Institute Technical Reports. No. 5. 18 pp. (http://www.floridamarine.org/publications/) McBride, R.S. and K.A. McKown. 2000. Consequences of dispersal of subtropically spawned crevalle jacks (Caranx hippos) to temperate estuaries. Fishery Bulletin, U. S. 98 (3): 528-538. (http://fishbull.noaa.gov/983/06.pdf) McBride, R.S. and K.W. Able. 1998. Ecology and fate of butterflyfish, Chaetodon spp., in the temperate, western North Atlantic. Bulletin of Marine Science. 63 (2): 401-416. McBride, R.S., J.B. O'Gorman and K.W. Able. 1998. Interspecific comparisons of searobin (Prionotus spp.) movements, size structure, and abundance in the temperate, western North Atlantic. Fishery Bulletin, U. S. 96 (2): 303-14. 73 List of Publications by Tibor T. Polgar Fellows McBride, R.S., L. Foushee, and B. Mahmoudi. 1996. Florida's halfbeak, Hemiramphus spp., bait fishery. Marine Fisheries Review. 58 (1-2): 27-36. McBride, R.S., M. Scherer, and C. Powell. 1995. Correlated variations in abundance, size, growth, and loss rates of age-0 bluefish in a southern New England estuary. Transactions of the American Fisheries Society. 124: 898-910. McBride, R.S. and K.W. Able. 1994. Reproductive seasonality, distribution, and abundance of Prionotus carolinus and P. evolans (Pisces: Triglidae) in the New York Bight. Estuarine, Coastal and Shelf Science. 38: 173-188. McBride, R.S., J. Ross, and D.O. Conover. 1993. Recruitment of bluefish (Pomatomus saltatrix) to estuaries of the South Atlantic Bight, U.S.A. Fishery Bulletin, U. S. 91(2): 389-395. McBride, R.S. and D.O. Conover. 1991. Recruitment of young-of-the-year bluefish (Pomatomus saltatrix) to the New York Bight: variation in abundance and growth of spring- and summerspawned cohorts. Marine Ecology Progress Series. 78: 205-216. Peer-reviewed Book Chapters (in print) McBride, R.S. 2002. Butterflyfishes. Family Chaetodontidae. Pp.: 446-448. IN: Bigelow and Schroeder's Fishes of the Gulf of Maine (3rd Ed). Collette, B.B. and G. Klein-MacPhee (Eds.). Washington, D.C.: Smithsonian Institution Press. 748 pp. Klein-MacPhee, G. and R.S. McBride. 2002. Sea Robins. Family Triglidae. Pp.: 338-345. IN: Bigelow and Schroeder's Fishes of the Gulf of Maine (3rd Ed). Collette, B.B. and G. Klein-MacPhee (Eds.). Washington, D.C.: Smithsonian Institution Press. 748 pp. Able, K.W., D.A. Witting, R.S. McBride, R.A. Rountree, and K.J. Smith. 1996. Fishes of polyhaline estuarine shores in Great Bay - Little Egg Harbor, New Jersey: a case study of seasonal and habitat influences. In: Estuarine Shores: Evolution, Environments and Human Alterations. K.F. Nordstrom and C.T. Roman (Eds.). John Wiley. Pp: 335-353. McBride, R.S. 1995. Marine Forage Fish. IN: Delaware Estuary Program Habitat Requirements Document. Nyman, R. (Ed.). Delaware River Basin Commission. West Trenton, NJ. Pp: 211-217. Other significant, but not peer-reviewed publications and reports (Post-doctoral) Patterson, William F., III, Cecelia A. Lounder, Robert J. Allman, and Richard S. McBride. 2008. Recruitment Dynamics and Population Connectivity of Gray Snapper, Lutjanus griseus, among West Florida Estuarine Systems. Final Report, Florida Sea Grant, Grant #R/LR-B-59. Sutherland, Sandra J., Loretta O’Brien, Sarah E. Pregracke, J. Burnett, R. McBride, and Ralph K. Mayo. 2007. Recent trends in weight-at-age and growth of New England flatfishes. GARM Data Meeting, Working Paper F.2. Woods Hole, MA. October 29-November 2, 2007. Atlantic States Marine Fisheries Commission. 2007. Stock Assessment Report No. 07-01 (Supplement) of the Atlantic States Marine Fisheries Commission American Shad Stock Assessment Report for Peer Review Volume III. (McBride is a contributing author for ‘Florida’; Chapter 16, pp. 502546). McBride, R. S., A. K. Richardson, K. L. Maki, and M. D. Murphy. 2007. Fishery and population characteristics of wahoo, Acanthocybium solandri, in Florida and adjacent waters of the western North Atlantic Ocean. Final Report. Marine Fisheries Initiative Grant Program. (NOAA Award Number NA17FF2882). Prepared for U.S. Department of Commerce, NOAA, NMFS, Cooperative Program Division, St. Petersburg, FL. March 30. McBride, R. S., K. L. Maki, and J. De Silva. 2006. Lessons learned from measuring ageing precision of simulated fish populations. Proceedings of the 57th Annual Meeting of the Gulf and Caribbean Fisheries Institute. St. Petersburg, FL. 8-12 November 2004. 57: 423-438. Maki, K., R. McBride, and M. Murphy. 2006. Biology of wahoo in Florida and the Bahamas. Proceedings of the 57th Annual Meeting of the Gulf and Caribbean Fisheries Institute. St. Petersburg, FL. 8-12 November 2004. 57: 1020-1021. 74 List of Publications by Tibor T. Polgar Fellows McBride, R. S. 2005. Develop and evaluate a decision-making tool for rebuilding American and hickory shad. Project F-106. Three-year Final Performance Report for Federal Aid in Sport Fish Restoration Act. November 30. 60 pp. FWC/FWRI File Code: 2459-02-05-F. Thurman, P. E., G. Dennis, K. Sulak, and R. S. McBride. 2005. Symposium abstract: Linking predator and prey species dynamics in deep-water reefs of the northeastern Gulf of Mexico. In: Benthic Habitats and the Effects of Fishing. P. W. Barnes and J. P. Thomas (eds.). American Fisheries Society Symposium 41. pp 320-321. McBride, R. S. and M. D. Murphy. 2005. Geographically-specific yield-per-recruit and egg production models for hogfish, Lachnolaimus maximus, in Florida. Prepared for the Florida Fish and Wildlife Conservation Commission, Division of Marine Fisheries, 2590 Executive Center, Circle E, Suite 201, Tallahassee, FL 32301. 18 p. September 30. McBride, R. S., and A. K. Richardson. 2005. Florida’s Annual State Report. Prepared for the Atlantic States Marine Fisheries Commission Shad and River Herring Technical Committee. Washington, D. C., July 1. (I prepared or co-prepared this report annually from 1999 to 2005). Harris, J. and R. McBride. 2004. A review of the potential effects of water level fluctuation on diadromous fish populations for MFL determinations. Final Report to the St. Johns River Water Management District (Contract No. SG346AA). Special Publication SJ2004-SP40. Submitted by the Florida Fish and Wildlife Conservation Commission. Fish and Wildlife Research Institute. 100 Eighth Avenue SE. St. Petersburg, Florida 33701-5095. 40 pp. McBride, R., M. Hendricks, and J. Olney. 2004. Testing the validity of Cating's criteria for age estimation of American shad from the Lehigh River. Final Report. American Shad Ageing Workshop Steering Committee. Shad and River Herring Technical Committee. Atlantic States Marine Fisheries Commission. Washington, DC. October. Ruiz-Carus, R. and R. McBride. 2004. Are sea lampreys hitchhiking to Florida? http://www.floridamarine.org/features/view_article.asp?id=22658 Thurman, P. E., R. S. McBride, K. J. Sulak, and G. D. Dennis. 2003. Age and reproduction in three serranid fishes of the northeastern Gulf of Mexico outer continental shelf: Pronotogrammus martinicensis, Hemanthias vivanus , and Serranus phoebe, with preliminary observations on the pomacentrid fish, Chromis enchrysurus. USBS/OCS/CEC Report No 2003-2, December 2003 (CEC NEGOM Program Investigation Report No. 2). Coastal Ecology and Conservation Research Group, Center for Aquatic Resource Studies, United States Geological Survey, Gainesville, Florida. Thurman, P. E. and R. S. McBride. 2003. Life history of three outer-continental shelf prey species, Pronotogrammus martinicensis, Hemanthias vivanus , and Serranus phoebe (Serranidae), with notes on the age and growth of Chromis enchrysurus (Pomacentridae). Final Report to the United States Geological Survey, Florida Caribbean Science Center (Award #01ERAG0017). FMRI File Code: 2294-01-F, July. VanderKooy, S. J. and K. Guindon-Tisdel (Editors). 2003. A Practical Handbook for Determining the Ages of Gulf of Mexico Fishes. Gulf States Marine Fisheries Commission. Ocean Springs, Mississippi. Publication No. 111. 128 pages. (McBride is a contributing author; pages 3-14 – 317). McBride, R. S. and M. D. Murphy. 2003. Current and potential yield per recruit for hogfish, Lachnolaimus maximus, in Florida. Proceedings of the 54th Annual Meeting of the Gulf and Caribbean Fisheries Institute. Providenciales, Turks and Caicos Islands. 12-17 November 2001. 54: 513-525. Mahmoudi, B. and R. S. McBride. 2002. A review of Florida’s halfbeak bait fishery and halfbeak biology, and a preliminary stock assessment. Prepared for the Florida Fish and Wildlife Conservation Commission, Division of Marine Fisheries, 2590 Executive Center, Circle E, Suite 201, Tallahassee, FL 32301. 24 p. June. 75 List of Publications by Tibor T. Polgar Fellows Whitaker, S. and R. S. McBride. 2002. Shad angler creel and electrofishing survey: St. Johns River, Florida, 2001-2002. Internal Final Report for the Florida Marine Research Institute, Florida Fish and Wildlife Conservation Commission. June. McBride, R.S. 2002. Harvest per trip for south Florida’s halfbeak fishery. Prepared for the Florida Fish and Wildlife Conservation Commission, Division of Marine Fisheries, 2590 Executive Center, Circle E, Suite 201, Tallahassee, FL 32301. February 11, 2002. 10 p. McBride, R.S. 2001. Age, growth, and reproduction of hogfish (Lachnolaimus maximus). Final Report. Marine Fisheries Initiative Grant Program (NOAA Award Number A87FF0422). Prepared for U.S. Department of Commerce, NOAA, NMFS, Cooperative Program Division, 9721 Executive Center Drive North, St. Petersburg, FL. March 19. Bakenhaster, M., R.S. McBride, and W. W. Price. 2001. The life history of the parasitic isopod Glossobius hemiramphi (Isopoda: Cymothoidae) and its relationship to its host Hemiramphus brasiliensis (Pisces: Hemiramphidae). Florida Scientist. 64 (Suppl. 1): 23. Patterson, H.M., R.S. McBride, R.E. Crabtree, and N. Julien. 2001. Elemental signatures of red drum (Sciaenops ocellatus) otoliths from the Gulf of Mexico and western Atlantic Proceedings of the 52nd Annual Meeting of the Gulf and Caribbean Fisheries Institute. Key West, FL. 1-5 November 1999. 52: 87-97. McBride, R., M. Johnson, L. Bullock, and F. Stengard. 2001. Preliminary observations on the sexual development of hogfish, Lachnolaimus maximus (Pisces: Labridae). Proceedings of the 52nd Annual Meeting of the Gulf and Caribbean Fisheries Institute. Key West, FL. 1-5 November 1999. 52: 98-102. McBride, R. 2001. Halfbeak, Hemiramphus spp., landings, fishing effort, and value for the south Florida lampara net fishery. Proceedings of the 52nd Annual Meeting of the Gulf and Caribbean Fisheries Institute. Key West, FL. 1-5 November 1999. 52: 103-115. Murphy, M. D., M. Tupper, S. Brown, and R. S. McBride. 2000. A compilation of the biological, fisheries, and assessment information available for dolphin, Coryphaena hippurus in Florida waters. In-house Report 2000-008. Florida Fish and Wildlife Conservation Commission, Florida Marine Research Institute. St. Petersburg, FL. 53 pp. McBride, R.S. 1999. Assessing Status and Trends for Florida's Halfbeak Bait Fishery. Final Report. Saltonstall-Kennedy Program (NOAA Award Number NA77FD0069). Prepared for U.S. Department of Commerce, NOAA, NMFS, Cooperative Program Division, 9721 Executive Center Drive North, St. Petersburg, FL. September 14. McBride, R.S. 1999. A Preliminary Assessment of Fishery and Biological Characters for Florida's Hogfish, Lachnolaimus maximus. An Interim Report for the Division of Marine Fisheries. Florida Fish & Wildlife Conservation Commission. 2540 Executive Center Circle West, Suite 106. Tallahassee, FL 32301. September. McBride, R.S. 1999. Status and Trends for Florida's Halfbeak, Hemiramphus spp., Bait Fishery. Prepared for the State of Florida’s Division of Marine Fisheries. 2540 Executive Center Circle West, Suite 106, Tallahassee, FL. August. McBride, R. S. 1999. Florida’s Plan for State Fishing/recovery of American Shad. Prepared for the Atlantic States Marine Fisheries Commission Shad and River Herring Technical Committee. Washington, D. C. June. McBride, R.S., T.R. Sminkey, and R.E. Crabtree. 1998. Pilot mail surveys of common snook, tarpon, and bonefish recreational fisheries in Florida. IN: Investigations into nearshore and estuarine gamefish. R.E. Crabtree (ed.). Project F-59. Five-year Final Report for Federal Aid in Sport Fish Restoration Act. McBride, R.S. 1998. Interim Report on Hogfish, Lachnolaimus maximus, and Florida's hogfish Fishery. Prepared for Florida Marine Fisheries Commission. 2540 Executive Center Circle West, Suite 106, Tallahassee, FL. October. 76 List of Publications by Tibor T. Polgar Fellows McBride, R.S. 1996. Progress Report on Florida's Halfbeak Fishery. Prepared for Florida Marine Fisheries Commission. 2540 Executive Center Circle West, Suite 106, Tallahassee, FL. July. McGlynn, Catherine McGlynn, C.A. 2009. Outcomes of invasive plant-native plant interactions in North American freshwater tidal wetlands: A foregone conclusion? Tidal marshes: Development, Ecological Significance and Environmental Impacts. New York: Nova Science Publishers. (In press). McGlynn, C.A. 2009. Native and invasive plant interactions in wetlands and the minimal role of invasiveness. Biological Invasions (In press) Currently available on “Online First.” Findlay, S.E.G., D. Burns, S. Chase, A. Catrchyan, C. Klocker, T. Lynch, G. Lovett, C. McGlynn, K. Menking, C. O’Reilly, and R. Urban-Mead. 2008. Recommendations for Stream and Flood Management in Dutchess County. Dutchess Area Environmental Advisory Network. McGlynn, C.A., J. R. Waldman and B.A. Blair. (eds) 2008. Final Reports of the Tibor T. Polgar Fellowship Program, 2007. New York: Hudson River Foundation. McGlynn, C.A. and R.S. Ostfeld. 2000. The effects of invasive plant species on the small mammal community of freshwater tidal marshes. In: Nieder, W.C. and J.R. Waldman, editors. Final reports of the Tibor T. Polgar Fellowship Program, 2000. New York: Hudson River Foundation; Section VI: 22 pp. Pereira, M.E. and C.A. McGlynn. 1997. Special relationships instead of female dominance for redfronted lemurs, Eulemur fulvus rufus. American Journal of Primatology. 43(3): 239-258. McGrath, Sarah McGrath, S.L. and G. D. O’Mullan. 2008. "Significance of Estuarine Hypoxia to Altered Nutrient Cycling and Toxic Nitrite Accumulation." In C.A. McGlynn & J.R. Waldman (eds.), Final Reports of the Tibor T. Polgar Fellowship Program, 2007. Hudson River Foundation. Merwin, Daria Merwin, D.E. (2005) Twelve entries for The Encyclopedia of New York State, edited by Peter Eisenstadt. Syracuse University Press. Merwin, D.E. (2003) Maritime History of Southern New England: The View from Long Island, New York. Bulletin of the Archaeological Society of Connecticut 65:3-17. Merwin, D.E. (2003) The Potential for Submerged Prehistoric Archaeological Sites off Sandy Hook. Bulletin of the Archaeological Society of New Jersey 57:1-10. Nack, Steven Nack, S., D. Bunnell, D. Green, and J. Forney. 1993. “Spawning and Nursery Habitats of Largemouth Bass in the Tidal Hudson River.” Transactions of the American Fisheries Society Volume 122, issue 2 (March 1993) pp 208-216 Raymond, Peter Caraco, N., J.E. Bauer, J.J. Cole, S. Petsch, P.A. Raymond. Submitted. Millennial aged organic carbon subsidies to a modern river food web. Ecology. Barnes, R.T., P.A. Raymond. In Revision. The contribution of agricultural and urban activities to inorganic carbon fluxes within temperate watersheds. Chem. Geol. 77 List of Publications by Tibor T. Polgar Fellows Raymond, P.A., N-H Oh. 2009. Long term changes of chemical weathering products in rivers heavily impacted from Acid Mine Drainage: Insights on the impact of coal mining on regional and global carbon and sulfur budgets. Earth Planet. Sci. Lett. doi:10.1016/j.epsl.2009.04.006 Griffith, D.R., R.T. Barnes, P.A. Raymond. In press. Inputs of fossil carbon from wastewater treatment plants to U.S. rivers and oceans. Environ. Sci. Technol. Barnes, R.T., P.A. Raymond. In revision. Land use controls on the delivery, processing and removal of nitrogen from small watersheds: Insights from the dual isotopic composition of stream nitrate. Ecol. App. Barnes, R.T., P.A. Raymond, K.L. Casciotti. 2008. Dual isotope analyses indicate efficient processing of atmospheric nitrate by forested watersheds in the northeastern U.S. Biogeochemistry, DOI 10.1007/s10533-008-9227-2 Copper, L.W., J.W. McClelland, R.M. Holmes, P.A. Raymond, J.J. Gibson, C.K. Guay, B.J. Peterson. 2008. Flow-weighted values of runoff Tracers ( 18O, DOC, Ba, Alkalinity) from the six largest Arctic rivers. Geophys. Res. Lett. 35, DOI 10.1029/2008GL035007 Holmes, R.M., J.W. McClelland, P.A. Raymond, B.B. Frazer, B.J. Peterson, M. Stiegliz. 2008. Lability of DOC transported by Alaskan rivers to the arctic ocean. Geophys. Res. Lett. 35, L03402, doi:10.1029/2007GL032837 Raymond, P.A, N-H Oh, R.E. Turner, W Broussard. 2008. Anthropogenically enhanced fluxes of water and carbon from the Mississippi River. Nature, 451:449-452 Longworth, B.E., S.T. Petsch, P.A. Raymond, J.E. Bauer. 2007. Linking lithology and land-use to sources of dissolved and particulate organic matter in headwaters of a temperate, passive-margin river system. Geochem. Cosmochem. Acta, 71 4233-4250 Raymond, P. A., J. W. McClelland, R. M. Holmes, A. V Zhulidov, K. Mull, B. J. Peterson, R. G. Striegl, G. R Aiken, T. Y. Gurtovaya. 2007. The flux and age of DOC exported to the Arctic Ocean: A carbon isotopic study of the five largest arctic rivers. Global Biogeochem. Cycl., 21, GB4011, doi:10.1029/2007GB002934 Butman D., P. A. Raymond, N-H Oh, K. Mull. 2007. Desorption and remineralization potential of soil organic carbon in freshwater and marine systems. Org. Geochem. 38, 1547-1557, doi:10.1016/j.orggeochem.2007.05.011 Zappa, C.J., W.R. McGillis, P. A. Raymond, J. B. Edson, E. J. Hintsa, H. J. Zemmelink, J. W. Dacy, D. T Ho. 2007. Environmental turbulent mixing controls on air-water gas exchange in marine and aquatic systems. Geophys. Res. Lett. 34, L10601, doi:10.1029/2006GL028790 Raymond P.A., N-H. Oh. 2007. An empirical study of climatic controls on riverine carbon export from 3 major United States watersheds. Global Biogeochem. Cycl. 21, GB2022, doi:1029/2006GB002783 Striegl, R.G., M. M. Dornblaser, G. R. Aiken, K. P. Wickland, P. A. Raymond. 2007. Carbon export and cycling by the York, Tanana and Porcupine Rivers, Alaska, 2001-2005. Water. Resour. Res. 43, W02411, doi:10.1029/2006WR005201. Oh N-H, P. A. Raymond. 2006. Contribution of agricultural liming to riverine bicarbonate export and CO2 sequestration in the Ohio River basin. Global Biogeochem. Cycl. 20:GB3012, doi:10.1029/2005GB002565 Raymond, P.A. 2005. The Composition and Transport of Organic Carbon in Rainfall: Insights from the Natural (13C and 14C) Isotopes of Carbon. Geophys. Res. Lett. 32:L14402, doi:10.1029/2005GL022879 Striegl, R.G., G.R. Aiken, M.M Dornblaser, P.A. Raymond, K.P. Wickland. 2005. A decrease in the discharge normalized DOC export by the Yukon River during summer through autumn. Geophys. Res. Lett., 32:L21413 doi:10.1029/2005GL024413 78 List of Publications by Tibor T. Polgar Fellows Cooper L., R. Benner, J. McClelland, R. Holmes, B. Peterson, P.A. Raymond, D. Hansell, J. M. Grebmeier, L.A., Codospoti. 2005. The linkage between runoff, dissolved organic carbon, and the stable oxygen isotope composition of seawater and other water mass indicators in the Arctic Ocean. J. Geophys. Res., 110:G02013, doi:10.1029/2005JG000031 Raymond, P.A., Bauer, J.E., Caraco, N.F., Cole, J.J., Longworth, B. and Petsch, S.T., 2004. Controls on the variability of organic matter and dissolved inorganic carbon ages in northeast US rivers. Marine Chemistry, 92 353-366. Raymond, P.A. and Cole, J.J., 2003. Increase in the export of alkalinity from North America's largest river. Science, 301 88-91. Raymond, P.A. and Hopkinson, C.S., 2003. Ecosystem modulation of dissolved carbon age in a temperate marsh-dominated estuary. Ecosystems, 6 694-705. Zappa, C.J., Raymond, P.A., Terray, E.A. and McGillis, W.R., 2003. Variation in surface turbulence and the gas transfer velocity over a tidal cycle in a macro-tidal estuary. Estuaries, 26 1401-1415. Raymond, P.A. and Bauer, J.E., 2001a. DOC cycling in a temperate estuary: A mass balance approach using natural C-14 and C-13 isotopes. Limnology and Oceanography, 46 655-667. Raymond, P.A. and Bauer, J.E., 2001b. Riverine export of aged terrestrial organic matter to the North Atlantic Ocean. Nature, 409 497-500. Raymond, P.A. and Bauer, J.E., 2001c. Use of C-14 and C-13 natural abundances for evaluating riverine, estuarine, and coastal DOC and POC sources and cycling: a review and synthesis. Organic Geochemistry, 32 469-485. Raymond, P.A. and Cole, J.J., 2001. Gas exchange in rivers and estuaries: Choosing a gas transfer velocity. Estuaries, 24 312-317. Ducklow, HW, GL. Schultz, P. Raymond, J Bauer and F-K Shiah. 2000. "Bacterial and DOM dynamics in large and small estuaries." Pp 105-112 In: CR. Bell, M. Brylinsky and P. Johnson-Green, Eds, Microbial Biosystems-New Frontiers. Proc. 8th Int'l Symposium on Microbial Ecology. Atlantic Canada Society for Microbial Ecology: Halifax NS. 939pg Raymond, P.A. and Bauer, J.E., 2000. Bacterial consumption of DOC during transport through a temperate estuary. Aquatic Microbial Ecology, 22 1-12. Raymond, P.A., Bauer, J.E. and Cole, J.J., 2000. Atmospheric CO2 evasion, dissolved inorganic carbon production, and net heterotrophy in the York River estuary. Limnology and Oceanography, 45 1707-1717. Raymond, P.A., Caraco, N.F. and Cole, J.J., 1997. Carbon dioxide concentration and atmospheric flux in the Hudson River. Estuaries, 20 381-390. Caraco, N.F., Cole, J.J., Raymond, P.A., Strayer, D.L., Pace, M.L., Findlay, S.E.G. and Fischer, D.T., 1997. Zebra mussel invasion in a large, turbid river: Phytoplankton response to increased grazing. Ecology, 78 588-602. Raymond P.A., J.J. Cole. 1994. The use of direct carbon dioxide measurements on the Hudson River Estuary. Final Reports of the Tibor T. Polgar Fellowship Program, 1993. Section I Non-referred Publications Birdsey, R. et al. (13 co-authors). Submitted. Carbon Cycle Observation: Gaps threaten Climate Mitigation Policies. EOS-transactions American Geophysical Union McClelland, J.W. et al. (17 co-authors). 2008. Development of a pan-Arctic database for river chemistry. EOS-transactions American Geophysical Union. doi:10.1029/2008EO240001 Raymond, P.A., 2005. The Age of the Amazon’s Breath. Nature, 436 469-470. Raymond, P. and Cole, J., 2003. Response to "Alkalinity Export and Carbon Balance". Science, 302 985. Raymond, P. and Cole, J., 2003. Response to Comment on "Increased Alkalinity in the Mississippi". Science, 302 985-987. 79 List of Publications by Tibor T. Polgar Fellows Roditi, Hudson Roditi, H.A., D.L. Strayer, and S.E.G. Findlay. 1997. Characteristics of zebra mussel (Dreissena polymorpha) biodeposits in a tidal freshwater estuary. Archiv fur Hydrobiologi 140(2):207-219. Roditi, H.A., N.M. Caraco, J.J. Cole, and D.L. Strayer. 1996. Filtration of Hudson River water by the zebra mussel (Dreissena polymorpha). Estuaries 19(4):824-832. Roditi, H.A., N.S. Fisher, and S.A. Sañudo-Wilhelmy. 2000. Uptake of dissolved organic carbon and trace elements by zebra mussels. Nature 407: 78-80. Roditi, H.A., N.S. Fisher, and S.A. Sañudo-Wilhelmy. 2000. Field testing a metal bioaccumulation model for zebra mussels. Environmental Science and Technology 34: 2817- 2825. Roditi, H.A., and N.S. Fisher. 1999. Rates and routes of trace element uptake in zebra mussels. Limnology and Oceanography 44: 1730-1749. Rubbo, Michael Rubbo, M.J., L.K. Belden, and J.M. Kiesecker. 2008. Differential responses of aquatic consumers to variations in terrestrial carbon subsidies. Hydrobiologia 605:37-44. Belden, L.K., M.J. Rubbo, J.C. Wingfield, and J.M. Kiesecker. 2007. Searching for the physiological mechanism of density-dependence: does corticosterone regulate tadpole responses to density? Physiological and Biochemical Zoology 80: 444-451. Rubbo, M.J., J.J. Cole, and J.M. Kiesecker. 2006. Terrestrial subsidies of organic carbon support net ecosystem production in temporary forest ponds: evidence from an ecosystem experiment. Ecosystems 9: 1170-1176. Rubbo, M.J., K. Shea, and J.M. Kiesecker. 2006. The influence of predation on population growth and the distribution of the pond-breeding salamander (Ambystoma jeffersonianum). Canadian Journal of Zoology 84:449-458. Rubbo, M.J., R.S. Mirza, L.K. Belden, J.J. Falkenbach, S.I. Storrs, and J.M. Kiesecker. 2006. Evaluating a predator-prey interaction in the field: the interaction between beetle larvae (predator) and tadpoles (prey). Journal of Zoology 269:1-5. (featured on cover) Rubbo, M.J., and J.M. Kiesecker. 2005. Amphibian breeding distribution in an urbanized landscape. Conservation Biology 19:504-511. Rubbo, M.J., and J.M. Kiesecker. 2004. Leaf-litter composition and community structure: translating regional species changes into local dynamics. Ecology 85:2519-2525. Kiesecker, J.M., L.K. Belden, K. Shea, and M.J. Rubbo. 2004. Amphibian decline and emerging disease. American Scientist 92:138-147. (featured on cover) Rubbo, M.J., V.R. Townsend, Jr., S.D. Smyers, and R.G. Jaeger. 2003. An experimental assessment of invertebrate/vertebrate predation: the predatory relationship between wolf spiders and terrestrial salamanders. Journal of Zoology 261:1-5. (featured on cover) Smyers, S.D., M.J. Rubbo, V.R. Townsend, Jr., and C.S. Swart. 2002. Intra- and interspecific characterizations of burrow use and defense by juvenile ambystomatid salamanders. Herpetologica 58:422-429. Rubbo, M.J., V.R. Townsend, Jr., S.D. Smyers, and R.G. Jaeger. 2001. The potential for invertebratevertebrate intraguild predation: the predatory relationship between wolf spiders (Gladicosa pulchra) and ground skinks (Scincella lateralis). Canadian Journal of Zoology 79:1465-1471. Smyers, S.D., M.J. Rubbo, and R.G. Jaeger. 2001. Interactions between juvenile ambystomatid salamanders in a laboratory experiment. Copeia 2001:1017-1025. Smyers, S.D., and M.J. Rubbo. 2001. Using a water bath to rear eggs of the marbled salamander (Ambystoma opacum). Herpetological Review 32:96-97. Rubbo, M.J., L.K. Belden, S.I. Storrs, J.J. Cole, and J.M. Kiesecker. Are heterotrophic systems inherently stable? To be submitted to Ecology Letters. 80 List of Publications by Tibor T. Polgar Fellows Rubbo, J.M., M.J. Rubbo, and R.P. Brooks. Suppressing the growth of an invasive grass enhances the establishment of native. In preparation. Samson, Jennifer Samson, J.C., S.E. Shumway, J.S. Weis. (2008) Sublethal effects of the toxic dinoflagellate, Alexandrium fundyense on three species of larval fish. Journal of Fish Biology 72: 168-188. Weis, J.S., J. Samson, T. Zhou, J. Skurnick, and P. Weis. (2003) Evaluating prey capture by larval mummichogs (Fundulus heteroclitus) as a potential biomarker of contaminants. Marine Environmental Research 55: 27-38. Weis, J.S., J. Samson, T. Zhou, J. Skurnick, and P. Weis. (2001) Prey capture ability of mummichogs (Fundulus heteroclitus) as a behavioural biomarker for contaminants in estuarine systems. Canadian Journal of Fisheries and Aquatic Sciences 58 (7): 1442-1452. Samson, J.C., R. Goodridge, F. Olobatuyi, and J.S. Weis. (2001) Delayed effects of embryonic exposure of zebrafish (Danio rerio) to methylmercury (MeHg). Aquatic Toxicology 51:369-376. Samson, J.C. and J. Shenker (2000) The teratogenic effects of methylmercury on early development of the zebrafish, Danio rerio. Aquatic Toxicology 48:343-354. Samson, J.C., Robertson, T.L. and J.S. Weis (1999) Behavioral effects of the toxic dinoflagellate, Alexandrium on larval mummichogs, Fundulus heteroclitus. American Zoologists. 39(5): 197G, SI. Abstract Samson, J.C. and J.S. Weis (1998) Investigations into cadmium resistance in Fundulus from a metals contaminated site. In: J. R. Waldman and W. C. Nieder (eds); Final Reports of the Tibor T. Polgar Fellowship Program 1997. Scharf, Fred Scharf, F.S., J.A. Buckel, and F. Juanes. 2009. Contrasting patterns of resource utilization between juvenile estuarine piscivores: the influence of relative prey size and foraging ability on the ontogeny of piscivory. Canadian Journal of Fisheries and Aquatic Sciences 66:790-801. Balmer, B.C., Wells, R.S., Nowacek, S.M., Nowacek, D.P., Schwacke, L.H., McLellan W. A., Scharf, F.S., Rowles, T. K., Hansen, L.J., Spradlin, T.R, and Pabst, D.A. 2008. Seasonal abundance and distribution patterns of bottlenose dolphins (Tursiops truncatus) near St. Joseph Bay, Florida, USA. Journal of Cetacean Research and Management 10:157-167. Bacheler, N.M., L.M. Paramore, J.A. Buckel, and F.S. Scharf. 2008. Recruitment of juvenile red drum in North Carolina: spatiotemporal patterns of year-class strength and validation of a seine survey. North American Journal of Fisheries Management 28:1086-1098. Stewart, C.B., and F.S. Scharf. 2008. Estuarine recruitment, growth, and first year survival of age-0 juvenile red drum (Sciaenops ocellatus) in North Carolina. Transactions of the American Fisheries Society 137:1089-1103. Fabrizio, M.C., F.S. Scharf, G.R. Shepherd, and J.E. Rosendale. 2008. Factors affecting catch and release mortality of bluefish. North American Journal of Fisheries Management 28:533-546. Barnes, C., Bethea, D. M., Buckel, J. A., Carlson, J. K., Satterwhite, M., Brodeur, R. D., Spitz, J., Ridoux, V., Pusineri, C., Chase, B. C., Hunsicker, M. E., Juanes, F., Conover, D. O., Kellermann, A., Lancaster, J., Menard, F., Labrune, C., Shin, Y.-J., Asine, A.-S., Bard, F.-X., Munk, P., Pinnegar, J. K., Scharf, F. S., Rountree, R. A., Stergiou, K. I., Fourtouni, H., Sassa, C., Sabates, A., and Jennings, S. 2008. Predator and prey body sizes in marine food webs. Data paper in Ecology 89:881. Lanier, J.M. and F.S. Scharf. 2007. Experimental investigation of spatial and temporal variation in estuarine growth of age-0 juvenile red drum (Sciaenops ocellatus). Journal of Experimental Marine Biology and Ecology 349:131-141. 81 List of Publications by Tibor T. Polgar Fellows Scharf, F.S., J.A. Buckel, F. Juanes, J.H. Cowan, and K.A. Rose. 2006. Effects of variable prey and cohort dynamics on growth of young-of-the-year estuarine bluefish: evidence for interactions between spring- and summer-spawned cohorts. Transactions of the American Fisheries Society 135:1266-1289. Scharf, F.S., J.P. Manderson, and M.C. Fabrizio. 2006. The effects of seafloor habitat complexity on survival of juvenile fishes: species-specific interactions with structural refuge. Journal of Experimental Marine Biology and Ecology 335:167-176. Scharf, F.S., J.P. Manderson, M.P. Fabrizio, J.P. Pessutti, J.E. Rosendale, R.J. Chant, and A.J. Bejda. 2004. Seasonal and interannual patterns of distribution and diet of bluefish within Middle Atlantic Bight estuary in relation to abiotic and biotic factors. Estuaries 27(3):426-436. Scharf, F.S., J.A. Buckel, P.A. McGinn, and F. Juanes. 2003. Vulnerability of marine forage fishes to piscivory: effects of prey behavior on susceptibility to attack and capture. Journal of Experimental Marine Biology and Ecology 294:41-59. Scharf, F.S., J.A. Buckel, and F. Juanes. 2002. Size-dependent vulnerability of juvenile bay anchovy (Anchoa mitchilli) to bluefish predation: does large body size always provide a refuge? Marine Ecology Progress Series 233:241-252. Juanes, F. J.A. Buckel, and F.S. Scharf. 2002. Feeding ecology of piscivorous fishes. Chapter 12 in The Handbook of Fish and Fisheries: The Biology, Conservation, and Management of Exploited Species, Vol. 1-Biology of Fishes, edited by P.J.B. Hart and J.D. Reynolds. Blackwell Scientific, London, pp. 267-283. Juanes, F. J.A. Buckel, and F.S. Scharf. 2001. Predatory behaviour and selectivity of a primary piscivore: comparing fish and non-fish prey. Marine Ecology Progress Series 217:157-165. Scharf, F.S., F. Juanes, and R.A. Rountree. 2000. Predator size - prey size relationships of marine fish predators: interspecific variation and the effects of ontogeny and body size on trophic niche breadth. Marine Ecology Progress Series 208:229-248. Scharf, F.S. 2000. Patterns in abundance, growth, and mortality of juvenile red drum across estuaries on the Texas coast and implications for recruitment and stock enhancement. Transactions of the American Fisheries Society 129:1207-1222. Scharf, F.S. and K.K. Schlicht. 2000. Feeding habits of red drum (Sciaenops ocellatus) in Galveston Bay, Texas: seasonal diet variation and predator-prey size relationships. Estuaries 23:128-139. Scharf, F.S., J.A. Buckel, F. Juanes, and D.O. Conover. 1998. Predation by juvenile piscivorous bluefish: the influence of prey to predator size ratio and prey type on predator capture success and prey profitability. Canadian Journal of Fisheries and Aquatic Sciences 55:1695-1703. Scharf, F.S., R.M. Yetter, A.P. Summers, and F. Juanes. 1998. Enhancing diet analyses of piscivorous fishes in the Northwest Atlantic through identification and reconstruction of original prey sizes from ingested remains. Fishery Bulletin 96:575-588. Scharf, F.S., F. Juanes, and M. Sutherland. 1998. Inferring ecological relationships from the edges of scatter diagrams: a comparison of regression techniques. Ecology 79:448-460. Scharf, F.S., J.A. Buckel, F. Juanes, and D.O. Conover. 1997. Estimating piscine prey size from partial remains: testing for shifts in foraging mode by juvenile bluefish. Environmental Biology of Fishes 49:377-388. Schmidt, Kathleen Schmidt, K., E. Kiviat, A. Wilder, and K Hajek. The mollusk communities of cattle-grazed and nongrazed calcareous fens in southeastern NY. In Preparation. Pearce, Timothy A., and Ken Hotopp, with illustrations by Kathleen A. Schmidt. A Field Guide to the Land Snails of New York State. This project was funded by the BRI (Biodiversity Research Institute) and is nearly complete. It will be published on-line first and later as a printed book. Funding has recently been held up. In Preparation. 82 List of Publications by Tibor T. Polgar Fellows Hotopp, K., T. Pearce, J. Nekola, and K. Schmidt. New Land Snail (Gastropoda: Pulmonata) Distribution Records for New York State. In Preparation. Schmidt, R.E. and K. A. Schmidt. A Manual of Young Fishes of the Hudson River Drainage. This is an identification and informational guide to young-of-the-year fish species found in the Hudson River and its tributaries. There are 214 species, approximately 150 of which have young in the drainage. Several will be described for the first time. In Preparation. Kiviat, E. and G. Stevens. 2001. Biodiversity Assessment Manual for the Hudson River Estuary Corridor. NY State Department of Environmental Conservation. 508 p. (Illustrations by K. Schmidt) Grimaldi, D., C. Michalski and K.A. Schmidt. 1991. Amber fossil Enicocephalidae (Heteroptera) from the lower Cretaceous of Lebanon and Oligo-Miocene of the Dominican Republic, with biogeographic analysis of Enicocephalus. American Museum Novitates 3071, 30p. Wygodzinski, P. W., and K.A. Schmidt. 1991. Revision of the New World Enicocephalomorpha (Heteroptera). Bulletin of the American Museum of Natural History 200, 265 p. Schmidt, K.A. 1986 The Life History of the crysomelid beetle Pyrrhalta nymphaea (Galerucinae) on water chestnut, (Trapa natans) (Hydrocaryaceae), in Tivoli, South Bay, Hudson River, NY. Pages V-1 to V-38 in J.C. Cooper, ed. Polgar Fellowship Reports of the Hudson River National Estuarine Sanctuary Program, 1985. New York State Department of Environmental Conservation, Hudson River Foundation, and US Department of Commerce. Wygodzinsky, P.W. and K.A. Schmidt. 1980. Survey of the Microcoryphia (Insecta) of the northeastern United States and adjacent provinces of Canada. American Museum Novitates 2701, 17p. Schoeberl, Karl Findlay, S., K. Schoeberl, and B. Wagner. Abundance, composition, and dynamics of the invertebrate fauna of a tidal freshwater wetland. J. N. Am. Benthol. Soc. 1989. 8(2):140-148. Seebaugh, David Seebaugh DR, Wallace WG (2009) Assimilation and subcellular distribution of elements by grass shrimp collected along an impact gradient. Aquatic Toxicology 93: 107-115. Wallace WG, Goto D, Seebaugh DR (2008) Metal assimilation results from the interaction of prey- and predator-dependent processes. Integrated Environmental Assessment and Management 4: 375377. Seebaugh DR, Estephan A, Wallace WG (2006) Relationship between dietary cadmium absorption by grass shrimp (Palaemonetes pugio) and trophically-available cadmium in amphipod (Gammarus lawrencianus) prey. Bulletin of Environmental Contamination and Toxicology 76: 16-23. Seebaugh DR, Goto D, Wallace WG (2005) Bioenhancement of cadmium transfer along a multi-level food chain. Marine Environmental Research 59: 473-491. Seebaugh DR, Wallace WG (2004) Importance of metal-binding proteins in the partitioning of Cd and Zn as trophically available metal (TAM) in the brine shrimp Artemia franciscana. Marine Ecology Progress Series 272: 215-230. Simoes, Jose Simoes, J.C. and R.M. Chambers. 1999. The Diamondback Terrapins of Piermont Marsh, Hudson River, New York. Northeastern Naturalist 6(3): 241-248. Haegel, N. M. J.C. Simoes, A.M. White and J.W. Beeman. 1999. Transient Behavior of Infrared Photoconductors: Applications of a Numerical Model. Applied Optics 38(10): 1910-1919. 83 List of Publications by Tibor T. Polgar Fellows Stainbrook, Karen Hong, B., K. E. Limburg, J. D. Erickson, J. M. Gowdy, A. A. Nowosielski, J. M. Polimeni, K.M. Stainbrook. 2009. Connecting the ecological-economic dots in human-dominated watersheds: Models to link socio-economic activities on the landscape to stream ecosystem health. Landscape and Urban Planning 91: 78-87. Creque, S.M., K.M. Stainbrook, R.A. Redman, D.C. Glover, S. Czesny, D. Makauskas, and J.M. Dettmers. 2009. Linking yellow perch movements to nearshore bottom substrate. Final Report to U.S. Fish and Wildlife Service, Great Lakes Fish and Wildlife Restoration Act, #30181-6-G105. Sparks, R. E., T.L. Barkley, S.M. Creque, J.M. Dettmers, and K. M. Stainbrook. In press. Evaluation of a fish dispersal barrier in the Chicago Sanitary and Ship Canal. In Chapman, D. and M. Hoff, Eds. Asian carp symposium proceedings. American Fisheries Society Symposium. Stainbrook, K.M., S. Czesny, J.M. Dettmers, and D.B. Makauskas. 2008. Linking yellow perch Movements to nearshore bottom substrate. Progress Report to Great Lakes Fishery Commission. Stainbrook, K.M., J.M. Dettmers, and T.N. Trudeau. 2007. Predicting suitable Asian carp habitat in the Illinois River. Final Report to USEPA Great Lakes National Program Office and US Army Corps of Engineers Chicago District. Project number W912P6-04-M-0028 A6079 493203. 2007/07 Limburg, K.E. and K.M. Stainbrook. 2007. Assessing Ecosystem Health in Dutchess County. In Erikson, J.D. and J.M. Gowdy, Eds. Frontiers In Ecological Economic Theory And Application. United States Ecological Economics Society Symposium, 384pp. Stainbrook, K.M., K.E. Limburg, R.A. Daniels, and R.E. Schimdt. 2006. Long-term changes in ecosystem health of two Hudson Valley watersheds, New York, USA 1936-2001. Hydrobiologia 571: 313327. Swaney, D.P., K.E. Limburg, and K.M. Stainbrook. 2006. Some historical changes in the patterns of population and land use in the Hudson River watershed. In Waldman, J., K. Limburg, and D. Strayer, Eds. American Fisheries Society Volume on Hudson River Fishes and Their Environment. American Fisheries Society Symposium 51, 376 pp. Limburg, K.E., K.M. Stainbrook, J.D. Erickson, and J.M. Gowdy. 2005. Urbanization consequences: case studies in the Hudson Valley. In Brown, L.R. and M. Meador, Eds. The effects of urbanization on aquatic ecosystems. American Fisheries Society Symposium 47. Stainbrook, K.M. 2004. Book Review: The Environmentalism of the Poor. Ecological Economics. Erickson, J.D., K. Limburg, J. Gowdy, K. Stainbrook, A. Nowosielski, C.Hermans, and J. Polimeni. 2004. Anticipating Change in the Hudson River Watershed: an Ecological Economic Model for Integrated Scenario Analysis, in R. Bruins and M. Heberling (Eds.), Economics and Ecological Risk Assessment: Applications to Watershed Management, CRC Press, Boca Raton, FL. Stainbrook, K.M. and K.E. Limburg. 2001. Preliminary Studies of Larval and Juvenile Gizzard Shad in the Hudson River: Where are They? What are They Eating? And What are They Assimilating? Section V: 1-28. In J.R. Waldman & W.C. Nieder (eds.), Final Reports of the Tibor T. Polgar Fellowship Program, 2000. Hudson River Foundation. Steinbacher, Joseph Ashley J., Horwitz R., Steinbacher J. and Ruppel B. 2003. A comparison of congeneric PCB patterns in American eels and striped bass from the Hudson and Delaware River estuaries. Marine Pollution Bulletin 46, 1294 – 1308. Steinbacher J., Balk C., Jahn K. and Brosnan T. 2003. Avian egg PCB contamination of various feeding guilds from the Upper Hudson River. 24th Annual Conference of the Society of Environmental Toxicology and Chemistry, Austin, TX. 84 List of Publications by Tibor T. Polgar Fellows Suatoni, Lisa Sumalia R. and E. Suatoni, 2005. Fish Economics: The benefits of rebuilding U.S. ocean fish populations. Fisheries Economic Research Unit, UBC Suatoni, E., S. Vicario, T. Snell, S. Rice, A. Caccone, 2006. An analysis of species boundaries and biogegraphic patterns in a cryptic species complex: The rotifer – Brachionus plicatilis. Molecular Phylogenetics and Evolution 41 pg. 86-98. Suatoni, E., E. Westerman, T. Snell, S. Rice. Large scale patterns of reproductive isolation in the rotifer, Brachionus plicatilis. Evolution, submitted. Levinton, J.S. E. Suatoni, W. Wallace, R. Junkins, B. Kelaher, and B. J. Allen 2003. Rapid loss of genetically based resistance to metals after the cleanup of a Superfund site. Proceedings of National Academy of Sciences Vol. 100(17) 9889-9891. Levinton, J., Klerks, P., Martinez, D., Montero, C., Sturmbauer, C., Suatoni, L., and Wallace, W. 1999. Running the gauntlet: pollution, evolution and reclamation of an estuarine bay. 125-138. IN: Whitfield, M., Mathews, J., and Reynolds, C., Aquatic Life Cycle Strategies: Survival in a Variable Environment. Plymouth, Marine Biological Association of the United Kingdom Caccone, A., J. Gibbs, V. Ketmaier, E. Suatoni, and J. Powell. 1999. Origin and evolutionary relationships of giant Galapagos tortoises. Proceedings of National Academy of Sciences. Vol. 96(23) 13223-13228. Templer, Pamela Craine JM, AJ Elmore, MPM Aidar, M Bustamante, TE Dawson, EA Hobbie, A Kahmen, MC Mack, KK McLauchlan, A Michelsen, GB Nardoto, LH Pardo, J Penuelas, PB Reich, EAG Schuur, WD Stock, PH Templer, RA Virginia, JM Welker, IJ Wright. 2009. Global patterns of foliar nitrogen isotopes and their relationships with nitrogen availability. In press, New Phytologist. Miller-Rushing, AJ, RB Primack, PH Templer, S Rathbone and S Mukunda. Long-term relationships among atmospheric CO2, stomata, and intrinsic water use efficiency in individual trees. In press, American Journal of Botany. Ewing, HA, KC Weathers, PH Templer, TE Dawson, MK Firestone, AM Elliott and VKS Boukili. 2009. Fog and Rain: Inputs and Edge Effects from Canopy to Soil in a California Redwood Forest. Ecosystems, 12:417-433. Templer, PH , WL Silver, J Pett-Ridge, K DeAngelis and MK Firestone. 2008. Plant and Microbial Controls on Nitrogen Retention and Loss in a Humid Tropical Forest. Ecology 89: 3030-3040. Huygens, D, P Boeckx, P Templer, L Paulino, O Van Cleemput, C Oyarzun and R Godoy. 2008. Refining the paradigm of terrestrial nitrogen cycling for pristine evergreen rainforests. Nature Geoscience 1: 543-548. Templer, PH , MA Arthur, GM Lovett and K Weathers. 2007. Plant and soil natural abundance δ15N: indicators of relative rates of nitrogen cycling in temperate forest ecosystems. Oecologia 153:399-406. Pardo L, Templer P, Goodale C, Duke S and Groffman P, Adams MB, Boeckx P, Boogs J, Campbell J, Colman B, Compton J, Emmett B, Gundersen P, Kjonaas J, Lovett G, Mack, M, Magill A, Mbila M, Mitchell M, McGee G, McNulty S, Nadelhoffer K, Ollinger S, Ross D, Rueth H, Rustad L, Shaberg P, Schiff S, Schleppi P, Spoelstra J, Wessel W. 2006. Regional Assessment of N saturation using foliar δ15N. Biogeochemistry 80:143-171. Templer, PH. 2005. Tree Species Effects on Nitrogen Cycling and Retention: a Synthesis of Studies Using 15N Tracers. In Tree Species Effects on Soils: Implications for Global Change. D. Binkley, O. Menyailo, eds. NATO Science Series, Kluwer Academic Publishers, Dordrecht. 85 List of Publications by Tibor T. Polgar Fellows Templer, PH, G Lovett, K Weathers, S Findlay, and T Dawson. 2005. Influence of tree species on forest nitrogen retention in the Catskill Mountains, New York, USA. Ecosystems 8:1-16. (Support from Hudson River Foundation) Templer, PH, P Groffman, A Flecker, and A Power. 2005. Land use change and soil nutrient transformations in the Los Haitises region of the Dominican Republic. Soil Biology and Biochemistry 37:215-225. Templer, PH and TE Dawson. 2004. Nitrogen uptake by seedlings of four tree species of the Catskill Mountains, NY: implications for forest N dynamics. Plant and Soil 262:251-261. Templer, PH, S Findlay, and G Lovett. 2003. Soil microbial biomass and nitrogen transformations among five tree species of the Catskill Mountains, NY. Soil Biology and Biochemistry 35:607-613. Harris, GP, SW Bigelow, JJ Cole, H Cyr, LL Janus, AP Kinzig, JF Kitchell, GE Likens, K.H. Reckhow, D Scavia, D Soto, L.M. Talbot, and PH Templer. 2003. The Role of Models in Ecosystem Management. In C.D. Canham, J.J. Cole, W.K. Lauenroth (eds.), Role of Models in Ecosystem Science. Princeton University Press. Dawson, TE, S Mambelli, AH Plamboeck, PH Templer, and KP Tu. 2002. Stable isotopes in plant ecology. Annual Review of Ecology and Systematics 33:507-559. Silver, WL and PH Templer. 2002. A walk through the Amazon from a biogeochemical perspective. Book review of: Biogeochemistry of the Amazon Basin. Eds. McClain, M., R.L. Victoria and J.E. Richey. Oxford University Press, New York, 365 pages. Ecology 83:3237-3238. Templer, PH, S Findlay and C Wigand. 1998. Sediment chemistry associated with native and non-native emergent macrophytes of a Hudson River marsh ecosystem. Wetlands 18:70-78 Thompson, Craig Thompson, C.M., D.J. Augustine, and D.M. Mayers. 2008. Swift fox response to prescribed fire in shortgrass steppe. Western North American Naturalist 68: 251-256. Thompson, C. M. and E. M. Gese. 2007. Food webs and intraguild predation: Community interactions of a native mesocarnivore. Ecology 88: 334-346. Thompson, C. M., P. E. Nye, G. A. Schmidt, and D. K Garcelon. 2005. Foraging ecology of bald eagles in a freshwater tidal system. Journal of Wildlife Management 69: 600-608. Thompson, C. M. and K. McGarigal, 2002. Influence of scale on bald eagle habitat selection along the Hudson River, NY. Landscape Ecology 17: 569-586. Villamagna, Amy Villamagna, A. and B. Murphy. 2008. Case Study: Water resources management in the Lerma-Chapala basin, Mexico. Journal of Natural Resources and Life Sciences Education 37:102-110. Villamagna, A. and S. Karpanty. 2008. Case Study: Taking an ecosystem approach to aquatic invasive species management. Journal of Natural Resources and Life Sciences Education 39: TBA Villamagna, A. 2006. Assessing the ecological and socio-economic impacts of water hyacinth control on Lake Chapala, Mexico. Proceedings Virginia Water Research Symposium 2006 “Water, Science and Technology. http://www.vwrrc.vt.edu/pdfs/proceedings/2006WaterResearchSymposium_proceedings.pdf Villamagna, A. 2005. A multidisciplinary framework for prioritizing freshwater lake conservation in Latin America using GIS. Proceedings Virginia Water Research Symposium 2005 “Balancing Water Law and Science” http://www.vwrrc.vt.edu/Proceedings/Symp%2005%20Proceedings.pdf Villamagna, A. and B. Murphy. Ecological and socio-economic effects of water hyacinth (Eichhornia crassipes): A Review 2008. Freshwater Biology. In review 86 List of Publications by Tibor T. Polgar Fellows Wallace, William Seebaugh DR, Wallace WG (2009) Assimilation and subcellular distribution of elements by grass shrimp collected along an impact gradient. Aquatic Toxicology 93: 107-115. Goto, D, Wallace WG 2009. Influences of prey- and predator- dependent processes on cadmium and methylmercury trophic transfer to mummichogs (Fundulus heteroclitus). Canadian Journal of Fisheries and Aquatic Sciences. 66 (5): 836–846. Khoury, J.N., Powers, E., Patnaik, P., Wallace, W.G. 2009. Relating disparity in competitive foraging behavior between two populations of fiddler crabs to the subcellular partitioning of metals. Arch. Environ. Contam. Toxicol. 56:489-499 Wallace, W.G., Goto, D., Seebaugh, D.R., 2008. Metal assimilation results from the interaction of preyand predator-dependent processes. Integrated Environ. Assess. Manag. 4: 375-377 Goto, D., Wallace, W.G. 2007. Interaction of Cd and Zn during uptake and loss in the polychaete Capitella capitata: whole body and subcellular perspectives. J. Exp. Mar. Biol. Ecol. 352:65-77 Seebaugh, D.R., Estephan, A., Wallace, W.G. 2006. Relationship between dietary cadmium absorption by grass shrimp (Palaemonetes pugio) and trophically available cadmium in amphipod (Gammarus lawrencianus) prey. Bull. Environ. Contam. Toxicol. 76:16-23 Seebaugh, D.R., Goto, D, Wallace, W.G. 2005. Bioenhancement of cadmium transfer along a multi-level food chain. Mar. Environ. Res.59:473-491 Seebaugh, D.R., Wallace, W.G. 2004. The importance of metal-binding proteins in the partitioning of Cd and Zn as trophically available metal (TAM) in the brine shrimp Artemia franciscana. Mar. Ecol. Prog. Ser. 272:215-230 Wallace, W.G., Estephan, A. 2004. Differential susceptibility of horizontal and vertical swimming activity to cadmium exposure in a gammaridean amphipod (Gammarus lawrencianus), Aquat. Toxicol. 69:289-297 Cain, D.J., Luoma, S.N., Wallace, W.G. 2004. Inter-specific tissue concentrations and subcellular partitioning of Cd, Cu, and Zn as a basis for understanding metal sensitivity in stream insects. Environ. Toxicol. Chem. 23(6): 1463-1473 Perez, M.H., Wallace, W.G. 2004. Differences in prey capture in grass shrimp, Palaemonetes pugio, collected along an environmental impact gradient. Arch. Environ. Contam. Toxicol. 46, 81-89 Levinton, J.S., Suatoni, L., Wallace, W.G., Junkins, R., Kelaher, B., Allen B. 2003. Rapid loss of genetically based resistance to metals after the cleanup of a Superfund site. Proceedings of the National Academy of Science. 100(17): 9889-9891 Wallace, W.G., Lee, B-G, Luoma, S.N. 2003. Subcellular compartmentalization of Cd and Zn in two bivalves. I. Significance of metal-sensitive fractions (MSF) and biologically detoxified metal (BDM). Mar. Ecol. Prog. Ser. 249:183-197 Wallace, W.G., Luoma, S.N. 2003. Subcellular compartmentalization of Cd and Zn in two bivalves. II. Significance of trophically available metal (TAM). Mar. Ecol. Prog. Ser. 257:125-137 Wallace, W.G., Hoexum Brouwer, T.M., Brouwer, M., Lopez, G.R. 2000. Alterations in prey capture and induction of metallothioneins in grass shrimp fed cadmium-contaminated prey. Environ. Toxicol. Chem. 19(4): 962-971 Levinton, J.S., Klerks, P., Martinez, D.E., Montero, C., Sturmbauer, C., Suatoni, L.,Wallace, W.G. 1999. Running the Gauntlet: Pollution, Evolution and Reclamation of an Estuarine Bay and its Significance in Understanding the Population Biology of Toxicology and Food Web Transfer. IN M. Whitfield, ed., Aquatic Life Cycles Strategies. Plymouth U.K., The Marine Biological Association. Wallace, W.G., Lopez, G.R., Levinton, J.S. 1998. Cd resistance in an oligochaete and its effect on cadmium trophic transfer to an omnivorous shrimp. Mar. Ecol. Prog. Ser. 175: 225-237 Lee, B.G., Wallace, W.G., Luoma, S.N. 1998. Uptake and loss kinetics of Cd, Cr and Zn in the bivalves Potamocorbula amurensis and Macoma balthica. Mar. Ecol. Prog. Ser. 175: 177-189 87 List of Publications by Tibor T. Polgar Fellows Wallace, W.G., Lopez, G.R. 1997. Bioavailability of biologically sequestered cadmium and the implications of metal detoxification. Mar. Ecol. Prog. Ser. 147:149-157 Wallace, W.G., Lopez, G.R. 1996. Relationship between the subcellular cadmium distribution of prey and cadmium trophic transfer to a predator. Estuaries 19(4): 923-930 Sokal, R.A., et al. (Wallace, W.G.). 1996. Restoration and recovery of an ecosystem polluted by cadmium. Journal of Undergraduate Research. 3(1): 115-127 Yozzo, David Cotroneo, C, and D.J. Yozzo. (In Review). W-fold: A folding, transportable 1 m2 throw trap for use in densely vegetated aquatic habitats. Submitted to The Journal of Freshwater Ecology. Osgood, D.T., D.J. Yozzo, R.M. Chambers, S. Pianka, C. LePage and J. Lewis. 2006. Patterns of habitat utilization by resident nekton in Phragmites and Typha marshes on the Hudson River Estuary, New York. In: J. Waldman, K. Limburg, and D. Strayer, (eds.) Hudson River Fishes And Their Environment. American Fisheries Society Symposium 51:151-173. Yozzo, D.J., and M.S. Laska. 2006. Restoration program assessment of the National Estuarine Research Reserve System. Ecological Restoration 24:13-21. Yozzo, D.J., Wilber, P., and R. J. Will. 2004. Beneficial uses of dredged material for habitat creation, enhancement, and restoration in New York - New Jersey Harbor. The Journal of Environmental Management 73:39-52. Yozzo, D.J., and F. Ottman. 2003. New distribution records for the spotfin killifish (Fundulus luciae Baird) in the lower Hudson River Estuary and adjacent waters. Northeastern Naturalist 10:399408. Osgood, D.T., D.J. Yozzo, R.M. Chambers, D. Jacobson, T. Hoffman, and J. Wnek. 2003. Tidal hydrology and habitat utilization by resident nekton in Phragmites and non-Phragmites marshes. Estuaries 26:523-534. Hanson, S. R., D.T. Osgood, and D.J. Yozzo. 2002. Nekton use of a Phragmites australis marsh on the Hudson River, New York. Wetlands 22:326-37. Yozzo, D.J., R. Clark, N. Curwen, M.R. Graybill, P. Reid, K. Rogal, J. Scanes, and C. Tilbrook. 2000. Managed retreat: Assessing the role of the human community in habitat restoration projects in the United Kingdom. Ecological Restoration 18:234-242. Yozzo, D.J., and R.J. Diaz. 1999. Tidal freshwater wetlands: invertebrate diversity, ecology and functional significance. in: Batzer, D., R. Rader, and S. Wissinger, eds., Invertebrates in Freshwater Wetlands of North America: Ecology and Management. John Wiley and Sons. Yozzo, D.J. and D.E. Smith. 1998. Composition and abundance of resident marsh-surface nekton: comparison between tidal freshwater and salt marshes in Virginia, USA. Hydrobiologia. 362:919. Pastorok, R.A., A. MacDonad, J.R. Sampson, P. Wilber, D.J. Yozzo, and J.P. Titre. 1997 An ecological decision framework for environmental restoration projects. Ecological Engineering 9:89-107. Yozzo, D.J. 1997. Ecological processes and parameters for restoration planning. pp. 86-87 in C.D. Stephan, and K. Beidler, (Eds.), Management of Atlantic Coastal Marine Fish Habitat: Proceedings of a Workshop for Habitat Managers, June 3-6, 1996, Philadelphia, PA, ASMFC Habitat Management Series No. 2. Yozo, D.J. and J.P. Titre. 1997. Planning manual for restoration of aquatic ecosystems published by U.S. Army Corps of Engineers. Restoration and Management Notes 15. Yozzo, D.J. and D.E. Smith. 1995. Abundance, microhabitat distribution, and seasonality of meiofauna from a Chickahominy River, Virginia tidal freshwater marsh. Hydrobiologia 310:197-206. Yozzo, D.J., K.I. Hester, and D.E. Smith. 1994. Abundance and spawning site utilization of Fundulus heteroclitus at the Virginia Coast Reserve. The Virginia Journal of Science 45:187-197. Yozzo, D.J. and P.L. Steineck. 1994. Ostracoda from tidal freshwater wetlands at Stockport, Hudson River Estuary: Abundance, distribution, and composition. Estuaries 17:680-684. 88 List of Publications by Tibor T. Polgar Fellows Yozzo, D.J., A. Mannino, and D.E. Smith. 1994. Mid-Summer abundance of resident sub-adult marsh nekton at the Virginia Coast Reserve. The Virginia Journal of Science 45:2130. Yozzo, D.J. and W.E. Odum. 1993. Fish predation on epiphytic microcrustacea in Tivoli South Bay, a Hudson River tidal freshwater wetland. Hydrobiologia 57:37-46. Yozzo, D.J. and W.E. Odum. 1990. Fish predation on littoral microcrustacea associated with water chestnut (Trapa natans) in Tivoli South Bay, a Hudson River tidal freshwater wetland. The Virginia Journal of Science 41:89. (abstract). Steineck, P.L., and D. Yozzo. 1988. The late Eocene-Recent Bradleya johnsoni Benson lineage (Crustacea, Ostracoda) in the Central Equatorial Pacific. Journal of Micropaleontology 7(2):189-199. 89 90