Research Interests
During my years of research, I have come to understand and appreciate a wide diversity of biological areas such as the fields of aquatic biology, fisheries biology, evolutionary biology, and physiological ecology. My approach within these fields of interest integrates theoretical and applied research on natural populations to answering questions concerning such topics as parental investment theory in ectotherms to determining the effects of environmental stressors on aquatic organisms. At the present time, my research focuses on the following two specific areas: 1) examining changes in morphology, physiology, behavior and life-history traits of bluegills and other aquatic organisms in response to environmental perturbation. This research involves both field and laboratory experiments utilizing state of the art laboratory equipment and procedures to answer questions concerning changes in body shape, performance traits, lipid cycles, reproductive cycles, metabolic rates, and age at sexual maturity in bluegills and other aquatic organisms from stressed sites, and 2) determining the effects of land-use practices on stream ecosystems. This research involves intense field analysis to answer questions related to the effects of flow regime and riparian zone changes on species diversity, species richness, biotic integrity and genetic structure of stream fish and invertebrate communities. Recent research projects have specifically examined 1) the effects of landscape processes on fish and invertebrate communities, 2) the effects of near stream habitat changes on the Index of Biotic Integrity (IBI), 3) the effects of stream habitat fragmentation on the genetic diversity of stream fish populations and 4) landscape effects on stream water chemistry and benthic productivity . In addition, I am also conducting research aimed at determining the egg components and developmental process of fish and reptiles in relation to parental investment patterns.
Present
Graduate Students
Jeff Fore - Relationship
between Geomorphology and Stream Fish Species Composition in
Jeff Butler - The Effects of Bridges on the Aquatic Communities in Illinois Streams
The project will sample fish and macroinvertebrates upstream from bridges, underneath bridges, and downstream from bridges on 10 stream sites located throughout central Illinois. This study will test for differences in the aquatic community by comparing fish and invertebrate diversity and abundances near bridges. The major reason for choosing to sample invertebrates and fish is to gain an understanding of how aquatic communities respond to bridges and then using this data incorporate the conclusions into improving the criteria for the selection of sampling sites in Illinois streams. I will sample fish communities near bridges using seines and standard stream electrofishing techniques. Fish collected during sampling will be preserved in formalin while macroinvertebrates will be collected using a core sampler and a kick net and preserved in ethanol for later identification.
Recent Graduate
Student
Projects
Chris North ─The effects of agricultural land-use on stream fish and invertebrate community structure.
In
order to
better understand the processes that occur within streams it is
important that
researchers attempt to incorporate some knowledge of the surrounding
landscape
into their studies. This is
particularly true in areas like the Midwest where human alteration of
the
landscape, such as the conversion of natural cover types to cultivated
row
crops, is widespread. When
assessing the health of streams, the composition and structure of the
biological
communities themselves tend to be the best indicators of water quality.
Previous
work in Hurricane Creek (Coles and Cumberland Counties, IL) has
demonstrated
significant differences in water chemistry and community metabolism
between
sites subject to differing intensities of farming in the upstream
watershed. Our objective was to examine
the differences in fish and
invertebrate communities at four sites along the stream representing
varying
degrees of agricultural land-use over four sampling periods, once each
season.
Fish were sampled using electroseining techniques and
invertebrates were
collected using the 20-jab method. Fish and invertebrate communities
were
compared using indices of biotic integrity (IBI, MBI) and a selection
of
statistical tests. This study will
help researchers better understand the affects of land-use on stream
ecosystems
and allow land managers to make more informed decisions about
rehabilitating
stream ecosystems. (In PhD program in
Biology at the University of Wyoming)
Mark Fincel - Does variable flow regime, produced by an overflow dam, alter downstream fish communities in a Midwestern stream?
Both natural and human induced disturbances, such as floods, have long been recognized as having adverse effects on the abiotic and biotic components of streams. Flood disturbances can hinder the predator-prey interactions that usually shape a community, influence reproductive timing and frequency, and physically injure and displace individual organisms within the stream. In 1920, a dam was built on the Sangamon River located in Cumberland County, Illinois to create Lake Decatur. With the building of the dam, a large number of variable flood disturbances have occurred in the central part of the Sangamon River over the past 84 years.
From 1998-99 and then from 2001-2002, an intensive sampling program was initiated to document temporal and spatial heterogeneity of an 8.5 km urban reach of the Sangamon River beginning just below Lake Decatur Dam and extending downstream to incorporate discharges from the Sanitary District of Decatur (SDD). The study was designed to characterize stream habitat quality and to assess impacts resulting from ongoing municipal and reservoir flow management (Pederson and Fischer, 2003). Results from the study indicate that the Sangamon River can be considered a fair quality aquatic ecosystem with minimal habitat heterogeneity. The variability observed in the stream habitat was primarily dependent upon such factors as substrate stability and pool variability, which are directly attributable to flow rates. Overall, the study suggest that a threshold flow rate of 100 cfs exists and when discharge falls below this level the upstream and downstream reaches are discrete habitats while they appear to behave as a continuum when discharge exceeds 100 cfs. This suggests, that at low flow rates water quality is reduced in the reach of the Sangamon River extending downstream from the dam to the discharge of the main treatment plant of the SDD and is a result of management practices employed to maintain reservoir levels.
One aspect not addressed by the study is the effect highly variable instream flow, resulting from random reservoir discharge, has played on shaping the steam biotic communities. Field stations placed below the dam have recorded an average base flow from 0 to 100 cfs. However, frequent releases from the overflow dam have caused dramatic flow fluctuations of up to 20 to 24 times the magnitude of base flow with a maximum observed outflow of 19,000, 190 times base flow, happening once within the last 20 years. This variability observed in flow rate may be detrimental to habitat quality and play a role in structuring communities. Thus, the central part of the Sangamon River offers a unique opportunity to investigate the effects of highly variable flow regimes on stream biota. The objectives of the research project were to evaluate the effects of fluctuating flow regimes on: 1) fish community structure, 2) stream fish re-colonization patterns and 3) flow management recommendation needed to maintain a diverse ecosystem. (In PhD program in Biology at the University of South Dakota)
BETHANY BOSTROM - The Effectiveness of Artificial Riffles in Illinois Streams.
In the late 19th and early 20th centuries large expanses of land in the Midwest were drained for agricultural activities, causing the loss of woody debris and gravel deposits. The outcome of these human disturbances were that fine and course cobble that create natural riffles were replaced by a fine sediment. To mediate the loss of riffle habitat and associated loss of aquatic diversity, the Illinois Department of Natural Resources installed thirty artificial riffles on eight different perturbated streams between 2000 and 2003. To date, very few studies have been conducted to investigate the effectiveness of artificial riffles as an aquatic habitat restoration technique. Thus, the artificial riffle projects completed by the Illinois Department of Natural Resources offer me the opportunity to study the efficiency of artificial riffles as techniques for increasing stream habitat and aquatic diversity. This project answered the question of whether man-made riffles successfully imitate natural riffles in streams and allow for an evaluation of the economic practicality of this type of habitat restoration. (Working for an environmental firm in Vermont)
MARYBETH
BREY - CHANGES
IN DIET AND CONDITION OF LAKE MICHIGAN LAKE TROUT WITH
THE
INTRODUCTION OF THE ROUND GOBY
.