Bronze level automatically awarded US beta
This data has achieved Bronze level on 22 October 2015 which means this data makes a great start at the basics of publishing open data.
The Niagara River Environmental Contaminants Study is an ongoing effort by the U.S. Fish and Wildlife Service Service emphasizing the use of biological indicators to assess the impacts of environmental contaminants on fish and wildlife resources. Reported here are the results of the wildlife bioindicator portion of the study. The goals of the study were to determine the nature and extent of environmental contaminant burdens in the Common Tern Sterna hirundo population of the upper Niagara River area, and to evaluate the potential for negative impacts to that population. Reproductive parameters and contaminant burdens of the upper Niagara River area Common Tern populations are compared to the Atlantic coast and lower Great Lakes populations. Between 1986 and 1988, 62 Common Tern eggs, nine Herring Gull eggs and 17 forage fish samples from the upper Niagara River area were collected and analyzed for organic and elemental residues. The results indicate that organochlorine, heavy metal, and polyaromatic and aliphatic hydrocarbon contamination in upper Niagara River Common Terns is low and does not appear to impair reproduction. A comparison of the P,PDDE:PCBs polychlorinated biphenyls ratios for Common Tern and Herring Gull Larus argentatus eggs showed them to be nearly the same. Those for Common Tern eggs and forage fish were similar and showed a parallel decline between 1986 and 1988. These comparisons suggest that the concentration of contaminants found in Common Tern eggs reflected local levels rather than contaminant levels on their wintering grounds. Hence, Common Terns were good indicators of upper Niagara River contaminants. Despite the low levels of contaminants found in the Common Tern eggs and forage fish sampled, the terns experienced poor hatching and fledging success. Predation and poor habitat quality may be the primary factors affecting the breeding success of terns in the upper Niagara River population. However, the high incidence of egg and chick predation and the indirect effects of predation at the tern colonies studied may have masked any observable linkage between poor reproductive performance of Common Terns with local contaminant burdens. Other factors, such as behavioral abnormalities, embryotoxicity, and embryonic mortality that are known to be pollutioninduced, should not be ruled out as having contributed to the poor reproductive success of the Common Terns. In particular, a study should be initiated to investigate parental nest attentiveness, prehatching mortality, and eggshell structure of the Common Terns nesting in the upper Niagara River area to further address the concern over the decline in the population.
http://catalog.data.gov/dataset/biomonitoring-and-assessment-of-environmental-contaminants-in-fish-eating-birds-of-the-upp Do you think this data is incorrect? Let us know
US Fish and Wildlife Service, Department of the Interior Do you think this data is incorrect? Let us know
http://catalog.data.gov/dataset/biomonitoring-and-assessment-of-environmental-contaminants-in-fish-eating-birds-of-the-upp Do you think this data is incorrect? Let us know
Creative Commons CCZero Do you think this data is incorrect? Let us know
yes, and the rights are all held by the same person or organisation Do you think this data is incorrect? Let us know
Creative Commons CCZero Do you think this data is incorrect? Let us know
its data licence Do you think this data is incorrect? Let us know
no data about individuals Do you think this data is incorrect? Let us know
http://catalog.data.gov/organization/fws-gov Do you think this data is incorrect? Let us know
go out of date but it is timestamped Do you think this data is incorrect? Let us know
backed up offsite Do you think this data is incorrect? Let us know
http://ecos.fws.gov/ServCatFiles/reference/holding/21530?accessType=DOWNLOAD Do you think this data is incorrect? Let us know
a standard open format Do you think this data is incorrect? Let us know
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http://catalog.data.gov/dataset/biomonitoring-and-assessment-of-environmental-contaminants-in-fish-eating-birds-of-the-upp Do you think this data is incorrect? Let us know
http://www.data.gov/issue/?media_url=http://catalog.data.gov/dataset/biomonitoring-and-assessment-of-environmental-contaminants-in-fish-eating-birds-of-the-upp Do you think this data is incorrect? Let us know