
Sophia Bonjour- PhD
- Fish Biologist at United States Geological Survey
Sophia Bonjour
- PhD
- Fish Biologist at United States Geological Survey
About
14
Publications
1,982
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82
Citations
Introduction
Current institution
Additional affiliations
July 2020 - December 2023
October 2017 - August 2020
Position
- Research Specialist
Description
- Managed the Grimm Lab which focused on urban and stream ecology. I managed two projects for the lab in particular 1) the Arizona portion of the StreamPULSE project and 2) the LTREB: Multiscale effects of climate variability and change on hydrologic regimes, ecosystem function, and community structure in a desert stream and its catchment.
Education
July 2020 - April 2024
August 2014 - December 2017
Publications
Publications (14)
Provides several methods to account for positional errors when spatially joining ground-truthing with remote sensing patch classifications. The joined data set is used to estimate the accuracy of patch type (e.g., land cover, substrate type, habitat type) classifications derived from the remote sensing data. The estimated classification accuracy is...
Tributaries provide temporal and spatial habitat heterogeneity in river networks that can be critical for parts of the life history of a species. Tributary fidelity can benefit individual fish undergoing spawning migrations by reducing time and energy spent exploring new areas and leveraging previous experience, but anthropogenic activities that fr...
Objective
Handling and tagging migrating fish might alter their behavior, limiting inference from mark–recapture studies. Posthandling flight of tributary spawning Flannelmouth Sucker Catostomus latipinnis was previously identified in Coal Creek in the upper Colorado River basin. Our objective was to determine if similar issues were present at McEl...
The North American monsoon season in the southwestern United States can produce heavy precipitation that results in high-flow events. Fish kills can occur when these monsoonal freshets derive from runoff flowing over recently burned catchments, but less is known concerning monsoon-induced fish kills occurring in unburned riverscapes. Here we report...
Effective management of invasive species benefits from a comprehensive understanding of the species' behavior and interactions with the invaded system. We investigated temporal dynamics of telemetry detections and the potential utility of a traitor approach for informing response efforts to the invasive grass carp (Ctenopharyngodon idella) populati...
Objective
Barriers to movement negatively affect population vital rates of riverine fishes that rely on connected migratory routes to complete components of their life cycle, such as reproduction and recruitment. In the southwestern United States, decades of water diversion, construction of large impoundments, and loss of floodplain habitats have a...
Recreational and occupational contact with freshwater harmful algal blooms (HABs) pose human health and economic risks worldwide. Individual U.S. states control monitoring, reporting, and mitigation of recreational exposure to HABs. We surveyed states to catalog responses to HAB problems. We used this data to develop a state‐specific HAB response i...
Spawning phenology and associated migrations of fishes are often regulated by factors such as temperature and stream discharge, but flow regulation of mainstem rivers coupled with climate change might disrupt these cues and affect fitness. Flannelmouth sucker (Catostomus latipinnis) persisting in heavily modified river networks are known to spawn i...
The “dimensional stability” approach measures different components of ecological stability to investigate how they are related. Yet, most empirical work has used small‐scale and short‐term experimental manipulations. Here, we apply this framework to a long‐term observational dataset of stream macroinvertebrates sampled between the winter flooding a...
The increasing availability of high‐frequency freshwater ecosystem metabolism data provides an opportunity to identify links between metabolic regimes, as gross primary production and ecosystem respiration patterns, and consumer energetics with the potential to improve our current understanding of consumer dynamics (e.g., population dynamics, commu...
• Drying intermittent stream networks often have permanent water refuges that are important for recolonisation. These habitats may be hotspots for interactions between fishes and invertebrates as they become isolated, but densities and diversity of fishes in these refuges can be highly variable across time and space.
• Insect emergence from streams...
Understanding factors that influence resource pulses is an important aspect of ecosystem ecology. We quantified below‐ to aboveground energy and nutrient fluxes during the 2015 periodical cicada emergence from forest habitats in a tallgrass prairie matrix and compared results to our prior studies of the 1998 emergence in the same watershed. We esti...
Stoichiometric ratios of resources and consumers have been used to predict nutrient limitation across diverse terrestrial and aquatic ecosystems. In forested headwater streams, coarse and fine benthic organic matter (CBOM, FBOM) are primary basal resources for the food web, and the distribution and quality of these organic matter resources may ther...
Restoration projects are often implemented to address specific issues in the environment. Consequences of a restoration project, if any are measured, typically focus on direct changes to the projects focus. However, changing habitat structure likely results in changes to the environment that affect the communities living there. Rock weirs have been...