David V Allen’s research while affiliated with United States Geological Survey and other places

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Publications (1)


Fig. 1. Satellite image of Great Salt Lake, Utah (USGS Earth Shots) identifies major areas and aspects of the region. South Arm sampling sites in our study are indicated by blue dots. 
Table 1 . Significant partial correlation signs for inter-and intra-annual relative abundances of phytoplankton taxa.
Fig. 2. Our hypothesized simple food web diagrams for the Great Salt Lake South Arm are presented. Two food webs are proposed: a phytoplankton-based web (right of dashed line) and an organic particle/benthic algae web (left of dashed line). Arrow thickness represents suspected relative interaction strengths. The phytoplankton- based web was examined here. 
Table 2 . Significant multiple regressions obtained for brine shrimp demography (partial correlations in parentheses).
Fig. 3. Plots of water temperature (red) and salinity (blue) with depth in the Great Salt Lake South Arm are presented for a deep and shallow site in April/May for two years (2005, 2006). In 2005, the deep site exhibits the deep brine layer (chemocline), but not in 2006. Both years exhibit a thermocline at the deep site, but never at the shallow site. 

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The Great Salt Lake Ecosystem (Utah, USA): Long term data and a structural equation approach: Reply
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March 2011

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Doyle Stephens

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Clay Perschon

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David V Allen

Great Salt Lake (Utah, USA) is one of the world's largest hypersaline lakes, supporting many of the western U.S.'s migratory waterbirds. This unique ecosystem is threatened, but it and other large hypersaline lakes are not well understood. The ecosystem consists of two weakly linked food webs: one phytoplankton-based, the other organic particle/benthic algae-based. Seventeen years of data on the phytoplankton-based food web are presented: abundances of nutrients (N and P), phytoplankton (Chlorophyta, Bacillariophyta, Cyanophyta), brine shrimp (Artemia franciscana), corixids (Trichocorixa verticalis), and Eared Grebes (Podiceps nigricollis). Abundances of less common species, as well as brine fly larvae (Ephydra cinerea and hians) from the organic particle/benthic algae-based food web are also presented. Abiotic parameters were monitored: lake elevation, temperature, salinity, PAR, light penetration, and DO. We use these data to test hypotheses about the phytoplankton-based food web and its weak linkage with the organic particle/benthic algae-based food web via structural equation modeling. Counter to common perceptions, the phytoplankton-based food web is not limited by high salinity, but principally through phytoplankton production, which is limited by N and grazing by brine shrimp. Annual N abundance is highly variable and depends on lake volume, complex mixing given thermo-and chemo-clines, and recycling by brine shrimp. Brine shrimp are food-limited, and predation by corixids and Eared Grebes does not depress their numbers. Eared Grebe numbers appear to be limited by brine shrimp abundance. Finally, there is little interaction of brine fly larvae with brine shrimp through competition, or with corixids or grebes through predation, indicating that the lake's two food webs are weakly connected. Results are used to examine some general concepts regarding food web structure and dynamics, as well as the lake's future given expected anthropogenic impacts.

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Citations (1)


... Samples exhibiting abnormally high reflectance in SWIR2 were eliminated, presuming that these pixels were overlapping dry land, or the pixel retained some cloud or cloud shadow pollution. We also compared water depth to the concentration of Chl a to determine if samples in shallower water resulted in abnormally high Chl a concentration (>200 mg L −1 ) [31], thus identifying samples whose Chl a concentration may have been influenced by the churning of the lake bottom by the boat propeller. To further address shallow water depth, we examined the change in the coefficient of determination between our spectral index and sampled Chl a concentration as samples were systematically removed by increasing water depth. ...

Reference:

Spatiotemporal Patterns of Chlorophyll-a Concentration in a Hypersaline Lake Using High Temporal Resolution Remotely Sensed Imagery
The Great Salt Lake Ecosystem (Utah, USA): Long term data and a structural equation approach: Reply