Brian Bergamaschi
Dr. Brian Bergamaschi is a research biogeochemist with the USGS California Water Science Center and adjunct Faculty at California State University Sacramento.
Brian received a Ph.D. in Chemical Oceanography from the University of Washington, in Seattle, WA, where he specialized in analyzing the sources and fates of natural organic material in the environment. His main interests are in understanding processes of carbon and nutrient cycling in aquatic environments and related biogeochemical processes. His particular interest is developing methods to quantify interactions between physical and biogeochemical processes. His research ranges in scale from light-mediated molecular transformations, to tidally driven wetland exchange, to effects of changing continental-scale nutrient fluxes on coastal carbon processes. His current projects largely focus on aquatic biogeochemical processes, aquatic habitat quality and carbon cycling in aquatic systems.
Science and Products
Environmental occurrence and shallow ground water detection of the antibiotic monensin from dairy farms
Assessing contribution of DOC from sediments to a drinking-water reservoir using optical profiling
Environmental occurrence and shallow ground water detection of the antibiotic monensin from dairy farms
The role of hydrologic regimes on dissolved organic carbon composition in an agricultural watershed
Diurnal variability in riverine dissolved organic matter composition determined by in situ optical measurement in the San Joaquin River (California, USA)
Landscape scale controls on the vascular plant component of dissolved organic carbon across a freshwater delta
A tool for assessing mercury loadings from restored tidal systems
An assessment of optical properties of dissolved organic material as quantitative source indicators in the Santa Ana River basin, Southern California
Method of analysis at the U.S. Geological Survey California Water Science Center, Sacramento Laboratory - determination of haloacetic acid formation potential, method validation, and quality-control practices
Suspended sediment fluxes in a tidal wetland: Measurement, controlling factors, and error analysis
Sources, bioavailability, and photoreactivity of dissolved organic carbon in the Sacramento-San Joaquin River Delta
Microbial and Dissolved Organic Carbon Characterization of Stormflow in the Santa Ana River at Imperial Highway, Southern California, 1999-2002
Non-USGS Publications**
**Disclaimer: The views expressed in Non-USGS publications are those of the author and do not represent the views of the USGS, Department of the Interior, or the U.S. Government.
Science and Products
Environmental occurrence and shallow ground water detection of the antibiotic monensin from dairy farms
Assessing contribution of DOC from sediments to a drinking-water reservoir using optical profiling
Environmental occurrence and shallow ground water detection of the antibiotic monensin from dairy farms
The role of hydrologic regimes on dissolved organic carbon composition in an agricultural watershed
Diurnal variability in riverine dissolved organic matter composition determined by in situ optical measurement in the San Joaquin River (California, USA)
Landscape scale controls on the vascular plant component of dissolved organic carbon across a freshwater delta
A tool for assessing mercury loadings from restored tidal systems
An assessment of optical properties of dissolved organic material as quantitative source indicators in the Santa Ana River basin, Southern California
Method of analysis at the U.S. Geological Survey California Water Science Center, Sacramento Laboratory - determination of haloacetic acid formation potential, method validation, and quality-control practices
Suspended sediment fluxes in a tidal wetland: Measurement, controlling factors, and error analysis
Sources, bioavailability, and photoreactivity of dissolved organic carbon in the Sacramento-San Joaquin River Delta
Microbial and Dissolved Organic Carbon Characterization of Stormflow in the Santa Ana River at Imperial Highway, Southern California, 1999-2002
Non-USGS Publications**
**Disclaimer: The views expressed in Non-USGS publications are those of the author and do not represent the views of the USGS, Department of the Interior, or the U.S. Government.