Donald O Rosenberry (Former Employee)
Science and Products
Filter Total Items: 132
Groundwater: The disregarded component in lake water and nutrient budgets, Part 1: Effects of groundwater on hydrology
Lake eutrophication is a large and growing problem in many parts of the world, commonly due to anthropogenic sources of
nutrients. Improved quantification of nutrient inputs is required to address this problem, including better determination of
exchanges between groundwater and lakes. This first of a two-part review provides a brief history of the evolution of the study of
groundwater exchange wit
Authors
Donald O. Rosenberry, Jörg Lewandowski, Karin Meinikmann, Gunnar Nützmann
A comparison of thermal infrared to fiber-optic distributed temperature sensing for evaluation of groundwater discharge to surface water
Groundwater has a predictable thermal signature that can be used to locate discrete zones of discharge to surface water. As climate warms, surface water with strong groundwater influence will provide habitat stability and refuge for thermally stressed aquatic species, and is therefore critical to locate and protect. Alternatively, these discrete seepage locations may serve as potential point sourc
Authors
Danielle K Hare, Martin A. Briggs, Donald O. Rosenberry, Dave Boutt, John W. Lane
Influence of hyporheic exchange, substrate distribution, and other physically-linked hydrogeomorphic characteristics on abundance of freshwater mussels
Both endangered and non-endangered unionid mussels are heterogeneously distributed within the Allegheny River,
Pennsylvania. Mussel populations vary from high to low density downstream of Kinzua Dam, and the direction, amount, and
range of hyporheic exchange (seepage) at the sediment–water interface were suspected to influence their distribution and
abundance. Nineteen hydrogeomorphic variables, i
Authors
Donald O. Rosenberry, P. Zion Klos, Rita Villella Bumgardner
Riverbed clogging associated with a California riverbank filtration system: An assessment of mechanisms and monitoring approaches
An experimental field study was performed to investigate riverbed clogging processes and associated monitoring approaches near a dam-controlled riverbank filtration facility in Northern California. Motivated by previous studies at the site that indicated riverbed clogging plays an important role in the performance of the riverbank filtration system, we investigated the spatiotemporal variability a
Authors
Craig Ulrich, Susan S. Hubbard, Joan Florsheim, Donald O. Rosenberry, Sharon Borglin, Marcus Trotta, Donald Seymour
Groundwater – The disregarded component in lake water and nutrient budgets. Part 2: effects of groundwater on nutrients
Lacustrine groundwater discharge (LGD) transports nutrients from a catchment to a lake, which may fuel eutrophication, one of the major threats to our fresh waters. Unfortunately, LGD has often been disregarded in lake nutrient studies. Most measurement techniques are based on separate determinations of volume and nutrient concentration of LGD: Loads are calculated by multiplying seepage volumes b
Authors
Jörg Lewandowski, Karin Meinikmann, Gunnar Nützmann, Donald O. Rosenberry
Placing prairie pothole wetlands along spatial and temporal continua to improve integration of wetland function in ecological investigations
We evaluated the efficacy of using chemical characteristics to rank wetland relation to surface and groundwater along a hydrologic continuum ranging from groundwater recharge to groundwater discharge. We used 27 years (1974–2002) of water chemistry data from 15 prairie pothole wetlands and known hydrologic connections of these wetlands to groundwater to evaluate spatial and temporal patterns in ch
Authors
Ned H. Euliss, David M. Mushet, Wesley E. Newton, Clint R.V. Otto, Richard D. Nelson, James W. LaBaugh, Eric J. Scherff, Donald O. Rosenberry
Quantity and quality of groundwater discharge in a hypersaline lake environment
Geophysical and geochemical surveys were conducted to understand groundwater discharge to Great Salt Lake (GSL) and assess the potential significance of groundwater discharge as a source of selenium (Se). Continuous resistivity profiling (CRP) focusing below the sediment/water interface and fiber-optic distributed temperature sensing (FO-DTS) surveys were conducted along the south shore of GSL. FO
Authors
R.B. Anderson, D. L. Naftz, F. D. Day-Lewis, R.D. Henderson, D. O. Rosenberry, Bernard J. Stolp, P. Jewell
Geophysical and hydrologic studies of lake seepage variability
Variations in lake seepage were studied along a 130 m shoreline of Mirror Lake NH. Seepage was downward from the lake to groundwater; rates measured from 28 seepage meters varied from 0 to −282 cm/d. Causes of this variation were investigated using electrical resistivity surveys and lakebed sediment characterization. Two-dimensional (2D) resistivity surveys showed a transition in lakebed sediments
Authors
Laura Toran, Jonathan E. Nyquist, Donald O. Rosenberry, Michael P. Gagliano, Natasha Mitchell, James Mikochik
Identifying non-point sources of endocrine active compounds and their biological impacts in freshwater lakes
Contaminants of emerging concern, particularly endocrine active compounds (EACs), have been identified as a threat to aquatic wildlife. However, little is known about the impact of EACs on lakes through groundwater from onsite wastewater treatment systems (OWTS). This study aims to identify specific contributions of OWTS to Sullivan Lake, Minnesota, USA. Lake hydrology, water chemistry, caged blue
Authors
Beth H. Baker, Dalma Martinovic-Weigelt, Mark L. Ferrey, Larry B. Barber, Jeffrey H. Writer, Donald O. Rosenberry, Richard L. Kiesling, James R. Lundy, Heiko L. Schoenfuss
Understanding water column and streambed thermal refugia for endangered mussels in the Delaware River
Groundwater discharge locations along the upper Delaware River, both discrete bank seeps and diffuse streambed upwelling, may create thermal niche environments that benefit the endangered dwarf wedgemussel (Alasmidonta heterodon). We seek to identify whether discrete or diffuse groundwater inflow is the dominant control on refugia. Numerous springs and seeps were identified at all locations where
Authors
Martin A. Briggs, Emily B. Voytek, Frederick D. Day-Lewis, Donald O. Rosenberry, John W. Lane
Seasonal changes in peatland surface elevation recorded at GPS stations in the Red Lake Peatlands, northern Minnesota, USA
Northern peatlands appear to hold large volumes of free‐phase gas (e.g., CH4 and CO2), which has been detected by surface deformations, pore pressure profiles, and electromagnetic surveys. Determining the gas content and its impact in peat is challenging because gas storage depends on both the elastic properties of the peat matrix and the buoyant forces exerted by pore fluids. We therefore used a
Authors
A.S. Reeve, P.H. Glaser, Donald O. Rosenberry
Temporal variability of exchange between groundwater and surface water based on high-frequency direct measurements of seepage at the sediment-water interface
Seepage at the sediment-water interface in several lakes, a large river, and an estuary exhibits substantial temporal variability when measured with temporal resolution of 1 min or less. Already substantial seepage rates changed by 7% and 16% in response to relatively small rain events at two lakes in the northeastern USA, but did not change in response to two larger rain events at a lake in Minne
Authors
Donald O. Rosenberry, Rich W. Sheibley, Stephen E. Cox, Frederic W. Simonds, David L. Naftz
Science and Products
Filter Total Items: 132
Groundwater: The disregarded component in lake water and nutrient budgets, Part 1: Effects of groundwater on hydrology
Lake eutrophication is a large and growing problem in many parts of the world, commonly due to anthropogenic sources of
nutrients. Improved quantification of nutrient inputs is required to address this problem, including better determination of
exchanges between groundwater and lakes. This first of a two-part review provides a brief history of the evolution of the study of
groundwater exchange wit
Authors
Donald O. Rosenberry, Jörg Lewandowski, Karin Meinikmann, Gunnar Nützmann
A comparison of thermal infrared to fiber-optic distributed temperature sensing for evaluation of groundwater discharge to surface water
Groundwater has a predictable thermal signature that can be used to locate discrete zones of discharge to surface water. As climate warms, surface water with strong groundwater influence will provide habitat stability and refuge for thermally stressed aquatic species, and is therefore critical to locate and protect. Alternatively, these discrete seepage locations may serve as potential point sourc
Authors
Danielle K Hare, Martin A. Briggs, Donald O. Rosenberry, Dave Boutt, John W. Lane
Influence of hyporheic exchange, substrate distribution, and other physically-linked hydrogeomorphic characteristics on abundance of freshwater mussels
Both endangered and non-endangered unionid mussels are heterogeneously distributed within the Allegheny River,
Pennsylvania. Mussel populations vary from high to low density downstream of Kinzua Dam, and the direction, amount, and
range of hyporheic exchange (seepage) at the sediment–water interface were suspected to influence their distribution and
abundance. Nineteen hydrogeomorphic variables, i
Authors
Donald O. Rosenberry, P. Zion Klos, Rita Villella Bumgardner
Riverbed clogging associated with a California riverbank filtration system: An assessment of mechanisms and monitoring approaches
An experimental field study was performed to investigate riverbed clogging processes and associated monitoring approaches near a dam-controlled riverbank filtration facility in Northern California. Motivated by previous studies at the site that indicated riverbed clogging plays an important role in the performance of the riverbank filtration system, we investigated the spatiotemporal variability a
Authors
Craig Ulrich, Susan S. Hubbard, Joan Florsheim, Donald O. Rosenberry, Sharon Borglin, Marcus Trotta, Donald Seymour
Groundwater – The disregarded component in lake water and nutrient budgets. Part 2: effects of groundwater on nutrients
Lacustrine groundwater discharge (LGD) transports nutrients from a catchment to a lake, which may fuel eutrophication, one of the major threats to our fresh waters. Unfortunately, LGD has often been disregarded in lake nutrient studies. Most measurement techniques are based on separate determinations of volume and nutrient concentration of LGD: Loads are calculated by multiplying seepage volumes b
Authors
Jörg Lewandowski, Karin Meinikmann, Gunnar Nützmann, Donald O. Rosenberry
Placing prairie pothole wetlands along spatial and temporal continua to improve integration of wetland function in ecological investigations
We evaluated the efficacy of using chemical characteristics to rank wetland relation to surface and groundwater along a hydrologic continuum ranging from groundwater recharge to groundwater discharge. We used 27 years (1974–2002) of water chemistry data from 15 prairie pothole wetlands and known hydrologic connections of these wetlands to groundwater to evaluate spatial and temporal patterns in ch
Authors
Ned H. Euliss, David M. Mushet, Wesley E. Newton, Clint R.V. Otto, Richard D. Nelson, James W. LaBaugh, Eric J. Scherff, Donald O. Rosenberry
Quantity and quality of groundwater discharge in a hypersaline lake environment
Geophysical and geochemical surveys were conducted to understand groundwater discharge to Great Salt Lake (GSL) and assess the potential significance of groundwater discharge as a source of selenium (Se). Continuous resistivity profiling (CRP) focusing below the sediment/water interface and fiber-optic distributed temperature sensing (FO-DTS) surveys were conducted along the south shore of GSL. FO
Authors
R.B. Anderson, D. L. Naftz, F. D. Day-Lewis, R.D. Henderson, D. O. Rosenberry, Bernard J. Stolp, P. Jewell
Geophysical and hydrologic studies of lake seepage variability
Variations in lake seepage were studied along a 130 m shoreline of Mirror Lake NH. Seepage was downward from the lake to groundwater; rates measured from 28 seepage meters varied from 0 to −282 cm/d. Causes of this variation were investigated using electrical resistivity surveys and lakebed sediment characterization. Two-dimensional (2D) resistivity surveys showed a transition in lakebed sediments
Authors
Laura Toran, Jonathan E. Nyquist, Donald O. Rosenberry, Michael P. Gagliano, Natasha Mitchell, James Mikochik
Identifying non-point sources of endocrine active compounds and their biological impacts in freshwater lakes
Contaminants of emerging concern, particularly endocrine active compounds (EACs), have been identified as a threat to aquatic wildlife. However, little is known about the impact of EACs on lakes through groundwater from onsite wastewater treatment systems (OWTS). This study aims to identify specific contributions of OWTS to Sullivan Lake, Minnesota, USA. Lake hydrology, water chemistry, caged blue
Authors
Beth H. Baker, Dalma Martinovic-Weigelt, Mark L. Ferrey, Larry B. Barber, Jeffrey H. Writer, Donald O. Rosenberry, Richard L. Kiesling, James R. Lundy, Heiko L. Schoenfuss
Understanding water column and streambed thermal refugia for endangered mussels in the Delaware River
Groundwater discharge locations along the upper Delaware River, both discrete bank seeps and diffuse streambed upwelling, may create thermal niche environments that benefit the endangered dwarf wedgemussel (Alasmidonta heterodon). We seek to identify whether discrete or diffuse groundwater inflow is the dominant control on refugia. Numerous springs and seeps were identified at all locations where
Authors
Martin A. Briggs, Emily B. Voytek, Frederick D. Day-Lewis, Donald O. Rosenberry, John W. Lane
Seasonal changes in peatland surface elevation recorded at GPS stations in the Red Lake Peatlands, northern Minnesota, USA
Northern peatlands appear to hold large volumes of free‐phase gas (e.g., CH4 and CO2), which has been detected by surface deformations, pore pressure profiles, and electromagnetic surveys. Determining the gas content and its impact in peat is challenging because gas storage depends on both the elastic properties of the peat matrix and the buoyant forces exerted by pore fluids. We therefore used a
Authors
A.S. Reeve, P.H. Glaser, Donald O. Rosenberry
Temporal variability of exchange between groundwater and surface water based on high-frequency direct measurements of seepage at the sediment-water interface
Seepage at the sediment-water interface in several lakes, a large river, and an estuary exhibits substantial temporal variability when measured with temporal resolution of 1 min or less. Already substantial seepage rates changed by 7% and 16% in response to relatively small rain events at two lakes in the northeastern USA, but did not change in response to two larger rain events at a lake in Minne
Authors
Donald O. Rosenberry, Rich W. Sheibley, Stephen E. Cox, Frederic W. Simonds, David L. Naftz