User:AngstyArmadillo/Coos Bay/Bibliography

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Bibliography

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  • Coos bay estuary Oregon fish and wildlife report from 1979.[1] Information on physical characteristics, including dimensions, tributaries, bottom topography, tidal circulation, mixing, flushing, temperature, dissolved oxygen, turbidity, sediments and more. Biological characteristics: phytoplankton, macroalgae, seagrasses, tidal marsh, zooplankton, invertebrates, fish, mammals, birds; and subsystems.
  • Coos Bay Salt Marshes report from 1974.[2] Info on: values and functions of salt marsh, history, salt marsh plants, marsh types of coos bay, mapping and acreage, salt marsh primary production in coos bay and more.
  • Comparative study of salt marshes in coo's bay report from 1976. [3] Includes: Site descriptions - size, location, drainage, climate, geology, population and industry; salt marsh plants and marsh zonation - characteristics of plants; Net primary production in coos bay salt marshes - seasonal changes in nutrient values; detrital production.
  • Shifting Sediment Dynamics in Coos Bay Estuary in Response to 150 Years of Modification (2021).[4] Using sediment transport model to look at how Coos bay has been modified since 1865: channel deepening/routing and dredging; leading to changes in dispersal and increased sediment trapping.
  • Impacts of 150 years of shoreline and bathymetric change in coos estuary. [5] dredging, shoreline reclamation, channel deepening, reduced intertidal areas. Hydrodynamic model using bathymetry data. Lead to increase in "tidal amplitude", "salinity intrusion length", "subtidal salt flux" and "ebb dominance of currents".
  • Sediment Tracer Tracking and Numerical Modeling at Coos Bay Inlet, OR.[6] (Note to self: may need to request from library) tracking movement of dredged material. numerical hydrodynamic, wave, and sediment transport model, the "Coastal Modeling System" to calculate sediment fluxes and simulate sediment tracer movement under waves, current, and wind conditions. results suggest movement is driven by tidal current in bay and inlet, and wave and storm conditions in open coastal area.
  • Environmental factors that affect Eelgrass meadows in Willapa Bay, WA and Coos Bay OR estuaries from 1998-2001. [7] Positive correlation between plant density and salinity, negative correlation with water temp gradients. Covers El Nino to La Nina - increase in plant flowering and abundance. significant effects of climate variation.
  • Hydrographic and dissolved oxygen variability in a seasonal pacific Northwest estuary. [8] Up/down welling, variation in freshwater input, big tides, "salt wedge" at high river flow, well-mixed at low river flow, partially mixed during moderate river flow plus strong tides leads to salinity gradients, stratification. No evidence of hypoxia.
  • Green sturgeon in coos bay estuary (and Columbia river estuary) 2010-2011. [9] ESA-listed, migrate upstream, used acoustic detectors and temperature/pressure sensor tags and capture release.
  • Olympia oyster larvae in coos bay, 2015. [10] abundance and vertical migration. study conducted in 2010. Seasonality, abundance.
  • Juvenile Coho Salmon diet in coos bay. [11] Early migration, many return as spawning population. Yearling and sub-yearling foraging in upper estuary intertidal zone. Suggested different diets.
  • Oregon tidal marshes used to account for more than 50,000 acres of habitat.[12] Roughly 68% of this habitat has been affected issues including sea level rise and increasing air temperatures, hurting populations of migratory birds, fish, and invertebrates.[13]
  • Marsh vegetation provides critical habitat, protects from storms and sea level rise[14], reduces pollution[15], and is a sink for carbon.[16]
  • Common values held by Oregonians regarding estuary restoration include increased habitat for fish and wildlife, increased ecological function, enhanced water quality, reduced impacts from sea level rise, increased native vegetation.[17]
  • (Dave Sutherland is a good resource) David A. Sutherland's research works | University of Oregon, Oregon (UO) and other places (researchgate.net)

References

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  1. ^ Roye, Cyndi (1979). "Natural Resources of Coos Bay Estuary". Oregon. Dept. of Fish and Wildlife. Research and Development Section, Oregon Land Conservation and Development Commission. Estuary inventory report. 2 (6). Portland, Or. : Research and Development Section, Oregon Dept. of Fish and Wildlife.
  2. ^ Hoffnagle, John; Olson, Robert (1974). "Salt marshes of the Coos Bay Estuary". University of Oregon Scholar's Bank Libraries. Oregon Institute of Marine Biology.
  3. ^ Hoffnagle, John (1976). "A comparative study of salt marshes in the Coos Bay Estuary". ir.library.oregonstate.edu. Retrieved 2022-10-15.
  4. ^ Eidam, E. F.; Sutherland, D. A.; Ralston, D. K.; Conroy, T.; Dye, B. (2021). "Shifting Sediment Dynamics in the Coos Bay Estuary in Response to 150 Years of Modification". Journal of Geophysical Research: Oceans. 126 (1). doi:10.1029/2020JC016771. ISSN 2169-9275.
  5. ^ Eidam, E.F.; Sutherland, D.A.; Ralston, D.K.; Dye, B.; Conroy, T.; Schmitt, J.; Ruggiero, P.; Wood, J. (2022-06-01). "Impacts of 150 Years of Shoreline and Bathymetric Change in the Coos Estuary, Oregon, USA". Estuaries and Coasts. 45 (4): 1170–1188. doi:10.1007/s12237-020-00732-1. ISSN 1559-2731.
  6. ^ Li, Honghai; Beck, Tanya M.; Moritz, Hans R.; Groth, Katharine; Puckette, Trapier; Marsh, Jon; Sánchez, Alejandro (2018). "Sediment Tracer Tracking and Numerical Modeling at Coos Bay Inlet, Oregon". Journal of Coastal Research. 35 (1): 4–25. doi:10.2112/JCOASTRES-D-17-00218.1. ISSN 0749-0208.
  7. ^ Thom, Ronald M.; Borde, Amy B.; Rumrill, Steven; Woodruff, Dana L.; Williams, Gregory D.; Southard, John A.; Sargeant, Susan L. (2003-08-01). "Factors influencing spatial and annual variability in eelgrass (Zostera marina L.) meadows in Willapa Bay, Washington, and Coos Bay, Oregon, estuaries". Estuaries. 26 (4): 1117–1129. doi:10.1007/BF02803368. ISSN 0160-8347.
  8. ^ Sutherland, David A.; O'Neill, Molly A. (2016-04-05). "Hydrographic and dissolved oxygen variability in a seasonal Pacific Northwest estuary". Estuarine, Coastal and Shelf Science. 172: 47–59. doi:10.1016/j.ecss.2016.01.042. ISSN 0272-7714.
  9. ^ Hansel, Hal C.; Romine, Jason G.; Perry, Russell W. (2017). "Acoustic tag detections of green sturgeon in the Columbia River and Coos Bay estuaries, Washington and Oregon, 2010–11". doi:10.3133/ofr20171144. {{cite journal}}: Cite journal requires |journal= (help)
  10. ^ Peteiro, Laura G.; Shanks, Alan L. (2015-06-18). "Up and down or how to stay in the bay: retentive strategies of Olympia oyster larvae in a shallow estuary". Marine Ecology Progress Series. 530: 103–117. doi:10.3354/meps11283. ISSN 0171-8630.
  11. ^ Mackereth, Kailan F. (2016). "Juvenile Coho Salmon (Oncorhynchus kisutch) Diet in Brackish and Freshwater Habitats in the Stream-estuary Ecotones of Coos Bay, Oregon". ir.library.oregonstate.edu (Master's Thesis). Oregon State University Scholars Archive. Retrieved 2022-10-15.
  12. ^ R., J. Weber, and R. Bailey. 1987. Oregon estuary plan book. Salem: Oregon Department of Land Conservation and Development.
  13. ^ Brophy, Laura S.; Greene, Correigh M.; Hare, Van C.; Holycross, Brett; Lanier, Andy; Heady, Walter N.; O’Connor, Kevin; Imaki, Hiroo; Haddad, Tanya; Dana, Randy (2019-08-14). "Insights into estuary habitat loss in the western United States using a new method for mapping maximum extent of tidal wetlands". PLOS ONE. 14 (8): e0218558. doi:10.1371/journal.pone.0218558. ISSN 1932-6203. PMC 6693690. PMID 31412030.{{cite journal}}: CS1 maint: PMC format (link) CS1 maint: unflagged free DOI (link)
  14. ^ Barbier, E.B., Hacker, S.D., Kennedy, C., Koch, E.W., Stier, A.C. and Silliman, B.R., 2011. The value of estuarine and coastal ecosystem services. Ecological Monographs, 81(2), pp.169-193
  15. ^ Silliman, B. R., T. Grosholz, and M. D. Bertness. 2009. Salt marshes under global siege. Pages 103–114 in B. R. Silliman, T. Grosholz, and M. D. Bertness, editors. Human impacts on salt marshes: a global perspective. University of California Press, Berkeley, California, USA.
  16. ^ Kauffman, J.B., Giovanonni, L., Kelly, J., Dunstan, N., Borde, A., Diefenderfer, H., Cornu, C., Janousek, C., Apple, J. and Brophy, L., 2020. Total ecosystem carbon stocks at the marine-terrestrial interface: Blue carbon of the Pacific Northwest Coast, United States. Global Change Biology, 26(10), pp.5679-5692.
  17. ^ Restoring Oregon’s estuaries. Portland State, UC Davis, SSNERR, The Wetlands Conservancy. https://www.oregon.gov/dsl/SS/Documents/Brochure%20RestoringOregonEstuaries.pdf