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- Title
- Survival and Growth of Eastern Oyster Spat, Crassostrea virginica, when Exposed to Low Salinity for Prolonged Periods with Short Intervals of Recovery at Higher Salinities.
- Creator
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Hans, Samuel, College of Arts & Sciences
- Abstract / Description
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The Caloosahatchee River and Estuary in Southwest Florida has a history of human driven alterations by dredging, channelization, construction of several lock and dams, and an artificial connection to Lake Okeechobee. Water management has changed the quality and quantity of discharges into the river and the ecological health of the estuary. The artificial connection to Lake Okeechobee sometimes requires large freshwater releases into the Caloosahatchee River. The euryhaline species in the...
Show moreThe Caloosahatchee River and Estuary in Southwest Florida has a history of human driven alterations by dredging, channelization, construction of several lock and dams, and an artificial connection to Lake Okeechobee. Water management has changed the quality and quantity of discharges into the river and the ecological health of the estuary. The artificial connection to Lake Okeechobee sometimes requires large freshwater releases into the Caloosahatchee River. The euryhaline species in the Caloosahatchee River face osmotic challenges from these freshwater inputs. The eastern oyster, Crassostrea virginica, is a keystone species that can provide an indication of estuary response to freshwater inflow and the resulting salinity fluctuations. A valued ecosystem component, the eastern oyster, helps sustain the ecological structure and function of the estuary by providing food, living space, and foraging sites for other estuarine species. Oyster spat, newly settled oysters <25mm, have an optimal salinity range of 15‰ to 22.5‰ and exposure to low salinity levels for long periods of time causes mortality. High temperatures (300C), which occur during the summer and rainy season, have a synergistic effect on low salinity stress. As part of a larger study to investigate how to improve water management to sustain oyster reefs in the Caloosahatchee River while managing the lake levels, this project examined oyster spat survival and growth during exposure to low salinity levels with intermittent recovery periods at higher salinity. This study carried out iterative bioassays to determine the longest duration (i.e., consecutive days) that oysters can be exposed to some minimum salinity (0‰-5‰, where valves will likely remain closed) with the shortest periods of recovery (10‰) to survive and grow. The results of this study clearly show that Crassostrea virginica spat exhibited improved survival rates and growth when given periods of recovery at a tolerable salinity after being stressed by prolonged low salinity conditions both with and without thermal stress. Spat reach greater than 50% survival when stressed at 5‰ for less than seven days and are allowed periods of recovery at a salinity of 10‰ or higher under thermal stress. Without thermal stress 50% survival was observed in spat that were stressed for less than 14 days at a salinity of 5‰ and allowed periods of recovery at a salinity of 10‰ or higher. The longer the recovery period at both 25oC and 30oC, the better the results tended to be in matching or exceeding growth in the negative stress controls held at 25‰. A ≥14-day period of recovery should always be targeted regardless of exposure duration in order to ensure oyster spat growth.
Show less - Date Issued
- 2020-12-08
- Identifier
- fgcu_ETD_0350
- Format
- Document (PDF)
- Title
- Effect of Urbanization on Predatory Defense Mechanisms of Southern Ringneck Snake (Diadophis punctatus punctatus) Populations in South Florida.
- Creator
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Richards, Tesla, College of Arts & Sciences
- Abstract / Description
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The effect of urbanization on native wildlife is mostly negative. For example, the creation of urban habitats results in the loss of wild habitats, which can increase fragmentation, limit species dispersal and reduce access to resources. However, in some circumstances, urbanization can have positive effects on native wildlife. For example, some opportunistic and generalized species are able to tolerate urbanization by taking advantage of novel niches with reduced competition. Diadophis...
Show moreThe effect of urbanization on native wildlife is mostly negative. For example, the creation of urban habitats results in the loss of wild habitats, which can increase fragmentation, limit species dispersal and reduce access to resources. However, in some circumstances, urbanization can have positive effects on native wildlife. For example, some opportunistic and generalized species are able to tolerate urbanization by taking advantage of novel niches with reduced competition. Diadophis punctatus punctatus (Southern Ringneck Snakes) are a small, cryptic species found throughout the southeastern United States that thrive in both urban and wild habitats, indicating the snake’s tolerance to urbanization. Urbanization may have expanded D. p. punctatus’ niche. These snakes may be able to take advantage of the climate and landscape, availability of novel prey, and/ or refuge from predators within urban habitats. In this study, I examined if D. p. punctatus used urban habitats as refuge from predators by comparing the frequency of predator bite marks on clay snake models placed in urban and wild habitats. The snake models resembled different aspects of D. p. punctatus’ morphology and behavior. I also analyzed the placement of predator bite marks on the snake models to determine the function (i.e., aposematic, parasematic, or deimatic signaling) of D. p. punctatus’ tail-coiling display. The rates of predator attacks on the snake models were similar between urban and wild habitats, indicating D. p. punctatus used urban habitats for reasons other than a refuge from predators. In addition, this study supports the claim that D. p. punctatus’ tail-coiling display was an anti-predatory mechanism. Predators avoided the tail on snake models with red coloration and coiled tails, suggesting D. p. punctatus’ tail-coiling display may be used as a deimatic signal. Results of this study appear to contradict previous findings about the tail-coiling display. However, it is likely that the use of D. p. punctatus’ anti-predatory signal depends on the context. These snakes seem to show multi-modal signaling and flexible defense mechanisms, which may be important characteristics of urbanophiles.
Show less - Date Issued
- 2017-07-27
- Identifier
- Richards_fgcu_1743_10263
- Format
- Document (PDF)
- Title
- The Impact of Social Media on Depression in 18-34-Year-Olds in the United States.
- Creator
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Krylova, Daria, College of Arts & Sciences
- Abstract / Description
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The purpose of this study was to better understand the relationship between social media use and depression, by helping eliminate any inconsistencies from prior findings and expanding the research to include other possible contributing factors that have yet to be explored. Participants consisted of 18-34-year-olds residing in the United States. The study was conducted through an online survey on SurveyMonkey. Participants (N = 198) reported that there are several potential causal factors of...
Show moreThe purpose of this study was to better understand the relationship between social media use and depression, by helping eliminate any inconsistencies from prior findings and expanding the research to include other possible contributing factors that have yet to be explored. Participants consisted of 18-34-year-olds residing in the United States. The study was conducted through an online survey on SurveyMonkey. Participants (N = 198) reported that there are several potential causal factors of depression that result from the use of social media. These include envy (40.45%), unsettling news (15.73%), exclusion (12.36%), negative posts (12.36%), conflicting views (8.99%), cyberbullying (3.37%), too much time spent on social media (3.37%) and recalling past experiences (3.37%). These results confirmed that social media envy is a potential causal factor of depression. Furthermore, it was found that there are additional causal factors resulting from social media use.
Show less - Date Issued
- 2017-06-05
- Identifier
- Krylova_fgcu_1743_10254
- Format
- Document (PDF)
- Title
- American Green Caviar: Analysis of sea grape algae (Caulerpa racemosa var. peltata) for bio-filtration and valuable co-production.
- Creator
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Gamel, Matt, College of Arts & Sciences
- Abstract / Description
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Rising global demand for seafood and declining catches have resulted in the volume of mariculture doubling each decade. The FAO (Food and Agriculture Organization of the United Nations) expects such a growth to persist in the years to come. This exponential growth has created a subsequent need to find alternative solutions to wastewater generation. The use of marine algae as bio-filters for aquaculture wastewater treatment has been shown to be an efficient and cost effective strategy. For...
Show moreRising global demand for seafood and declining catches have resulted in the volume of mariculture doubling each decade. The FAO (Food and Agriculture Organization of the United Nations) expects such a growth to persist in the years to come. This exponential growth has created a subsequent need to find alternative solutions to wastewater generation. The use of marine algae as bio-filters for aquaculture wastewater treatment has been shown to be an efficient and cost effective strategy. For this study, I selected Caulerpa racemosa (commonly known as sea grape algae) as a potential bio-filtration candidate for the mitigation of aquaculture effluent. Sea grapes are highly valued in Asian and South-Pacific cuisine, where they are referred to as green caviar. They are also high in omega-3 fatty acids and antioxidants, representing a possible new marketing angle as a “super food.” This alga has been largely excluded from western markets, as the Pacific varieties are known invasives in the Atlantic basin. For this reason, I decided to utilize the native Floridian variety, which is poorly researched, despite being present throughout the Caribbean and parts of South America. For my study, I conducted laboratory growth trials to determine optimal conditions for both irradiance and nutrient concentrations. Floridian C. racemosa was found to be highly adaptable to a wide range of irradiance and nutrient regimes, with nutrient uptake efficiency greater than 90%. A clear set of optimal parameters could not be defined, however, as the treatment results were not significantly different. This finding demonstrates the high adaptability and resilience of this species. For the final trials, I constructed a 1500-L outdoor recirculating aquaculture system, raising juvenile pinfish (Lagodon rhomboides). The setup was designed to serve as a proof of concept, to test how good C. racemosa performed outside of the laboratory. The study produced mixed results, but found that a 4:1 fish to seaweed wet weight ratio was ideal in maintaining stable nutrient levels. Overall, the results designate C. racemosa as a strong candidate for commercial bio-filtration, and as a possible cash crop for the domestic sushi and algal supplement industries.
Show less - Date Issued
- 2017
- Identifier
- Gamel_fgcu_1743_10258
- Format
- Document (PDF)
- Title
- Externalizing Disorders and Violent Juvenile Crime.
- Creator
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Brown, Erika, College of Arts & Sciences
- Abstract / Description
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This thesis presents a comparative study that investigates the possibility of a relationship between the diagnosis of conduct disorder (CD), oppositional defiant disorder (ODD), intermittent explosive disorder (IED), or attention-deficit/hyperactivity disorder (ADHD) (e.g., all of which are categorized as externalizing disorders) and juvenile violent crime. Previous research documents the frequency of externalizing disorders in the juvenile offender population and the behaviors associated...
Show moreThis thesis presents a comparative study that investigates the possibility of a relationship between the diagnosis of conduct disorder (CD), oppositional defiant disorder (ODD), intermittent explosive disorder (IED), or attention-deficit/hyperactivity disorder (ADHD) (e.g., all of which are categorized as externalizing disorders) and juvenile violent crime. Previous research documents the frequency of externalizing disorders in the juvenile offender population and the behaviors associated with violent crimes (Cashman & Thomas, 2016; Shepherd & Purcell, 2015; Pullmann, 2009; Kim et al., 2017). Currently, there is a lack of research that explores the relationships between specific diagnoses and specific types of crimes in juvenile populations. In this thesis eight case studies are qualitatively analyzed for externalizing behaviors, the severity and frequency of the violence, the type of aggression, and the victim(s). The case studies revealed that defiance and impulsivity are the behaviors seen in the externalizing cases, whereas aggression and irritability are the behaviors seen in the non-externalizing cases.
Show less - Date Issued
- 2020-10-19
- Identifier
- fgcu_ETD_0349
- Format
- Document (PDF)
- Title
- Fragile Spectres: How Women of Victorian Britain used the Occult and Spiritualist Movement to Create Autonomy.
- Creator
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Drew, Danielle Jean, College of Arts & Sciences
- Abstract / Description
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This research observes and illustrates ways in which British women of the mid- to late-nineteenth century used the occult revival and spiritualist movements of the Victorian period to generate spiritual, physical, and financial autonomy for themselves in a culture that sought to confine middle-class women to the home. Using the stories of women in the occult and spiritualist movements, namely the stories of Georgiana Houghton, Emma Hardinge Britten, and Rosa Campbell Praed, this thesis shows...
Show moreThis research observes and illustrates ways in which British women of the mid- to late-nineteenth century used the occult revival and spiritualist movements of the Victorian period to generate spiritual, physical, and financial autonomy for themselves in a culture that sought to confine middle-class women to the home. Using the stories of women in the occult and spiritualist movements, namely the stories of Georgiana Houghton, Emma Hardinge Britten, and Rosa Campbell Praed, this thesis shows that middle class mediums generated more independence and autonomy for themselves by embracing this new cultural movement through the practice of seance, mediumship, public lecture, and publication, in contrast to their non-occultist and non-spiritualist female counterparts.
Show less - Date Issued
- 2017-04-19
- Identifier
- Drew_fgcu_1743_10239
- Format
- Document (PDF)
- Title
- Diel movements of juvenile smalltooth sawfish (Pristis pectinata): Implications for defining the size of a nursery hotspot.
- Creator
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Huston, Cecily Ann, College of Arts & Sciences
- Abstract / Description
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Habitat use and movements of juvenile (1-year-old fish (1–3 years old), remained along the northern shoreline of the river in a protected cove. The younger age class remained closer (
Show moreHabitat use and movements of juvenile (<3 yr old) Critically Endangered smalltooth sawfish Pristis pectinata were studied in the Peace River in southwest Florida to estimate the size of a known nursery hotspot (high-use area). A total of 23 smalltooth sawfish were tagged during the peak recruitment period of April and May 2014 and were tracked until the end of September 2014 using passive acoustic monitoring. Active tracking was used to estimate positions of individuals relative to the shoreline and major habitat types. During the day, sawfish <1500 mm stretched total length (STL; n=11), representing <1 year old fish, and those measuring 1504 to 1881 mm STL (n=12), representing >1-year-old fish (1–3 years old), remained along the northern shoreline of the river in a protected cove. The younger age class remained closer (<25 m) to red mangrove-dominated shorelines than did the older age class. At night, both age classes moved away from the shoreline and away from the protected cove; the older individuals made the longest excursions (~5 km), toward the southern shoreline of the river. The discovery of these regular diel movements has led to the expansion of the boundaries of the single recognized nursery hotspot in the Peace River, which was previously defined solely by daytime catch data. These data are crucial for aiding the conservation of this Critically Endangered species and adding an extra layer of protection within its federally-designated Critical Habitat.
Show less - Date Issued
- 2017-06-13
- Identifier
- Huston_fgcu_1743_10259
- Format
- Document (PDF)
- Title
- "Dawn and Doom Were in the Branches": Religious Tension in Zora Neale Hurston's Their eyes Were Watching God and Ernest J. Gaine's A Gathering of Old Men.
- Creator
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Benson, Kathryn A., College of Arts & Sciences
- Abstract / Description
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Given that religion, specifically Christianity, plays such an important role in the creation, definition, and maturation of both Hurston ' s and Gaines’s characters, I believe it is imperative to evaluate the role that this religion plays in the lives of the black characters in two seminal texts by these two authors. Clearly religious concerns are at work throughout both texts, so too, then, is the issue of race in that the black characters, via their enslaved ancestors, inherited...
Show moreGiven that religion, specifically Christianity, plays such an important role in the creation, definition, and maturation of both Hurston ' s and Gaines’s characters, I believe it is imperative to evaluate the role that this religion plays in the lives of the black characters in two seminal texts by these two authors. Clearly religious concerns are at work throughout both texts, so too, then, is the issue of race in that the black characters, via their enslaved ancestors, inherited Christianity as they knew it from white slaveholders. Thus, the study of Christianity in the lives of black Southern characters necessarily must also address racism. This analysis, then, speaks to the role that white Christian ideology plays in the shaping of black Southern characters, in terms of both identity and religion.
Show less - Date Issued
- 2007
- Identifier
- fgcu_ETD_0465
- Format
- Document (PDF)
- Title
- ASSESSMENT OF EDUCATOR’S PERCEPTIONS OF THEIR NEEDS TO BEST SUPPORT ENVIRONMENTAL EDUCATION IN THE SOUTHWEST FLORIDA COMMUNITY.
- Creator
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Rolfe, Allison Elizabeth, College of Arts & Sciences
- Abstract / Description
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According to the President's Council of Advisors on Science and Technology (2010), the demand for STEM-educated teachers in the United States is increasing. With limited time and space in the general classroom setting, Environmental Education (EE) is becoming increasingly more important to the education system. The Environmental Education Alliance of Southwest Florida (EE Alliance) is a community of practice that relies on participation of local experts to create successful environmental...
Show moreAccording to the President's Council of Advisors on Science and Technology (2010), the demand for STEM-educated teachers in the United States is increasing. With limited time and space in the general classroom setting, Environmental Education (EE) is becoming increasingly more important to the education system. The Environmental Education Alliance of Southwest Florida (EE Alliance) is a community of practice that relies on participation of local experts to create successful environmental education programs. This study identifies the needs of environmental education in Southwest Florida through the EE Alliance by eliciting the perspectives of local EE professionals. A survey was sent to a total of 219 participants of the EE Alliance listserv; 50 responses were received. This study collects quantitative data from Likerttype survey response as well as qualitative data obtained from open response comments sections. The study identifies the perceived needs of material resources (resources that can be bought with funding), human resources (the knowledge, amount, and adequacy of staff), and social resources (the ability to create partnerships, relationships, and professional development opportunities) in order to run successful environmental education programs.
Show less - Date Issued
- 2017
- Identifier
- Rolfe_fgcu_1743_10265
- Format
- Document (PDF)
- Title
- Fish Community Responses Following Restoration of Vallisneria americana in the Caloosahatchee River.
- Creator
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Cooper, Charles Michael, College of Arts & Sciences
- Abstract / Description
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Submerged aquatic vegetation (SAV) has long been recognized as a critical habitat for macrofauna and megafauna in freshwater and estuarine ecosystems. Historical and current anthropogenic activities such as canal construction, land development, and water management have had destructive impacts on SAV in the Caloosahatchee River and estuary. Large scale alterations to flow rates, salinity fluctuations, nutrient loading, an expansion of the watershed, and dredging activities have led to a...
Show moreSubmerged aquatic vegetation (SAV) has long been recognized as a critical habitat for macrofauna and megafauna in freshwater and estuarine ecosystems. Historical and current anthropogenic activities such as canal construction, land development, and water management have had destructive impacts on SAV in the Caloosahatchee River and estuary. Large scale alterations to flow rates, salinity fluctuations, nutrient loading, an expansion of the watershed, and dredging activities have led to a substantial decrease of Vallisneria americana in the Caloosahatchee River. This study focused on three oligohaline locations of the river that underwent restoration of Vallisneria americana, amounting to 20 acres of SAV restoration. Understanding fish communities and associated changes in diversity and abundance is critical in assessing the success of the restoration. Pre-restoration assessments of the fish community in 2018 and early 2019 were compared to post-restoration assessments of the fish community in 2019 for each of the sites. Multiple types of passive and active fish traps were deployed throughout the sampling period. Data were interpreted using univariate statistical techniques and multivariate statistical techniques to examine diversity and abundance of the fish. After initial sampling, the effective passive traps were narrowed down to Breder traps, mesh umbrella traps, and crayfish traps. Active trapping methods initially involved seining and cast netting. Cast nets were found to be ineffective and were not continued. After restoration of Vallisneria americana and introduction of herbivore exclusion cages, seining was more difficult due to the placement of cages and was only utilized once after restoration. Alternative active trapping methods were added: hook and line sampling, trawling, and electroshocking. Electroshocking was found to be the most efficient at capturing large numbers of individuals of many different species. Trawling was found to be moderately effective and hook and line sampling was found to be largely ineffective. For the consistently utilized passive trapping techniques, individual locations did show some variability, but the mean species richness appeared to follow the similar trends as the Control Site over time. For the three consistently utilized passive trapping techniques, a drop in average species richness was seen for the mean of all restored sites and the Control Site. The largest lifts in total abundance were seen in the two downstream locations, Site 1 and the Control Site. Multivariate analyses by site for the pooled pre and post-restoration data indicates that all sites were similar in pre-treatment and differences emerged in post-treatment. Post-treatment similarity appeared to be related to geographical position in the river, with downstream sites showing similarity and upstream sites showing similarity. Such trends might also be related to lack of exclosures which may have affected the establishment of Vallisneria americana at Site 1. Disaggregation of data into individual sampling events indicated two significant groups in the cluster analysis at the p<0.1 level, largely grouping by time, regardless of treatment type. Electroshocking of the sites showed that species richness, abundance, and catch per unit effort (CPUE) increased in the restored sites farther upriver, although not all trends were statistically significant. Abundance and biomass of common snook (Centropomus undecimalis) was statistically significant, with more were captured in upstream sites. The larger numbers in the upstream locations is potentially a result of geographical location or as a result of the presence of cages as structure. Seining abundances significantly increased at all sites when comparing the first seining session to the one post restoration sampling. Seining richness also increased across each site, but the results were not statistically significant. The ecological lifts (richness or abundance) occurring at all sites, including the Control Site, indicates that such changes were likely related to external factors. The lack of significant differences in fish species diversity or abundance following the initial restoration plantings does not signify a failure of the project. Geographical differences of the sites and the lack of long-term data might also mean that lifts in the fish community are difficult to observe and quantify in the short-term. The monitoring of changes in fish abundance and diversity can inform future restoration efforts. Additionally, this research highlights effective methods to record fish abundance and diversity. Restoring SAV will allow future generations to enjoy improved aesthetics, enhanced recreation, a sustainable economy, sustainable fisheries, and most importantly to have a healthy environment to live in that fuel’s happiness and wellbeing. Quantifying changes in diversity and abundance is also of interest to fishermen who are looking to catch more species of fish, ecologists looking to restore ecosystems, and local, state, and federal governments seeking justification for allocating resources to restoration.
Show less - Date Issued
- 2020-08-19
- Identifier
- fgcu_ETD_0347
- Format
- Document (PDF)
- Title
- Environmental Factors Affecting Enterococcus and Fecal Coliform Bacteria in Beach Waters of Sarasota County, Florida.
- Creator
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Clemente, Jennifer Elaine, College of Arts & Sciences
- Abstract / Description
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The Florida Department of Health (FDOH) conducts sampling at recreational beaches for Enterococcus and fecal coliform bacteria, and posts advisories recommending against beach swimming when reported concentrations exceed 104 #CFU/100mL for enterococcus and 400#CFU/100mL for fecal coliform). County agencies select beaches to sample, and collect surf-zone samples once weekly. Bacteria concentrations fluctuate rapidly and over short distances, and beach advisories are posted up to four days...
Show moreThe Florida Department of Health (FDOH) conducts sampling at recreational beaches for Enterococcus and fecal coliform bacteria, and posts advisories recommending against beach swimming when reported concentrations exceed 104 #CFU/100mL for enterococcus and 400#CFU/100mL for fecal coliform). County agencies select beaches to sample, and collect surf-zone samples once weekly. Bacteria concentrations fluctuate rapidly and over short distances, and beach advisories are posted up to four days after high bacteria is first observed (field resampling and laboratory testing consume several days), seriously compromising FDOH's capability to protect beachgoers from exposure to harmful conditions. Precautionary measures could be improved if we could reliably predict conditions under which high bacteria concentrations are likely to occur. The objective of this research is to identify conditions statistically related to high bacterial concentrations using data from ten years of weekly sampling at 16 beaches in Sarasota County, FL. Previous studies in California, Miami FL, and elsewhere, analyzing the immediate vicinity of ocean stormwater outfalls, have identified modest relationships to factors including: magnitude and intensity of storm events that may mobilize bacteria from coastal watersheds; length of antecedent dry period before mobilizing storm, during which bacteria may propagate in conveyances; and tide/surf conditions that may either mobilize bacteria propagating in beach sand, break up bacterial colonies in the surf zone, or generate where bacteria may survive near the shore. The present study attempted multiple regression relating bacteria conditions to explanatory factors including: watershed rainfall in days prior to the sample date; total rainfall over several months, a surrogate for saturation of soils in the tributary watershed as well as for dry periods when bacteria may multiply in conveyances; seasonality, a surrogate for high air and water temperatures that promote propagation in the environment; and tidal stages and levels. Results found no correlation greater than 20%, for Sarasota County beaches in aggregate or for any beach individually, with the magnitude of bacteria measured in samples. Relationships are, however, identified between frequency of high-count bacteria samples and environmental conditions including flood level and stage, one-day antecedent rainfall, and seasonal rainfall (wet vs dry season). Results show the relationships are stronger for beaches influenced by stormwater outfalls, and less evident in beaches where no outfalls are nearby. This demonstrates that different mechanisms affect high-bacteria conditions on different beaches in this region, implying that prediction of potentially unhealthful bacteria conditions may be possible on a site-specific basis but may not be supported for a uniform set of environmental parameters across multiple sites, even for a group of beaches in close proximity with similar precipitation, tidal, and seasonal characteristics
Show less - Date Issued
- 2017
- Identifier
- Clemente_1743_10253
- Format
- Document (PDF)
- Title
- A mangrove creek restoration plan utilizing hydraulic modeling.
- Creator
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Marois, Darryl E., Mitsch, William
- Abstract / Description
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Despite the valuable ecosystem services provided by mangrove ecosystems they remain threatened around the globe. Urban development has been a primary cause for mangrove destruction and deterioration in south Florida USA for the last several decades. As a result, the restoration of mangrove forests has become an important topic of research. Using field sampling and remote-sensing we assessed the past and present hydrologic conditions of a mangrove creek and its connected mangrove forest and...
Show moreDespite the valuable ecosystem services provided by mangrove ecosystems they remain threatened around the globe. Urban development has been a primary cause for mangrove destruction and deterioration in south Florida USA for the last several decades. As a result, the restoration of mangrove forests has become an important topic of research. Using field sampling and remote-sensing we assessed the past and present hydrologic conditions of a mangrove creek and its connected mangrove forest and brackish marsh systems located on the coast of Naples Bay in southwest Florida. We concluded that the hydrology of these connected systems had been significantly altered from its natural state due to urban development. We propose here a mangrove creek restoration plan that would extend the existing creek channel 1.1 km inland through the adjacent mangrove forest and up to an adjacent brackish marsh. We then tested the hydrologic implications using a hydraulic model of the mangrove creek calibrated with tidal data from Naples Bay and water levels measured within the creek. The calibrated model was then used to simulate the resulting hydrology of our proposed restoration plan. Simulation results showed that the proposed creek extension would restore a twice-daily flooding regime to a majority of the adjacent mangrove forest and that there would still be minimal tidal influence on the brackish marsh area, keeping its salinity at an acceptable level. This study demonstrates the utility of combining field data and hydraulic modeling to aid in the design of mangrove restoration plans.
Show less - Date Issued
- 2017-07-13
- Identifier
- 10.1016/j.ecoleng.2017.06.063, fgcu_ir_001006, https://linkinghub.elsevier.com/retrieve/pii/S0925857417303920
- Format
- Citation
- Title
- Sustainability across the Curriculum.
- Creator
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Bevins, Sharon, Wilkinson, Neil
- Abstract / Description
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When Florida Gulf Coast University opened its doors to students in August 1997, a commitment to graduating ‘ecologically literate’ students had already been established. Faculty from across disciplines were courted to advance this endeavour. Nine months before the university opened, the Dean’s Council adopted the following statement as a guide for the development of programmes: We have made a commitment as a university to make environmental education an integral part of our identity. One of...
Show moreWhen Florida Gulf Coast University opened its doors to students in August 1997, a commitment to graduating ‘ecologically literate’ students had already been established. Faculty from across disciplines were courted to advance this endeavour. Nine months before the university opened, the Dean’s Council adopted the following statement as a guide for the development of programmes: We have made a commitment as a university to make environmental education an integral part of our identity. One of our university-wide outcomes is that all students will develop ‘an ecological perspective.’ A way to accomplish this perspective is to devise a course, or group of experiences, with an environmental focus that all FGCU students must complete, and in which faculty from all four colleges would be involved. Because ‘ecology’ applies to our total living space and interrelationships, human and natural, it is relevant to all our disciplines and professions. Thus an ecology course would touch on all nine of the university-wide goals and outcomes, and more. Students would not only be introduced to FGCU values, they would participate in them. (Dean’s Council 1997) To this end, FGCU requires all undergraduates to complete a course on sustainable development, called ‘The University Colloquium: A Sustainable Future’. To date, all students who have received an undergraduate degree from FGCU have taken this class. For the spring 2009 semester, 31 sections of Colloquium were offered, with 25 students per class, taught by 28 faculty members.
Show less - Date Issued
- 2009-11-17
- Identifier
- fgcu_ir_000108
- Format
- Citation
- Title
- The campus ecosystem model.
- Creator
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Savarese, Michael, Tolley, Gregory, Everham, Edwin, McDonald, Michael
- Abstract / Description
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Interdisciplinary teaching, research experience, and active, collaborative strategies have all been identified as practices highly favorable to the learning process. By using the university campus as the focus for the study of the entire watershed within which it is situated, the Campus Ecosystem Model presents a context for incorporating these pedagogical elements into a useful framework for undergraduate science education.
- Date Issued
- 2002-03-01
- Identifier
- fgcu_ir_000970
- Format
- Citation
- Title
- Rotation, activity, and stellar obliquities in a large uniform sample of Kepler solar analogs.
- Creator
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Buzasi, Derek, Lezcano, Andy, Preston, Heather L.
- Abstract / Description
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In this study, we undertook a deep photometric examination of a narrowly-defined sample of solar analogs in the Kepler field, with the goals of producing a uniform and statistically meaningful sample of such stars, comparing the properties of planet hosts to those of the general stellar population, and examining the behavior of rotation and photometric activity among stars with similar overall physical parameters. We successfully derived photometric activity indicators and rotation periods...
Show moreIn this study, we undertook a deep photometric examination of a narrowly-defined sample of solar analogs in the Kepler field, with the goals of producing a uniform and statistically meaningful sample of such stars, comparing the properties of planet hosts to those of the general stellar population, and examining the behavior of rotation and photometric activity among stars with similar overall physical parameters. We successfully derived photometric activity indicators and rotation periods for 95 planet hosts (Kepler objects of interest [KOIs]) and 954 solar analogs without detected planets; 573 of these rotation periods are reported here for the first time. Rotation periods average roughly 20 d, but the distribution has a wide dispersion, with a tail extending to P > 35 d which appears to be inconsistent with published gyrochronological relations. We observed a weak rotation-activity relation for stars with rotation periods less than about 12 d; for slower rotators, the relation is dominated by scatter. However, we are able to state that the solar activity level derived from Virgo data is consistent with the majority of stars with similar rotation periods in our sample. Finally, our KOI sample is consistently approximately 0.3 dex more variable than our non-KOIs; we ascribe the difference to a selection effect due to low orbital obliquity in the planet-hosting stars and derive a mean obliquity for our sample of v 1⁄4 6þ5 , similar to that seen in the solar system.
Show less - Date Issued
- 2016-10-25
- Identifier
- 10.1051/swsc/2016033, fgcu_ir_000094, http://www.swsc-journal.org/10.1051/swsc/2016033
- Format
- Citation
- Title
- Carbon Sequestration and Sedimentation in Mangrove Swamps Influenced by Hydrogeomorphic Conditions and Urbanization in Southwest Florida.
- Creator
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Marchio, Daniel, Savarese, Michael, Bovard, Brian, Mitsch, William
- Abstract / Description
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This study compares carbon sequestration rates along two independent tidal mangrove creeks near Naples Bay in Southwest Florida, USA. One tidal creek is hydrologically disturbed due to upstream land use changes; the other is an undisturbed reference creek. Soil cores were collected in basin, fringe, and riverine hydrogeomorphic settings along each of the two tidal creeks and analyzed for bulk density, total organic carbon profiles, and sediment accretion. Radionuclides 137Cs and 210Pb were...
Show moreThis study compares carbon sequestration rates along two independent tidal mangrove creeks near Naples Bay in Southwest Florida, USA. One tidal creek is hydrologically disturbed due to upstream land use changes; the other is an undisturbed reference creek. Soil cores were collected in basin, fringe, and riverine hydrogeomorphic settings along each of the two tidal creeks and analyzed for bulk density, total organic carbon profiles, and sediment accretion. Radionuclides 137Cs and 210Pb were used to estimate recent sediment accretion and carbon sequestration rates. Carbon sequestration rates (mean ± standard error) for seven sites in the two tidal creeks on the Naples Bay (98 ± 12 g-C m−2·year−1 (n = 18)) are lower than published global means for mangrove wetlands, but consistent with other estimates from the same region. Mean carbon sequestration rates in the reference riverine setting were highest (162 ± 5 g-C m−2·year−1), followed by rates in the reference fringe and disturbed riverine settings (127 ± 6 and 125 ± 5 g-C m−2·year−1, respectively). The disturbed fringe sequestered 73 ± 10 g-C m−2·year−1, while rates within the basin settings were 50 ± 4 g-C m−2·year−1 and 47 ± 4 g-C m−2·year−1 for the reference and disturbed creeks, respectively. These data support our hypothesis that mangroves along a hydrologically disturbed tidal creek sequestered less carbon than did mangroves along an adjacent undisturbed reference creek.
Show less - Date Issued
- 2016-05-30
- Identifier
- 10.3390/f7060116, fgcu_ir_000086, http://www.mdpi.com/1999-4907/7/6/116
- Format
- Citation
- Title
- Engaging Students in Ethical Considerations of the Scientific Process Using a Simulated Funding Panel.
- Creator
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Demers, Nora, Nelson, Katherine, Gunnels, Charles W., Bovard, Brian, Cassani, Mary Kay, Douglass, James, Everham, Edwin, Hartley, Anne, Herman, John, Mujtaba, Mustafa, Muller,...
Show moreDemers, Nora, Nelson, Katherine, Gunnels, Charles W., Bovard, Brian, Cassani, Mary Kay, Douglass, James, Everham, Edwin, Hartley, Anne, Herman, John, Mujtaba, Mustafa, Muller, Joanne, Nicolas, Antoine, Southard, Larry, Thomas, Serge, Buzasi, Derek
Show less - Abstract / Description
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All undergraduates majoring in a physical or natural science in the College of Arts and Sciences at Florida Gulf Coast University (FGCU) are required to take an interdisciplinary-science methods course entitled Scientific Process. This course is designed to help professionalize students by introducing them to the history, practice, philosophy, and ethics associated with being a working scientist (Meers, Demers and Savarese 2003). Most students take the course early in their junior year as the...
Show moreAll undergraduates majoring in a physical or natural science in the College of Arts and Sciences at Florida Gulf Coast University (FGCU) are required to take an interdisciplinary-science methods course entitled Scientific Process. This course is designed to help professionalize students by introducing them to the history, practice, philosophy, and ethics associated with being a working scientist (Meers, Demers and Savarese 2003). Most students take the course early in their junior year as the first class in a sequence of research courses that culminates in conducting and presenting independent research during their senior year.
Show less - Date Issued
- 2015-10-01
- Identifier
- fgcu_ir_000397
- Format
- Citation
- Title
- Sounding stellar cycles with Kepler – II. Ground-based observations★.
- Creator
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Karoff, C., Metcalfe, T. S., Chaplin, W. J., Frandsen, S., Grundahl, F., Kjeldsen, H., Christensen-Dalsgaard, J., Nielsen, M. B., Frimann, S., Thygesen, A. O., Arentoft, T.,...
Show moreKaroff, C., Metcalfe, T. S., Chaplin, W. J., Frandsen, S., Grundahl, F., Kjeldsen, H., Christensen-Dalsgaard, J., Nielsen, M. B., Frimann, S., Thygesen, A. O., Arentoft, T., Amby, T. M., Sousa, S. G., Buzasi, D. L.
Show less - Abstract / Description
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We have monitored 20 Sun-like stars in the Kepler field-of-view for excess flux with the FIES spectrograph on the Nordic Optical Telescope since the launch of Kepler spacecraft in 2009. These 20 stars were selected based on their asteroseismic properties to sample the parameter space (effective temperature, surface gravity, activity level etc.) around the Sun. Though the ultimate goal is to improve stellar dynamo mod- els, we focus the present paper on the combination of space-based and...
Show moreWe have monitored 20 Sun-like stars in the Kepler field-of-view for excess flux with the FIES spectrograph on the Nordic Optical Telescope since the launch of Kepler spacecraft in 2009. These 20 stars were selected based on their asteroseismic properties to sample the parameter space (effective temperature, surface gravity, activity level etc.) around the Sun. Though the ultimate goal is to improve stellar dynamo mod- els, we focus the present paper on the combination of space-based and ground-based observations can be used to test the age-rotation-activity relations. In this paper we describe the considerations behind the selection of these 20 Sun- like stars and present an initial asteroseismic analysis, which includes stellar age es- timates. We also describe the observations from the Nordic Optical Telescope and present mean values of measured excess fluxes. These measurements are combined with estimates of the rotation periods obtained from a simple analysis of the modula- tion in photometric observations from Kepler caused by starspots, and asteroseismic determinations of stellar ages, to test relations between between age, rotation and activity.
Show less - Date Issued
- 2013-06-22
- Identifier
- 10.1093/mnras/stt964, fgcu_ir_000068, http://academic.oup.com/mnras/article/433/4/3227/1750181/Sounding-stellar-cycles-with-Kepler-II-Groundbased
- Format
- Citation
- Title
- REPEATABILITY AND ACCURACY OF EXOPLANET ECLIPSE DEPTHS MEASURED WITH POST-CRYOGENIC SPITZER.
- Creator
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Ingalls, James G., Krick, J. E., Carey, S. J., Stauffer, John R., Lowrance, Patrick J., Grillmair, Carl J., Buzasi, Derek, Deming, Drake, Diamond-Lowe, Hannah, Evans, Thomas M.,...
Show moreIngalls, James G., Krick, J. E., Carey, S. J., Stauffer, John R., Lowrance, Patrick J., Grillmair, Carl J., Buzasi, Derek, Deming, Drake, Diamond-Lowe, Hannah, Evans, Thomas M., Morello, G., Stevenson, Kevin B., Wong, Ian, Capak, Peter, Glaccum, William, Laine, Seppo, Surace, Jason, Storrie-Lombardi, Lisa
Show less - Abstract / Description
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We examine the repeatability, reliability, and accuracy of differential exoplanet eclipse depth measurements made using the InfraRed Array Camera (IRAC) on the Spitzer Space Telescope during the post-cryogenic mission. We have re-analyzed an existing 4.5 μm data set, consisting of 10 observations of the XO-3b system during secondary eclipse, using seven different techniques for removing correlated noise. We find that, on average, for a given technique, the eclipse depth estimate is repeatable...
Show moreWe examine the repeatability, reliability, and accuracy of differential exoplanet eclipse depth measurements made using the InfraRed Array Camera (IRAC) on the Spitzer Space Telescope during the post-cryogenic mission. We have re-analyzed an existing 4.5 μm data set, consisting of 10 observations of the XO-3b system during secondary eclipse, using seven different techniques for removing correlated noise. We find that, on average, for a given technique, the eclipse depth estimate is repeatable from epoch to epoch to within 156 parts per million (ppm). Most techniques derive eclipse depths that do not vary by more than a factor 3 of the photon noise limit. All methods but one accurately assess their own errors: for these methods, the individual measurement uncertainties are comparable to the scatter in eclipse depths over the 10 epoch sample. To assess the accuracy of the techniques as well as to clarify the difference between instrumental and other sources of measurement error, we have also analyzed a simulated data set of 10 visits to XO-3b, for which the eclipse depth is known. We find that three of the methods (BLISS mapping, Pixel Level Decorrelation, and Independent Component Analysis) obtain results that are within three times the photon limit of the true eclipse depth. When averaged over the 10 epoch ensemble, 5 out of 7 techniques come within 60 ppm of the true value. Spitzer exoplanet data, if obtained following current best practices and reduced using methods such as those described here, can measure repeatable and accurate single eclipse depths, with close to photon-limited results.
Show less - Date Issued
- 2016-08-03
- Identifier
- 10.3847/0004-6256/152/2/44, fgcu_ir_000095, http://stacks.iop.org/1538-3881/152/i=2/a=44?key=crossref.70d250fce65f1d6f4fe21faaf105e018
- Format
- Citation