Abiotic data collected in the St. Lawrence River and several tributaries in and adjacent to the Saint Regis Mohawk Tribe reservation in northern New York, 2004
Dates
Publication Date
2021-05-17
Start Date
2004-05-01
End Date
2004-10-30
Citation
McKenna, J.E., Jr., Barkley, J.L., and Johnson, J.H., 2021, Abiotic data collected in the St. Lawrence River and several tributaries in and adjacent to the Saint Regis Mohawk Tribe reservation in northern New York, 2004: U.S. Geological Survey data release, https://doi.org/10.5066/P9HHXF4F.
Summary
This data set includes the sample site locations, site descriptions, and abiotic data used in the analyses reported in McKenna et al. 2008. The data represent selected abiotic conditions within the St. Lawrence and lower reaches of four US tributaries during 2004. Samples were collected from shallow, seinable areas (< 1.5 m) of the St. Lawrence River, adjacent wetland channels, and the lower reaches of major tributaries (Grass River, Raquette River, St. Regis River, and Salmon River). This part of the St. Lawrence River is non-tidal fresh water. Sample locations were randomly selected from a grid of spatial cells (1 km x 1 km) encompassing the area within the 5,700 ha Akwesasne Wetland Complex (at the intersection of the New York, [...]
Summary
This data set includes the sample site locations, site descriptions, and abiotic data used in the analyses reported in McKenna et al. 2008. The data represent selected abiotic conditions within the St. Lawrence and lower reaches of four US tributaries during 2004. Samples were collected from shallow, seinable areas (< 1.5 m) of the St. Lawrence River, adjacent wetland channels, and the lower reaches of major tributaries (Grass River, Raquette River, St. Regis River, and Salmon River). This part of the St. Lawrence River is non-tidal fresh water. Sample locations were randomly selected from a grid of spatial cells (1 km x 1 km) encompassing the area within the 5,700 ha Akwesasne Wetland Complex (at the intersection of the New York, Ontario, and Quebec borders). Continuously recording temperature (Hobo H8 one channel) and pressure (Hobo-Atm; water-level) sensors (Onset, Bourne, Massachusetts) were installed at 12 of the sites. The variability of water level was represented by the spatially interpolated coefficient of variation (CV) of those continuous water pressure measurements.
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Snye_samples_Abiotic.csv “Data table”
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WaterLevel_abiotic_data_20210517.xml Original FGDC Metadata
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Related External Resources
Type: Related Primary Publication
James E. McKenna Jr., Joyce L. Barkley & James H. Johnson (2008) Influence of Summer Water-Level Variability on St. Lawrence River-Wetland Fish Assemblages, Journal of Freshwater Ecology, 23:4, 513-517, DOI: 10.1080/02705060.2008.9664238
This data set was collected in support of a study of fish in and adjacent to the Saint Regis Mohawk Tribe reservation in northern New York in relation to water level changes. See Cross-section reference