Western Ecological Research Center (WERC)
3020 State University Drive East
Modoc Hall, Room 3006
Sacramento, CA 95819
Phone: 916-278-9485
Fax: 916-278-9475
http://www.werc.usgs.gov/
Samples of contaminant-related research at WERC:
Contaminated Habitats:
Hazardous Waste Sites
Contaminated Habitats: Mining, Metals, Mercury, and Energy Development
- Mercury at the Oat Hill Extension Mine and James Creek, Napa County, California: Tailings, Sediment, Water, and Biota, 2003-2004, Open-file report 2007-1132.
- Mercury Contamination and Effects on Survival of American Avocet and Black-necked Stilt Chicks in San Francisco Bay, Ecotoxicology 17:103-116 (abstract).
- Mercury Contamination in Waterbirds Breeding in San Francisco Bay - an article from the October 2007 issue of Soundways, USGS monthly newsletter.
- Mercury in Birds in the San Francisco Bay-Delta. CALFED program: http://calwater.ca.gov/index.aspx#
- Ackerman, JT, CA Eagles-Smith, GH Heinz, SE Wainwright-De La Cruz, JY Takekawa, TL Adelsbach, AK Miles, DJ Hoffman, SE Schwarzbach, TH Suchanek, and TC Maurer. 2007. Mercury in birds of the San Francisco Bay-Delta: trophic pathways, bioaccumulation, and ecotoxicological risk to avian reproduction. 2006 Annual Administrative Report, U. S. Geological Survey, Western Ecological Research Center, Davis, CA, and U. S. Fish and Wildlife Service, Environmental Contaminants Division, Sacramento, CA, 44 pp. [Technical Report] Download the Report (2.23 MB, PDF--get Adobe Reader)
- Mercury Contamination from Historical Gold Mining in California
Integration of Ecological Stressors: Multistressor Research
Integration of Ecological Stressors: Monitoring
- Baseline emergent contaminant monitoring of Crissy Field Tidal Marsh prior to use of treated wastewater for irrigation. Visit Crissy Field project page on the National Park Service Web site to learn about interdisciplinary multi-agency restoration and monitoring efforts in the area of former waste dump. Biologists from WERC collaborate with colleagues from Columbia Environmental Research Center (CERC)on determining the presence and potential estrogenic activity of chemicals sequestered by POCI.
For Resource Managers
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Go to the WERC Web site
In the Spotlight
Mercury concentrations in the blood of breeding waterbirds approached and surpassed toxic threshold levels in the South San Francisco Bay, especially for fish-eating terns. Bird samples were analyzed for mercury at the USGS Davis Field Station Mercury Lab. Dr. Josh Ackerman of WERC's Davis Field Station and Dr. Collin Eagles-Smith of the U.S. Fish and Wildlife Service present their research on mercury contamination in waterbirds breeding in San Francisco Bay in an article, published in Tideline, a newsletter of Don Edwards San Francisco Bay National Wildlife Refuge. Download the article. (799.12 KB, PDF -- get Abobe Reader)
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