Lake Erie Programs | Ohio Sea Grant | Stone Lab | GLAERC | CLEAR

Ohio Sea Grant College Program

Pollution

Publications
All materials available in printed form.
REQUEST

Clicking on [PDF] will download the file to your computer, enabling you to view and print it in its original form. You will need Acrobat Reader to download PDFs.

FS-006 Reducing the "red worm" parasites in your Lake Erie yellow perch catch.
FS-007 PCBs: Thier history and our health.
FS-009 Lymphocytis and other virus-related skin diseases in walleye.
FS-015 Lake Erie phosphorus and eutrophication.
FS-040 Lake Erie water quality during the 1970s and early '80s. (PDF)
FS-041 Ohio's Areas of Concern. (PDF)
FS-046 Lake Erie water quality: Past, present and future.

Material Available in printed form only

FS-056

Contaminants in Great Lakes fish.
Descriptions of 30 publications and videotapes to help you safely enjoy Great Lakes fish. Includes order forms. free

Twine Line Articles

Ask Your Agent: Are Lake Erie Fish Safe to Eat?
January/February 2001, p. 2
by Fred Snyder, Ohio Sea Grant Extension

Research Review: Subirrigation System increases Water Quality and Crop Yields
March/April 2000, p. 3
by Jessica Sharon, Ohio Sea Grant Communications

Lake Erie's Past and Future
November/December 1999, p. 1
by Jeff Reutter, Ohio Sea Grant

Ask Your Agent: What is the Progress of the Ashtabula River Partnership?
November/December 1999, p. 2
by Frank Lichtkoppler, Ohio Sea Grant Extension

The Realities of Ohio's Brownfields Program
November/December 1999, p. 3
by Walter Williams, Ohio Sea Grant Extension

Lampricide Reduction: A High Priority in the Sea Lamprey Battle March/April 1999
by Marc Gaden, Great Lakes Fishery Commission
tl-0399lamprey.html

Is any effort being made to slow down soil erosion around Lake Erie? January/February 1999
by Fred Snyder, Ohio Sea Grant Extension
tl-0199erosion.html

Environmental Importance Impacts Willingness to Pay for Cleanup September 1998
by Frank Lichtkoppler, Ohio Sea Grant Extension
tl-0998cleanup.html

A New Means for Heavy Metal Removal in the Great Lakes July 1998
by Jill Jentes, Ohio Sea Grant Communications
tl-0798metal.html

Mayflies and Lake Erie May 1998
by Jill Jentes, Ohio Sea Grant Communications
tl-0598mayfly.html

Newly Funded Projects October 1997
tl-1097projects

That bloomin' Microsystis: Where'd it come from? Where'd it go? August 1997
by Robin Taylor, Ohio Sea Grant Communications
t1-0897microcystis

Mars has Sojourner, Lake Erie has the Phantom August 1997
by Dr. Paul Berkman, The Ohio State University
tl-0897phantom

Old Woman News August 1997
from Coastal Services
tl-0897runoff

Thick slick of green ick (It can make you sick!) Bloom of blue-green algae returns to Lake Erie: A bloom of a potentially toxic cyanobacterium was discovered mid-August in Lake Erie's western basin October 1995
tl-1095bloom

Desire for bargains helps keep the environment clean October 1995
tl-1095bargain

When news isn't new: History of estrogenic chemicals December 1994
tl-1294news

The point of nonpoint August 1994
tl-0894point

Animals and insects help determine quality of water April 1994
tl-0494animals

What is water quality? August 1993
tl-0893quality

Research Projects
Links to brief Research Reports. Not available in print format.

Pollution Studies

R/PS-1

Biological Removal of Mercury from Contaminated Waste

R/PS-2

Exposure of Wetlands to Agricultural Pesticides in Storm Runoff

R/PS-3

Development of an Environmental Sensitivity Index (ESI) for the Great Lakes

R/PS-4

Sunlight Induced Photochemistry: Formation of Reactive Species

R/PS-5

Environmental Factors Affecting the Accumulation of Sediment-Sorbed Carcinogens into Great Lakes Food Chains

R/PS-6-PD

Concentration of Hydrophobic Carcinogens by Zebra Mussels: Effects on Aquatic Food Chains

R/PS-7-PD

Control of Zebra Mussels with Lemmatoxins, A Natural Molluscacide from Phytolacca dodecandra

R/PS-8-PD

Testing of Mechanical, Molluscicidal, Anti-Attachment, Antibiofouling Agents on the Zebra Mussel

R/PS-9

The mobility of Contaminant-Laden Colloids in the Sedimentary Porewaters of The Great Lakes

R/PS-10

Mechanisms of bioaccumulation: The Relative Importance of Absorption Versus Ingestion in Sediment-Dwelling and Detritus-Feeding Invertebrates

R/PS-11-PD

Zebra MusselS Directed Trophic Transfer

R/PS-12-PD

Role of sunlight and Dissolved Organic Matter on the transformation of Some Pesticides Commonly Used in Agricultural Practices in Lake Erie Drainage Basin

R/PS-13

Partitioning of Priority Pollutants Into Edible Fish and Quantitative Human Risk Assessment

R/PS-14

The Relationship Between Critical Body Burden of Hydrophobic Contaminants and Biological Endpoints in Aquatic Biomonitoring Organisms

R/PS-15-PD

Economic and Hydrologic Analysis of Integrated Wetland Reservoir and Subirrigated Agricultural Production Systems

R/PS-16

Round Gobies and Zebra Mussels: Trophic Interactions Affecting Contaminant Cycling in the Great Lakes

R/PS-17

Immunological Biomarkers and Contaminant-Associated Immunosuppression in Fish-Eating Birds of the Lower Great Lakes

R/PS-18-PD

Degradation of Alachlor Under Sulfate Reducing Conditions

R/PS-19-PD

Phenotypic profiling of E. Coli assemblages In Surface Water: A method for Evaluating Fecal Contamination from Diffuse Sources

R/PS-20-PD

Viral Lysis of Cyanobacteria in Lake Erie

R/PS-21

The Relationships between Particle Size Composition of Suspended Sediments and Particulate Pollutant Transport in Rivers

R/PS-22

Photodegradation of Agricultural Pesticides and Herbicides in Estuarine Wetlands in the Great Lakes Basin

R/PS-23

Environmental Transmission of Hepatitis A Virus (HAV) in a Zebra Mussel Dominated Foodchain

R/PS-24-PD

Investigating Individual PCB Congener Concentrations in Turtle Blood Samples: A Non-Lethal Measure for Monitoring Environmental Contamination

R/PS-25

Advancing Tissue Residue-Based Risk Assessment: Field and Laboratory Tests of the Critical Body Residue Hypothesis

R/PS-26

Sonochemical Desorption of Mercury Laden Sediments

R/PS-27-PD

Digestive physiology as it relates to food preference as a mechanism explaining differential bioaccumulation of lipophilic pollutants among benthic invertebrates

GLAERC Members specialization

David B. Baker Heidelberg College Institutional Representative
Stephen E. Cabaniss Kent State University
Susan W. Fisher The Ohio State University Institutional Representative
Rosanne W. Fortner The Ohio State University
Sheldon Guttman Miami University
Johan F. Gottgens The University of Toledo Institutional Representative
Robert T. Heath Kent State University Institutional Representative
Jeffrey Johansen John Carroll University Institutional Representative
Kenneth A. Krieger Heidelberg College
Gerald Matisoff Case Western Reserve University
Patricia Maurice Kent State University
Peter McCall Case Western Reserve University
R. Peter Richards Heidelberg College
Pamela S. Showalter The University of Toledo
Peter Whiting Case Western Reserve University

Ohio Sea Grant College Program

Non-Frame Version

Site Map | Subject Directory | Search
News Releases | Current Events/Calendar | Job Opportunities
Publications | Contact Us | Related Links

www.sg.ohio-state.edu/publications/topics/ts-pollution.html

Ohio Sea Grant Logo

The Ohio State University Logo