Posts Tagged ‘macroinvertebrates’

Yellowstone River Oil Spill- Redeux

Tuesday, August 23rd, 2011

Well, you may have noticed that I have not said anything about the Yellowstone River Oil Spill since our original entry. Yet, in truth, we have been busily working on the project in-house.  The experience has not been all-together positive; quite the contrary. This entry deals with how the public loses because of bureaucracy; bureaucracy of the corporate breed, not the  governmental red tape I’d expected.

After the oil spill, we contacted Montana Department of Environmental Quality (MT DEQ) for information, they put us in contact with Montana Fish Wildlife and Parks, who deferred us to ExxonMoble’s contact, who put us in touch with a consultant. We discussed my qualifications and my previous work and he reckoned they could use me and my team for the aquatic insect assessments to describe the impact and the recovery of the Yellowstone ecosystem. He sent me an email about once a week to say, they were still trying to bring us on board. After several weeks, he said I better get an OSHA hazardous materials certification and that there was no way around the requirement if I want to work on the Yellowstone River. Several hundred dollars and 3 working-days later (per trainee), we completed the certification.  I informed the contact that we had completed OSHA training as required and didn’t hear back from him for over a week. He said, sorry, “Sorry don’t think its going to work out.” I wrote him a scathing letter; which he apparently passes along to ARCADIS (Exxon’s Primary firm for everything), the next thing I know, I received an 158-page listing of ExxonMoble’s contracting requirements and several 6-9 page contract specifics and insurance requirements.   Again, these were corporate regulations, not governmental regulations.  I had my insurance agent looking into the extra coverages required and it was apparent that it was going to be very costly to bring our $2-million insurance coverage up to the “required” $9-million; just to collect insects by the riverside.

We were working on finalizing their insurance needs when I recieved the following note (today).

“Brett,
It looks like the clock has run out. We have had to mobilize a small field effort to obtain representative macroinvertebrate samples from the spill area. We needed to get out there before fall influenced the life stages we are sampling. Apologies to you if I was in any way misleading regarding your potential role, but we simply did not comprehend the bureaucratic log jams we ran into. Best of luck in the future.”

Ok. So, I am a little embarrassed by my trusting nature and the way I let the corporate dudes string me along.  And, I have always been critical of critics, even when I am the critic.  It is easy to criticize a process or organization, but unless you offer a viable alternative, it amounts to nothing but whining.  My way of dealing with this is to turn it in to something positive.

I reckon that, in preparation for this project it has cost me time, materials, and training fees, totaling nearly $7,300. Interesting that for just another 3o hours of my staff’s time, vehicle costs, and motel lodging, we can collect the samples in a scientifically relevant way.  Therefore, I am proud to announce that we are initiating the Yellowstone Biological Assessment Project, independently, as a community service. There will be laboratory time as well, but hey, that’s what winter nights are for, right…. (?)

If we do not ante up, and get this done right, there will be lots of paper pushed, but the world will be no closer to understanding the impacts of Exxon’s Oil spill on the Yellowstone River ecosystem. Our survey will not be able to cover everything, but it will provide more information than either the state, or Exxon will gather.

We will be sampling this week.   I’ll keep you posted. Full-speed ahead!

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More Aquatic Insects of Montana and Wyoming

Wednesday, July 28th, 2010
Crawling water beetle

Haliplus from Niobrara Conservation District.

Earlier, I promised to follow up with some discussion based on some of my Aquatic Insect photographs.

Technical mumbo-jumbo

I like this photograph. It is a composite image of about 20 photographs–each taken at a different depth of field–then integrated using image analysis software. I took it while working on the Wyoming Educational Benthic Imaging project. During the project I worked for EcoAnalysts, but the budget required much of my personal time (nights and weekends)for, therefore i specifically retained the artist’s copyright, while allowing limited copyrights to both EcoAnalysts Inc. and the Wyoming Association of Conservation Districts.  If you are interested in using these pictures, please write me and I will provide the necessary permissions–Just be sure to give credit where it is due :)

About the Critter

The subject is  Haliplus sp., a haliplid beetle (Coleoptera: Haliplidae). The common name for this family of beetles is the “crawling water beetles”.

In life, when you find one of these tiny guys (~2 mm) they usually appear to be frantically running along the bottom of a pool or your collection jar. Although they “crawl,” they appear to do so at great speed, frantically.  Definitely distinct from the slow methodical crawling of some of the damselflies or dragonflies, as well as from the smooth, multidimensional swimming of Dytiscids, Noterids, and Hyrophilids.  The adult haliplids push themselves downward as they swim which helps them disappear in to the fine sediments that are often collected with them.

lateral view of Haliplus sp.

One of the things that make haliplids unique is that they breathe air from an air bubble that they carry around with them.  Of course, other beetles (e.g., Dytiscids, Hydrophilids), and even some hemipterans (e.g., Corixidae, Notonectidae) also breathe air from bubbles carried around with them. However, the method of retaining the bubble is unique from all other groups of aquatic insects.  Halipidae are united by the morphological expansion of the rear coxae (think hip joints) into large flat plates, which hold a portable air bubble against the body (see above). This is one of the first key characters in many keys to identifying aquatic beetles, and if you’ve never seen it, the text can be confusing. Fortunately, a picture is worth a thousand words and once you see it you will never mistake any other feature for the expanded coxal plates of  the Haliplidae.  Most photographs of this feature exhibit the full-on ventral view– which is useful and shows the lovely sculpture of each plate (bottom)… but it is hard to appreciate the role the feature in respiration from this view.  For this reason, i really like my oblique angle shots (above).

A number of years ago I saw a film made of one of these beetles feeding before. i think it was by Win Fairchild or one of his students. the mouth parts acted like a little sewing machine pulling filamentous algae through like thread… their were spines on the mouth parts that were spaced appropriately for size of some filamentous algae. the spines pierced each cell, and sucked the juices out… so the thread of algae went in green, and came out empty clear cells…. very efficient.

Well that’s all the time for now… if you’d like to discuss… please post a comment. or use my contact page.

Ventral Peltodytes

Standard ventral view

The vental view shows how plates from below.

Aquatic Insect Identifications

Monday, June 28th, 2010

Identification of macroinvertebrate samples from Sublette County, WY is progressing at faster pace with the addition of Esmeralda to our team.  She is a meticulous sorter and has a sorting efficiency of 97-100%!  This is impressive to me because, some of the other companies I have worked for have the sorters strive for 90%.  The idea is that if sorters remove 90% or more on the first sort, that the sample passes the Quality Assurance Standards of most bioassessment programs BUT that if they exceed it “too much” they are spending too much time on a sample.  Since laboratory work is usually conducted at a fixed price (per sample, regardless of how long it takes), one way to increase the profit margin is to ensure that employees spend as little time on each sample as possible. I wonder, if it is truely more cost effective to have the sorters aim a little lower.

For Example, if a sorting technician speeds through a sample, knowingly missing a few specimens, aiming for 90% efficiency, actually only sorts 70% of the insects. The sample would fail the QA/QC check and need to be re-sorted.  If the rechecked sample is sorted t0 88%, the entire processed portion needs to be sorted… again… Personally, I don’t think this would work well in my lab.  I think that it is more cost effective to take 20% longer to aim 10% higher (aim for 100%), than it is to retrieve the sample from storage, resort it, amending the data later–even if you only have to do that to a small portion of the samples.  But then we are a small capacity laboratory and it feels like our infrastructure is better suited for minimizing re-sorts.  I think it is a fairly valid assumption that the sample that has been re-sorted to 98% efficiency is just as good as the sample that was sorted to 98% efficiency the first time, so it is really about how the labs handle logistics–not so much about data quality. So, Esmeralda, keep up the highly efficient sorting–it is a good fit here!

I did just realized that some readers may not know about the two standard types of Quality Assurance measures applied to benthic macroinvertebrate sample processing: Sorting efficiency, and subsampling consistency.  We just discussed sorting efficiency (above). It is the portion of the total number of specimens found relative to the actual number in the sample. To calculate this number, one person sorts the sample and removes all the specimens from the sample. Later, another investigator examines the sample and removes all the specimens they find.  If the first person found 90 critters, and the second found 10, the first sorter’s efficiency would be 90%.

Sorting efficiency is a measure of the completeness of the sorting effort in the laboratory’s staff and may indicate the need for corrective action, whereas “subsampling consistency” describes some inherent characteristic of the of the samples composition–the clumpiness. Most bioassessment samples are not completely sorted–they are usually subsampled. So, if 25% of a sample was sorted to reach the SOP’s target number of organisms, (100, 200, 300, 500, or 1,000) then another equal portion of the sample (25%) would be analyzed in the laboratory. Both the taxonomic composition and total number of organisms are issues for comparison. Ideally the composition of the two portions taken from the same sample would be very very similar. However, in some instances specimens remain clumped together and one subsample is quite different from another portion of the sample. There is really nothing that can be done about this within the confines of study design.  If you add the two samples together, the new sample represents twice as much effort as the other samples in the study and would violate several assumptions in the analysis. If you keep them separate they violate other assumptions. Thus the number serves as a warning sign about the amount of variation with in a sample… Subsampling consistency involves as much work as a new sample, so it costs the same as an additional sample. Thus, most clients do not elect to perform this analysis on their benthic samples.  If a state agency routinely sends out 300 samples in a year, they would need to pay for 30 additional (~$9,000) samples to have subsampling consistency checks on 10% of their samples.  I think I can understand their desire to spend those funds sampling additional samples rather than describing an uncontrollable aspect of  sample composition. The flip side is if they assume the samples are 100% uniform and representative, some poor decisions can be made.

More on the effect of subsampling efficiency latter. Meanwhile, here is a thought question: Why do you think sorting efficiency matters?

~Jefferson River Montana~

Friday, June 25th, 2010

The Jefferson River Flooded last weekend. All the hay fields in the area were flooded and roads that have not been submerged in recent history became gentle rivulets. The High water is good for the Jefferson River because it has had many years of below average flows–and fine sediments have built up among the interstitial spaces were many invertebrates that are important fish forage live.

When Snorkeling in recent years, I have found that if you pick up a cobble, there is beneath it only sand. Typically, you might expect to find more cobbles under cobbles. Among the sand grains are the burrows of several sediment dwelling invertebrates (e.g., Hexagenia and Ephoron sp.). According to locals, the river once supported impressive hatches of large stoneflies (Hesperoperla pacifica, Pteronarcys sp. etc).

When sediment fills in the the area under the stones, much of the habitat used buy large stone flies is lost because the interstitial spaces are simply too small for them to pass through. This results in smaller populations (of large invertebrates), and ultimately smaller hatches. It may also reduce the forage available for fish. For example, it appears that sedimentation of the Jefferson River may have caused Burrowing dragonflies (Gomphidae) to replace many of the large predatory stoneflies typically expected. We sampled the Jefferson River several years ago and found about 2-3 gomphid dragonflies per square foot and about 0.3 large stoneflies in the same area–the dragonflies were nearly 10x times as abundant as the stoneflies.  We are hopeful  that high river levels will scour sand from interstitial spaces and improve survival of stoneflies. This could result in an improvement in fishing a few years down the road…

Aside from benefiting river ecology, another effect of the flood is that pools and back waters that have not been flooded for years have now been nicely inundated for a week or more. Mosquito eggs can remain dormant for several years–until they become wet.  We found hundreds of thousands of mature mosquito larvae and pupae among the grassy ditches and fields last weekend. There were so many larvae, that in just a few minutes we observed hundreds of larvae washing across the road in shallow riffles (picture below).  By this weekend or early next week the Jefferson Valley will likely be swarmed by endless squadrons mosquitoes… and it has been such a nice spring.  If you can tolerate the bites and buzzing it might be a nice weekend to try mosquito-mimic flies… and if you have a friend who owns a hay field… maybe see if you can get permission to fish it!

mosquitoes float across the road