Southern California's Marine Monitoring System Ten Years after the National Research Council Evaluation Brock B. BernsteinStephen B. Weisberg OriginalPaper Pages: 3 - 14
Effective Application of Monitoring Information: The Case of San Francisco Bay Rainer HoenickeJay A. DavisKaren Taberski OriginalPaper Pages: 15 - 25
Bi-National Assessment of the Great Lakes: SOLEC Partnerships Paul BertramNancy Stadler-SaltHarvey Shear OriginalPaper Pages: 27 - 33
The Mysound Project: Building an Estuary-Wide Monitoring Network for Long Island Sound, U.S.A. Mark TedescoW. Frank BohlenPeter A. Tebeau OriginalPaper Pages: 35 - 42
Conservation and Management Applications of the Reef Volunteer Fish Monitoring Program Christy V. Pattengill-SemmensBrice X. Semmens OriginalPaper Pages: 43 - 50
The Coastal Component of the U.S. Integrated Ocean Observing System Thomas C. Malone OriginalPaper Pages: 51 - 62
Great Lakes Monitoring Results—Comparison of Probability Based and Deterministic Sampling Grids Glenn J. WarrenPaul J. Horvatin OriginalPaper Pages: 63 - 71
A Hydrologic Network Supporting Spatially Referenced Regression Modeling in the Chesapeake Bay Watershed John W. BrakebillStephen D. Preston OriginalPaper Pages: 73 - 84
The Importance of Considering Spatial Attributes in Evaluating Estuarine Habitat Condition: The South Carolina Experience Robert F. Van DolahDavid E. ChestnutWilliam McDermott OriginalPaper Pages: 85 - 95
Living with a Large Reduction in Permited Loading by Using a Hydrograph-Controlled Release Scheme Paul A. ConradsWilliam P. MartelloNancy R. Sullins OriginalPaper Pages: 97 - 106
A Proposed Coast-Wide Reference Monitoring System for Evaluating Wetland Restoration Trajectories in Louisiana Gregory D. SteyerCharles E. SasserRichard C. Raynie OriginalPaper Pages: 107 - 117
Stormwater Toxicity in Chollas Creek and San Diego Bay, California Kenneth SchiffSteven BayDario Diehl OriginalPaper Pages: 119 - 132
Managing Troubled Data: Coastal Data Partnerships Smooth Data Integration Stephen S. HaleAnne Hale MiglareseBruce G. Peterjohn OriginalPaper Pages: 133 - 148
Incidence of Stress in Benthic Communities along the U.S. Atlantic and Gulf of Mexico Coasts within Different Ranges of Sediment Contamination from Chemical Mixtures Jeffrey L. HylandW. Leonard BalthisRobert F. Van Dolah OriginalPaper Pages: 149 - 161
Application of the Benthic Index of Biotic Integrity to Environmental Monitoring in Chesapeake Bay Roberto J. LlansóDaniel M. DauerLisa C. Scott OriginalPaper Pages: 163 - 174
Spatial Scales and Probability Based Sampling in Determining Levels of Benthic Community Degradation in the Chesapeake Bay Daniel M. DauerRoberto J. Llansó OriginalPaper Pages: 175 - 186
An Approach for Identifying the Causes of Benthic Degradation in Chesapeake Bay Cory S. ChristmanDaniel M. Dauer OriginalPaper Pages: 187 - 197
Variability in the Identification and Enumeration of Marine Benthic Invertebrate Samples and Its Effect on Benthic Assessment Measures J. Ananda RanasingheDavid E. MontagneRonald G. Velarde OriginalPaper Pages: 199 - 206
Production, Respiration and Net Ecosystem Metabolism in U.S. Estuaries Jane M. Caffrey OriginalPaper Pages: 207 - 219
Foraminifera as Bioindicators in Coral Reef Assessment and Monitoring: The FORAM Index Pamela HallockBarbara H. LidzKelly B. Donnelly OriginalPaper Pages: 221 - 238
Monitoring Nekton as a Bioindicator in Shallow Estuarine Habitats Kenneth B. RaposaCharles T. RomanJames F. Heltshe OriginalPaper Pages: 239 - 255
Interlaboratory Variability of Amphipod Sediment Toxicity Tests in a Cooperative Regional Monitoring Program Steven M. BayAndrew JirikStanford Asato OriginalPaper Pages: 257 - 268
Making Performance-Based Chemistry Work: How We Created Comparable Data among Laboratories as Part of a Southern California Marine Regional Assessment Richard GossettRodger BairdStephen B. Weisberg OriginalPaper Pages: 269 - 287
Characterization and Statistical Modeling of Bacterial ( Escherichia Coli) Outflows from Watersheds that Discharge into Southern Lake Michigan Greg A. OlyphantJudith ThomasDenver Harper OriginalPaper Pages: 289 - 300
Comparison of Beach Bacterial Water Quality Indicator Measurement Methods Rachel T. NobleStephen B. WeisbergPatricia M. Vainik OriginalPaper Pages: 301 - 312
Molecular Approaches to Microbiological Monitoring: Fecal Source Detection Katharine G. FieldAnne E. BernhardTimothy J. Brodeur OriginalPaper Pages: 313 - 326
Characterization of Microbial Communities from Coastal Waters using Microarrays O. Colin StineAmy CarnahanJ. Glenn Morris OriginalPaper Pages: 327 - 336
Using Multiple Antibiotic Resistance and Land use Characteristics to Determine Sources of Fecal Coliform Bacterial Pollutiion R. Heath KelseyGeoffrey I. ScottLaura Webster OriginalPaper Pages: 337 - 348
Long-Term Phytoplankton Trends and Related Water Quality Trends in the Lower Chesapeake Bay, Virginia, U.S.A. Harold G. MarshallMichael F. LaneKneeland K. Nesius OriginalPaper Pages: 349 - 360
Initial Results from a Multi-Institutional Collaboration to Monitor Harmful Algal Blooms in South Carolina Alan J. LewitusA. Fred Holland OriginalPaper Pages: 361 - 371
A Pilot Project to Detect and Forecast Harmful Algal Blooms in the Northern Gulf of Mexico William S. FisherThomas C. MaloneJames D. Giattina OriginalPaper Pages: 373 - 381
Preliminary Investigation of Submerged Aquatic Vegetation Mapping using Hyperspectral Remote Sensing David J. WilliamsNancy B. RybickiRichard B. Gomez OriginalPaper Pages: 383 - 392
Effect of El Niño on Demographic, Morphological, and Chemical Parameters in Turtle-Grass (Thalassia testudinum): An Unexpected Test of Indicators Paul R. Jr. CarlsonLaura A. YarbroMichael J. Durako OriginalPaper Pages: 393 - 408