Publications

PUBLICATIONS

Author order is in order of relative contribution (i.e., greatest to least); first author is corresponding author, unless otherwise noted. * indicates student and ^ indicates postdoc whom I directly supervised. For In Press and published articles, Thomson Reuters impact factors in parentheses following citation for the year published.

Peer-reviewed journal articles:

Submitted (or in advanced manuscript stage)

Sulliván, S.M.P., Hedden-Nicely, D., and G. Bulltail. Enhancing water protection on tribal lands. Frontiers in Ecology and the Environment.

Daufel, S.M., ^Bohenek, J.R., and S.M.P. Sullivan. Artificial light at night has species-specific effects on oviposition behavior of mosquitoes. Journal of Applied Entomology.

^Stefanik, K.C., and S.M.P. Sullivan. Geomorphic stream characteristics mediate nutrient loads across a land-use gradient of Ohio, U.S.A. Freshwater Biology.

Sullivan, S.M.P., ^Bohenek, J.R., *Czaja, R. *Kenly, T.L. ^ Stefanik, K.C., and L.M. Pintor. Shifts in invertebrate network structure correspond to nutrient concentrations in streams of central Ohio, USA. Freshwater Science.

^Cáceres, C., ^Stefanik, K.C., and S.M.P. Sulliván. Identifying critical sources areas of phosphate in lake catchments along an agricultural urban-forested gradient: d18O in phosphate as a tracer. Environmental Science & Technology.

*Dorobek, A.C., and S.M.P. Sullivan. Lowhead dam removal prompts short-term shifts in fish-centered food webs in a mid-size river system. Journal of Applied Ecology.

^Hossler, K., Sullivan, S.M.P., *Boaz, L.E., and K.L. Jaeger. Contrasting effects of hydrogeomorphology on mercury transport across stream-riparian boundaries. Environmental Toxicology and Chemistry.

*Zapata, M.J., Sullivan, S.M.P. and J.R. Bohenek. Aquatic primary productivity linked to nearshore spider trophic dynamics in a subtropical estuary. Freshwater Biology.

Bohenek, J.R., Sullivan, S.M.P., and S.M. Gray. Habitat and nutrients, but not artificial lighting at night, drive fish assemblage composition in urban streams. Urban Ecosystems.

Pending/In revision with journal

Qian, S.S., Arend, K.K., Jacquemin, S.J., and S.M.P. Sulliván. Estimating phosphorus retention capacity of flow-through wetlands. Ecological Engineering.

^Cáceres, C., Romero-Romero, S., S.M.P. Sullivan, and *A. Kautza. Variability in the body size-based trophic structure of carnivorous and non-carnivorous freshwater fish assemblages linked to urbanization. Aquatic Sciences.

*Diesburg, K.M., and S.M.P. Sullivan. Watershed imperviousness and channel width more strongly related to benthic macroinvertebrate communities than invasive riparian honeysuckle. River Research and Applications.

Published

J70. Mills, M., Lee, S., Mollenkopf, D., Wittum, Sullivan, S.M.P, and J. Lee. 2022. Comparison of environmental microbiomes in an antibiotic resistant polluted urban river highlights periphyton and fish gut communities as reservoirs of concern. Science of the Total Environment. 851:158042

(7.96)

J69. Ballash, G.A., Baesu, A., Lee, S., Mills, M.C., Mollenkopf, D.F., Sullivan, S.M.P., Lee, J., Bayen, S., and T.E. Wittum. In press. Fish as sentinels of antimicrobial resistant bacteria, epidemic carbapenemase genes, and antibiotics in surface water. PLoS One 17(9): e0272806. (4.17)

J68. *Rieck, L.O. and S.M.P. Sullivan. 2022. Ecological impacts of altered stream hydrogeomorphic characteristics extend beyond the channel boundary: evidence from urban streams of Columbus, Ohio, USA. Frontiers in Ecology and Evolution. doi.org/10.3389/fevo.2022.817289. (4.17)

J67. Carlson, A.K., Taylor, W.W., DeVries, D.R., Ferreri, C.P., Fogarty, M.J., Hartman, K.J., Infante, D.M., Kinnison, M.T., Levin, S.A., Melstrom, R.T., Newman, R.M., Pinsky, M.L., Rubenstein, D.I., Sullivan, S.M.P., Venturelli, P.A., Weber, M.J., Wuellner, M.R., and G.B. Zydlewski. 2022. Stepping up: a U.S. perspective on the 10 Steps to Responsible Inland Fisheries. Fisheries 47:68-77. (2.94)

J66. *Torres-Bejarano, A.M., S.M.P Sulliván, W. González-Daza, ^C. Cáceres, and G.J. Colorado Z. 2022. Riparian vegetation structure and seasonality influence taxonomic and functional characteristics of stream fish assemblages in the Colombian Amazon. Aquatic Ecology 56:153-172. (1.64)

J65. *Corra, J.W. and S.M.P. Sullivan. 2021. Temperature and land use influence Tree Swallow individual health. Conservation Physiology 9:coab084. (3.08)

J64. Baesu, A., G. Ballash, D. Mollenkopf, T. Wittum, S.M.P. Sulliván, S. Bayen. 2021. Suspect screening of pharmaceuticals in fish livers based on QuEChERS extraction coupled with high-resolution mass spectrometry. Science of the Total Environment 783:146902. (6.55)

J63. ^Manning, D.W.P., and S.M.P. Sullivan. 2021. Conservation across aquatic-terrestrial boundaries: linking continental-scale water quality to emergent aquatic insects and declining aerial insectivorous birds. Frontiers in Ecology and Evolution. doi:10.3389/fevo.2021.633160. (2.42)

J62. Diesburg, K.M., Sullivan, S.M.P, and ^D.W.P. Manning. 2021. Stream-riparian trophic linkages respond to a terrestrial invader. Biological Invasions 23:1-22. (3.09)

J61. Sullivan, S.M.P., *Corra, J.W., and *J.T. Hayes. 2021. Urbanization mediates the effects of water quality and climate on a model aerial insectivorous bird. Ecological Monographs e01442. (7.72)

J60. Sulliván, S.M.P., ^Bohenek, J.R., ^Cáceres, C.L. and L.W. Pomeroy. 2021. Multiple urban stressors drive fish-based ecological networks in streams of Columbus, Ohio, USA. Science of the Total Environment (Invited) 754:141970. (6.55)

J59. Sullivan, S.M.P., Rains, M.C., Rodewald, Buzbee, W.W., and A.D Rosemond. 2020. Distorting science, putting water at risk. Science 369:766-768. (41.85)

J58. *Rieck, L.O., and S.M.P. Sullivan. 2020. Coupled fish-hydrogeomorphic responses to urbanization in streams of Columbus, Ohio, USA. PLoS ONE 15: e0234303. (2.78)

J57. *Goss, C.W., Sullivan, S.M.P., and P.C. Goebel. 2020. Effects of land-cover transitions on emerging aquatic insects and environmental characteristics of headwater streams in an agricultural catchment. River Research and Applications 36:1097-1108. (1.95)

J56. Ballash, G., Lee, S., Mollenkopf, D., Mathys, D., Albers, A., Sechrist, E., Feicht, S., Van Belen Rubio, J, Sullivan, S.M.P., Lee, J., and T. Wittum. 2020. Pulsed electric field application reduces carbapenem- and colistin-resistant microbiota and blaKPC spread in urban wastewater. Journal of Environmental Management 265:110529. (4.87)

J55. *Jackson, B.K, and S.M.P. Sullivan. 2020. Influence of wildfire severity on geomorphic features and riparian vegetation of forested streams of the Sierra Nevada, California, USA. International Journal of Wildland Fire 29:611-617. (2.66)

J54. Mutumi, G.L., Cumming, G.S., Sullivan, S.M.P. (corresponding author), Caron, A., and ^C. Cáceres. 2020. Using a multi-isotope approach to understand waterfowl movement in southern Africa. The Condor: Ornithological Applications 121(4):1-10. (2.80)

J53. Sullivan, S.M.P., and ^D.W.P. Manning. 2019. Aquatic-terrestrial linkages as complex systems: insights and advances from network models. (Feature Article). Freshwater Science 38(4):936-945. (2.48)

J52. Sullivan, S.M.P., Rains, M.C., and A.D. Rodewald. 2019. The proposed change to the definition of “waters of the United States” flouts sounds science. Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences 116(24):11558–11561. (9.50)

J51. Carlson, A.K., Taylor, W.W., Kinnison, M.T., Sullivan, S.M.P., Weber, M.J., Melstrom, R.T., Venturelli, P.A., Wuellner, M.R., Newman, R.M., Hartman, K.J., Zydlewski, G.B., DeVries, D.D., Gray, S.M., Infante, D.M., Pegg, M.A., Harrell, R.M., and A.E. Todgham. 2019. Threats to freshwater fisheries in the United States: perspectives and investments of state fisheries administrators and agricultural experiment station directors. (Feature Article). Fisheries 44(6): 276-287. (3.00)

J50. Colvin, S.A.R., Sullivan, S.M.P., Shirey, P.D., Colvin, R.W., Winemiller, K.O., Hughes, R.M., Fausch, K.D., Infante, D.M., Olden, J.D., Bestgen, K.R., Danehy, R.J., and L. Eby. 2019. Headwater streams and wetlands are critical for sustaining fish, fisheries, and ecosystem services. (Feature Article) Fisheries 44(2):73-91. (3.00)

J49. Santos, F., Wymore, A.S., *Jackson, B.K., Sullivan, S.M.P., McDowell, W.H., and A.A. Berhe. 2019. Fire severity, time since fire, and site-level characteristics influence streamwater chemistry at baseflow conditions in catchments of the Sierra Nevada, California, USA. Fire Ecology 15:3. (1.61)

J48. *Zapata, M.J., Sullivan, S.M.P, and S.M. Gray. 2019. Artificial lighting at night in estuaries – ecological implications from individuals to ecosystems (Selected as Editor’s Choice). Estuaries and Coasts 42(2):309-330. (2.18)

J47. *Zapata, M.J., and S.M.P. Sullivan. 2019. Spatial and seasonal variability of emergent aquatic insects in a subtropical estuary. Marine and Freshwater Research 70:541-553. (1.67)

J46. *Diesburg, K.M., Sullivan, S.M.P, and D.W.P. Manning. 2019. Changes in benthic invertebrate communities of central Appalachian streams attributed to hemlock woolly adelgid invasion. Aquatic Sciences 81(1):11. (3.62)

J45. Sullivan, S.M.P., ^Hossler, K. and *L.A. Meyer. 2019. Artificial lighting at night alters aquatic-riparian invertebrate food webs (Feature Article). Ecological Applications 29:e01821. (4.39)

J44. *Cook, D.R., and S.M.P. Sullivan (corresponding author). 2018. Associations between riffle development and aquatic biota following lowhead dam removal. Environmental Monitoring and Assessment 190(6):339. (1.69)

J43. Sullivan, S.M.P., ^D.W.P. Manning, and *R.P. Davis. 2018. Do the ecological impacts of dam removal extend across the aquatic-terrestrial boundary? Ecosphere 9:e02180. 10.1002/ecs2.2180.

(2.49)

J42. *Jackson, B.K., and S.M.P. Sullivan. 2018. Ecosystem size and flooding drive trophic dynamics of riparian spiders in a fire-prone Sierra Nevada river system. Canadian Journal of Fisheries and Aquatic Sciences 75(2):308-318. (2.44)

J41. *Tagwireyi, P., Sullivan, S.M.P., and K. Zhao. 2017. Associations between riverine landscape patches and internal and external environmental determinants are scale-dependent: evidence from the Scioto River, USA. Fundamental and Applied Limnology 190:235-249. (1.17)

J40. *Davis, R.P. Sullivan, S.M.P, and ^K.C. Stefanik. 2017. Reductions in fish-community contamination following lowhead dam removal linked more to shifts in food-web structure than sediment pollution. Environmental Pollution 231:671-680. (5.10)

J39. Sullivan, S.M.P., and ^D.W.P. Manning. 2017. Seasonally distinct taxonomic and functional shifts in macroinvertebrate communities following dam removal. PeerJ. 5:e3189; DOI 10.7717/peerj.3189. (2.18)

J38. Keeton, W.S., Copeland, E.C., Sullivan, S.M.P., and M.C. Watzin. 2017. Riparian forest structure and stream geomorphic condition: implications for flood resilience. Canadian Journal of Forest Research 47:476-487. (1.68)

J37. Sullivan, S.M.P., *Boaz, L.E., and ^K. Hossler. 2016. Fluvial geomorphology and aquatic-to-terrestrial Hg export are weakly coupled in small urban streams of Columbus, Ohio. Water Resources Research 52:2822-2839. (3.55)

J36. *Tagwireyi, P. and S.M.P. Sullivan (corresponding author). 2016. Riverine landscape patches influence trophic dynamics of riparian ants. River Research and Applications 32: 1721-1729. (2.03)

J35. *Alberts, J.M., and S.M.P. Sullivan. 2016. Factors influencing aquatic-to-terrestrial contaminant transport to terrestrial arthropod consumers in a multiuse river system. Environmental Pollution 213: 53-62. (4.84)

J34. *Kautza, A. and S.M.P. Sullivan. 2016. Anthropogenic and natural determinants of fish food-chain length in a mid-size river system. Freshwater Science. 35: 895-908. (1.42)

J33. *Kautza, A. and S.M.P. Sullivan. 2016. The energetic contributions of aquatic primary producers to terrestrial food webs in a mid-size river system. Ecology. 97:694-705. (5.00)

J32. *Tagwireyi, P. and S.M.P. Sullivan. 2016. Distribution and trophic dynamics of riparian tetragnathid spiders in a large river system. Marine and Freshwater Research. 67:309-318. (2.25)

J31. Čivas, L, Kesminas, V. and S.M.P. Sullivan. 2016. Influences of hydrogeomorphology and chemical water quality on fish assemblages in the Nevėžis River, Lithuania: implications for river basin management plans in the Baltics. Environmental Monitoring and Assessment. 188(2): 109. (1.68)

J30. *Kautza, A. and S.M.P. Sullivan. 2015. Shifts in reciprocal river-riparian arthropod fluxes along an urban-rural landscape gradient. Freshwater Biology. 60:2156-2168. (2.91)

J29. Sullivan, S.M.P., ^Hossler, K., and C.M. Cianfrani. 2015. Ecosystem structure emerges as a strong determinant of food-chain length in linked stream-riparian ecosystems. Ecosystems. 18:1356-1372. (3.53)


J28. *Kautza, A. and S.M.P. Sullivan. 2015. Spatially-dependent human alterations determine fish assemblage composition in a modified river system. River Systems. 21/2–3: 93-108. (Science Citation Index not yet available.)

J27. *Jackson, B.K., and S.M.P. Sullivan. 2015. Responses of riparian tetragnathid spiders to wildfire in forested ecosystems of the California Mediterranean climate region, USA. Freshwater Science. 34(4):1542-1557. (1.42)

J26. *Tagwireyi, P. and S.M.P. Sullivan. 2015. Riverine landscape patch heterogeneity drives riparian ant assemblages in the Scioto River Basin, USA. PLoS ONE 10(4): e0124807. DOI:10.1371/journal.pone.0124807. (3.23)

J25. *Dorobek, A.C., Sullivan, S.M.P., and A. Kautza. 2015. Short-term consequences of lowhead dam removal for fish assemblages in an urban river system. River Systems. 21/2–3: 125-139. (Science Citation Index not yet available.)

J24. *Bey, C. and S.M.P. Sullivan. 2015. Associations between stream hydrogeomorphology and codependent mussel-fish assemblages: evidence from an Ohio, USA river system. Aquatic Conservation: Marine and Freshwater Ecosystems 25: 555-568. (1.76)

J23. *Goss, C.W., P.C. Goebel, and S.M.P. Sullivan. 2014. Shifts along agricultural-forest transitions of two streams in central Ohio, USA. Agriculture, Ecosystems and Environment 197:106-117. (3.20)

J22. *Rowse, L., A.D. Rodewald, and S.M.P. Sullivan. 2014. Pathways and consequences of contaminant flux to Acadian Flycatchers (Empidonax virescens) in urbanizing landscapes of Ohio, USA. Science of the Total Environment 485-486: 461-467. (4.10)

J21. *Meyer, L.A., and S.M.P. Sullivan. 2013. Bright lights, big city: influences of ecological light pollution on reciprocal stream-riparian invertebrate fluxes. Ecological Applications 23: 1322-1330. (4.13)

J20. *Alberts, J.M., Sullivan, S.M.P. and *A. Kautza. 2013. Riparian swallows as integrators of landscape change in a multiuse river system: implications for aquatic-to-terrestrial transfers of contaminants. Science of the Total Environment 463-464: 42-50. (3.16)

J19. Sullivan, S.M.P. 2013. Stream food web δ13C and geomorphology are tightly coupled in mountain drainages of northern Idaho. Freshwater Science 32: 606-621. (1.42)

J18. Sullivan, S.M.P. 2012. Geomorphic-biotic relationships highly variable between headwater and network mountain streams of northern Idaho, USA. Journal of the American Water Resources Association 48: 1221-1232. (1.96)

J17. *Kautza, A. and S.M.P. Sullivan. 2012. Using a process-based catchment-scale model for enhancing field-based stream assessments and predicting stream fish assemblages. Aquatic Conservation: Marine and Freshwater Ecosystems 22: 511-525. (1.92)

J16. Cianfrani, C.M., Sullivan, S.M.P., Hession, C.W., and M.C. Watzin. 2012. A multitaxonomic approach to understanding local- versus watershed-scale influences on stream biota in the Lake Champlain Basin, Vermont, USA. River Research and Applications 28: 973-988. (2.43)

J15. Sullivan, S.M.P. and K.T. Vierling. 2012. Exploring the influences of multiscale environmental factors on the American dipper (Cinclus mexicanus). Ecography 35: 624-636. (5.12)

J14. *Kautza, A. and S.M.P. Sullivan. 2012. Relative effects of local- and landscape-scale environmental factors on stream fish assemblages: evidence from Ohio and Idaho, USA. Fundamental and Applied Limnology 180: 259-270. (1.19)

J13. *Jackson, B.K., Sullivan, S.M.P., and R. Malison. 2012. Wildfire severity mediates fluxes of plant material and terrestrial invertebrates to mountain streams. Forest Ecology and Management 278: 27-34. (2.77)

J12. Sullivan, S.M.P. and A.D. Rodewald. 2012. In a state of flux: the energetic pathways that move contaminants from aquatic to terrestrial environments (Invited). Environmental Toxicology and Chemistry 31: 1175-1183. (2.62)

J11. Sullivan, S.M.P. and M.C. Watzin. 2010. Towards a functional understanding of the effects of sediment aggradation on stream fish condition. River Research and Applications 26: 1298-1314. (1.82)

J10. Cianfrani, C.M., Sullivan, S.M.P., Hession, W.C., and M.C. Watzin. 2009. Mixed stream channel morphologies: implications for fish community diversity. Aquatic Conservation: Marine and Freshwater Ecosystems 19: 147-156. (1.48)

J9. *Jackson, B.K. and S.M.P. Sullivan. 2009. Influence of wildfire severity on riparian plant community heterogeneity in an Idaho, USA wilderness. Forest Ecology and Management 259: 24-32. (1.95)

J8. Sullivan, S.M.P. and K.T. Vierling. 2009. Experimental and ecological implications of evening bird surveys in stream-riparian ecosystems (Feature Article). Environmental Management 44: 789-799. (1.41)

J7. Sullivan, S.M.P. and M.C. Watzin. 2009. Stream–floodplain connectivity and fish assemblage diversity in the Champlain Valley, Vermont, U.S.A. Journal of Fish Biology 74: 1394-1418. (1.23)

J6. Sullivan, S.M.P., and M.C. Watzin. 2008. Relating stream physical habitat condition and concordance of biotic productivity across multiple taxa. Canadian Journal of Fisheries and Aquatic Sciences 65: 2667–2677. (2.28)

J5. Braatne, J.H., Sullivan, S.M.P., and E. Chamberlain, E. 2007. Leaf decomposition and stream macroinvertebrate colonisation of Japanese Knotweed, an invasive plant species. International Review of Hydrobiology 92(6): 656-665. (1.06)

J4. Sullivan, S.M.P., Watzin, M.C, and W.S. Keeton. 2007. A riverscape perspective on habitat associations among riverine bird assemblages in the Lake Champlain Basin, USA. Landscape Ecology 22: 1169-1186. (2.06)

J3. Sullivan, S.M.P., Watzin, M.C. and W.C. Hession. 2006. Influence of stream geomorphic condition on fish communities in Vermont, USA. Freshwater Biology 51: 1811-1826. (2.50)

J2. Sullivan, S.M.P., Watzin, M.C. and W.C. Hession. 2006. Differences in the reproductive ecology of belted kingfishers (Ceryle alcyon) across streams with varying geomorphology and habitat quality. Waterbirds: The International Journal of Waterbird Biology 29(3): 258-270. (0.48)

J1. Sullivan, S.M.P., Watzin, M.C. and W.C. Hession. 2004. Understanding stream geomorphic state in relation to ecological integrity: evidence using habitat assessments and macroinvertebrates. Environmental Management 34(5): 669-683. (0.91)

Book Chapters:

BC5. Bohenek, J. and S.M.P. Sullivan (corresponding author). In press. Inland waters – rivers: land use and water quality. In: “Encyclopedia of inland waters, 2nd edition, eds. T. Mehner and K. Tockner. Elsevier, Amsterdam.

BC4. Sullivan, S.M.P. and D.A. Cristol. 2020. Ecological networks as a framework for understanding and predicting contaminant movement across the land-water interface. Pages 299-342 in: “Contaminants and ecological subsidies: the land-water interface”, eds. Kraus, J.M., Waters, D.M., and M.A. Mills. SpringerNature, Switzerland.

BC3. Sullivan, S.M.P., Manning, D.W.P, St Jacques, J.-M., and R. Moncayo-Estrada. 2019. Multiple stressors in North America: perspectives for the New World. Pages 157-178 in: “Multiple stressors in river ecosystems: status, impacts, and prospects for the future”, Sabater, S., A. Elosegi, A., and R. Ludwig (eds). Academic Press (Elsevier), Amsterdam.

BC2. Vierling, K.T. and S.M.P. Sullivan. 2018. Ecosystem and landscape management and planning. Pages 853-881 in: “Ornithology: Foundation, Critique, and Application”, eds. Morrison, M.L., Rodewald, A.D., Voelker, G., Colón, M.R. and J. Prather. Johns Hopkins University Press, Maryland.

BC1. *Jackson, B.J., Sullivan, S.M.P., Baxter, C.V., and R. Malison. 2015. Stream-riparian ecosystems and mixed- and high-severity fire. Pages 118-148 in: “The ecological importance of mixed-severity fires: nature's Phoenix”, eds. DellaSala, D.A. and C.T. Hanson. Elsevier, Amsterdam.

Conference Proceedings and Other Scholarly Contributions:

CPSC8. Sullivan, S.M.P. 2020. Declaration of Dr. S. Mažeika Patricio Sulliván in Support of Preliminary Injunction to Prevent Implementation of the Navigable Waters Protection Rule. Case No. 3:20-cv-03005-DMR in the United States District Court for the Northern District of California. Plaintiffs: State of California by and through Attorney General Xavier Becerra and California State Water Resources Control Board, State of New York, State of Connecticut, State of Illinois, State of Maine, State of Maryland, State of Michigan, State of New Jersey, State of New Mexico, State of North Carolina ex. Rel. Attorney General Joshua H. Stein, State of Oregon, State of Rhode Island, State of Vermont, State of Washington, State of Wisconsin, Commonwealths of Massachusetts and Virginia, the North Carolina Department of Environmental Quality, the District of Columbia, and the City of New York. Defendants: Andrew R. Wheeler, as Administrator of the US EPA; R.D. James, as Asst. Secretary of the Army for Civil Works; and the US Army Corps of Engineers.

CPSC7. Sullivan, S.M.P., Rains, M.C., Rodewald, A.D., Ali, G., Rosi, E., Fausch, K.D., Tank, J.L., Brooks, R.P., Gooseff, M.N., Fennessy, M.S. Murphy, M.T., Meyer, J.L., and Allan, J.D., and H.M. Valett. 2020. Input on Science Advisory Board Commentary on the Proposed Rule Defining the Scope of Waters Federally Regulated Under the Clean Water Act (10/16/19) – “Commentary on Revised Definition of ‘Waters of the United States’(84 FR 4154)”.

CPSC6. Sullivan, S.M.P., Rains, M.C., Rodewald, A.D., Ali, G., Rosi, E., Fausch, K.D., Tank, J.L., Brooks, R.P., Gooseff, M.N., Fennessy, M.S. Murphy, M.T., Meyer, J.L., and J.D. Allan. 2019. Comment Letter to Federal Register on Revised Definition of “Waters of the United States” (84 FR 4154; Docket ID No. EPA-HQ-OW-2018-0149).

CPSC5. Rodewald, A.D., Aldous, A., Ali, G., Allan, J.A., Benda, L., Bernhardt, E.D., Brooks, R.P., Fausch, K., Fennessy, M.S., Gooseff, M., Harvey, J. Hawkins, C., Johnson, L., Josselyn, M., Kalin, L., Kolm, K., Meyer, J., Murphy, M., Patten, D., Rains, M., Reddy, R., Rosi-Marshall, E., Stanford, J., Sullivan, S.M.P., Tank, J.L., Valett, M., and W. Whol. 2014. Letter to Gina McCarthy. October 17, 2014. SAB Review of the Draft EPA Report Connectivity of Streams and Wetlands to Downstream Waters: A Review and Synthesis of the Scientific Evidence. U.S. Environmental Protection Agency, Washington D.C., USA.

CPSC4. Sullivan, S.M.P., and B. Joseph. 2010. Learning from the past: An ecolinguistic approach to reconstructing and predicting biocomplexity in Lithuanian watersheds. Societas Linguistica Europaea 43rd Annual Meeting Book of Abstracts. Vilnius, Lithuania. Vilniaus Universiteto Leidykla. (September):1-233.

CPSC3. Cianfrani, C.M., Sullivan, S.M.P., Hession, W.C. and M.C. Watzin. 2006. Effects of land use, physical habitat type, and stream geomorphology at multiple spatial scales on fish community diversity. Eos Transactions, AGU. 87(36), Joint Assembly Supplement, Abstract H51B-02.

CPSC2. Cianfrani, C.M., Hession, W.C., Watzin, M.C., and S.M.P. Sullivan. 2005. Linking stream geomorphology, watershed condition, and aquatic ecosystem health. In G.E. Moglen (editor), Managing watersheds for human and natural impacts: engineering, ecological, and economic challenges. Proceedings of the 2005 Watershed Management Conference, July 19-22, 2005, Williamsburg, VA. American Society of Civil Engineers, Reston, VA (CD-ROM).

CPSC1. Hession, W.C., Watzin, M.C., Cianfrani, C.M., and S.M.P. Sullivan. 2005. Linking watershed land use, stream geomorphology, and aquatic biodiversity in a hierarchical classification scheme. Eos Transactions, AGU. 86(18), Joint Assembly Supplement, Abstract B52A-04.