Daisuke Goto
University of Nebraska–Lincoln
36 Papers
172 Citations
Daisuke Goto is an academic researcher from University of Nebraska–Lincoln. The author has contributed to research in topics: Population & Trophic level. The author has an hindex of 13, co-authored 36 publications. Previous affiliations of Daisuke Goto include City University of New York & University of Wisconsin-Madison.
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Papers
Assessing and addressing the re-eutrophication of Lake Erie: Central basin hypoxia
Donald Scavia,J. David Allan,Kristin K. Arend,Steven M. Bartell,Dmitry Beletsky,Nate S. Bosch,Stephen B. Brandt,Ruth D. Briland,Irem Daloğlu,Joseph V. DePinto,David M. Dolan,Mary Anne Evans,Troy M. Farmer,Daisuke Goto,Haejin Han,Tomas O. Höök,Roger L. Knight,Stuart A. Ludsin,Doran M. Mason,Anna M. Michalak,R. Peter Richards,James J. Roberts,Daniel K. Rucinski,Edward S. Rutherford,David J. Schwab,Timothy M. Sesterhenn,Hongyan Zhang,Yuntao Zhou,Yuntao Zhou +28 more
TL;DR: In this paper, recent trends in key eutrophication-related properties, assess their likely ecological impacts, and develop load response curves to guide revised hypoxia-based loading targets called for in the 2012 Great Lakes Water Quality Agreement.
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Bioenhancement of cadmium transfer along a multi-level food chain
TL;DR: The aim of the current investigation was to determine the influence of TAM on the trophic transfer of Cd along an experimental, three-level food chain: Artemia franciscana (brine shrimp)-->Palaemonetes pugio (grass shrimp-->Fundulus heteroclitus (mummichog).
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Eroding productivity of walleye populations in northern Wisconsin lakes
Andrew L. Rypel,Andrew L. Rypel,Andrew L. Rypel,Daisuke Goto,Greg G. Sass,M. Jake Vander Zanden +5 more
TL;DR: This study reveals the crucial link between fish recruitment potential and fish production, helping to explain why the regional walleye fishery is struggling and reveals a need to adapt fisheries management systems collaboratively for future sustainability.
Influences of prey- and predator-dependent processes on cadmium and methylmercury trophic transfer to mummichogs (Fundulus heteroclitus).
Daisuke Goto,William G. Wallace +1 more
TL;DR: The relationship suggests that the majority of CH3Hg and Cd partitioned as TAM in prey were solubilized in the digestive tract of mummichogs.
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Bioenergetic responses of a benthic forage fish (Fundulus heteroclitus) to habitat degradation and altered prey community in polluted salt marshes
Daisuke Goto,William G. Wallace +1 more
TL;DR: It is suggested that pollution-tolerant fishes such as mummichogs may have energetic costs of living in chronically degraded habitats.
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