Item talk:Q47553
From geokb
orcid:
meta: status_code: 200 timestamp: '2023-10-20T09:24:59.449610' url: https://pub.orcid.org/v3.0/0000-0001-6063-9867/record orcid: activities: employments: affiliation-group: - external-ids: external-id: [] last-modified-date: value: 1472605695611 summaries: - employment-summary: created-date: value: 1472605695611 department-name: Biological Resources Discipline display-index: '0' end-date: null external-ids: null last-modified-date: value: 1472605695611 organization: address: city: Cook country: US region: WA disambiguated-organization: disambiguated-organization-identifier: '2928' disambiguation-source: RINGGOLD name: US Geological Survey path: /0000-0001-6063-9867/employment/2196600 put-code: 2196600 role-title: Project Chief/Lead Research Fishery Biologist source: assertion-origin-client-id: null assertion-origin-name: null assertion-origin-orcid: null source-client-id: null source-name: value: Theresa Liedtke source-orcid: host: orcid.org path: 0000-0001-6063-9867 uri: https://orcid.org/0000-0001-6063-9867 start-date: day: value: '07' month: value: 09 year: value: '1994' url: null visibility: public last-modified-date: value: 1472605695611 path: /0000-0001-6063-9867/employments history: claimed: true completion-date: null creation-method: DIRECT deactivation-date: null last-modified-date: value: 1689008052765 source: null submission-date: value: 1472605542515 verified-email: true verified-primary-email: true person: keywords: keyword: - content: lamprey created-date: value: 1681857355060 display-index: 1 last-modified-date: value: 1681857355060 path: /0000-0001-6063-9867/keywords/3137586 put-code: 3137586 source: assertion-origin-client-id: null assertion-origin-name: null assertion-origin-orcid: null source-client-id: null source-name: value: Theresa Liedtke source-orcid: host: orcid.org path: 0000-0001-6063-9867 uri: https://orcid.org/0000-0001-6063-9867 visibility: public last-modified-date: value: 1681857355060 path: /0000-0001-6063-9867/keywords name: created-date: value: 1472605542744 credit-name: null family-name: value: Liedtke given-names: value: Theresa last-modified-date: value: 1472605542744 path: 0000-0001-6063-9867 source: null visibility: public
usgs_staff_profile:
meta: status_code: 200 timestamp: '2023-09-30T17:12:04.063006' url: https://www.usgs.gov/staff-profiles/theresa-marty-liedtke profile: abstracts: [] affiliations: [] education: - M.S. Zoology/Marine Biology, University of Hawaii, Honolulu, HI - B.S. Biology, Illinois State University, Normal, IL email: tliedtke@usgs.gov expertise_terms: - Application of Radio and Acoustic Telemetry Technologies - Endangered/Threatened Species - Fish Movements and Behavior - Fish Passage and Survival (Especially Juvenile Salmon) - Fish Performance and Stress Response - Forage Fishes in Puget Sound - Pacific Lamprey and Other Native lampreys - Predator-Prey Interactions - Salmonid Population and Behavior Monitoring - Transmitter Implantation Techniques honors: [] intro_statements: - Marty Liedtke is a Project Leader at the Columbia River Research Laboratory with 25+ years of experience focused on movement, behavior, and performance of fishes in both freshwater and marine systems. name: Theresa "Marty" Liedtke name_qualifier: null orcid: 0000-0001-6063-9867 organization_link: https://www.usgs.gov/centers/western-fisheries-research-center organization_name: Western Fisheries Research Center personal_statement: My research is currently focused on Pacific Lamprey and other native lampreys in the Columbia River Basin and forage fishes in Puget Sound. My team evaluates juvenile and larval lamprey performance under controlled laboratory conditions to address management needs such as dewatering of lamprey habitat, interactions with screens at water diversions, and dredging impacts. A newly developed, prototype acoustic telemetry transmitter, designed for use in lamprey and eels allowed us to conduct one of the first acoustic telemetry studies of juvenile Pacific lamprey migration movements. Prior to the development of this transmitter such studies were not possible due to the small size of these fish. In Puget Sound we have focused on Pacific sand lance and surf smelt and have evaluated spawning site selection, responses to climate change, food habits, and rearing habitats. Most recently we are investigating linkages between forage fishes and legacy and current use contaminants in both field and laboratory settings.Historically my team has conducted radio and acoustic telemetry studies to evaluate juvenile salmon passage and survival at hydroelectric dams in the Columbia River Basin. We have used telemetry to monitor the behavior and movements of many fishes, including adult salmonids using transmitters with sensors (temperature, motion). I have developed standard operating procedures for surgical implantation of transmitters and regularly train others to design tagging operations and conduct tagging for telemetry studies. I am interested in the performance of fish equipped with telemetry transmitters, specifically comparing the stress response, swimming performance, buoyancy compensation, and predator avoidance ability of tagged fish to untagged fish. professional_experience: - 1994 to Present - Research Fish Biologist, U.S. Geological Survey, Western Fisheries Research Center, Columbia River Research Laboratory, Cook, WA title: Research Fish Biologist