What happens in an estuary doesn't stay there: patterns of biotic connectivity resulting from long term ecological research
Martha E. Mather, John T. Finn, Christina G. Kennedy, Linda A. Deegan, Joseph M. Smith
2013, Oceanography (26) 168-179
The paucity of data on migratory connections and an incomplete understanding of how mobile organisms use geographically separate areas have been obstacles to understanding coastal dynamics. Research on acoustically tagged striped bass (Morone saxatilis) at the Plum Island Ecosystems (PIE) Long Term Ecological Research site, Massachusetts, documents intriguing patterns of...
Adventures on the roof of the world
David M. Leslie Jr.
2013, BioScience (63) 684-685
To conduct field biology requires tenacity, grit, and flexibility; to endeavor to achieve conservation success requires patience, persistence, and passion. The essence of field biology and the hope for conservation success are both reflected admirably in George B. Schaller's most recent book, Tibet Wild: A Naturalist's Journeys on the Roof of...
A bibliography of all known publications & reports on the Gulf sturgeon, Acipenser oxyrinchus desotoi
Melissa Price, Jennifer Adler, Chanda Littles, April Norem Randolph, Ursula A. Nash, Bethan Gillett, Michael T. Randall, Kenneth J. Sulak, Stephen J. Walsh, Prescott Brownell
2013, Report
This functional bibliography is meant to be a complete and comprehensive bibliography of all discoverable reports containing information on the Gulf Sturgeon (GS). This bibliography contains all known reports presenting, documenting, summarizing, listing, or interpreting information on the GS through 31 December 2013. Report citations are organized into four sections....
The contributions of Donald Lee Johnson to understanding the Quaternary geologic and biogeographic history of the California Channel Islands
Daniel R. Muhs
2013, Monographs of the Western North American Naturalist (7) 1-20
Over a span of 50 years, native Californian Donald Lee Johnson made a number of memorable contributions to our understanding of the California Channel Islands. Among these are (1) recognizing that carbonate dunes, often cemented into eolianite and derived from offshore shelf sediments during lowered sea level, are markers of...
The 2003 and 2007 wildfires in southern California
Jon E. Keeley, Alexandra D. Syphard, C. J. Fotheringham
Sarah Boulter, Jean Palutikof, David John Karoly, Daniela Guitart, editor(s)
2013, Book chapter, Natural disasters and adaptation to climate change
Although many residents of southern California have long recognised that wildfires in the region are an ongoing, constant risk to lives and property, the enormity of the regional fire hazard caught the world’s attention during the southern California firestorms of 2003 (Figure 5.1). Beginning on 21 October, a series of...
A deposit model for magmatic iron-titanium-oxide deposits related to Proterozoic massif anorthosite plutonic suite
Laurel G. Woodruff, Suzanne W. Nicholson, David L. Fey
2013, Scientific Investigations Report 2010-5070-K
This descriptive model for magmatic iron-titanium-oxide (Fe-Ti-oxide) deposits hosted by Proterozoic age massif-type anorthosite and related rock types presents their geological, mineralogical, geochemical, and geoenvironmental attributes. Although these Proterozoic rocks are found worldwide, the majority of known deposits are found within exposed rocks of the Grenville Province, stretching from southwestern...
Annual flood sensitivities to El Niño-Southern Oscillation at the global scale
Philip J. Ward, S. Eisner, M. Florke, Michael D. Dettinger, M. Kummu
2013, Hydrology and Earth System Sciences (18) 47-66
Floods are amongst the most dangerous natural hazards in terms of economic damage. Whilst a growing number of studies have examined how river floods are influenced by climate change, the role of natural modes of interannual climate variability remains poorly understood. We present the first global assessment of the influence...
Late Miocene-Pleistocene evolution of a Rio Grande rift subbasin, Sunshine Valley-Costilla Plain, San Luis Basin, New Mexico and Colorado
C.A. Ruleman, R. A. Thompson, R. R. Shroba, M. Anderson, B. J. Drenth, J. Rotzien, J. Lyon
2013, GSA Special Papers (494) 47-73
The Sunshine Valley-Costilla Plain, a structural subbasin of the greater San Luis Basin of the northern Rio Grande rift, is bounded to the north and south by the San Luis Hills and the Red River fault zone, respectively. Surficial mapping, neotectonic investigations, geochronology, and geophysics demonstrate that the structural, volcanic,...
Songbird use of floodplain and upland forests along the Upper Mississippi River corridor during spring migration
Eileen M. Kirsch, Patricia J. Heglund, Brian R. Gray, Patrick Mckann
2013, The Condor (115) 115-130
The Upper Mississippi River is thought to provide important stopover habitat for migrating landbirds because of its north-south orientation and floodplain forests. The river flows through the Driftless Area of southwestern Wisconsin and southeastern Minnesota where forests are plentiful, yet forests of the floodplain and Driftless Area uplands differ greatly...
Aftershocks of the 2010 Mw 7.2 El Mayor-Cucapah earthquake revealcomplex faulting in the Yuha Desert, California
K. Kroll, Elizabeth S. Cochran, K. Richards-Dinger, Danielle Sumy
2013, Journal of Geophysical Research B: Solid Earth (118) 6146-6164
We detect and precisely locate over 9500 aftershocks that occurred in the Yuha Desert region during a 2 month period following the 4 April 2010 Mw 7.2 El Mayor-Cucapah (EMC) earthquake. Events are relocated using a series of absolute and relative relocation procedures that include Hypoinverse, Velest, and hypoDD. Location...
Avian disease assessment in seabirds and non-native passerines birds at Midway Atoll NWR
Dennis A. LaPointe, Carter T. Atkinson, John L. Klavitter
2013, Report, Hawaii Cooperative Studies Unit Technical Report
Midway Atoll in the Northwestern Hawaiian Islands supports the largest breeding colony of Laysan albatross (Phoebastria immutabilis) in the world and is a proposed site for the translocation of endangered Northwestern Hawaiian Island passerine birds such as the Nihoa finch (Telespiza ultima), Nihoa millerbird (Acrocephalus familiaris kingi), or Laysan finch...
Development of a novel flow cytometric approach to evaluate fish sperm chromatin using fixed samples
Jill A. Jenkins
2013, Conference Paper, Proceedings of the 8th Association for Applied Animal Andrology Biennial Conference
The integrity of the paternal DNA is essential for the accurate transmission of genetic information, yet fertilization is not inhibited by chromatin breakage. Some methods are available for the sensitive detection of DNA damage and can be applied in studies of environmental toxicology, carcinogenesis, aging, and assisted reproduction techniques in...
An effective noise-suppression technique for surface microseismic data
Farnoush Forghani-Arani, Mark Willis, Seth S. Haines, Mike Batzle, Jyoti Behura, Michael Davidson
2013, Geophysics (78) KS85-KS95
The presence of strong surface-wave noise in surface microseismic data may decrease the utility of these data. We implement a technique, based on the distinct characteristics that microseismic signal and noise show in the τ‐p domain, to suppress surface-wave noise in microseismic data. Because most microseismic source mechanisms are deviatoric,...
Blind test of methods for obtaining 2-D near-surface seismic velocity models from first-arrival traveltimes
Colin A. Zelt, Seth Haines, Michael H. Powers, Jacob Sheehan, Siegfried Rohdewald, Curtis Link, Koichi Hayashi, Don Zhao, Hua-wei Zhou, Bethany L. Burton, Uni K. Petersen, Nedra D. Bonal, William E. Doll
2013, Journal of Environmental & Engineering Geophysics (18) 183-194
Seismic refraction methods are used in environmental and engineering studies to image the shallow subsurface. We present a blind test of inversion and tomographic refraction analysis methods using a synthetic first-arrival-time dataset that was made available to the community in 2010. The data are realistic in terms of the near-surface...
High-density grass carp stocking effects on a reservoir invasive plant and water quality
A. Brad Garner, Thomas J. Kwak, Kenneth L. Manuel, D. Hugh Barwick
2013, Journal of Aquatic Plant Management (51) 27-33
Stocking grass carp [Ctenopharyngodon idella (Valenciennes)] is a commonly applied technique to control nuisance aquatic vegetation in reservoirs. Factors that influence the degree of aquatic vegetation control are fish stocking density, regional climate, abundance and species composition of the aquatic plant community, and relative grass carp feeding preferences for plant...
Hydraulically controlled discrete sampling from open boreholes
Philip T. Harte
2013, Groundwater (51) 822-827
Groundwater sampling from open boreholes in fractured-rock aquifers is particularly challenging because of mixing and dilution of fluid within the borehole from multiple fractures. This note presents an alternative to traditional sampling in open boreholes with packer assemblies. The alternative system called ZONFLO (zonal flow) is based on hydraulic control...
The impact environment of the Hadean Earth
Oleg Abramov, David A. Kring Kring, Stephen J. Mojzsis
2013, Chemie der Erde (73) 227-248
Impact bombardment in the first billion years of solar system history determined in large part the initial physical and chemical states of the inner planets and their potential to host biospheres. The range of physical states and thermal consequences of the impact epoch, however, are not well quantified. Here, we...
A non-marine source of variability in Adélie Penguin demography
William R. Fraser, Donna L. Patterson-Fraser, Christine Ribic, Oscar Schofield, Hugh Ducklow
2013, Oceanography (26) 207-209
A primary research objective of the Palmer Long Term Ecological Research (LTER) program has been to identify and understand the factors that regulate the demography of Adélie penguins (Pygoscelis adeliae). In this context, our work has been focused on variability in the marine environment on which this species depends for...
Evaluating spatial overlap and relatedness of white-tailed deer in a chronic wasting disease management zone
Michael D. Samuel, Seth B. Magle, Timothy R. Van Deelen, Stacie J. Robinson, Nancy E. Mathews
2013, PLoS ONE (8)
Wildlife disease transmission, at a local scale, can occur from interactions between infected and susceptible conspecifics or from a contaminated environment. Thus, the degree of spatial overlap and rate of contact among deer is likely to impact both direct and indirect transmission of infectious diseases such chronic wasting disease (CWD)...
Radio-transmitters do not affect seasonal productivity of female Golden-winged Warblers
Henry M. Streby, Sean M. Peterson, Callie Gesmundo, Michael K. Johnson, Alexander C. Fish, Justin A. Lehman, David E. Andersen
2013, Journal of Field Ornithology (84) 316-321
Investigating the potential effects of handling and marking techniques on study animals is important for correct interpretation of research results and to effect progress in data-collection methods. Few investigators have compared the reproductive output of radio-tagged and non-radio-tagged songbirds, and no one to date has examined the possible effect of...
Do singing-ground surveys reflect american woodcock abundance in the western Great Lakes region?
Matthew R. Nelson, David E. Andersen
2013, Wildlife Society Bulletin (37) 585-595
The Singing-ground Survey (SGS) is the primary monitoring tool used to assess population status and trends of American woodcock (Scolopax minor). Like most broad-scale surveys, the SGS cannot be directly validated because there are no independent estimates of abundance of displaying male American woodcock at an appropriate spatial scale. Furthermore,...
The effects of force-fledging and premature fledging on the survival of nestling songbirds
Henry M. Streby, Sean M. Peterson, Justin A. Lehman, Gunnar R. Kramer, Kelly J. Iknayan, David E. Andersen
2013, Ibis (155) 616-620
Despite the broad consensus that force-fledging of nestling songbirds lowers their probability of survival and therefore should be generally avoided by researchers, that presumption has not been tested. We used radiotelemetry to monitor the survival of fledglings of OvenbirdsSeiurus aurocapilla and Golden-winged Warblers Vermivora chrysoptera that we unintentionally force-fledged (i.e. nestlings left the...
Accuracy of stream habitat interpolations across spatial scales
Kenneth R. Sheehan, Stuart A. Welsh
2013, Journal of Geographic Information System (5) 606-612
Stream habitat data are often collected across spatial scales because relationships among habitat, species occurrence, and management plans are linked at multiple spatial scales. Unfortunately, scale is often a factor limiting insight gained from spatial analysis of stream habitat data. Considerable cost is often expended to collect data at several...
Niche overlap, threshold food densities, and limits to prey depletion for a diving duck assemblage in an estuarine bay
James R. Lovvorn, Susan De La Cruz, John Y. Takekawa, Laura E. Shaskey, Samantha E. Richman
2013, Marine Ecology Progress Series (476) 251-268
Planning for marine conservation often requires estimates of the amount of habitat needed to support assemblages of interacting species. During winter in subtidal San Pablo Bay, California, the 3 main diving duck species are lesser scaup Aythya affinis (LESC), greater scaup A. marila (GRSC), and surf scoter Melanitta perspicillata (SUSC), which all feed almost entirely on...
Sedimentation in mountain streams: A review of methods of measurement
Lara B. Hedrick, James T. Anderson, Stuart A. Welsh, Lian-Shin Lin
2013, Natural Resources (4) 92-104
The goal of this review paper is to provide a list of methods and devices used to measure sediment accumulation in wadeable streams dominated by cobble and gravel substrate. Quantitative measures of stream sedimentation are useful to monitor and study anthropogenic impacts on stream biota, and stream sedimentation is measurable...