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Page 1467, results 36651 - 36675

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Not all publications have extents, not all extents are completely accurate
Behavior and movement of adult summer steelhead following collection and release, lower Cowlitz River, Washington, 2012--2013
Tobias J. Kock, Theresa L. Liedtke, Brian K. Ekstrom, Dennis W. Rondorf, Chris Gleizes, Wolf Dammers, Scott Gibson, Jamie Murphy
2013, Open-File Report 2013-1116
Executive SummaryHistorically, adult summer steelhead Oncorhynchus mykiss returning to hatcheries on the lower Cowlitz River were sometimes transported and released in the river (recycled) to provide additional angling opportunity for the popular sport fishery in the basin. However, this practice has not been used in recent years because of concerns...
Multiscale sagebrush rangeland habitat modeling in the Gunnison Basin of Colorado
Collin G. Homer, Cameron L. Aldridge, Debra K. Meyer, Spencer J. Schell
2013, Open-File Report 2013-1049
North American sagebrush-steppe ecosystems have decreased by about 50 percent since European settlement. As a result, sagebrush-steppe dependent species, such as the Gunnison sage-grouse, have experienced drastic range contractions and population declines. Coordinated ecosystem-wide research, integrated with monitoring and management activities, is needed to help maintain existing sagebrush habitats; however,...
Coastal topography–Northeast Atlantic coast, post-hurricane Sandy, 2012
Hilary F. Stockdon, Kara S. Doran, Kristin L. Sopkin, Kathryn E. L. Smith, Xan Fredericks
2013, Data Series 765
This Data Series contains lidar-derived bare-earth (BE) topography, dune elevations, and mean-high-water shoreline position datasets for most sandy beaches for Fire Island, New York, and from Cape Henlopen, Delaware to Cape Lookout, North Carolina. The data were acquired post-Hurricane Sandy, which made landfall as an extratropical cyclone on October 29,...
The U.S. Geological Survey Climate Geo Data Portal: an integrated broker for climate and geospatial data
David L. Blodgett
2013, Fact Sheet 2013-3019
The increasing availability of downscaled climate projections and other data products that summarize or predict climate conditions, is making climate data use more common in research and management. Scientists and decisionmakers often need to construct ensembles and compare climate hindcasts and future projections for particular spatial areas. These tasks generally...
Determination of selenium in fish from designated critical habitat in the Gunnison River, Colorado, March through October, 2012
Thomas W. May, Michael J. Walther
2013, Open-File Report 2013-1104
This report presents results for the summer 2012 sam-pling of muscle plugs from common carp (Cyprinus carpio), bonytail chub (Gila elegans), Colorado pikeminnow (Ptycho-cheilus lucius), and razorback suckers (Xyrauchen texanus) inhabiting critical habitat in the Gunnison River in western Colorado. Total selenium in fish muscle plugs was determinedby instrumental neutron...
Geochemical results from stream-water and stream-sediment samples collected in Colorado and New Mexico
Philip L. Hageman, Andrew S. Todd, Kathleen S. Smith, Ed DeWitt, Mathew P. Zeigler
2013, Open-File Report 2013-1064
Scientists from the U.S. Geological Survey are studying the relationship between watershed lithology and stream-water chemistry. As part of this effort, 60 stream-water samples and 43 corresponding stream-sediment samples were collected in 2010 and 2011 from locations in Colorado and New Mexico. Sample sites were selected from small to midsize...
Estimating irrigation water use in the humid eastern United States
Sara B. Levin, Phillip J. Zarriello
2013, Scientific Investigations Report 2013-5066
Accurate accounting of irrigation water use is an important part of the U.S. Geological Survey National Water-Use Information Program and the WaterSMART initiative to help maintain sustainable water resources in the Nation. Irrigation water use in the humid eastern United States is not well characterized because of inadequate reporting and...
Seventy-five years of science—The U.S. Geological Survey’s Western Fisheries Research Center
Gary A. Wedemeyer
2013, General Information Product 149
As of January 2010, 75 years have elapsed since Dr. Frederic Fish initiated the pioneering research program that would evolve into today’s Western Fisheries Research Center (WFRC). Fish began his research working alone in the basement of the recently opened Fisheries Biological Laboratory on Lake Union in Seattle, Washington. WFRC’s...
Evaluation of the potential for hysteresis in index-velocity ratings for the Chicago Sanitary and Ship Canal near Lemont, Illinois
P. Ryan Jackson, Sumit Sinha, Som Dutta, Kevin K. Johnson, James J. Duncker, Marcelo H. Garcia
2013, Scientific Investigations Report 2013-5095
The U.S. Geological Survey (USGS) is responsible for monitoring flows in the Chicago Sanitary and Ship Canal (CSSC) near Lemont, Illinois, as a part of the Lake Michigan Diversion Accounting overseen by the U.S. Army Corps of Engineers, Chicago District. Lake Michigan Diversion Accounting is mandated by a U.S. Supreme...
Determination of low-level mercury in coralline aragonite by calcination-isotope dilution-inductively coupled plasma-mass spectrometry and its application to Diploria specimens from Castle Harbour, Bermuda
Carl H. Lamborg, Gretchen J. Swarr, Konrad A. Hughen, Ross J. Jones, Scott Birdwhistell, Kathryn Furby, Sujata A. Murty, Nancy G. Prouty, Chun-Mao Tseng
2013, Geochimica et Cosmochimica Acta (109) 27-37
We have developed a technique that combines a high temperature quartz furnace with inductively coupled plasma-mass spectrometry for the determination of Hg stored in the annual CaCO3 bands found in coral skeletons. Substantial matrix effects, presumably due to the discontinuous introduction of CO2 to the gas stream, were corrected for by...
Using diets to reveal overlap and egg predation among benthivorous fishes in Lake Michigan
Justin G. Mychek-Londer, David B. Bunnell, Wendylee Stott, James S. Diana, John R. P. French III, Margret Chriscinske
2013, Transactions of the American Fisheries Society (142) 492-504
Ecological stability in the Laurentian Great Lakes has been altered by nonindigenous species, such as the Round Goby Neogobius melanostomus and dreissenid mussels, and by declines in native amphipods Diporeia spp. We evaluated whether these changes could influence diet overlap between three benthivorous fishes (Slimy Sculpin Cottus cognatus, Deepwater Sculpin...
Total dissolved gas and water temperature in the lower Columbia River, Oregon and Washington, water year 2012: Quality-assurance data and comparison to water-quality standards
Dwight Q. Tanner, Heather M. Bragg, Matthew W. Johnston
2013, Open-File Report 2012-1256
Significant Findings Air is entrained in water as it is flows through the spillways of dams, which causes an increase in the concentration of total dissolved gas in the water downstream from the dams. The elevated concentrations of total dissolved gas can adversely affect fish and other freshwater aquatic life. An...
Aquatic insect assemblages associated with subalpine stream segment types in relict glaciated headwaters
Joshua S. Kubo, Christian E. Torgersen, Susan M. Bolton, Anne A. Weekes, Robert I. Gara
2013, Insect Conservation and Diversity (6) 422-434
1. Aquatic habitats and biotic assemblages in subalpine headwaters are sensitive to climate and human impacts. Understanding biotic responses to such perturbations and the contribution of high-elevation headwaters to riverine biodiversity requires the assessment of assemblage composition among habitat types. We compared aquatic insect assemblages among headwater stream segment types...
Washington's volcanoes: Know your sleeping giants
Carolyn L. Mastin
2013, Washington Trails
Northwest hikers frequently hand down rich traditions of favorite trails to younger generations. While these multi-generational traditions provide the illusion of landscape permanence, observant hikers often witness geologic change in progress—rockfall, water erosion, and glacier change. You might recognize that your views of mountain landscapes are a little bit different...
Evapotranspiration and water balance of an anthropogenic coastal desert wetland: responses to fire, inflows and salinities
Edward P. Glenn, Lourdes Mexicano, Jaqueline Garcia-Hernandez, Pamela L. Nagler, Martha M. Gomez-Sapiens, Dawei Tang, Marcelo A. Lomeli, Jorge Ramírez-Hernández, Francisco Zamora-Arroyo
2013, Ecological Engineering (59) 176-184
Evapotranspiration (ET) and other water balance components were estimated for Cienega de Santa Clara, an anthropogenic brackish wetland in the delta of the Colorado River in Mexico. The marsh is in the Biosphere Reserve of the Upper Gulf of California and Delta of the Colorado River, and supports a high...
Estimating irrigation water demand using an improved method and optimizing reservoir operation for water supply and hydropower generation: a case study of the Xinfengjiang reservoir in southern China
Yiping Wu, Ji Chen
2013, Agricultural Water Management (116) 110-121
The ever-increasing demand for water due to growth of population and socioeconomic development in the past several decades has posed a worldwide threat to water supply security and to the environmental health of rivers. This study aims to derive reservoir operating rules through establishing a multi-objective optimization model for the...
Factors influencing storm-generated suspended-sediment concentrations and loads in four basins of contrasting land use, humid-tropical Puerto Rico
Allen C. Gellis
2013, Catena (104) 39-57
The significant characteristics controlling the variability in storm-generated suspended-sediment loads and concentrations were analyzed for four basins of differing land use (forest, pasture, cropland, and urbanizing) in humid-tropical Puerto Rico. Statistical analysis involved stepwise regression on factor scores. The explanatory variables were attributes of flow, hydrograph peaks, and rainfall, categorized...
Evaporative losses from soils covered by physical and different types of biological soil crusts
S. Chamizo, Y. Canton, F. Domingo, J. Belnap
2013, Hydrological Processes (27) 324-332
Evaporation of soil moisture is one of the most important processes affecting water availability in semiarid ecosystems. Biological soil crusts, which are widely distributed ground cover in these ecosystems, play a recognized role on water processes. Where they roughen surfaces, water residence time and thus infiltration can be greatly enhanced,...
Field measurement of basal forces generated by erosive debris flows
S.W. McCoy, G.E. Tucker, J. W. Kean, J. A. Coe
2013, Journal of Geophysical Research F: Earth Surface (118) 589-602
It has been proposed that debris flows cut bedrock valleys in steeplands worldwide, but field measurements needed to constrain mechanistic models of this process remain sparse due to the difficulty of instrumenting natural flows. Here we present and analyze measurements made using an automated sensor network, erosion bolts, and a...
Capture of white sturgeon larvae downstream of The Dalles Dam, Columbia River, Oregon and Washington, 2012
Michael J. Parsley, Eric Kofoot
2013, Open-File Report 2013-1110
Wild-spawned white sturgeon (Acipenser transmontanus) larvae captured and reared in aquaculture facilities and subsequently released, are increasingly being used in sturgeon restoration programs in the Columbia River Basin. A reconnaissance study was conducted to determine where to deploy nets to capture white sturgeon larvae downstream of a known white sturgeon...
Return period adjustment for runoff coefficients based on analysis in undeveloped Texas watersheds
Nirajan Dhakal, Xing Fang, William H. Asquith, Theodore G. Cleveland, David B. Thompson
2013, Journal of Irrigation and Drainage Engineering (139) 476-482
The rational method for peak discharge (Qp) estimation was introduced in the 1880s. The runoff coefficient (C) is a key parameter for the rational method that has an implicit meaning of rate proportionality, and the C has been declared a function of the annual return period by various researchers. Rate-based...
Optimizing stream water mercury sampling for calculation of fish bioaccumulation factors
Karen Riva-Murray, Paul M. Bradley, Celeste A. Journey, Mark E. Brigham, Barbara C. Scudder Eikenberry, Christopher Knightes, Daniel T. Button
2013, Environmental Science & Technology (47) 5904-5912
Mercury (Hg) bioaccumulation factors (BAFs) for game fishes are widely employed for monitoring, assessment, and regulatory purposes. Mercury BAFs are calculated as the fish Hg concentration (Hgfish) divided by the water Hg concentration (Hgwater) and, consequently, are sensitive to sampling and analysis artifacts for fish and water. We evaluated the...
Regional patterns and proximal causes of the recent snowpack decline in the Rocky Mountains, U.S.
Gregory T. Pederson, Julio L. Betancourt, Gregory J. McCabe
2013, Geophysical Research Letters (40) 1811-1816
We used a first-order, monthly snow model and observations to disentangle seasonal influences on 20th century,regional snowpack anomalies in the Rocky Mountains of western North America, where interannual variations in cool-season (November–March) temperatures are broadly synchronous, but precipitation is typically antiphased north to south and uncorrelated with temperature. Over the...
Evaluation of a new model of aeolian transport in the presence of vegetation
Junran Li, Gregory S. Okin, Jeffrey E. Herrick, Jayne Belnap, Mark E. Miller, Kimberly Vest, Amy E. Draut
2013, Journal of Geophysical Research F: Earth Surface (118) 288-306
Aeolian transport is an important characteristic of many arid and semiarid regions worldwide that affects dust emission and ecosystem processes. The purpose of this paper is to evaluate a recent model of aeolian transport in the presence of vegetation. This approach differs from previous models by accounting for how vegetation...
Estimating instream constituent loads using replicate synoptic sampling, Peru Creek, Colorado
Robert L. Runkel, Katherine Walton-Day, Briant A. Kimball, Philip L. Verplanck, David A. Nimick
2013, Journal of Hydrology (489) 26-41
The synoptic mass balance approach is often used to evaluate constituent mass loading in streams affected by mine drainage. Spatial profiles of constituent mass load are used to identify sources of contamination and prioritize sites for remedial action. This paper presents a field scale study in which replicate synoptic...