Impacts of climate change on ecosystem services
Peter Kareiva, Mary Ruckleshaus, Katie K. Arkema, Gary Geller, Evan Girvetz, Dave Goodrich, Erik Nelson, Virginia Matzek, Malin Pinsky, Walt Reid, Martin Saunders, Darius J. Semmens, Heather Tallis
2012, Book chapter, Impacts of climate change on biodiversity, ecosystems, and ecosystem services: technical input to the 2013 National Climate Assessment
Key Findings By 2050, climate change will triple the fraction of counties in the U.S. that are at high or extremely high risk of outstripping their water supplies (from 10 percent to 32 percent). The most at risk areas in the U.S. are the West, Southwest and Great Plains regions....
Unraveling Alleghanian orogenesis in southern Connecticut: The history of the Lyme Dome
Gregory J. Walsh, John N. Aleinikoff, Robert P. Wintsch
2012, Conference Paper, Guidebook for fieldtrips in Connecticut and Massachusetts
No abstract available....
Bedrock basins in the Sierra Nevada, Alta California
James G. Moore, Mary A. Gorden, Thomas W. Sisson
2012, California Archaeology (4) 99-122
A 360-km-long belt of more than 1,400 meter-sized granitic bedrock basins occurs at 1,200 to 2,500 m elevation on the west flank of the Sierra Nevada. The circular, smooth basins are 0.7 to 1.7 min diameter and are commonly 50 to 1,000 liters in volume. They are man-made as shown by their restricted...
Landslide inventory maps of the Gales Creek quadrangle, Washington County, Oregon
W. J. Burns, S. Duplantis, K. A. Mickelson, J. M. Spritzer, Ray Wells
2012, Interactive Map Series 46
No abstract available....
Significant motions between GPS sites in the New Madrid region: implications for seismic hazard
Arthur Frankel, Robert Smalley, J. Paul
2012, Bulletin of the Seismological Society of America (102) 479-489
Position time series from Global Positioning System (GPS) stations in the New Madrid region were differenced to determine the relative motions between stations. Uncertainties in rates were estimated using a three‐component noise model consisting of white, flicker, and random walk noise, following the methodology of Langbein, 2004. Significant motions of...
Basin thickness variations at the Junction of the Eastern California Shear Zone and the San Bernardino Mountains, California: How thick could the Pliocene sections be?
Victoria E. Langenheim, Tammy L. Surko, Phillip A. Armstrong, Jonathan C. Matti
2012, Conference Paper, Searching for the Pliocene: southern exposures, Annual Desert Symposium Proceedings
We estimate the thickness of Neogene basin fill along the junction of the Eastern California Shear Zone and the North Frontal thrust system of the San Bernardino Mountains using gravity data with geologic and well log constraints. The geometry of the basin fill is of interest for groundwater assessment and location of potential...
Subsidy or subtraction: how do terrestrial inputs influence consumer production in lakes?
Stuart E. Jones, Christopher T. Solomon, Brian Weidel
2012, Freshwater Reviews (5) 37-49
Cross-ecosystem fluxes are ubiquitous in food webs and are generally thought of as subsidies to consumer populations. Yet external or allochthonous inputs may in fact have complex and habitat-specific effects on recipient ecosystems. In lakes, terrestrial inputs of organic carbon contribute to basal resource availability, but can also reduce resource...
Life history characteristics of a recovering lake whitefish Coregonus clupeaformis stock in the Detroit River, North America
Edward F. Roseman, Gregory W. Kennedy, Bruce A. Manny, James Boase, James McFee
Ross F. Tallman, Kimberly L. Howland, Michael D. Rennie, Kenneth Mills, editor(s)
2012, Advances in Limnology (63) 477-501
The Detroit River is part of a channel connecting Lakes Huron and Erie and was once a prolific spawning area for lake whitefish, Coregonus clupeaformis. Large numbers of lake whitefish migrated into the river to spawn where they were harvested by commercial fisheries and for fish culture operations. Prior to...
Application of the control volume mixed finite element method to a triangular discretization
Richard L. Naff
2012, International Journal for Numerical Methods in Engineering (89) 846-868
A two‐dimensional control volume mixed finite element method is applied to the elliptic equation. Discretization of the computational domain is based in triangular elements. Shape functions and test functions are formulated on the basis of an equilateral reference triangle with unit edges. A pressure support based on...
Environmental and medical geochemistry in urban disaster response and preparedness
Geoffrey S. Plumlee, Suzette A. Morman, A. Cook
2012, Elements (8) 451-457
History abounds with accounts of cities that were destroyed or significantly damaged by natural or anthropogenic disasters, such as volcanic eruptions, earthquakes, wildland–urban wildfires, hurricanes, tsunamis, floods, urban firestorms, terrorist attacks, and armed conflicts. Burgeoning megacities place ever more people in the way of harm from future disasters. In addition...
Arsenic-induced biochemical and genotoxic effects and distribution in tissues of Sprague-Dawley rats
Anita K. Patlolla, Todor I. Todorov, Paul B. Tchounwou, Gijsbert van der Voet, Jose A. Centeno
2012, Microchemical Journal (105) 101-107
Arsenic (As) is a well documented human carcinogen. However, its mechanisms of toxic action and carcinogenic potential in animals have not been conclusive. In this research, we investigated the biochemical and genotoxic effects of As and studied its distribution in selected tissues of Sprague–Dawley rats. Four groups of six male...
Pyrite–sulfosalt reactions and semimetal fractionation in the Chinkuashih, Taiwan, copper–gold deposit: A 1 Ma paleo-fumarole
R.W. Henley, Byron R. Berger
2012, Geofluids (12) 245-260
The mineralized fracture system that underlay paleo-fumarole field at Chinkuashih, Taiwan has been exposed by copper–gold mining to depths of about 550 m below the paleo-surface. Its mineralogy and systematic variations in metal and semimetal (Fe, Cu, As, Sb, Bi, Hg, Cd, Sn, Zn, Pb, Se, Te, Au, Ag) concentrations provide...
Productivity and sedimentary δ15N variability for the last 17,000 years along the northern Gulf of Alaska continental slope
Jason A. Addison, Bruce P. Finney, Walter E. Dean, Maureen H. Davies, Alan C. Mix, John M. Jaeger
2012, Paleoceanography (27)
Biogenic opal, organic carbon, organic matter stable isotope, and trace metal data from a well-dated, high-resolution jumbo piston core (EW0408–85JC; 59° 33.3′N, 144° 9.21′W, 682 m water depth) recovered from the northern Gulf of Alaska continental slope reveal changes in productivity and nutrient utilization over the last 17,000 years. Maximum...
Aftershocks halted by static stress shadows
Shinji Toda, Ross S. Stein, Gregory C. Beroza, David Marsan
2012, Nature Geoscience (5) 410-413
Earthquakes impart static and dynamic stress changes to the surrounding crust. Sudden fault slip causes small but permanent—static—stress changes, and passing seismic waves cause large, but brief and oscillatory—dynamic—stress changes. Because both static and dynamic stresses can trigger earthquakes within several rupture dimensions of a mainshock, it has proven difficult...
Ecological impacts of non-native species
David S. Pilliod, R.A. Griffiths, S.L. Kuzmin
Harold Heatwole, John W. Wilkinson, editor(s)
2012, Book chapter, Conservation and decline of amphibians: Ecological aspects, effect of humans, and management
Non-native species are considered one of the greatest threats to freshwater biodiversity worldwide (Drake et al. 1989; Allen and Flecker 1993; Dudgeon et al. 2005). Some of the first hypotheses proposed to explain global patterns of amphibian declines included the effects of non-native species (Barinaga 1990; Blaustein and Wake 1990;...
Loss and modification of habitat
Francis Lemckert, Stephen Hecnar, David S. Pilliod
2012, Book chapter, Conservation and decline of amphibians: Ecological aspects, effect of humans, and management
Amphibians live in a wide variety of habitats around the world, many of which have been modified or destroyed by human activities. Most species have unique life history characteristics adapted to specific climates, habitats (e.g., lentic, lotic, terrestrial, arboreal, fossorial, amphibious), and local conditions that provide suitable areas for reproduction,...
New Zealand’s deadliest quake sounds alarm for cities on fault lines
Erol Kalkan
2012, Natural Hazards Observer (36) 1-4
The catastrophic Christ Church Earthquake is a strong reminder to engineers and scientists of the hazards pose by fault lines, both mapped and unknown, near major cities. In February 2011, the relatively moderate earthquake that struck the cities of Christchurch and Lyttleton in the Canterbury region of New Zealand's South...
Mineralogy and environmental geochemistry of historical iron slag, Hopewell Furnace National Historic Site, Pennsylvania, USA
Nadine M. Piatak, Robert R. Seal
2012, Applied Geochemistry (27) 623-643
The Hopewell Furnace National Historic Site in southeastern Pennsylvania, which features an Fe smelter that was operational in the 18th and 19th centuries, is dominated by three slag piles. Pile 1 slag, from the Hopewell Furnace, and pile 2 slag, likely from the nearby Cornwall Furnace, were both produced...
Using computational modeling of river flow with remotely sensed data to infer channel bathymetry
Jonathan M. Nelson, Richard R. McDonald, Paul J. Kinzel, Y. Shimizu
2012, Conference Paper, IAHR Riverflow 2012 Conference Proceedings
As part of an ongoing investigation into the use of computational river flow and morphodynamic models for the purpose of correcting and extending remotely sensed river datasets, a simple method for inferring channel bathymetry is developed and discussed. The method is based on an inversion of the equations expressing conservation...
Observed source parameters for dynamic rupture with non-uniform initial stressand relatively high fracture energy
Nicholas M. Beeler, Brian D. Kilgore, Arthur F. McGarr, Jon Peter B. Fletcher, John R. Evans, Steven R. Baker
2012, Journal of Structural Geology (38) 77-89
We have conducted dynamic rupture propagation experiments to establish the relations between in-source stress drop, fracture energy and the resulting particle velocity during slip of an unconfined 2 m long laboratory fault at normal stresses between 4 and 8 MPa. To produce high fracture energy in the source we use a...
The crustal magma storage system of Volcán Quizapu, Chile, and the effects of magma mixing on magma diversity
George W. Bergantz, Kari M. Cooper, Edward Hildreth, Phillipp Ruprecht
2012, Journal of Petrology (53) 801-840
Crystal zoning as well as temperature and pressure estimates from phenocryst phase equilibria are used to constrain the architecture of the intermediate-sized magmatic system (some tens of km3) of Volcán Quizapu, Chile, and to document the textural and compositional effects of magma mixing. In contrast to most arc magma systems,...
Northern Fulmar (Fulmarus glacialis)
Mark L. Mallory, Scott A. Hatch, David N. Nettleship
2012, The Birds of North America
No abstract available...
Sexual selection and mating chronology of Lesser Prairie-Chickens
Adam C. Behney, Blake A. Grisham, Clint W. Boal, Heather A. Whitlaw, David A. Haukos
2012, Wilson Journal of Ornithology (124) 96-105
Little is known about mate selection and lek dynamics of Lesser Prairie-Chickens (Tympanuchus pallidicinctus). We collected data on male territory size and location on leks, behavior, and morphological characteristics and assessed the importance of these variables on male Lesser Prairie-Chicken mating success during spring 2008 and 2009 in the Texas...
Provisioning of nestling Dickcissels in native warm-season grass field buffers
K. L. Mitchell, Samuel K. Riffell, L. Wes Burger Jr., Francisco Vilella
2012, Wilson Journal of Ornithology (124) 298-309
We used video cameras in 2008–2009 to record provisioning activities at Dickcissel (Spiza americana) nests in and around Conservation Reserve Program field buffers in north-central Mississippi, USA. We simultaneously observed foraging flight distances of parents. Provisioning rate (P = 0.412), biomass (P = 0.161), and foraging distance (P = 0.159)...
Population genetic structure of a widespread coniferous tree, Taxodium distichum [L.] Rich. (Cupressaceae), in the Mississippi River Alluvial Valley and Florida
Ayako Tanaka, Masato Ohtani, Yoshihisa Suyama, Nobuyuki Inomata, Yoshihiko Tsumura, Beth A. Middleton, Hidenori Tachida, Junko Kusumi
2012, Tree Genetics and Genomes (8) 1135-1147
Studies of genetic variation can elucidate the structure of present and past populations as well as the genetic basis of the phenotypic variability of species. Taxodium distichum is a coniferous tree dominant in lowland river flood plains and swamps of the southeastern USA which exhibits morphological variability and adaption to...