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Publication Extents

Not all publications have extents, not all extents are completely accurate
Holocene evolution of sea-surface temperature and salinity in the Gulf of Mexico
Kaustubh Thiumalai, Julie N. Richey, Terrence M. Quinn
2021, Paleoceanography and Paleoclimatology (36)
Flows into and out of the Gulf of Mexico (GoM) are integral to North Atlantic ocean circulation, and help facilitate poleward heat transport in the Western Hemisphere. The GoM also serves as a key source of moisture for much of North America. Modern patterns of sea-surface temperature...
Understanding the future of big sagebrush regeneration: challenges of projecting complex ecological processes
Daniel Rodolphe Schlaepfer, John B. Bradford, William K. Lauenroth, Robert K Shriver
2021, Ecosphere (12)
Regeneration is an essential demographic step that affects plant population persistence, recovery after disturbances, and potential migration to track suitable climate conditions. Challenges of restoring big sagebrush (Artemisia tridentata) after disturbances including fire-invasive annual grass interactions exemplify the need to understand the complex regeneration processes of...
Paleoclimate record for Lake Coyote, California, and the Last Glacial Maximum and deglacial paleohydrology (25 to 14 cal ka) of the Mojave River
David M. Miller, Stephanie L. Dudash, John P. McGeehin
2021, Book chapter, From Saline to Freshwater: The Diversity of Western Lakes in Space and Time
Lake Coyote, California, which formed in one of five basins along the Mojave River, acted both as a part of the Lake Manix basin and, after the formation of Afton Canyon and draining of Lake Manix ca. 24.5 calibrated (cal) ka, a side basin that was filled episodically for the...
Tolerance of northern Gulf of Mexico eastern oysters to chronic warming at extreme salinities
D.A. Marshall, N.C. Coxe, Megan K. La Peyre, W.C. Walton, F. Scott Rikard, J. Beseres Pollack, M.A. Kelly, J.F. La Peyre
2021, Journal of Thermal Biology (100)
The eastern oyster, Crassostrea virginica, provides critical ecosystem services and supports valuable fishery and aquaculture industries in northern Gulf of Mexico (nGoM) subtropical estuaries where it is grown subtidally. Its upper critical thermal limit is not well defined, especially when combined with extreme salinities. The cumulative mortalities of the progenies of wild C....
A decade of Indigenous knowledge research in the Yukon River basin: Reflection on “Indigenous observations of change in the lower Yukon River basin, Alaska”
Nicole M. Herman-Mercer
2021, Human Organization (80) 234-245
Herman-Mercer reflects on her first article" Indigenous Observations of Change in the Lower Yukon River Basin, Alaska." The observations and knowledge presented in this study have become part of an ever-growing catalog of studies representing, and part of a chorus of Indigenous communities across the Arctic and Subarctic conveying, the...
Channel-amphitheatre landforms resulting from liquefaction flowslides during rapid drawdown of glacial Lake Fraser, British Columbia, Canada
Brendan G.N. Miller, Richard M. Iverson, John J. Clague, Marten Geertsema, Nicholas J. Roberts
2021, Geomorphology (392)
Unusual channel-amphitheatre landforms are present in Late Pleistocene–early Holocene, subaqueous fan and delta deposits in the glacial Lake Fraser basin, central British Columbia. The lake formed during the decay of the last Cordilleran Ice Sheet and drained ~11,500 years ago during a large outburst flood. The fronts of...
Cooperative Fish and Wildlife Research Units program—2020 Year in review
John D. Thompson, Donald E. Dennerline, Dawn E. Childs, Patrick G.R. Jodice
2021, Circular 1478
Established in 1935, the Cooperative Fish and Wildlife Research Units program (CRU program) is a unique cooperative partnership among State fish and wildlife agencies, universities, the Wildlife Management Institute, the U.S. Geological Survey (USGS), and the U.S. Fish and Wildlife Service. Designed to meet the scientific needs of natural resource...
Cooperative Fish and Wildlife Research Units program—2020 research abstracts
John D. Thompson, Patrick G.R. Jodice, Donald E. Dennerline, Dawn E. Childs, editor(s)
2021, Circular 1477
The U.S. Geological Survey (USGS) serves as the research arm of the U.S. Department of the Interior and has established a series of strategic goals that focus its efforts on serving the American people. Within the USGS, the Ecosystems Mission Area is responsible for conducting and sponsoring research that addresses...
Student and recent graduate opportunities
Laura K. Corey
2021, General Information Product 211
As an unbiased, multidisciplinary science organization, the U.S. Geological Survey (USGS) is dedicated to the timely, relevant, and impartial study of the health of our ecosystems and environment, our natural resources, the impacts of climate and land-use change, and the natural hazards that affect our lives. Opportunities for undergraduate and...
Optimization of salt marsh management at the Long Island National Wildlife Refuge Complex, New York, through use of structured decision making
Hilary A. Neckles, James E. Lyons, Jessica L. Nagel, Susan C. Adamowicz, Toni Mikula, Monica R. Williams
2021, Open-File Report 2021-1070
Structured decision making is a systematic, transparent process for improving the quality of complex decisions by identifying measurable management objectives and feasible management actions; predicting the potential consequences of management actions relative to the stated objectives; and selecting a course of action that maximizes the total benefit achieved and balances...
American and Sacramento Rivers, California, erodibility measurements and model
Paul A. Work, Daniel N. Livsey
2021, Scientific Investigations Report 2021-5052
Executive Summary  A previous report by the authors described sediment sampling and drilling by the U.S. Geological Survey (USGS) beside the American and Sacramento Rivers near Sacramento, California, in support of a U.S. Army Corps of Engineers project focused on regional flood control. The drilling was performed to define lithology,...
Identification of the Gulf of Mexico as an important high-use habitat for leatherback turtles from Central America
D.R. Evans, R.A. Valverde, C. Ordonez, Raymond R. Carthy
2021, Ecosphere (12)
Endangered leatherback sea turtles (Dermochelys coriacea) are wide-ranging, long-distance migrants whose movements are often associated with environmental cues. We examined the spatial distribution and habitat use for 33 satellite-tracked leatherbacks from nesting beaches on the Caribbean coast of Costa Rica and Panama from 2004 to 2018,...
Radiometric performance of Landsat 8 Collection 2 products
Esad Micijevic, Md Obaidul Haque, Julia Barsi
2021, Conference Paper, Proceedings Volume 11829, Earth Observing Systems XXVI
The U.S. Geological Survey (USGS) archive of Earth images acquired by Landsat 1-8 sensors is organized in collections of consistently calibrated, geolocated, and processed data products. Such an organization ensures consistent quality of the archived data within a collection over time and across all instruments within the Landsat mission. In...
The response of streams in the Adirondack region of New York to projected changes in sulfur and nitrogen deposition under changing climate
Shuai Shao, Douglas A. Burns, Huizhong Shen, Yilin Chen, Armistead G Russell, Charles T. Driscoll
2021, Science of the Total Environment (800)
Modeling studies project that in the future surface waters in the northeast US will continue to recover from acidification over decades following reductions in atmospheric sulfur dioxide and nitrogen oxides emissions. However, these studies generally assume stationary climatic conditions over the simulation period and ignore the linkages between soil...
Merging scientific silos: Integrating specialized approaches for thinking about and using spatial data that can provide new directions for persistent fisheries problems
Martha E. Mather, Joseph M. Smith, Kayla M. Boles, Ryland Taylor, Cristina Kennedy, Sean M. Hitchman, Jane S. Rogosch, Holly Frank
2021, Fisheries Magazine (46) 485-494
By merging our specialization silos, fisheries professionals can expand the options that are available to them to address difficult fisheries and aquatic conservation problems, which require an understanding of spatial patterns in geographically large systems. Our purpose is to start a profession-wide conversation about additional ways...
Miocene phosphatization of rocks from the summit of Rio Grande Rise, Southwest Atlantic Ocean
Mariana Benites, James R. Hein, Kira Mizell, Luigi Jovane
2021, Paleoceanography and Paleoclimatology (36)
Marine phosphorites are an important part of the oceanic phosphorus cycle and are related to the effects of long-term global climate changes. We use petrography, mineralogy, rare earth elements contents, and 87Sr/86Sr-determined carbonate fluorapatite (CFA) and calcite ages to investigate the paragenesis and history of phosphatization of...
Efficiency of bioaerosol samplers: A comparison study
Esra Mescioglu, Adina Paytan, Bailey W. Mitchell, Dale W. Griffin
2021, Aerobiologia (37) 447-459
Bioaerosols, including bacteria and fungi, are ubiquitous and have been shown to impact various organisms as well as biogeochemical cycles and human health. However, sample collection poses a challenge for aeromicrobiologists and can determine the success of a study. Establishing a standard collection procedure for bioaerosol...
Quarterly wildlife mortality report July 2021
Bryan J. Richards, Anne Ballmann, Julia S. Lankton, Thierry M. Work, Jaimie L. Miller
2021, Newsletter
The USGS National Wildlife Health Center (NWHC) Quarterly Mortality Report provides brief summaries of epizootic mortality and morbidity events by quarter. The write-ups, highlighting epizootic events and other wildlife disease topics of interest, are published in the Wildlife Disease Association quarterly newsletter. A link is provided in this WDA newsletter...
Estimates of abundance and harvest rates of female black bears across a large spatial extent
Jacob Humm, Joseph D. Clark
2021, Journal of Wildlife Management (85) 1321-1331
American black bears (Ursus americanus) are an iconic wildlife species in the southern Appalachian highlands of the eastern United States and have increased in number and range since the early 1980s. Given an increasing number of human-bear conflicts in the region, many management agencies have liberalized harvest...
Tandem field and laboratory approaches to quantify attenuation mechanisms of pharmaceutical and pharmaceutical transformation products in a wastewater effluent-dominated stream
Hui Zhi, Alyssa L Mianecki, Dana W. Kolpin, Rebecca D. Klaper, Luke R. Iwanowicz, Gregory H. LeFevre
2021, Water Research (203)
Evolving complex mixtures of pharmaceuticals and transformation products in effluent-dominated streams pose potential impacts to aquatic species; thus, understanding the attenuation dynamics in the field and characterizing the prominent attenuation mechanisms of pharmaceuticals and their transformation products (TPs) is critical for hazard assessments. Herein, we...
A new composite abundance metric detects stream fish declines and community homogenization during six decades of invasions
Logan J. Sleezer, Paul L. Angermeier, Emmanuel A. Frimpong, Bryan L. Brown
2021, Diversity and Distributions (27) 2136-2156
AimWe developed a new technique, utilizing species-specific counts of individuals from historical fish community samples, to examine landscape-level, spatio-temporal trends in relative abundance distributions. Abundance-based historical distribution analyses are often plagued by data comparability issues, but provide critical information about community composition trends inaccessible to those using...
System characterization report on Planet’s Dove-R
Minsu Kim, Seonkyung Park, Cody Anderson, Gregory L. Stensaas
2021, Open-File Report 2021-1030-D
Executive SummaryThis report addresses system characterization of Planet’s Dove-R and is part of a series of system characterization reports produced and delivered by the U.S. Geological Survey Earth Resources Observation and Science Cal/Val Center of Excellence. These reports present and detail the methodology and procedures for characterization; present technical and...
Accounting for dispersal and local habitat when evaluating tributary use by riverine fishes
Corey G. Dunn, Craig P. Paukert
2021, Ecosphere (12)
Conservation practitioners increasingly recognize the conservation value of tributaries for supporting mainstem, large-river specialist fishes. A tributarys discharge at its mouth is a coarse indicator of large-river specialist fishes found within the tributary, but the relative influences of regional dispersal and local habitat underpinning this species-discharge relationship is often unknown....
Changes in organic carbon source and storage with sea level rise-induced transgression in a Chesapeake Bay marsh
Rachel Van Allen, Kathryn M. Schreiner, Glenn R. Guntenspergen, Joseph A. Carlin
2021, Estuaries and Coasts (261)
Organic matter (OM) accumulation in marsh soils affects marsh survival under rapid sea-level rise (SLR). This work describes the changing organic geochemistry of a salt marsh located in the Blackwater National Wildlife Refuge on the eastern shore of Chesapeake Bay that has transgressed inland with SLR over the past 35–75 years. Marsh soils and vegetation were...
Assessing potential stock structure of adult Coho Salmon in a small Alaska watershed: Quantifying run timing, spawning locations, and holding areas with radiotelemetry
M. E. Stratton, H. Finkle, Jeffrey A. Falke, P. A. H. Westley
2021, North American Journal of Fisheries Management (41) 1423-1435
Run timing and spatial locations of spawning habitats are often used to identify stocks for conservation planning or management of salmonid fishes. Although complex stock structure is most common within large watersheds with diverse habitats, even small drainages can produce multiple co-occurring spatially or temporally isolated populations or “stocks.” This...