Final Report for Phase 1 - USGS-NE CSC and USFS-NRS Cooperative Research on Climate-Vulnerable Habitats and Species in the Northeast
Keith Nislow, Toni Lyn Morelli
2019, Report
The US Forest Service (USFS) and Northeast Climate (Adaptation) Science Center (NE CASC) came together to focus research and management cooperation on the topic of the impacts of climate change on forested ecosystems. This work had 3 primary components: 1) modeling headwater stream refugia; 2) investigating resilience and resistance strategies...
USGS Illinois River catch database and visualization
Enrika Hlavacek, Travis J. Harrison, Brent C. Knights, Marybeth K. Brey
2019, Report, 2019 Interim summary report: Asian carp monitoring and response plan
No abstract available....
USGS geospatial support for unified fishing method
Kevin D. Hop, Andrew C. Strassman, Jonathan M. Vallazza, Brent C. Knights
2019, Report, 2019 Interim summary report: Asian carp monitoring and response plan
No abstract available....
Stream corridor sources of suspended sediment and phosphorus from an agricultural tributary to the Great Lakes
Faith A. Fitzpatrick, James D. Blount, Leah Kammel, David L. Hoover, Allen C. Gellis, Barbara C. Scudder Eikenberry
2019, Conference Paper, Proceedings of SEDHYD 2019
Fine-grained sediment and phosphorous are major contaminants in the Great Lakes and their tributaries. Plum Creek, Wisconsin (92 km2), a tributary to the Lower Fox River, has a Total Maximum Daily Load (TMDL) requiring reductions of suspended sediment and phosphorus loading by 70% and 77%, respectively. In 2016-18, an...
Conceptual framework for assessing disturbance impacts on debris-flow initiation thresholds across hydroclimatic settings
Benjamin B. Mirus, Dennis M. Staley, Jason W. Kean, Joel B. Smith, Rick Wooten, Luke A. McGuire, Brian A. Ebel
2019, Conference Paper, Debris-flow hazards mitigation: Mechanics, monitoring, modeling, and assessment; proceedings of the Seventh International Conference on Debris-Flow Hazards Mitigation
The destructive and deadly nature of debris flows has motivated research into empirical rainfall thresholds to provide situational awareness, inform early warning systems, and reduce loss of life and property. Disturbances such as wildfire and land-cover change can influence the hydrological processes of infiltration and runoff generation; in steep terrain...
Berea Sandstone petroleum system
T. Marty Parris, Stephen F. Greb, Cortland F. Eble, Paul C. Hackley, David C. Harris
2019, Report
Since 2011, production of sweet high gravity oil from the Upper Devonian Berea Sandstone in northeastern Kentucky has caused the region to become the leading oil producer in the state. Remarkably, Berea oil is being produced at depths of 2,200 ft or less and in an area in which the prospective source rocks—the...
Soil microbial communities and global change
Mark P. Waldrop, Courtney Creamer
Jan Dirk van Elsas, Jack T. Trevors, Alexandre Soares Rosado, Paolo Nannipieri, editor(s)
2019, Book chapter, Modern soil microbiology
Soils and soil microbial communities mediate the biogeochemical processes that underly ecosystem-level changes. This chapter examines why soils and soil microbial communities are important for understanding impacts and feedbacks to global change. It discusses the technological approaches and challenges that are at the frontiers of this research area. Global change...
Recovery planning in a dynamic system: Integrating uncertainty into a decision support tool for an endangered songbird
Jessica Stanton, Jenny Marek, Linnea S. Hall, Barbara E. Kus, Allison Alvarado, Bruce K. Orr, Eric Morrissette, Laura Riege, Wayne E. Thogmartin
2019, Ecology and Society (24)
Along the Santa Clara River in California, populations of the federally and state-listed Least Bell's Vireo (Vireo bellii pusillus) are recovering from near extirpation. Habitat protection and restoration, as well as controlling rates of brood parasitism, are thought to be the primary drivers of this recovery. Continuing successful management...
Transmissivity and geophysical data for selected wells at and near the Idaho National Laboratory, Idaho, 2017–18
Brian V. Twining, Neil V. Maimer
2019, Scientific Investigations Report 2019-5134
The U.S. Geological Survey, in cooperation with the U.S. Department of Energy, conducted aquifer tests during 2017–18 on 101 wells at and near the Idaho National Laboratory, Idaho, to define the hydraulic characteristics for individual wells. These were short-duration aquifer tests, conducted with a limited number of observations during routine...
Geomorphic controls on hyporheic exchange across scales - Watersheds to particles
Steven Wondzell, Skuyler Herzog, Michael Gooseff, Adam S Ward, Noah Schmadel
2019, Book chapter, Treatise on fluvial geomorphology
We examined the relationship between fluvial geomorphology and hyporheic exchange flows. We use geomorphology as a framework to understand hyporheic processes and how these processes change with location within a stream network, and over time in response to changes in stream...
Overcoming barriers to progress in seismic monitoring and characterization of debris flows and lahars
Kate E. Allstadt, Maxime Farin, Andrew Lockhart, Sara K. McBride, Jason W. Kean, Richard M. Iverson, Matthew Logan, Joel B. Smith, Victor C. Tsai, David L. George
2019, Conference Paper, Debris-flow hazards mitigation: Mechanics, monitoring, modeling, and assessment; proceedings of the Seventh International Conference on Debris-Flow Hazards Mitigation
Debris flows generate seismic signals that contain valuable information about events as they unfold. Though seismic waves have been used for along-channel debris-flow and lahar monitoring systems for decades, it has proven difficult to move beyond detection to more quantitative characterizations of flow parameters and event size. This is for...
Yellowstone River Compact Commission sixty-eighth annual report 2019
Seth Davidson
2019, Report
No abstract available....
Monitoring the effect of deep drawdowns of a flood control reservoir on sediment transport and dissolved oxygen, Fall Creek Lake, Oregon
Liam N. Schenk, Heather M. Bragg
2019, Conference Paper, Proceeding of SEDHYD 2019
Annual reservoir drawdowns at Fall Creek Lake, Oregon, have occurred for eight consecutive years from December 2012 to November 2019. The annual drawdowns are the result of the 2008 Biological Opinion of the US Army Corps of Engineers (USACE) Willamette Valley Project operations, which directed the USACE to carry out...
Natural Attenuation in Source Zone and Groundwater Plume - Bemidji Crude Oil Spill
Barbara A. Bekins
2019, Book chapter, Enviro Wiki
A long-term study of a 40-year-old crude oil spill provides insights about petroleum hydrocarbon natural attenuation processes and rates. In the source zone, fermentation coupled to methanogenesis is the dominant natural source zone depletion (NSZD) process, and most of the carbon mass exits the surface as CO2 efflux. Monitored natural...
The response of kelp forest organisms to spatial and temporal variation in wave energy in the California Channel Islands
Kevin D. Lafferty, Andrew Rassweiler, C C Gotschalk, D N Morton, T W Bell, F Henderikx Freitas, Kushner D J, J Sprague, C.G. Johnson, L Washburn
2019, Report
This report describes the spatial and temporal variation in wave height for the study system in the broader context of the Southern California Bight. A new, low-cost pressure sensor was engineered for measuring wave height and period. These sensors were placed for several months at 32 sites around the Channel...
Conservation status of the world’s swan populations, Cygnus sp. and Coscoroba sp.: a review of current trends and gaps in knowledge
Eileen Rees, Lei Cao, P. Clausen, J. M. Coleman, J. Cornely, O. Einarsson, Craig R. Ely, R. Kingsford, Ming Ma, C. E. Mitchell, S. Nagy, T. Shimada, Jeffrey Snyder, D. Solovyeva, W. Tijsen, Y. Vilna, R. Wlodarczyk, K. Brides
2019, Wildfowl
Recent estimates of the world’s swan Cygnus sp. populations indicate that there are currently between 1.5–1.6 million birds in 8 species, including the Coscoroba Swan Coscoroba coscoroba as an honorary swan. Monitoring programmes in Europe and North America indicate that most populations increased following the introduction of national and international legislation to protect the...
GoMAMN strategic bird monitoring guidelines: Avian health
M. A. Ottinger, T. Maness, J. K. Grace, R. R. Wilson, Patrick G.R. Jodice
2019, Book chapter, Strategic bird monitoring guidelines for the northern Gulf of Mexico, Mississippi Agricultural and Forestry Experiment Station Research Bulletin 1228
No abstract available....
Asian carp population modeling to support an Adaptive Management framework, USGS Contribution
Richard A. Erickson
2019, Book chapter, 2019 Asian carp interim summary report
The Spatially Explicit Asian carp Population (SEAcarP) model was developed to inform management and research decisions with the goal of minimizing the abundance of Bighead Carp and Silver Carp (collectively referred to as “Asian carp” in this document) in the upper Illinois River waterway, thereby reducing risk of population expansion...
Diel feeding and movement activity of Northern Snakehead Channa argus
Nicolas W. R. Lapointe, Ryan K. Saylor, Paul L. Angermeier
2019, Conference Paper, American Fisheries Society symposium 89
Understanding the diel activity of a species can shed light on potential interactions with other species and inform management practices. To understand the diel activity of Northern Snakehead Channa argus, feeding habits and movement patterns were observed. Two hundred seventy-three Northern Snakehead were captured by boat electrofishing during May and June...
Heavy mineral sands resources in China
Bradley S. Van Gosen, Baohong Hou, Tianrui Song
2019, Book chapter, Mineral deposits of China
About 200 known coastal deposits of heavy mineral sands (HMS) occur in China, in which considerable mineral resources of titanium, zircon, rare earth elements, and thorium exist in the forms of ilmenite, rutile, zircon, and monazite. More than 20 of these HMS deposits are reported as having been or are...
Holocene sedimentary architecture and paleoclimate variability at Mono Lake, California
Susan H Zimmerman, Sidney R. Hemming, Scott W. Starratt
2019, Book chapter, From saline to freshwater: The diversity of western lakes in space and time
Mono Lake occupies an internally drained basin on the eastern flank of the Sierra Nevada, and it is sensitive to climatic changes affecting precipitation in the mountains (largely delivered in the form of snowpack). Efforts to...
Significant seismic behavior features of two tall buildings inferred from response records
Mehmet Celebi
2019, Conference Paper
In this paper, recent studies of recorded responses of behavior and performances of two instrumented tall buildings subjected to long-period motions from events that originate at far distances (e.g. 100-800km) are presented. Significant results indicate that (a) computed average drift ratios are substantial (~0.5%), and (b) there is permanent shift...
Sixty years of White-tailed Deer (Odocoileus virginianus) yarding in a Gray Wolf (Canis lupus)–deer system
L. David Mech, Shannon Barber-Meyer
2019, Canadian Field Naturalist (133) 343-351
This article synthesizes information from over a six-decade period of studies of White-tailed Deer (Odocoileus virginianus) use of a winter yard and subject to Gray Wolf (Canis lupus) predation in northeastern Minnesota. It also adds spring migration data from 35 adult female deer and fawns studied there during 1998, 1999,...
Contrasting demographic responses of toad populations to regionally synchronous pathogen (Batrachochytrium dendrobatidis) dynamics
Blake R. Hossack, Robin E. Russell, Rebecca McCaffery
2019, Biological Conservation (241)
Batrachochytrium dendrobatidis (Bd), a fungal pathogen that causes amphibian chytridiomycosis, has been implicated in population declines globally. To better understand how Bd affects survival and how threats vary spatially and temporally, we conducted long-term (range: 9–13 yrs) capture-recapture studies of boreal toads (Anaxyrus boreas) from three similar communities in western Montana. We also estimated temporal...
Integrating the sociology of space with geospatial semantics relation properties for data graphs
Dalia E. Varanka
2019, Conference Paper
This research posits that socially constructed spatial relations address concepts of interactions instead of intersections, human/tool agents instead of physical processes, and broader ranges of geographical outcomes. The hypothesis is that social space can be represented by using patterns of logic relations between sets of entities. The data corpus...