Behavioral activities of male Cerulean Warblers in relation to habitat characteristics
Petra Bohall Wood, Kelly A. Perkins
2012, Wilson Journal of Ornithology (124) 497-505
Activities of 29 male Cerulean Warblers (Setophaga cerulea) were quantified on two sites in West Virginia during May–June 2005. Singing and foraging were the most common of 11 observed behavioral activities (81.6%), while maintenance and mating behaviors were uncommonly observed. Male activity differed among vegetative strata (P = 0.02) with lower-...
Interactive terrain visualization enables virtual field work during rapid scientific response to the 2010 Haiti earthquake
Eric Cowgill, Tony S. Bernardin, Michael E. Oskin, Christopher Bowles, M. Burak Yikilmaz, Oliver Kreylos, Austin J. Elliott, Scott Bishop, Ryan D. Gold, Alexander Morelan, Gerald W. Bawden, Bernd Hamann, Louise Kellogg
2012, Geosphere (8) 787-804
The moment magnitude (Mw) 7.0 12 January 2010 Haiti earthquake is the first major earthquake for which a large-footprint LiDAR (light detection and ranging) survey was acquired within several weeks of the event. Here, we describe the use of virtual reality data visualization to analyze massive amounts (67 GB on...
Using stable isotopes to test for trophic niche partitioning: a case study with stream salamanders and fish
Adam J. Sepulveda, Winsor H. Lowe, Peter P. Marra
2012, Freshwater Biology (57) 1399-1409
1. Stream salamanders and fish often co-occur even though fish prey on and outcompete salamanders. However, the mechanisms that allow palatable salamanders to coexist with fish are unknown. 2. We tested mechanisms in the field that promote coexistence between Idaho giant salamanders (Dicamptodon aterrimus) and stream salmonid fishes in headwater streams. Previous research...
Monitoring subsurface hydrologic response for precipitation-induced shallow landsliding in the San Francisco Bay area, California, USA
Brian D. Collins, Jonathan D. Stock, Lisa C. Weber, K. Whitman, N. Knepprath
2012, Conference Paper, Landslides and engineered slopes: Protecting society through improved understanding, Proceedings of the 11th International Symposium on Landslides
Intense winter storms in the San Francisco Bay area (SFBA) of California, USA often trigger shallow landslides. Some of these landslides mobilize into potentially hazardous debris flows. A growing body of research indicates that rainfall intensity-duration thresholds are insufficient for accurate prediction of landslide occurrence. In response, we have begun...
Spot-mapping underestimates song-territory size and use of mature forest by breeding golden-winged warblers in Minnesota, USA
Henry M. Streby, John P. Loegering, David E. Andersen
2012, Wildlife Society Bulletin (36) 40-46
Studies of songbird breeding habitat often compare habitat characteristics of used and unused areas. Although there is usually meticulous effort to precisely and consistently measure habitat characteristics, accuracy of methods for estimating which areas are used versus which are unused by birds remains generally untested. To examine accuracy of spot-mapping...
High-density polyethylene pipe: A new material for pass-by passive integrated transponder antennas
David C. Kazyak, Joseph D. Zydlewski
2012, North American Journal of Fisheries Management (32) 49-52
Pass-by passive integrated transponder (PIT) antennas are widely used to study the movements of fish in streams. At many sites, stream conditions make it difficult to maintain antennas and obtain a continuous record of movement. We constructed pass-by PIT antennas by using high-density polyethylene (HDPE) and found them to be...
Fingerprinting of glacial silt in lake sediments yields continuous records of alpine glaciation (35–15 ka), western USA
Joseph G. Rosenbaum, Richard L. Reynolds, Steven M. Colman
2012, Quaternary Research (78) 333-340
Fingerprinting glacial silt in last glacial-age sediments from Upper Klamath Lake (UKL) and Bear Lake (BL) provides continuous radiocarbon-dated records of glaciation for the southeastern Cascade Range and northwestern Uinta Mountains, respectively. Comparing of these records to cosmogenic exposure ages from moraines suggests that variations in glacial flour largely reflect...
Post-fire land treatments and wind erosion -- lessons from the Milford Flat Fire, UT, USA
Mark E. Miller, Matthew A. Bowker, Richard L. Reynolds, Harland L. Goldstein
2012, Aeolian Research (7) 29-44
We monitored sediment flux at 25 plots located at the northern end of the 2007 Milford Flat Fire (Lake Bonneville Basin, west-central Utah) to examine the effectiveness of post-fire rehabilitation treatments in mitigating risks of wind erosion during the first 3 years post fire. Maximum values were recorded during Mar–Jul...
Structural equation modeling and the analysis of long-term monitoring data
James B. Grace, Jon E. Keeley, Darren Johnson, A Kenneth Bollen Kenneth
2012, Book chapter, Design and analysis of long-term ecological monitoring studies
The analysis of long-term monitoring data is increasingly important; not only for the discovery and documentation of changes in environmental systems, but also as an enterprise whose fruits validate the allocation of effort and scarce funds to monitoring. In simple terms, we may distinguish between the detection of change in...
Rapid late Pleistocene/Holocene uplift and coastal evolution of the southern Arabian (Persian) Gulf
Warren W. Wood, Richard M. Bailey, B. A. Hampton, Thomas F. Kraemer, Zhong Lu, David W. Clark, Rhodri H. R. James, Khalid Al Ramadan
2012, Quaternary Research (77) 215-220
The coastline along the southern Arabian Gulf between Al Jubail, Kingdom of Saudi Arabia, and Dubai, UAE, appears to have risen at least 125 m in the last 18,000 years. Dating and topographic surveying of paleo-dunes (43–53 ka), paleo-marine terraces (17–30 ka), and paleo-marine shorelines (3.3–5.5 ka)...
Wintering waterfowl respond to Wetlands Reserve Program lands in the Central Valley of California
Jeffrey J. Buler, Wylie C. Barrow Jr., Lori A. Randall
2012, Report
Daytime use by wintering waterfowl at Wetlands Reserve Program (WRP) sites within the northern Central Valley of California (CVC) increased dramatically after wetland restoration and was sustained for up to 8 years post-restoration. The magnitude of the increase in waterfowl density at WRP sites after wetland restoration was greater with...
Sensitivity of spring phenology to warming across temporal and spatial climate gradients in two independent databases
Benjamin I. Cook, Elizabeth M. Wolkovich, T. Jonathan Davies, Toby R. Ault, Julio L. Betancourt, Jenica M. Allen, Kjell Bolmgren, Elsa E. Cleland, Theresa Crimmins, Nathan J. B. Kraft, Lesley T. Lancaster, Susan J. Mazer, Gregory J. McCabe, Brian J. McGill, Camille Parmesan, Stephanie Pau, James Regetz, Nicolas Salamin, Mark D. Schwartz, Steven E. Travers
2012, Ecosystems (15) 1283-1294
Disparate ecological datasets are often organized into databases post hoc and then analyzed and interpreted in ways that may diverge from the purposes of the original data collections. Few studies, however, have attempted to quantify how biases inherent in these data (for example, species richness, replication, climate) affect their suitability...
Extended Kalman Filter framework for forecasting shoreline evolution
Joseph Long, Nathaniel G. Plant
2012, Geophysical Research Letters (39)
A shoreline change model incorporating both long- and short-term evolution is integrated into a data assimilation framework that uses sparse observations to generate an updated forecast of shoreline position and to estimate unobserved geophysical variables and model parameters. Application of the assimilation algorithm provides quantitative statistical estimates of combined model-data...
Helicopter electromagnetic data map ice thickness at Mount Adams and Mount Baker, Washington, USA
Carol A. Finn, Maria Deszcz-Pan, Paul A. Bedrosian
2012, Journal of Glaciology (58) 1133-1143
Ice-thickness measurements critical for flood and mudflow hazard studies are very sparse on Cascade Range (North America) volcanoes. Helicopter electromagnetic (HEM) data collected to detect hydrothermal alteration are used to determine ice thickness over portions of Mount Baker and Mount Adams volcanoes. A laterally continuous inversion method provides good estimates...
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....
Thermal infrared remote sensing of water temperature in riverine landscapes
R. N Handcock, Christian E. Torgersen, K. A Cherkauer, A. R Gillespie, K Tockner, R. N. Faux, Jing Tan
Patrice E. Carbonneau, Hervé Piégay, editor(s)
2012, Book chapter, Fluvial remote sensing for science and management
Water temperature in riverine landscapes is an important regional indicator of water quality that is influenced by both ground- and surface-water inputs, and indirectly by land use in the surrounding watershed (Brown and Krygier, 1970; Beschta et al., 1987; Chen et al., 1998; Poole and Berman, 2001). Coldwater fishes such...
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...
Mysis diluviana and Hemimysis anomala: reviewing the roles of a native and invasive mysid in the Laurentian Great Lakes region
Maureen G. Walsh, Brent T. Boscarino, Jerome Marty, Ora E. Johannsson
2012, Journal of Great Lakes Research (38) 1-6
Mysis diluviana and Hemimysis anomala are the only two species of mysid shrimps in the order Mysidacea that are present in the Laurentian Great Lakes of North America. M. diluviana has inhabited the deep, cold waters of this region since Pleistocene-era glacial retreat and is widely considered to have a...
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...
Repeat surveys of spawning cisco (Coregonus artedi) in western Lake Superior: Timing, distribution and composition of spawning stocks
Daniel L. Yule, Donald R. Schreiner, Peter A. Addison, Michael J. Seider, Lori M. Evrard, Steven A. Geving, Henry R. Quinlan
2012, Advances in Limnology (63) 65-87
Acoustic (AC) and midwater trawl (MT) surveys of spawning cisco (Coregonus artedi) in Lake Superior have been combined with commercial yield to estimate exploitation. To time surveys properly, it is important to understand when adults typically arrive at spawning grounds and how numbers change as the spawning season progresses. We...
Sources of shaking and flooding during the Tohoku-Oki earthquake: a mixture of rupture styles
Shengji Wei, Robert Graves, Don Helmberger, Jean-Philippe Avouac, Junle Jiang
2012, Earth and Planetary Science Letters (333-334) 91-100
Modeling strong ground motions from great subduction zone earthquakes is one of the great challenges of computational seismology. To separate the rupture characteristics from complexities caused by 3D sub-surface geology requires an extraordinary data set such as provided by the recent Mw9.0 Tohoku-Oki earthquake. Here we combine deterministic inversion and...
Analysis of host genetic diversity and viral entry as sources of between-host variation in viral load
Andrew R. Wargo, Alison M. Kell, Robert J. Scott, Gary H. Thorgaard, Gael Kurath
2012, Virus Research (165) 71-80
Little is known about the factors that drive the high levels of between-host variation in pathogen burden that are frequently observed in viral infections. Here, two factors thought to impact viral load variability, host genetic diversity and stochastic processes linked with viral entry into the host, were examined. This work...