Changing Arctic ecosystems--research to understand and project changes in marine and terrestrial ecosystems of the Arctic
Joy Geiselman, Anthony R. DeGange, Karen Oakley, Dirk V. Derksen, Mary E. Whalen
2012, Fact Sheet 2011-3136
Ecosystems and their wildlife communities are not static; they change and evolve over time due to numerous intrinsic and extrinsic factors. A period of rapid change is occurring in the Arctic for which our current understanding of potential ecosystem and wildlife responses is limited. Changes to the physical environment include...
St. Petersburg Coastal and Marine Science Center's Core Archive Portal
Chris Reich, Matt Streubert, Brendan Dwyer, Meg Godbout, Adis Muslic, Dan Umberger
2012, Data Series 626
This Web site contains information on rock cores archived at the U.S. Geological Survey (USGS) St. Petersburg Coastal and Marine Science Center (SPCMSC). Archived cores consist of 3- to 4-inch-diameter coral cores, 1- to 2-inch-diameter rock cores, and a few unlabeled loose coral and rock samples. This document - and...
Spatial patterns and temporal trends in mercury concentrations, precipitation depths, and mercury wet deposition in the North American Great Lakes region, 2002-2008
Martin R. Risch, David A. Gay, Kathleen K. Fowler, Gerard J. Keeler, Sean M. Backus, Pierrette Blanchard, James A. Barres, J. Timothy Dvonch
2012, Environmental Pollution (161) 261-271
Annual and weekly mercury (Hg) concentrations, precipitation depths, and Hg wet deposition in the Great Lakes region were analyzed by using data from 5 monitoring networks in the USA and Canada for a 2002-2008 study period. High-resolution maps of calculated annual data, 7-year mean data, and net interannual change for...
Litterfall mercury dry deposition in the eastern USA
Martin R. Risch, John F. DeWild, David P. Krabbenhoft, Randall K. Kolka, Leiming Zhang
2012, Environmental Pollution (161) 284-290
Mercury (Hg) in autumn litterfall from predominately deciduous forests was measured in 3 years of samples from 23 Mercury Deposition Network sites in 15 states across the eastern USA. Annual litterfall Hg dry deposition was significantly higher (median 12.3 micrograms per square meter (μg/m2), range 3.5–23.4 μg/m2) than annual Hg wet...
Evidence from 12-year study links ecosystem changes in the Gulf of Maine with climate change
George R. Aiken, Thomas G. Huntington, William Balch, David Drapeau, Bruce Bowler
2012, EcoSystem Indicator Partnership Journal
Investigators at the Bigelow Laboratory for Ocean Sciences (East Boothbay, Maine) and the U.S. Geological Survey collaborated to study ecosystem changes in the Gulf of Maine. As part of the Gulf of Maine North Atlantic Time Series (GNATS), a comprehensive long-term study of hydrographic, biological, optical and chemical properties,...
EarthExplorer
Treva Houska
2012, General Information Product 136
The EarthExplorer trifold provides basic information for on-line access to remotely-sensed data from the U.S. Geological Survey Earth Resources Observation and Science (EROS) Center archive. The EarthExplorer (http://earthexplorer.usgs.gov/) client/server interface allows users to search and download aerial photography, satellite data, elevation data, land-cover products, and digitized maps. Minimum computer system...
Watershed modeling applications in south Texas
Diana E. Pedraza, Darwin J. Ockerman
2012, Fact Sheet 2012-3005
Watershed models can be used to simulate natural and human-altered processes including the flow of water and associated transport of sediment, chemicals, nutrients, and microbial organisms within a watershed. Simulation of these processes is useful for addressing a wide range of water-resource challenges, such as quantifying changes in water availability...
Mapping argillic and advanced argillic alteration in volcanic rocks, quartzites, and quartz arenites in the western Richfield 1° x 2 ° quadrangle, southwestern Utah, using ASTER satellite data
Barnaby W. Rockwell, Albert H. Hofstra
2012, Open-File Report 2012-1105
The Richfield quadrangle in southwestern Utah is known to contain a variety of porphyry Mo, skarn, polymetallic replacement and vein, alunite, and kaolin resources associated with 27-32 Ma calc-alkaline or 12-23 Ma bimodal volcano-plutonic centers in Neoproterozoic to Mesozoic carbonate and siliciclastic rocks. Four scenes of visible to shortwave-infrared image...
Active transtensional intracontinental basins: Walker Lane in the western Great Basin
Angela S. Jayko, Marcus Bursik
2012, Book chapter, Tectonics of Sedimentary Basins: Recent Advances
The geometry and dimensions of sedimentary basins within the Walker Lane are a result of Plio-Pleistocene transtensive deformation and partial detachment of the Sierra Nevada crustal block from the North American plate. Distinct morpho-tectonic domains lie within this active transtensive zone. The northeast end of the Walker Lane is partly...
Carbonate aquifers
Kevin J. Cunningham, Michael Sukop, H. Allen Curran
2012, Book, Trace Fossils as Indicators of Sedimentary Environments
Only limited hydrogeological research has been conducted using ichnology in carbonate aquifer characterization. Regardless, important applications of ichnology to carbonate aquifer characterization include its use to distinguish and delineate depositional cycles, correlate mappable biogenically altered surfaces, identify zones of preferential groundwater flow and paleogroundwater flow, and better understand the origin...
The influence of chilling requirement on the southern distribution limit of exotic Russian olive (Elaeagnus angustifolia) in western North America
Kimberly R. Guilbault, C. S. Brown, Jonathan M. Friedman, P.B. Shafroth
2012, Biological Invasions (14) 1711-1724
Russian olive (Elaeagnus angustifolia L.), a Eurasian tree now abundant along rivers in western North America, has an apparent southern distribution limit running through southern California, Arizona, New Mexico and Texas. We used field observations to precisely define this limit in relation to temperature variables. We then investigated...
The Palmyra Atoll Research Consortium
Thomas H. Suchanek
2012, Fact Sheet 2012-3002
Palmyra Atoll in the tropical Pacific is the site of some exciting work by scientists from a diverse collection of research institutions. The Palmyra Atoll Research Consortium (PARC) fosters collaborative multi- and inter-disciplinary research by U.S. Department of the Interior (DOI) agencies (USGS and U.S. Fish and Wildlife Service–USFWS), academic...
Detection probability of an in-stream passive integrated transponder (PIT) tag detection system for juvenile salmonids in the Klamath River, northern California, 2011
John W. Beeman, Brian Hayes, Katrina Wright
2012, Open-File Report 2012-1001
A series of in-stream passive integrated transponder (PIT) detection antennas installed across the Klamath River in August 2010 were tested using tagged fish in the summer of 2011. Six pass-by antennas were constructed and anchored to the bottom of the Klamath River at a site between the Shasta and Scott...
Metformin prevents endoplasmic reticulum stress-induced apoptosis through AMPK-PI3K-c-Jun NH2 pathway
T.W. Jung, Myung W. Lee, Y.-J. Lee, S.M. Kim
2012, Biochemical and Biophysical Research Communications (417) 147-152
Type 2 diabetes mellitus is thought to be partially associated with endoplasmic reticulum (ER) stress toxicity on pancreatic beta cells and the result of decreased insulin synthesis and secretion. In this study, we showed that a well-known insulin sensitizer, metformin, directly protects against dysfunction and death of ER stress-induced NIT-1...
Preliminary evaluation of the shale gas prospectivity of the Lower Cretaceous Pearsall Formation in the onshore Gulf Coast region, United States
Catherine B. Enomoto, Kristina Scott, Brett J. Valentine, Paul C. Hackley, Kristin Dennen, Celeste D. Lohr
2012, Gulf Coast Association of Geological Societies Transactions (62) 93-115
Recent work by the U.S. Geological Survey indicated that the Lower Cretaceous Pearsall Formation contains an estimated mean undiscovered, technically recoverable unconventional gas resource of 8.8 trillion cubic ft in the Maverick Basin, South Texas. Cumulative gas production from horizontal wells in the core area of the emerging play has...
Relationship between fish size and upper thermal tolerance
Matthew S. Recsetar, Matthew P. Zeigler, David L. Ward, Scott A. Bonar, Colleen A. Caldwell
2012, Transactions of the American Fisheries Society (141) 1433-1438
Using critical thermal maximum (CTMax) tests, we examined the relationship between upper temperature tolerances and fish size (fry-adult or subadult lengths) of rainbow trout Oncorhynchus mykiss (41-200-mm TL), Apache trout O. gilae apache (40-220-mm TL), largemouth bass Micropterus salmoides (72-266-mm TL), Nile tilapia Oreochromis niloticus (35-206-mm TL), channel catfish Ictalurus...
Response of New zealand mudsnails Potamopyrgus antipodarum to freezing and near freezing fluctuating water temperatures
Christine M. Moffitt, Christopher A. James
2012, Freshwater Science (31) 1035-1041
We explored the resilience of the invasive New Zealand mudsnail Potamopyrgus antipodarum to fluctuating winter freezing and near-freezing temperature cycles in laboratory tests. Our goal was to provide data to confirm field observations of mortality and presumed mortality in stream habitats with fluctuating freezing to near-freezing temperatures. We tested individuals...
Simulated effects of dam removal on water temperatures along the Klamath River, Oregon and California, using 2010 Biological Opinion flow requirements
John C. Risley, Scott J. Brewer, Russell W. Perry
2012, Open-File Report 2011-1311
Computer model simulations were run to determine the effects of dam removal on water temperatures along the Klamath River, located in south-central Oregon and northern California, using flow requirements defined in the 2010 Biological Opinion of the National Marine Fisheries Service. A one-dimensional, daily averaged water temperature model (River Basin...
Assessment of potential shale gas resources of the Bombay, Cauvery, and Krishna-Godavari Provinces, India, 2011
Water Resources Division, U.S. Geological Survey
2012, Fact Sheet 2011-3131
Using a performance-based geologic assessment methodology, the U.S. Geological Survey estimated a technically recoverable mean volume of 6.1 trillion cubic feet of potential shale gas in the Bombay, Cauvery, and Krishna-Godavari Provinces of India....
Will hunters steward wolves? A comment on Treves and Martin
Jeremy T. Bruskotter, David C. Fulton
2012, Society & Natural Resources: An International Journal (25) 97-102
As wolf conservation transitions away from federally sponsored protection and recovery toward sustainable management under state fish and game agencies, researchers and policymakers are interested to know what role hunters will play. Based upon hunters' responses to three recent surveys in Wisconsin and the northern Rockies, Treves and Martin question...
Anaerobic oxidation of arsenite by autotrophic bacteria: The view from Mono Lake, California
Ronald S. Oremland, John F. Stolz, Chad W. Saltikov
Joanne M. Santini, Seamus A. Ward, editor(s)
2012, Book chapter, The metabolism of arsenite
Introduction The phenomenon of arsenite [As(III)] oxidation by aerobic bacteria was first reported by Green (1918), and the many subsequent discoveries made in this realm, most occurring over the past three decades, are the primary focus of this book. In contrast, the fact that select anaerobes can also achieve this feat...
Normal (but unusual) lymphoid tissue of sturgeon
Diane G. Elliott, Satu Viljamaa-Dirks Satu, Heike Schmidt-Posthaus Heike, Carla M. Conway
D.W. Bruno, D.G. Elliott, B. Nowak, editor(s)
2012, Report, Proceedings of the European Association of Fish Pathologists 15th International Conference on Diseases of Fish and Shellfish, Split 2011 Histopathology Workshop. Lymphoid Organ Pathology.
No abstract available....
Effects of acoustic deterrents on foraging bats
Joshua B. Johnson, W. Mark Ford, Jane L. Rodrigue, John W. Edwards
2012, Research Note NRS-129
Significant bat mortality events associated with wind energy expansion, particularly in the Appalachians, have highlighted the need for development of possible mitigation practices to reduce or prevent strike mortality. Other than increasing turbine cut-in speed, acoustic deterrents probably hold the greatest promise for reducing bat mortality. However, acoustic deterrent effectiveness...
Small-scale lacustrine drifts in Lake Champlain, Vermont
Patricia L. Manley, T.O. Manley, Kathryn Hayo, Thomas Cronin
2012, Journal of Great Lakes Research (38) 88-100
High resolution CHIRP (Compressed High Intensity Radar Pulse) seismic profiles reveal the presence of two lacustrine sediment drifts located in Lake Champlain's Juniper Deep. Both drifts are positive features composed of highly laminated sediments. Drift B sits on a basement high while Drift A is built on a trough-filling acoustically-transparent...
Short-term survival of ammonites in New Jersey after the end-Cretaceous bolide impact
Neil H. Landman, Matthew P. Garb, Remy Rovelli, Denton S. Ebel, Lucy E. Edwards
2012, Acta Palaeontologica Polonica (57) 703-715
A section containing the Cretaceous/Paleogene (= Cretaceous/Tertiary) boundary in Monmouth County, New Jersey, preserves a record of ammonites extending from the end of the Cretaceous into possibly the beginning of the Danian. The section includes the upper part of the Tinton Formation and lower part of the Hornerstown Formation. The...