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Page 1683, results 42051 - 42075

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Publication Extents

Not all publications have extents, not all extents are completely accurate
Conceptualizing and communicating ecological river restoration
Robert B. Jacobson, Jim Berkley
2011, Book chapter, Stream restoration in dynamic fluvial systems
We present a general conceptual model for communicating aspects of river restoration and management. The model is generic and adaptable to most riverine settings, independent of size. The model has separate categories of natural and social-economic drivers, and management actions are envisioned as modifiers of naturally dynamic systems. The model...
Unravelling long-term vegetation change patterns in a binational watershed using multitemporal land cover data and historical photography
Miguel L. Villarreal, Laura M. Norman, Robert H. Webb, Diane E. Boyer, Raymond M. Turner
2011, Conference Paper, Proceedings of MULTITEMP 2011, 6th International Workshop on the Analysis of Multitemporal Remote Sensing Images
A significant amount of research conducted in the Sonoran Desert of North America has documented, both anecdotally and empirically, major vegetation changes over the past century due to human land use activities. However, many studies lack coincidental landscape-scale data characterizing the spatial and temporal manifestation of these changes. Vegetation changes...
Aggregation of estimated numbers of undiscovered deposits: an R-script with an example from the Chu Sarysu Basin, Kazakhtan: Chapter B in Global mineral resource assessment
John H. Schuenemeyer, Michael L. Zientek, Stephen E. Box
2011, Scientific Investigations Report 2010-5090-B
Mineral resource assessments completed by the U.S. Geological Survey during the past three decades express geologically based estimates of numbers of undiscovered mineral deposits as probability distributions. Numbers of undiscovered deposits of a given type are estimated in geologically defined regions. Using Monte Carlo simulations, these undiscovered deposit estimates are...
Coastal circulation and water-column properties off Kalaupapa National Historical Park, Molokai, Hawaii, 2008-2010
Curt D. Storlazzi, Katherine Presto, Eric K. Brown
2011, Open-File Report 2011-1154
More than 2.2 million measurements of oceanographic forcing and the resulting water-column properties were made off U.S. National Park Service's Kalaupapa National Historical Park on the north shore of Molokai, Hawaii, between 2008 and 2010 to understand the role of oceanographic processes on the health and sustainability of the area's...
Hydrogeophysical investigations at Hidden Dam, Raymond, California
Burke J. Minsley, Bethany L. Burton, Scott Ikard, Michael H. Powers
2011, Journal of Environmental & Engineering Geophysics (16) 145-164
Self-potential and direct current resistivity surveys are carried out at the Hidden Dam site in Raymond, California to assess present-day seepage patterns and better understand the hydrogeologic mechanisms that likely influence seepage. Numerical modeling is utilized in conjunction with the geophysical measurements to predict variably-saturated flow through typical two-dimensional...
Ictalurids in Iowa’s streams and rivers: Status, distribution, and relationships with biotic integrity
Anthony R. Sindt, Jesse R. Fischer, Michael C. Quist, Clay Pierce
2011, American Fisheries Society Symposium (77) 335-347
Anthropogenic alterations to Iowa’s landscape have greatly altered lotic systems with consequent effects on the biodiversity of freshwater fauna. Ictalurids are a diverse group of fishes and play an important ecological role in aquatic ecosystems. However, little is known about their distribution and status in lotic systems throughout Iowa. The...
Gravity lineaments of the Cocos Plate: Evidence for a thermal contraction crack origin
Marie-Helene Cormier, Kathleen D. Gans, Douglas S. Wilson
2011, Geochemistry Geophysics Geosystems (12)
Lineaments in the gravity field with wavelengths of 100–200 km affect the south-central Pacific. Because they align with absolute plate motion, it has been proposed that they reflect small-scale convection cells beneath the lithosphere that become elongated by basal shear. Alternatively, it was suggested that they reflect channelized flow of...
Combined multibeam and LIDAR bathymetry data from eastern Long Island Sound and westernmost Block Island Sound-A regional perspective
L.J. Poppe, W. W. Danforth, K.Y. McMullen, Castle E. Parker, E. F. Doran
2011, Open-File Report 2011-1003
Detailed bathymetric maps of the sea floor in Long Island Sound are of great interest to the Connecticut and New York research and management communities because of this estuary's ecological, recreational, and commercial importance. The completed, geologically interpreted digital terrain models (DTMs), ranging in area from 12 to 293 square...
Mine waters: Acidic to circumneutral
D. Kirk Nordstrom
2011, Elements (7) 393-398
Acid mine waters, often containing toxic concentrations of Fe, Al, Cu, Zn, Cd, Pb, Ni, Co, and Cr, can be produced from the mining of coal and metallic deposits. Values of pH for acid mine waters can range from –3.5 to 5, but even circumneutral (pH ≈ 7) mine waters...
Density estimation in a wolverine population using spatial capture-recapture models
J. Andrew Royle, Audrey J. Magoun, Beth Gardner, Patrick Valkenbury, Richard E. Lowell
Kevin McKelvey, editor(s)
2011, Journal of Wildlife Management (75) 604-611
Classical closed-population capture-recapture models do not accommodate the spatial information inherent in encounter history data obtained from camera-trapping studies. As a result, individual heterogeneity in encounter probability is induced, and it is not possible to estimate density objectively because trap arrays do not have a well-defined sample area. We applied...
Amplification and dampening of soil respiration by changes in temperature variability
C.A. Sierra, M. E. Harmon, E. Thomann, S.S. Perakis, H.W. Loescher
2011, Biogeosciences (8) 951-961
Accelerated release of carbon from soils is one of the most important feed backs related to anthropogenically induced climate change. Studies addressing the mechanisms for soil carbon release through organic matter decomposition have focused on the effect of changes in the average temperature, with little attention to changes in temperature...
Degradation of the disease-associated prion protein by a serine protease from lichens
C.J. Johnson, J. P. Bennett, S.M. Biro, J.C. Duque-Velasquez, C.M. Rodriguez, R. A. Bessen, Tonie E. Rocke
Jason C. Bartz, editor(s)
2011, PLoS ONE (6)
The disease-associated prion protein (PrP(TSE)), the probable etiological agent of the transmissible spongiform encephalopathies (TSEs), is resistant to degradation and can persist in the environment. Lichens, mutualistic symbioses containing fungi, algae, bacteria and occasionally cyanobacteria, are ubiquitous in the environment and have evolved unique biological activities allowing their survival in...
Tools for assessing kinship, population structure, phylogeography, and interspecific hybridization in Asian carps invasive to the Mississippi River, USA: isolation and characterization of novel tetranucleotide microsatellite DNA loci in silver carp Hypophthalmichthys molitrix
T.L. King, M.S. Eackles, D.C. Chapman
2011, Conservation Genetics Resources (3) 397-401
We document the isolation and characterization of novel tetranucleotide microsatellite DNA markers for the invasive silver carp Hypophthalmichthys molitrix and provide the results of cross-species amplification for three additional invasive carp species: bighead (H. nobilis), grass (Ctenopharyngodon idella) and black (Mylopharyngodon piceus). In the target species these markers yielded levels...
Deep permeable fault–controlled helium transport and limited mantle flux in two extensional geothermal systems in the Great Basin, United States
Amlan Banerjee, Mark Person, Albert Hofstra, Donald S. Sweetkind, Denis Cohen, Andrew Sabin, Jeff Unruh, George Zyvoloski, Carl W. Gable, Laura Crossey, Karl Karlstrom
2011, Geology (39) 195-198
This study assesses the relative importance of deeply circulating meteoric water and direct mantle fluid inputs on near-surface 3He/4He anomalies reported at the Coso and Beowawe geothermal fields of the western United States. The depth of meteoric fluid circulation is a critical factor that controls the temperature, extent of fluid-rock isotope...
Simulating oil droplet dispersal from the Deepwater Horizon spill with a Lagrangian approach
Elizabeth W. North, E. Eric Adams, Zachary Schlag, Christopher R. Sherwood, Ruoying He, Hoon Hyun, Scott A. Socolofsky
2011, Book chapter, Monitoring and modeling the Deepwater Horizon oil spill: A record-breaking enterprise
An analytical multiphase plume model, combined with time-varying flow and hydrographic fields generated by the 3-D South Atlantic Bight and Gulf of Mexico model (SABGOM) hydrodynamic model, were used as input to a Lagrangian transport model (LTRANS), to simulate transport of oil droplets dispersed at depth from the recent Deepwater...
The population crash of the white-rumped vulture, and its struggle to recover
Carol U. Meteyer, Martin Gilbert
2011, The Falconer 76-78
The white-rumped vulture Gyps bengalensis was once the most abundant bird of prey on the Indian sub-continent. This species easily adapted to life in urban settings; thriving as a keystone species that maintained an ecological balance between the living and the dead. Dead livestock comprised the bulk of...
Treatment of anchor pixels in the METRIC model for improved estimation of sensible and latent heat fluxes
Ramesh K. Singh, A. Irmak
2011, Hydrological Sciences Journal (56) 895-906
Reliable estimation of sensible heat flux (H) is important in energy balance models for quantifying evapotranspiration (ET). This study was conducted to evaluate the value of adding the Priestley-Taylor (PT) equation to the METRIC (Mapping Evapotranspiration at high Resolution with Internalized Calibration) model. METRIC was used to estimate energy fluxes...
Macondo-1 well oil in sediment and tarballs from the northern Gulf of Mexico shoreline
Florence L. Wong, Robert J. Rosenbauer, Pamela L. Campbell, Angela Lam, T.D. Lorenson, Frances D. Hostettler, Burt Thomas
2011, Open-File Report 2011-1164
From April 20 through July 15, 2010, an estimated 4.4 million barrels (1 barrel = 42 gallons [~700,000 cu m]) of crude oil spilled into the northern Gulf of Mexico (nGOM) from the ruptured British Petroleum (BP) Macondo-1 (M-1) well after the explosion of the drilling platform Deepwater Horizon. In...
Simulation of specific conductance and chloride concentration in Abercorn Creek, Georgia, 2000-2009
Paul Conrads, Edwin A. Roehl Jr., Steven R. Davie
2011, Scientific Investigations Report 2011-5074
The City of Savannah operates an industrial and domestic water-supply intake on Abercorn Creek approximately 2 miles from the confluence with the Savannah River upstream from the Interstate 95 bridge. Chloride concentrations are a major concern for the city because industrial customers require water with low chloride concentrations, and elevated...
Groundwater withdrawals and associated well descriptions for the Nevada National Security Site, Nye County, Nevada, 1951-2008
Peggy E. Elliott, Michael T. Moreo
2011, Data Series 567
From 1951 to 2008, groundwater withdrawals totaled more than 25,000 million gallons from wells on and directly adjacent to the Nevada National Security Site. Total annual groundwater withdrawals ranged from about 30 million gallons in 1951 to as much as 1,100 million gallons in 1989. Annual withdrawals from individual wells...
Alphacoronaviruses in New World Bats: Prevalence, Persistence, Phylogeny, and Potential for Interaction with Humans
Christina Osborne, Paul M. Cryan, Thomas J. O'Shea, Lauren M. Oko, Christina Ndaluka, Charles H. Calisher, Andrew D. Berglund, Mead L. Klavetter, Kathryn V. Holmes, Samuel R. Dominguez
Joel Mark Montgomery, editor(s)
2011, PLoS ONE (6)
Bats are reservoirs for many different coronaviruses (CoVs) as well as many other important zoonotic viruses. We sampled feces and/or anal swabs of 1,044 insectivorous bats of 2 families and 17 species from 21 different locations within Colorado from 2007 to 2009. We detected alphacoronavirus RNA in bats of 4...
OpenStreetMap Collaborative Prototype, Phase 1
Eric B. Wolf, Greg D. Matthews, Kevin McNinch, Barbara S. Poore
2011, Open-File Report 2011-1136
Phase One of the OpenStreetMap Collaborative Prototype (OSMCP) attempts to determine if the open source software developed for the OpenStreetMap (OSM, http://www.openstreetmap.org) can be used for data contributions and improvements that meet or exceed the requirements for integration into The National Map (http://www.nationalmap.gov). OpenStreetMap Collaborative Prototype Phase One focused on...
Coastal habitat degradation and green sea turtle diets in Southeastern Brazil
Robson G. Santos, Agnaldo Silva Martins, Julyana da Nobrega Farias, Antunes Paulo Horta, Hudson Tercio Pinheiro, Cecilia Baptistotte, Jeffrey A. Seminoff, George H. Balazs, Thierry M. Work
2011, Marine Pollution Bulletin (62) 1297-1302
To show the influence of coastal habitat degradation on the availability of food for green turtles (Chelonia mydas), we assessed the dietary preferences and macroalgae community at a feeding area in a highly urbanized region. The area showed low species richness and was classified as degraded. We examined stomach contents...
Acute Toxicity of Sodium Fluorescein to Ashy Pebblesnails Fluminicola fuscus
Kelly A. Stockton, Christine M. Moffitt, David L. Blew, C. Neil Farmer
2011, Report
Water resource agencies and groundwater scientists use fluorescein dyes to trace ground water flows that supply surface waters that may contain threatened or endangered mollusk species. Since little is known of the toxicity of sodium fluorescein to mollusks, we tested the toxicity of sodium fluorescein to the ashy pebblesnail Fluminicola...