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Page 1709, results 42701 - 42725

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Publication Extents

Not all publications have extents, not all extents are completely accurate
Overview of the ARkStorm scenario
Keith Porter, Anne Wein, Charles N. Alpers, Allan Baez, Patrick L. Barnard, James Carter, Alessandra Corsi, James Costner, Dale Cox, Tapash Das, Mike Dettinger, James Done, Charles Eadie, Marcia Eymann, Justin Ferris, Prasad Gunturi, Mimi Hughes, Robert Jarrett, Laurie Johnson, Hanh Dam Le-Griffin, David Mitchell, Suzette Morman, Paul Neiman, Anna Olsen, Suzanne Perry, Geoffrey Plumlee, Martin Ralph, David Reynolds, Adam Rose, Kathleen Schaefer, Julie Serakos, William Siembieda, Jonathan D. Stock, David Strong, Ian Sue Wing, Alex Tang, Pete Thomas, Ken Topping, Chris Wills, Lucile Jones
2011, Open-File Report 2010-1312
The U.S. Geological Survey, Multi Hazards Demonstration Project (MHDP) uses hazards science to improve resiliency of communities to natural disasters including earthquakes, tsunamis, wildfires, landslides, floods and coastal erosion. The project engages emergency planners, businesses, universities, government agencies, and others in preparing for major natural disasters. The project also helps...
Characterization of hydrology and salinity in the Dolores project area, McElmo Creek region, southwest Colorado, water years 1978-2006
Rodney J. Richards, Kenneth J. Leib
2011, Scientific Investigations Report 2010-5218
Increasing salinity loading in the Colorado River has become a major concern for agricultural and municipal water supplies. The Colorado Salinity Control Act was implemented in 1974 to protect and enhance the quality of water in the Colorado River Basin. The U.S. Geological Survey, in cooperation with the Bureau of...
Upper Colorado River Basin Climate Effects Network
Jayne Belnap, Donald Campbell, Jeff Kershner
2011, Fact Sheet 2010-3092
The Upper Colorado River Basin (UCRB) Climate Effects Network (CEN) is a science team established to provide information to assist land managers in future decision making processes by providing a better understanding of how future climate change, land use, invasive species, altered fire cycles, human systems, and the interactions among...
Cyclic spattering, seismic tremor, and surface fluctuation within a perched lava channel, Kilauea Volcano
Matthew R. Patrick, Tim R. Orr, David C. Wilson, David C. Dow, R. Freeman
2011, Bulletin of Volcanology (73) 639-653
In late 2007, a perched lava channel, built up to 45 m above the preexisting surface, developed during the ongoing eruption near Pu‘u ‘Ō‘ō cone on Kīlauea Volcano’s east rift zone. The lava channel was segmented into four pools extending over a total of 1.4 km. From late October to mid-December, a...
Use of cover habitat by bull trout, Salvelinus confluentus, and lake trout, Salvelinus namaycush, in a laboratory environment
Michael H. Meeuwig, Christopher S. Guy, Wade A. Fredenberg
2011, Environmental Biology of Fishes (90) 367-378
Lacustrine-adfluvial bull trout, Salvelinus confluentus, migrate from spawning and rearing streams to lacustrine environments as early as age 0. Within lacustrine environments, cover habitat provides refuge from potential predators and is a resource that is competed for if limiting. Competitive interactions between bull trout and other species could result in bull...
Distribution and habitat associations of breeding secretive marsh birds in Louisiana's Mississippi Alluvial Valley
Jonathan J. Valente, Sammy L. King, R. Randy Wilson
2011, Wetlands (31) 1-10
Populations of many North American secretive marsh birds (SMBs) have declined in recent decades, partially as a function of wetland loss. Protecting and restoring appropriate habitat for these species is contingent upon understanding the habitat features they utilize. We investigated breeding distributions of SMBs in northeast Louisiana at 118 wetlands...
Does prescribed fire benefit wetland vegetation?
C. Flores, D.L. Bounds, D.E. Ruby
2011, Wetlands (31) 35-44
The effects of fire on wetland vegetation in the mid-Atlantic region of the United States are poorly known, despite the historical use of fire by federal, state, and private landowners in the Chesapeake Bay Region. Prescribed fire is widely used by land managers to promote vegetation that is beneficial to...
How systematic age underestimation can impede understanding of fish population dynamics: Lessons learned from a Lake Superior cisco stock
Daniel L. Yule, Jason D. Stockwell, J.A. Black, Ken I. Cullis, Gary A. Cholwek, Jared T. Myers
2011, Transactions of the American Fisheries Society (137) 481-495
Systematic underestimation of fish age can impede understanding of recruitment variability and adaptive strategies (like longevity) and can bias estimates of survivorship. We suspected that previous estimates of annual survival (S; range = 0.20-0.44) for Lake Superior ciscoes Coregonus artedi developed from scale ages were biased low. To test this hypothesis, we...
Seasonal use of a New England estuary by foraging contingents of migratory striped bass
Martha E. Mather, Sarah M. Pautzke, John T. Finn, Linda A. Deegan, Robert M. Muth
2011, Transactions of the American Fisheries Society (139) 257-269
Using acoustic telemetry on migratory striped bass Morone saxatilis in Plum Island Estuary (PIE), Massachusetts, we found that striped bass (335–634 mm total length) tagged in the spring and summer of 2005 (n = 14) and 2006 (n = 46) stayed in the estuary for an average of 66.0 d in 2005 and 72.2...
Sampling effort and estimates of species richness based on prepositioned area electrofisher samples
Zachary H. Bowen, Mary C. Freeman
2011, North American Journal of Fisheries Management (18) 144-153
Estimates of species richness based on electrofishing data are commonly used to describe the structure of fish communities. One electrofishing method for sampling riverine fishes that has become popular in the last decade is the prepositioned area electrofisher (PAE). We investigated the relationship between sampling effort and fish...
Structural and functional effects of herbicides on non-target organisms in aquatic ecosystems with an emphasis on atrazine
James Fairchild
Andreas Kortekamp, editor(s)
2011, Book chapter, Herbicides and environment
Herbicide use has increased dramatically around the world over the past 6 decades (Gianessi and Reigner, 2007). Few herbicides were in use in the 1950s. However, by 2001 approximately 1.14 billion kilograms of herbicides were applied globally for the control of undesireable vegetation in agricultural, silvicultural, lawncare, aquacultural, and irrigation/recreational...
Habitat associations of small fishes around islands in the upper Mississippi River
Barry L. Johnson, Cecil A. Jennings
2011, North American Journal of Fisheries Management (18) 327-336
In large rivers, islands provide a variety of habitat types and increase habitat heterogeneity. Creating or modifying islands with dredged sediments from channel maintenance operations provides an opportunity to enhance habitat features that might promote certain fish communities or general fish abundance. To determine associations between fish species and habitat...
Passage and behavior of adult American shad in an experimental louver bypass system
B. Kynard, C. Buerkett
2011, North American Journal of Fisheries Management (17) 734-742
We tested 436 adult American shad Alosa sapidissima in an experimental louver bypass system, which was similar to a system operating at Holyoke Dam, Massachusetts, to determine guidance and passage efficiency and to study fish response to stimuli from physical structures, light intensity, and water velocity. Groups of 5–29 fish were exposed...
Thermal marking of Atlantic salmon otoliths
B. H. Letcher, T.D. Terrick
2011, North American Journal of Fisheries Management (18) 406-410
By exposing fry of Atlantic salmon Salmo salar to various temperature regimes, we determined conditions required to produce a readable thermal otolith mark. Marks were quantified by using a darkness index that represented the number of times darker the mark was than the background. Minimum requirements for a strong mark were 1...
Estimating the impacts of reservoir elevation changes on kokanee emergence in Flaming Gorge Reservoir, Wyoming-Utah
T. Modde, R.J. Jeric, W.A. Hubert, R.D. Gipson
2011, North American Journal of Fisheries Management (17) 470-473
Flaming Gorge Reservoir, like many western North American reservoirs, is managed to release water during the winter months to allow for water storage associated with melting snow and rain during spring. Decreases in reservoir elevation during winter can cause mortalities of kokanee Oncorhynchus nerka spawned along the shoreline the previous fall. This...
Relationship between vegetation coverage and abundance, size, and diet of juvenile largemouth bass during winter
L.E. Miranda, L.L. Pugh
2011, North American Journal of Fisheries Management (17) 601-610
Juvenile largemouth bass Micropterus salmoides were collected by electrofishing during October through March 1992–1994 from coves (≤25 ha) covered with aquatic macrophytes over 1–65% of their area. Mean total length of juvenile largemouth bass was highest in coves with the least vegetated cover, but increase in mean length between October and March...
Trends in relative weight of walleye stocks in Wyoming reservoirs
T.D. Marwitz, W.A. Hubert
2011, North American Journal of Fisheries Management (17) 44-53
The relative weight (Wr) index of body condition provided insight into the stock dynamics of walleye Stizostedion vitreum in six reservoirs in the North Platte River drainage of Wyoming. The three most upstream reservoirs are managed as both walleye and trout (Oncorhynchus spp. and Salmo spp.) fisheries; trout are stocked annually. The three downstream reservoirs...
Age at sexual maturity, sex ratio, fecundity, and longevity of isolated headwater populations of westslope cutthroat trout
Christopher C. Downs, Robert G. White, Bradely B. Shepard
2011, North American Journal of Fisheries Management (17) 85-92
We sampled 19 isolated headwater populations of westslope cutthroat trout Oncorhynchus clarki lewisi in Montana to provide estimates of fecundity, longevity, sex ratio, and age at sexual maturity. Fecundity was estimated for 31 fish collected from two streams in the upper Missouri River drainage. Females smaller than 149 mm fork length (FL)...
Movement of saugers in the lower Tennessee River determined by radio telemetry, and implications for management
M.A. Pegg, P.W. Bettoli, J.B. Layzer
2011, North American Journal of Fisheries Management (17) 763-768
Since 1979, abundances of sauger Stizostedion canadense have declined in the Tennessee River system. Reasons for this decline may include overharvest, loss of spawning habitat, and low recruitment due to extreme flows. The purpose of this study was to investigate the movements of saugers following winter concentration below Pickwick Dam, Tennessee. Thirty-seven...
Effects of variable recruitment on catch-curve analysis for crappie populations
M. S. Allen
2011, North American Journal of Fisheries Management (17) 202-205
Catch-curve analysis is frequently used to estimate total annual mortality (A) of exploited fishes, but the method assumes constant recruitment. Because populations of crappie Pomoxis spp. have exhibited large fluctuations in recruitment, I conducted simulations to assess the amount of variability in recruitment that precludes the use of a catch curve and...
The effects of wetland restoration on mercury bioaccumulation in the South Bay Salt Pond Restoration Project: Using the biosentinel toolbox to monitor changes across multiple habitats and spatial scales
Joshua T. Ackerman, Mark Marvin-DiPasquale, Darell Slotton, Mark P. Herzog, Collin A. Eagles-Smith
2011, Report, 2010 Annual Report to the Resources Legacy Fund, State Coastal Conservancy, and South Bay Salt Ponds Restoration Program
The project was initiated in April 2010, and to date has included four sampling events of surface water (April, May, June/July, and August 2010) and five sampling events of biota (April, May, June/July, August, and September 2010) and three sampling events for surface...
Seasonal Flux and Assemblage Composition of Planktic Foraminifera from the Northern Gulf of Mexico, 2008-2009
Jessica W. Spear, Richard Z. Poore
2011, Open-File Report 2011-1002
The U.S. Geological Survey established a sediment trap in the northern Gulf of Mexico to collect time-series data on the flux and assemblage composition of live planktic foraminifers. This report provides an update of the 2008 time-series data to include results from 2009. Ten species, or varieties, of planktic foraminifers...