Preparing for a "Big One": The great southern California shakeout
Lucile M. Jones, M. Benthien
2011, Earthquake Spectra (27) 575-595
The Great Southern California ShakeOut was a week of special events featuring the largest earthquake drill in United States history. On November 13, 2008, over 5 million Southern Californians pretended that the magnitude-7.8 ShakeOut scenario earthquake was occurring and practiced actions derived from results of the ShakeOut Scenario, to reduce...
A Comparison of seismic instrument noise coherence analysis techniques
A. T. Ringler, C. R. Hutt, J.R. Evans, L.D. Sandoval
2011, Bulletin of the Seismological Society of America (101) 558-567
The self-noise of a seismic instrument is a fundamental characteristic used to evaluate the quality of the instrument. It is important to be able to measure this self-noise robustly, to understand how differences among test configurations affect the tests, and to understand how different processing techniques and isolation methods (from...
A large and persistent carbon sink in the world's forests
Y. Pan, R.A. Birdsey, J. Fang, R. Houghton, P.E. Kauppi, W.A. Kurz, O.L. Phillips, A. Shvidenko, S.L. Lewis, J.G. Canadell, P. Ciais, R.B. Jackson, S.W. Pacala, A. David McGuire, S. Piao, A. Rautiainen, S. Sitch, D. Hayes
2011, Science (333) 988-993
The terrestrial carbon sink has been large in recent decades, but its size and location remain uncertain. Using forest inventory data and long-term ecosystem carbon studies, we estimate a total forest sink of 2.4 ± 0.4 petagrams of carbon per year (Pg C year–1) globally for...
Reservoir characterization of the Mt. Simon Sandstone, Illinois Basin, USA
S.M. Frailey, J. Damico, H.E. Leetaru
2011, Conference Paper
The integration of open hole well log analyses, core analyses and pressure transient analyses was used for reservoir characterization of the Mt. Simon sandstone. Characterization of the injection interval provides the basis for a geologic model to support the baseline MVA model, specify pressure design requirements of surface equipment,...
From deposition to erosion: Spatial and temporal variability of sediment sources, storage, and transport in a small agricultural watershed
J.L. Florsheim, B.A. Pellerin, N.H. Oh, N. Ohara, P.A.M. Bachand, Sandra M. Bachand, B.A. Bergamaschi, P.J. Hernes, M.L. Kavvas
2011, Geomorphology (132) 272-286
The spatial and temporal variability of sediment sources, storage, and transport were investigated in a small agricultural watershed draining the Coast Ranges and Sacramento Valley in central California. Results of field, laboratory, and historical data analysis in the Willow Slough fluvial system document changes that transformed a transport-limited depositional system...
Electronic tags and genetics explore variation in migrating steelhead kelts (oncorhynchus mykiss), Ninilchik river, Alaska
J.L. Nielsen, S.M. Turner, Christian E. Zimmerman
2011, Canadian Journal of Fisheries and Aquatic Sciences (68) 1-16
Acoustic and archival tags examined freshwater and marine migrations of postspawn steelhead kelts (Oncorhynchus mykiss) in the Ninilchik River, Alaska, USA. Postspawn steelhead were captured at a weir in 2002-2005. Scale analysis indicated multiple migratory life histories and spawning behaviors. Acoustic tags were implanted in 99 kelts (2002-2003), and an...
Porphyry Cu indicator minerals in till as an exploration tool: Example from the giant Pebble porphyry Cu-Au-Mo deposit, Alaska, USA
Karen D. Kelley, Robert G. Eppinger, J. Lang, Steven M. Smith, David L. Fey
2011, Geochemistry: Exploration, Environment, Analysis (11) 321-334
Porphyry Cu indicator minerals are mineral species in clastic sediments that indicate the presence of mineralization and hydrothermal alteration associated with porphyry Cu and associated skarn deposits. Porphyry Cu indicator minerals recovered from shallow till samples near the giant Pebble Cu-Au-Mo porphyry deposit in SW Alaska, USA, include apatite, andradite...
Dynamic habitat selection by two wading bird species with divergent foraging strategies in a seasonally fluctuating wetland
James M. Beerens, Dale E. Gawlik, Garth Herring, Mark I. Cook
2011, The Auk (128) 651-662
Seasonal and annual variation in food availability during the breeding season plays an influential role in the population dynamics of many avian species. In highly dynamic ecosystems like wetlands, finding and exploiting food resources requires a flexible behavioral response that may produce different population trends that vary with a species'...
Vegetation index-based crop coefficients to estimate evapotranspiration by remote sensing in agricultural and natural ecosystems
E. P. Glenn, C. M. U. Neale, D.J. Hunsaker, P.L. Nagler
2011, Hydrological Processes (25) 4050-4062
Crop coefficients were developed to determine crop water needs based on the evapotranspiration (ET) of a reference crop under a given set of meteorological conditions. Starting in the 1980s, crop coefficients developed through lysimeter studies or set by expert opinion began to be supplemented by remotely sensed vegetation indices (VI)...
Response of non-native lake trout (Salvelinus namaycush) to 15 years of harvest in Yellowstone Lake, Yellowstone National Park
J.M. Syslo, C.S. Guy, P.E. Bigelow, P.D. Doepke, B.D. Ertel, T.M. Koel
2011, Canadian Journal of Fisheries and Aquatic Sciences (68) 2132-2145
Introduced lake trout (Salvelinus namaycush) threaten to extirpate native Yellowstone cutthroat trout (Oncorhynchus clarkii bouvieri) in the 34 000 ha Yellowstone Lake in Yellowstone National Park, USA. Suppression (and eventual eradication) of the lake trout population is deemed necessary for the conservation of Yellowstone cutthroat trout. A US National Park...
Woody invasions of urban trails and the changing face of urban forests in the great plains, USA
K.T. Nemec, Craig R. Allen, A. Alai, G. Clements, A.C. Kessler, T. Kinsell, A. Major, B.J. Stephen
2011, American Midland Naturalist (165) 241-256
Corridors such as roads and trails can facilitate invasions by non-native plant species. The open, disturbed habitat associated with corridors provides favorable growing conditions for many non-native plant species. Bike trails are a corridor system common to many urban areas that have not been studied for their potential role in...
Design of ecoregional monitoring in conservation areas of high-latitude ecosystems under contemporary climate change
Erik A. Beever, Andrea Woodward
2011, Biological Conservation (144) 1258-1269
Land ownership in Alaska includes a mosaic of federally managed units. Within its agency’s context, each unit has its own management strategy, authority, and resources of conservation concern, many of which are migratory animals. Though some units are geographically isolated, many are nevertheless linked by paths of abiotic and biotic...
Constraints on mechanisms for the growth of gully alcoves in Gasa crater, Mars, from two-dimensional stability assessments of rock slopes
C.H. Okubo, L.L. Tornabene, N.L. Lanza
2011, Icarus (211) 207-221
The value of slope stability analyses for gaining insight into the geologic conditions that would facilitate the growth of gully alcoves on Mars is demonstrated in Gasa crater. Two-dimensional limit equilibrium methods are used in conjunction with high-resolution topography derived from stereo High Resolution Imaging Science Experiment (HiRISE) imagery. These...
Diel variation of selenium and arsenic in a wetland of the Great Salt Lake, Utah
G. Dicataldo, W.P. Johnson, David L. Naftz, D.F. Hayes, W.O. Moellmer, T. Miller
2011, Applied Geochemistry (26) 28-36
Diel (24-h) changes in Se and As concentrations in a freshwater wetland pond bordering the Great Salt Lake (GSL) were examined. Selenium concentrations (filtered and unfiltered) changed on a diel basis, i.e., were depleted during early morning and enriched during daytime over August 17–18. During the May 24–25, 2006 and...
An improved understanding of the Alaska coastal current: The application of a bivalve growth-temperature model to reconstruct freshwater-influenced paleoenvironments
N. Hallmann, B.R. Schone, G.V. Irvine, M. Burchell, E.D. Cokelet, M.R. Hilton
2011, Palaios (26) 346-363
Shells of intertidal bivalve mollusks contain sub-seasonally to interannually resolved records of temperature and salinity variations in coastal settings. Such data are essential to understand changing land-sea interactions through time, specifically atmospheric (precipitation rate, glacial meltwater, river discharge) and oceanographic circulation patterns; however, independent temperature and salinity proxies are currently...
Behavioral, clinical, and pathological characterization of acid metalliferous water toxicity in mallards
J.P. Isanhart, H. Wu, K. Pandher, R.K. MacRae, S.B. Cox, M.J. Hooper
2011, Archives of Environmental Contamination and Toxicology (61) 653-667
From September to November 2000, United States Fish and Wildlife Service biologists investigated incidents involving 221 bird deaths at 3 mine sites located in New Mexico and Arizona. These bird deaths primarily involved passerine and waterfowl species and were assumed to be linked to consumption of acid metalliferous water (AMW)....
An ecosystem-scale model for the spread of a host-specific forest pathogen in the Greater Yellowstone Ecosystem
J.A. Hatala, M.C. Dietze, R.L. Crabtree, Katherine C. Kendall, D. Six, P.R. Moorcroft
2011, Ecological Applications (21) 1138-1153
The introduction of nonnative pathogens is altering the scale, magnitude, and persistence of forest disturbance regimes in the western United States. In the high-altitude whitebark pine (Pinus albicaulis) forests of the Greater Yellowstone Ecosystem (GYE), white pine blister rust (Cronartium ribicola) is an introduced fungal pathogen that is...
New collection records and range extension for the caddisfly Arctopora salmon (Smith, 1969) (Trichoptera: Limnephilidae)
Blake R. Hossack, Robert L. Newell, David E. Ruiter
2011, Pan-Pacific Entomologist (87) 206-208
[No abstract available]...
Hapke modeling of Rhea surface properties through Cassini-VIMS spectra
M. Ciarniello, F. Capaccioni, G. Filacchione, Roger N. Clark, D. P. Cruikshank, P. Cerroni, A. Coradini, R. H. Brown, B. J. Buratti, F. Tosi, K. Stephan
2011, Icarus (214) 541-555
TThe surface properties of the icy bodies in the saturnian system have been investigated by means of the Cassini-VIMS (Visual Infrared Mapping Spectrometer) hyperspectral imager which operates in the 0.35–5.1 μm wavelength range. In particular, we have analyzed 111 full disk hyperspectral images of Rhea ranging in solar phase between 0.08°...
Cougar space use and movements in the wildland-urban landscape of western Washington
B.N. Kertson, R.D. Spencer, J.M. Marzluff, Jeffrey Hepinstall-Cymerman, C.E. Grue
2011, Ecological Applications (21) 2866-2881
The wildland-urban interface lies at the confluence of human-dominated and wild landscapes, creating a number of management and conservation challenges. Because wildlife ecology, behavior, and evolution at this interface are shaped by both natural and human phenomena, this requires greater understanding of how diverse factors affect ecosystem and population processes....
Sexual difference in mercury concentrations of lake trout (Salvelinus namaycush) from Lake Ontario
C.P. Madenjian, M.J. Keir, D.M. Whittle
2011, Chemosphere (83) 903-908
We determined total mercury (Hg) concentrations in 50 female lake trout (Salvelinus namaycush) and 69 male lake trout from Lake Ontario (Ontario, Canada and New York, United States). Results showed that, on average, males were 8% higher in Hg concentration than females in Lake Ontario. We also used bioenergetics modeling...
Multi-scale temporal and spatial variation in genotypic composition of Cladophora-borne Escherichia coli populations in Lake Michigan
B.D. Badgley, J. Ferguson, A.V. Heuvel, G.T. Kleinheinz, C.M. McDermott, T.R. Sandrin, J. Kinzelman, E.A. Junion, M.N. Byappanahalli, R.L. Whitman, M.J. Sadowsky
2011, Water Research (45) 721-731
High concentrations of Escherichia coli in mats of Cladophora in the Great Lakes have raised concern over the continued use of this bacterium as an indicator of microbial water quality. Determining the impacts of these environmentally abundant E. coli, however, necessitates a better understanding of their ecology. In this study,...
EAARL coastal topography - Assateague Island National Seashore, Maryland and Virginia, 2010
J.M. Bonisteel-Cormier, Amar Nayegandhi, C. W. Wright, J. C. Brock, D.B. Nagle, Saisudha Vivekanandan, E.S. Klipp, Xan Fredericks, Sara Stevens
2011, Data Series 628
This DVD contains lidar-derived bare-earth (BE) and first-surface (FS) topography GIS datasets of a portion of the Assateague Island National Seashore in Maryland and Virginia. These datasets were acquired on March 19 and 24, 2010....
Population structure and genetic diversity of greater sage-grouse (Centrocercus urophasianus) in fragmented landscapes at the northern edge of their range
K.L. Bush, C.K. Dyte, B.J. Moynahan, Cameron L. Aldridge, H.S. Sauls, A.M. Battazzo, B.L. Walker, K.E. Doherty, J. Tack, J. Carlson, D. Eslinger, J. Nicholson, M.S. Boyce, D.E. Naugle, C.A. Paszkowski, D.W. Coltman
2011, Conservation Genetics (12) 527-542
Range-edge dynamics and anthropogenic fragmentation are expected to impact patterns of genetic diversity, and understanding the influence of both factors is important for effective conservation of threatened wildlife species. To examine these factors, we sampled greater sage-grouse (Centrocercus urophasianus) from a declining, fragmented region at the northern periphery of the...
Walleye and sauger habitat
Michael A. Bozek, Timothy J. Haxton, Joshua K. Raabe
Bruce A. Barton, editor(s)
2011, Book chapter, Biology, management, and culture of walleye and sauger
No abstract available....