Microtopography enhances nitrogen cycling and removal in created mitigation wetlands
K.L. Wolf, C. Ahn, G.B. Noe
2011, Ecological Engineering (37) 1398-1406
Natural wetlands often have a heterogeneous soil surface topography, or microtopography (MT), that creates microsites of variable hydrology, vegetation, and soil biogeochemistry. Created mitigation wetlands are designed to mimic natural wetlands in structure and function, and recent mitigation projects have incorporated MT as one way to attain this goal. Microtopography...
Century-scale variability in global annual runoff examined using a water balance model
G.J. McCabe, D.M. Wolock
2011, International Journal of Climatology (31) 1739-1748
A monthly water balance model (WB model) is used with CRUTS2.1 monthly temperature and precipitation data to generate time series of monthly runoff for all land areas of the globe for the period 1905 through 2002. Even though annual precipitation accounts for most of the temporal and spatial variability in...
Divergence in forest-type response to climate and weather: Evidence for regional links between forest-type evenness and net primary productivity
J.B. Bradford
2011, Ecosystems (14) 975-986
Climate change is altering long-term climatic conditions and increasing the magnitude of weather fluctuations. Assessing the consequences of these changes for terrestrial ecosystems requires understanding how different vegetation types respond to climate and weather. This study examined 20 years of regional-scale remotely sensed net primary productivity (NPP) in forests of the...
Feasibility of waveform inversion of Rayleigh waves for shallow shear-wave velocity using a genetic algorithm
C. Zeng, J. Xia, R. D. Miller, G.P. Tsoflias
2011, Journal of Applied Geophysics (75) 648-655
Conventional surface wave inversion for shallow shear (S)-wave velocity relies on the generation of dispersion curves of Rayleigh waves. This constrains the method to only laterally homogeneous (or very smooth laterally heterogeneous) earth models. Waveform inversion directly fits waveforms on seismograms, hence, does not have such a limitation. Waveforms of...
Comparative phylogeography of a coevolved community: Concerted population expansions in Joshua trees and four Yucca moths
C.I. Smith, S. Tank, W. Godsoe, J. Levenick, Espen Strand, T. Esque, O. Pellmyr
2011, PLoS ONE (6)
Comparative phylogeographic studies have had mixed success in identifying common phylogeographic patterns among co-distributed organisms. Whereas some have found broadly similar patterns across a diverse array of taxa, others have found that the histories of different species are more idiosyncratic than congruent. The variation in the results of comparative phylogeographic...
Looking beyond fertilizer: Assessing the contribution of nitrogen from hydrologic inputs and organic matter to plant growth in the cranberry agroecosystem
S.M. Stackpoole, K.R. Kosola, B.A.A. Workmaster, N.M. Guldan, B.A. Browne, R. D. Jackson
2011, Nutrient Cycling in Agroecosystems (91) 41-54
Even though nitrogen (N) is a key nutrient for successful cranberry production, N cycling in cranberry agroecosystems is not completely understood. Prior research has focused mainly on timing and uptake of ammonium fertilizer, but the objective of our study was to evaluate the potential for additional N contributions from hydrologic...
Storage as a Metric of Catchment Comparison
J. P. McNamara, D. Tetzlaff, K. Bishop, C. Soulsby, M. Seyfried, N.E. Peters, Brent T. Aulenbach, R. Hooper
2011, Hydrological Processes (25) 3364-3371
The volume of water stored within a catchment, and its partitioning among groundwater, soil moisture, snowpack, vegetation, and surface water are the variables that ultimately characterize the state of the hydrologic system. Accordingly, storage may provide useful metrics for catchment comparison. Unfortunately, measuring and predicting the amount of water present...
Diffusion-driven magnesium and iron isotope fractionation in Hawaiian olivine
F.-Z. Teng, N. Dauphas, Rosalind Tuthill Helz, S. Gao, S. Huang
2011, Earth and Planetary Science Letters (308) 317-324
Diffusion plays an important role in Earth sciences to estimate the timescales of geological processes such as erosion, sediment burial, and magma cooling. In igneous systems, these diffusive processes are recorded in the form of crystal zoning. However, meaningful interpretation of these signatures is often hampered by the fact that...
The influence of fine-scale habitat features on regional variation in population performance of alpine White-tailed Ptarmigan
B. Fedy, K. Martin
2011, Condor (113) 306-315
It is often assumed (explicitly or implicitly) that animals select habitat features to maximize fitness. However, there is often a mismatch between preferred habitats and indices of individual and population measures of performance. We examined the influence of fine-scale habitat selection on the overall population performance of the White-tailed Ptarmigan...
Building transparent data access for ocean observatories: Coordination of U.S. IOOS DMAC with NSF's OOI Cyberinfrastructure
M. Arrott, Corrine Alexander, J. Graybeal, C. Mueller, R. Signell, J. de La Beaujardière, A. Taylor, J. Wilkin, B. Powell, J. Orcutt
2011, Conference Paper, OCEANS'11 - MTS/IEEE Kona, Program Book
The NOAA-led U.S. Integrated Ocean Observing System (IOOS) and the National Science Foundation's Ocean Observatories Initiative (OOI) have been collaborating since 2007 on advanced tools and technologies that ensure open access to ocean observations and models. Initial collaboration focused on serving ocean data via cloud computing-a key component of the...
Chronic toxicity of erythromycin thiocyanate to Daphnia magna in a flow-through, continuous exposure test system
J.R. Meinertz, Theresa M. Schreier, J.A. Bernardy
2011, Bulletin of Environmental Contamination and Toxicology (87) 621-625
Approval of a new animal drug application for AQUAMYCIN 100® (erythromycin thiocyanate; ET) to treat freshwater salmonid species with bacterial kidney disease is being pursued in the US. As part of the approval process, ET’s impact on an aquatic environment had to be described in an environmental assessment. The environmental assessment...
Egg size matching by an intraspecific brood parasite
Patrick R. Lemons, James S. Sedinger
2011, Behavioral Ecology (22) 696-700
Avian brood parasitism provides an ideal system with which to understand animal recognition and its affect on fitness. This phenomenon of laying eggs in the nests of other individuals has classically been framed from the perspective of interspecific brood parasitism and host recognition of parasitic eggs. Few examples exist of...
NETPATH-WIN: an interactive user version of the mass-balance model, NETPATH
A. I. El-Kadi, Niel Plummer, P. Aggarwal
2011, Ground Water (49) 593-599
NETPATH-WIN is an interactive user version of NETPATH, an inverse geochemical modeling code used to find mass-balance reaction models that are consistent with the observed chemical and isotopic composition of waters from aquatic systems. NETPATH-WIN was constructed to migrate NETPATH applications into the Microsoft WINDOWS® environment. The new version facilitates...
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]...
Effects of stop-level habitat change on cerulean warbler detections along breeding bird survey routes in the central appalachians
Patrick M. McElhone, Petra B. Wood, Deanna K. Dawson
2011, Wilson Journal of Ornithology (123) 699-708
- We examined the effects of habitat change on Cerulean Warbler ( Dendroica cerulea) populations at stops along Breeding Bird Survey (BBS) routes in the central Appalachians. We used aerial photographs to compare early (1967/1971), middle (1982/1985), and late (2000/2003) periods and compared 1992 and 2001 National Land Cover...
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....
A data-driven approach for modeling post-fire debris-flow volumes and their uncertainty
Michael J. Friedel
2011, Environmental Modelling and Software (26) 1583-1598
This study demonstrates the novel application of genetic programming to evolve nonlinear post-fire debris-flow volume equations from variables associated with a data-driven conceptual model of the western United States. The search space is constrained using a multi-component objective function that simultaneously minimizes root-mean squared and unit errors for the evolution...
Cooling rates and the depth of detachment faulting at oceanic core complexes: Evidence from zircon Pb/U and (U-Th)/He ages
Craig B. Grimes, Michael J. Cheadle, Barbara E. John, P.W. Reiners, J. L. Wooden
2011, Geochemistry, Geophysics, Geosystems (12)
Oceanic detachment faulting represents a distinct mode of seafloor spreading at slow spreading mid‐ocean ridges, but many questions persist about the thermal evolution and depth of faulting. We present new Pb/U and (U‐Th)/He zircon ages and combine them with magnetic anomaly ages to define the cooling histories of gabbroic crust...
Expansion of urban area and wastewater irrigated rice area in Hyderabad, India
K.M. Gumma, Rooijen D. van, A. Nelson, P.S. Thenkabail, Radha V. Aakuraju, P. Amerasinghe
2011, Irrigation and Drainage Systems (25) 135-149
The goal of this study was to investigate land use changes in urban and peri-urban Hyderabad and their influence on wastewater irrigated rice using Landsat ETM + data and spectral matching techniques. The main source of irrigation water is the Musi River, which collects a large volume of wastewater and...
Influence of landscape characteristics on migration strategies of white-tailed deer
T.W. Grovenburg, C.N. Jacques, R. W. Klaver, C.S. Deperno, T.J. Brinkman, C. C. Swanson, J.A. Jenks
2011, Journal of Mammalogy (92) 534-543
A trade-off exists for migrating animals as to whether to migrate or remain residents. Few studies have documented relationships between landscape variables and deer migration strategies. From 2000 to 2007 we captured 267 adult female white-tailed deer (Odocoileus virginianus) at 7 study sites in Minnesota and South Dakota and monitored...
Hydrologic response of catchments to precipitation: Quantification of mechanical carriers and origins of water
Y.-J. Park, E.A. Sudicky, A.E. Brookfield, J.P. Jones
2011, Water Resources Research (47)
Precipitation-induced overland and groundwater flow and mixing processes are quantified to analyze the temporal (event and pre-event water) and spatial (groundwater discharge and overland runoff) origins of water entering a stream. Using a distributed-parameter control volume finite-element simulator that can simultaneously solve the fully coupled partial differential equations describing 2-D...
The importance of warm season warming to western U.S. streamflow changes
T. Das, D.W. Pierce, D.R. Cayan, J.A. Vano, D.P. Lettenmaier
2011, Geophysical Research Letters (38)
Warm season climate warming will be a key driver of annual streamflow changes in four major river basins of the western U.S., as shown by hydrological model simulations using fixed precipitation and idealized seasonal temperature changes based on climate projections with SRES A2 forcing. Warm season (April-September) warming reduces streamflow...
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...
Potential effects of alpha-recoil on uranium-series dating of calcrete
L.A. Neymark
2011, Chemical Geology (282) 98-112
Evaluation of paleosol ages in the vicinity of Yucca Mountain, Nevada, at the time the site of a proposed high-level nuclear waste repository, is important for fault-displacement hazard assessment. Uranium-series isotope data were obtained for surface and subsurface calcrete samples from trenches and boreholes in Midway Valley, Nevada, adjacent to...
Semi-quantitative evaluation of fecal contamination potential by human and ruminant sources using multiple lines of evidence
D. M. Stoeckel, Erin A. Stelzer, Stogner, David P. Mau
2011, Water Research (45) 3225-3244
Protocols for microbial source tracking of fecal contamination generally are able to identify when a source of contamination is present, but thus far have been unable to evaluate what portion of fecal-indicator bacteria (FIB) came from various sources. A mathematical approach to estimate relative amounts of FIB, such as Escherichia coli,...