Pre- and post-drill comparison of the Mount Elbert gas hydrate prospect, Alaska North Slope
Myung W. Lee, Warren F. Agena, Timothy S. Collett, T.L. Inks
2011, Marine and Petroleum Geology (28) 578-588
In 2006, the United States Geological Survey (USGS) completed a detailed analysis and interpretation of available 2-D and 3-D seismic data, along with seismic modeling and correlation with specially processed downhole well log data for identifying potential gas hydrate accumulations on the North Slope of Alaska. A methodology was...
Local weather, regional climate, and annual survival of the northern spotted owl
E.M. Glenn, Robert Anthony, E.D. Forsman, G.S. Olson
2011, The Condor (113) 159-176
We used an information-theoretical approach and Cormack—Jolly—Seber models for open populations in program MARK to examine relationships between survival rates of Northern Spotted Owls and a variety of local weather variables and long-term climate variables. In four of the six populations examined, survival was positively associated with wetter than normal...
Mysis diluviana population and cohort dynamics in Lake Ontario before and after the establishment of Dreissena spp., Cercopagis pengoi, and Bythotrephes longimanus
Ora E. Johannsson, Kelly L. Bowen, Kristen T. Holeck, Maureen G. Walsh
2011, Canadian Journal of Fisheries and Aquatic Sciences (68) 795-811
We investigated population responses of Mysis to ecosystem changes induced by invasion of dreissenids and predatory cladocerans, Cercopagis and Bythotrephes. Lake productivity declined as dreissenids invaded the offshore region. Whole-lake mysid biomass was compared before (early 1990s) and after (2002–2007) the invasion period; it declined 40%–45%. Abundance of young mysids...
Sensitivity of Pliocene ice sheets to orbital forcing
A.M. Dolan, A.M. Haywood, D.J. Hill, H.J. Dowsett, S.J. Hunter, D.J. Lunt, S.J. Pickering
2011, Palaeogeography, Palaeoclimatology, Palaeoecology (309) 98-110
The stability of the Earth's major ice sheets is a critical uncertainty in predictions of future climate and sea level change. One method of investigating the behaviour of the Greenland and the Antarctic ice sheets in a warmer-than-modern climate is to look back at past warm periods of Earth history,...
Projecting avian response to linked changes in groundwater and riparian floodplain vegetation along a dryland river: A scenario analysis
Brand L. Arriana, J.C. Stromberg, D.C. Goodrich, M.D. Dixon, K. Lansey, D. Kang, D.S. Brookshire, D.J. Cerasale
2011, Ecohydrology (4) 130-142
Groundwater is a key driver of riparian condition on dryland rivers but is in high demand for municipal, industrial, and agricultural uses. Approaches are needed to guide decisions that balance human water needs while conserving riparian ecosystems. We developed a space‐for‐time substitution model that links groundwater change scenarios implemented within...
Correlation between deep fluids, tremor and creep along the central San Andreas fault
M. Becken, O. Ritter, P. A. Bedrosian, U. Weckmann
2011, Nature (480) 87-90
The seismicity pattern along the San Andreas fault near Parkfield and Cholame, California, varies distinctly over a length of only fifty kilometres. Within the brittle crust, the presence of frictionally weak minerals, fault-weakening high fluid pressures and chemical weakening are considered possible causes of an anomalously weak fault northwest of...
Field observations onsSelectivet tidal-stream transport for postlarval and juvenile pink shrimp in florida bay
Maria M. Criales, Michael B. Robblee, Joan A. Browder, H. Cardenas, Thomas L. Jackson
2011, Journal of Crustacean Biology (31) 26-33
Postlarvae and juveniles of pink shrimp were collected in the summers of 2005 and 2006 at three stations in northwestern Florida Bay, the main nursery ground of this species in South Florida. Collections were made at one- or two-hour intervals during three full moon nights and two new moon nights...
Quantification of a greenhouse hydrologic cycle from equatorial to polar latitudes: The mid-Cretaceous water bearer revisited
M.B. Suarez, Luis A. Gonzalez, Greg A. Ludvigson
2011, Palaeogeography, Palaeoclimatology, Palaeoecology (307) 301-312
This study aims to investigate the global hydrologic cycle during the mid-Cretaceous greenhouse by utilizing the oxygen isotopic composition of pedogenic carbonates (calcite and siderite) as proxies for the oxygen isotopic composition of precipitation. The data set builds on the Aptian–Albian sphaerosiderite δ18O data set presented by Ufnar et...
Assessment of NE Greenland: Prototype for development of Circum-ArcticResource Appraisal methodology
Donald L. Gautier, L. Stemmerik, F.G. Christiansen, K. Sorensen, T. Bidstrup, J. A. Bojesen-Koefoed, Kenneth J. Bird, Ronald Charpentier, David W. Houseknecht, Timothy R. Klett, Christopher J. Schenk, Marilyn E. Tennyson
2011, Geological Society Memoir 663-672
Geological features of NE Greenland suggest large petroleum potential, as well as high uncertainty and risk. The area was the prototype for development of methodology used in the US Geological Survey (USGS) Circum-Arctic Resource Appraisal (CARA), and was the first area evaluated. In collaboration with the Geological Survey of Denmark...
Sphaeridiotrema globulus and Sphaeridiotrema pseudoglobulus (Digenea): Species differentiation based on mtDNA (Barcode) and partial LSUrDNA sequences
L. Bergmame, J. Huffman, Rebecca A. Cole, S. Dayanandan, V. Tkach, J.D. McLaughlin
2011, Journal of Parasitology (97) 1132-1136
Flukes belonging to Sphaeridiotrema are important parasites of waterfowl, and 2 morphologically similar species Sphaeridiotrema globulus and Sphaeridiotrema pseudoglobulus, have been implicated in waterfowl mortality in North America. Cytochrome oxidase I (barcode region) and partial LSU-rDNA sequences from specimens of S. globulus and S. pseudoglobulus, obtained from naturally and experimentally infected hosts from...
The dynamics, transmission, and population impacts of avian malaria in native hawaiian birds: A modeling approach
Michael D. Samuel, P.H.F. Hobbelen, F. Decastro, Jorge A. Ahumada, Dennis A. LaPointe, Carter T. Atkinson, Bethany L. Woodworth, P.J. Hart, D.C. Duffy
2011, Ecological Applications (21) 2960-2973
We developed an epidemiological model of avian malaria (Plasmodium relictum) across an altitudinal gradient on the island of Hawaii that includes the dynamics of the host, vector, and parasite. This introduced mosquito‐borne disease is hypothesized to have contributed to extinctions and major shifts in the altitudinal distribution of highly susceptible...
Volcanic versus anthropogenic carbon dioxide
T. Gerlach
2011, Eos, Transactions, American Geophysical Union (92) 201-202
Which emits more carbon dioxide (CO2): Earth's volcanoes or human activities? Research findings indicate unequivocally that the answer to this frequently asked question is human activities. However, most people, including some Earth scientists working in fields outside volcanology, are surprised by this answer. The climate change debate has revived and...
Estimating earthquake-rupture rates on a fault or fault system
E. H. Field, M.T. Page
2011, Bulletin of the Seismological Society of America (101) 79-92
Previous approaches used to determine the rates of different earthquakes on a fault have made assumptions regarding segmentation, have been difficult to document and reproduce, and have lacked the ability to satisfy all available data constraints. We present a relatively objective and reproducible inverse methodology for determining the rate of...
Spatial and temporal trends of selected trace elements in liver tissue from polar bears (Ursus maritimus) from Alaska, Canada and Greenland
Heli Routti, Robert J. Letcher, Erik W. Born, Marsha Branigan, Rune Dietz, Thomas J. Evans, Aaron T. Fisk, Elizabeth L. Peacock, Christian Sonne
2011, Journal of Environmental Monitoring (13) 2260-2267
Spatial trends and comparative changes in time of selected trace elements were studied in liver tissue from polar bears from ten different subpopulation locations in Alaska, Canadian Arctic and East Greenland. For nine of the trace elements (As, Cd, Cu, Hg, Mn, Pb, Rb, Se and Zn) spatial trends were...
Modeling regional coral reef responses to global warming and changes in ocean chemistry: Caribbean case study
R. W. Buddemeier, D.R. Lane, J.A. Martinich
2011, Climatic Change (109) 375-397
Climatic change threatens the future of coral reefs in the Caribbean and the important ecosystem services they provide. We used a simulation model [COMBO (“COral Mortality and Bleaching Output”)] to estimate future coral cover in the part of the eastern Caribbean impacted by a massive coral bleaching event in 2005....
Formation pressure testing at the Mount Elbert Gas Hydrate Stratigraphic Test Well, Alaska North Slope: Operational summary, history matching, and interpretations
B. Anderson, S. Hancock, S. Wilson, C. Enger, Timothy S. Collett, R. Boswell, R. Hunter
2011, Marine and Petroleum Geology (28) 478-492
In February 2007, the U.S. Department of Energy, BP Exploration (Alaska), and the U.S. Geological Survey, collected open-hole pressure-response data, as well as gas and water sample collection, in a gas hydrate reservoir (the BPXA-DOE-USGS Mount Elbert Gas Hydrate Stratigraphic Test Well) using Schlumberger's Modular Dynamics Formation Tester (MDT)...
Use of hydrologic and hydrodynamic modeling for ecosystem restoration
J. Obeysekera, L. Kuebler, S. Ahmed, M.-L. Chang, V. Engel, Christian D. Langevin, Eric D. Swain, Y. Wan
2011, Critical Reviews in Environmental Science and Technology (41) 447-488
Planning and implementation of unprecedented projects for restoring the greater Everglades ecosystem are underway and the hydrologic and hydrodynamic modeling of restoration alternatives has become essential for success of restoration efforts. In view of the complex nature of the South Florida water resources system, regional-scale (system-wide) hydrologic models have been...
Specificity of DNA vaccines against the U and M genogroups of infectious hematopoietic necrosis virus (IHNV) in rainbow trout (Oncorhynchus mykiss)
M.M.D. Penaranda, S. E. LaPatra, Gael Kurath
2011, Fish and Shellfish Immunology (31) 43-51
Infectious hematopoietic necrosis virus (IHNV) is a fish rhabdovirus that causes significant mortality in salmonid species. In North America IHNV has three major genogroups designated U, M, and L. Host-specificity of the M and U genogroups of IHNV has been established both in the field and in experimental challenges, with...
Fire frequency, area burned, and severity: A quantitative approach to defining a normal fire year
J.A. Lutz, Carl H. Key, C.A. Kolden, J.T. Kane, Jan W. Van Wagtendonk
2011, Fire Ecology (7) 51-65
Fire frequency, area burned, and fire severity are important attributes of a fire regime, but few studies have quantified the interrelationships among them in evaluating a fire year. Although area burned is often used to summarize a fire season, burned area may not be well correlated with either the number...
Attitudes and intentions of off-highway vehicle riders toward trail use: Implications for forest managers
Diane Kuehn, P. D. D’Luhosch, Valerie Luzadis, R. W. Malmsheimer, Rudy Schuster
2011, Journal of Forestry (109) 281-287
Management of off-highway vehicles (OHV) in public forest areas requires up-to-date information about the attitudes and intentions of OHV riders toward trail use. A survey of 811 members of the New England Trail Riders Association was conducted in fall 2007; 380 questionnaires were completed and returned. Descriptive statistics and regressions...
Economic resilience lessons from the ShakeOut earthquake scenario
A. Wein, A. Rose
2011, Earthquake Spectra (27) 559-573
Following a damaging earthquake, “business interruption” (BI)—reduced production of goods and services—begins and continues long after the ground shaking stops. Economic resilience reduces BI losses by making the best use of the resources available at a given point in time (static resilience) or by speeding recovery through repair and reconstruction...
Linking biomarkers to reproductive success of caged fathead minnows in streams with increasing urbanization
J. Crago, Steven R. Corsi, D. Weber, R. Bannerman, R. Klaper
2011, Chemosphere (82) 1669-1674
Reproductive and oxidative stress biomarkers have been recommended as tools to assess the health of aquatic organisms. Though validated in the laboratory, there are few studies that tie a change in gene expression to adverse reproductive or population outcomes in the field. This paper looked at 17 streams with varying...
The key to commercial-scale geological CO2 sequestration: Displaced fluid management
R.C. Surdam, Z. Jiao, P. Stauffer, T. Miller
2011, Energy Procedia (4) 4246-4251
The Wyoming State Geological Survey has completed a thorough inventory and prioritization of all Wyoming stratigraphic units and geologic sites capable of sequestering commercial quantities of CO2 (5–15 Mt CO2/year). This multi-year study identified the Paleozoic Tensleep/Weber Sandstone and Madison Limestone (and stratigraphic equivalent units) as the leading clastic and carbonate...
Use of fatty acid analysis to determine dispersal of Caspian Terns in the Columbia River Basin, U.S.A.
C. J. Maranto, J. K. Parrish, D. P. Herman, A. E. Punt, J. D. Olden, M. T. Brett, Daniel D. Roby
2011, Conservation Biology (25) 736-746
Lethal control, which has been used to reduce local abundances of animals in conflict with humans or with endangered species, may not achieve management goals if animal movement is not considered. In populations with emigration and immigration, lethal control may induce compensatory immigration, if the source of attraction remains unchanged....
Suspended material availability and filtration-biodeposition processes performed by a native and invasive bivalve species in streams
C.L. Atkinson, M.R. First, A.P. Covich, Stephen P. Opsahl, S.W. Golladay
2011, Hydrobiologia (667) 191-204
Unionid mussels are among the most threatened group of freshwater organisms globally. They are known for their ability to filter food particles from flowing and standing waters. However, invasive bivalve species, such as the Asian clam (Corbicula fluminea) in North America, have the potential to overlap in feeding and potentially...