Nutrient loadings to streams of the Continental United States from municipal and industrial effluent
M.A. Maupin, T. Ivahnenko
2011, Journal of the American Water Resources Association (47) 950-964
Data from the United States Environmental Protection Agency Permit Compliance System national database were used to calculate annual total nitrogen (TN) and total phosphorus (TP) loads to surface waters from municipal and industrial facilities in six major regions of the United States for 1992, 1997, and 2002. Concentration and effluent...
Scented guide ropes as a method to enhance brown treesnake (Boiga irregularis) trap capture success on Guam
L.C. Mason, J. A. Savidge, G.H. Rodda, A. A. Yackel Adams
2011, Journal of Herpetology (45) 308-312
Current methods for controlling the invasive Brown Treesnake (Boiga irregularis) on Guam include a modified minnow trap with a live mouse lure. We investigated the effects on capture success of augmenting these traps with scented guide ropes leading to trap entrances. Initial screening of scent preferences was based on...
Phylogeography of a vanishing North American songbird: The Painted Bunting (Passerina ciris)
C.A. Herr, P.W. Sykes Jr., J. Klicka
2011, Conservation Genetics (12) 1395-1410
The breeding distribution of Painted Buntings (Passerina ciris) is comprised of two allopatric populations separated by a 550-km distributional gap in the southeastern United States. Curiously, the boundary between the two recognized P. ciris subspecies does not separate the two allopatric breeding populations but instead runs roughly through the center of the...
Bias-adjusted satellite-based rainfall estimates for predicting floods: Narayani Basin
M.S. Shrestha, G. A. Artan, S.R. Bajracharya, D.K. Gautam, S.A. Tokar
2011, Journal of Flood Risk Management (4) 360-373
In Nepal, as the spatial distribution of rain gauges is not sufficient to provide detailed perspective on the highly varied spatial nature of rainfall, satellite‐based rainfall estimates provides the opportunity for timely estimation. This paper presents the flood prediction of Narayani Basin at the Devghat hydrometric station (32 000 km2) using bias‐adjusted...
Pressure waves in a supersaturated bubbly magma
I. Kurzon, V. Lyakhovsky, O. Navon, B. Chouet
2011, Geophysical Journal International (187) 421-438
We study the interaction of acoustic pressure waves with an expanding bubbly magma. The expansion of magma is the result of bubble growth during or following magma decompression and leads to two competing processes that affect pressure waves. On the one hand, growth in vesicularity leads to increased damping and...
Coral skeletal carbon isotopes (δ13C and Δ14C) record the delivery of terrestrial carbon to the coastal waters of Puerto Rico
R.P. Moyer, A.G. Grottoli
2011, Coral Reefs (30) 791-802
Tropical small mountainous rivers deliver a poorly quantified, but potentially significant, amount of carbon to the world’s oceans. However, few historical records of land–ocean carbon transfer exist for any region on Earth. Corals have the potential to provide such records, because they draw on dissolved inorganic carbon (DIC) for calcification....
Sex effect on polychlorinated biphenyl concentrations in fish: a synthesis
C.P. Madenjian
2011, Fish and Fisheries (12) 451-460
Polychlorinated biphenyls (PCBs) accumulate in fish primarily via food intake, and therefore, PCBs serve as a chemical tracer for food consumption. Sex differences in PCB concentrations of fish have been attributed to the following three mechanisms: (i) females losing a substantial portion of their PCB body burden during spawning and...
Potential shifts in dominant forest cover in interior Alaska driven by variations in fire severity
K. Barrett, A. David McGuire, E.E. Hoy, E.S. Kasischke
2011, Ecological Applications (21) 2380-2396
Large fire years in which >1% of the landscape burns are becoming more frequent in the Alaskan (USA) interior, with four large fire years in the past 10 years, and 79 000 km2 (17% of the region) burned since 2000. We modeled fire severity conditions for the entire area burned in large...
A multi-agency nutrient dataset used to estimate loads, improve monitoring design, and calibrate regional nutrient SPARROW models
D. A. Saad, G. E. Schwarz, Dale M. Robertson, N.L. Booth
2011, Journal of the American Water Resources Association (47) 933-949
Stream‐loading information was compiled from federal, state, and local agencies, and selected universities as part of an effort to develop regional SPAtially Referenced Regressions On Watershed attributes (SPARROW) models to help describe the distribution, sources, and transport of nutrients in streams throughout much of the United States. After screening, 2,739...
Homogenization of large-scale movement models in ecology
M.J. Garlick, J. A. Powell, M.B. Hooten, L.R. McFarlane
2011, Bulletin of Mathematical Biology (73) 2088-2108
A difficulty in using diffusion models to predict large scale animal population dispersal is that individuals move differently based on local information (as opposed to gradients) in differing habitat types. This can be accommodated by using ecological diffusion. However, real environments are often spatially complex, limiting application of a direct...
Informal and formal trail monitoring protocols and baseline conditions: Acadia National Park
Jeffrey L. Marion, Jeremy F. Wimpey, L. Park
2011, Report
At Acadia National Park, changing visitor use levels and patterns have contributed to an increasing degree of visitor use impacts to natural and cultural resources. To better understand the extent and severity of these resource impacts and identify effective management techniques, the park sponsored this research to develop monitoring protocols,...
Parasite transmission in social interacting hosts: Monogenean epidemics in guppies
M.B. Johnson, K. D. Lafferty, Oosterhout C. van, J. Cable
2011, PLoS ONE (6)
BackgroundInfection incidence increases with the average number of contacts between susceptible and infected individuals. Contact rates are normally assumed to increase linearly with host density. However, social species seek out each other at low density and saturate their contact rates at high densities. Although predicting epidemic behaviour...
Surface-water nutrient conditions and sources in the United States Pacific Northwest
D.R. Wise, H.M. Johnson
2011, Journal of the American Water Resources Association (47) 1110-1135
The SPAtially Referenced Regressions On Watershed attributes (SPARROW) model was used to perform an assessment of surface-water nutrient conditions and to identify important nutrient sources in watersheds of the Pacific Northwest region of the United States (U.S.) for the year 2002. Our models included variables representing nutrient sources as well...
A working environment for digital planetary data processing and mapping using ISIS and GRASS GIS
A. Frigeri, T. Hare, M. Neteler, A. Coradini, C. Federico, R. Orosei
2011, Conference Paper, Planetary and Space Science
Since the beginning of planetary exploration, mapping has been fundamental to summarize observations returned by scientific missions. Sensor-based mapping has been used to highlight specific features from the planetary surfaces by means of processing. Interpretative mapping makes use of instrumental observations to produce thematic maps that summarize observations of actual...
Titan's cloud seasonal activity from winter to spring with Cassini/VIMS
S. Rodriguez, Stéphane Le Mouélic, P. Rannou, Christophe Sotin, R. H. Brown, J. W. Barnes, C.A. Griffith, J. Burgalat, K. H. Baines, B. J. Buratti, R. N. Clark, P. D. Nicholson
2011, Icarus (216) 89-110
Since Saturn orbital insertion in July 2004, the Cassini orbiter has been observing Titan throughout most of the northern winter season (October 2002–August 2009) and the beginning of spring, allowing a detailed monitoring of Titan’s cloud coverage at high spatial resolution with close flybys on a monthly basis. This...
Response of surface processes to climatic change in the dunefields and Loess Plateau of North China during the late Quaternary
H. Lu, J.A. Mason, T. Stevens, Y. Zhou, S. Yi, X. Miao
2011, Earth Surface Processes and Landforms (36) 1590-1603
This paper draws on recent optically stimulated luminescence (OSL) dating to evaluate the long‐held assumption that dust accumulation rates in the Loess Plateau and the extent of active aeolian sand in the dunefields to the north have varied together over time, because both are controlled by the strength of the...
Integration of Palmer Drought Severity Index and remote sensing data to simulate wetland water surface from 1910 to 2009 in Cottonwood Lake area, North Dakota
Shengli Huang, Devendra Dahal, Claudia Young, Gyanesh Chander, Shuguang Liu
2011, Remote Sensing of Environment (115) 3377-3389
Spatiotemporal variations of wetland water in the Prairie Pothole Region are controlled by many factors; two of them are temperature and precipitation that form the basis of the Palmer Drought Severity Index (PDSI). Taking the 196 km2 Cottonwood Lake area in North Dakota as our pilot study site, we integrated PDSI, Landsat...
Quantifying the hydrological responses to climate change in an intact forested small watershed in Southern China
G. Zhou, X. Wei, Y. Wu, Y. Huang, J. Yan, Dongxiao Zhang, Q. Zhang, J. Liu, Z. Meng, C. Wang, G. Chu, S. Liu, X. Tang, Xiuying Liu
2011, Global Change Biology (17) 3736-3746
Responses of hydrological processes to climate change are key components in the Intergovernmental Panel for Climate Change (IPCC) assessment. Understanding these responses is critical for developing appropriate mitigation and adaptation strategies for sustainable water resources management and protection of public safety. However, these responses are not well understood and little...
High-frequency Born synthetic seismograms based on coupled normal modes
F. Pollitz
2011, Geophysical Journal International (187) 1420-1442
High-frequency and full waveform synthetic seismograms on a 3-D laterally heterogeneous earth model are simulated using the theory of coupled normal modes. The set of coupled integral equations that describe the 3-D response are simplified into a set of uncoupled integral equations by using the Born approximation to calculate scattered...
Transient electromagnetic study of basin fill sediments in the Upper San Pedro Basin, Mexico
M.W. Bultman, F. Gray
2011, Environmental Earth Sciences (64) 2091-2106
The Upper San Pedro River Basin in Mexico and the United States is an important riparian corridor that is coming under increasing pressure from growing populations and the associated increase in groundwater withdrawal. Several studies have produced three-dimensional maps of the basin fill sediments in the US portion of the...
Time-lapse three-dimensional inversion of complex conductivity data using an active time constrained (ATC) approach
M. Karaoulis, A. Revil, D.D. Werkema, B. J. Minsley, W.F. Woodruff, A. Kemna
2011, Geophysical Journal International (187) 237-251
Induced polarization (more precisely the magnitude and phase of impedance of the subsurface) is measured using a network of electrodes located at the ground surface or in boreholes. This method yields important information related to the distribution of permeability and contaminants in the shallow subsurface. We propose a new time-lapse...
Native and European haplotypes of Phragmites Australis (common reed) in the central Platte River, Nebraska
D.L. Larson, S.M. Galatowitsch, J.L. Larson
2011, Great Plains Research (21) 175-180
Phragmites australis (common reed) is known to have occurred along the Platte River historically, but recent rapid increases in both distribution and density have begun to impact habitat for migrating sandhill cranes and nesting piping plovers and least terns. Invasiveness in Phragmites has been associated with the incursion of a...
Source and Delivery of Nutrients to Receiving Waters in the Northeastern and Mid-Atlantic Regions of the United States
R. B. Moore, C. M. Johnston, R. A. Smith, B. Milstead
2011, Journal of the American Water Resources Association (47) 965-990
This study investigates nutrient sources and transport to receiving waters, in order to provide spatially detailed information to aid water‐resources managers concerned with eutrophication and nutrient management strategies. SPAtially Referenced Regressions On Watershed attributes (SPARROW) nutrient models were developed for the Northeastern and Mid‐Atlantic (NE US) regions of the United...
Recent advances in the hydrostratigraphy of paleozoic bedrock in the midwestern united states
K. R. Bradbury, Anthony C. Runkel
2011, Conference Paper, GSA Today
Recent hydrostratigraphic researches have made it possible to acquire knowledge about the relatively undeformed Paleozoic bedrock that forms the most widely used aquifers in Minnesota and Wisconsin. Ongoing evaluation of the Cambrian Eau Claire Formation in southern Wisconsin has caused the formation to be considered a major regional aquitard. Subsurface...
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...