Groundwater-quality data for the Sierra Nevada study unit, 2008: Results from the California GAMA program
Jennifer L. Shelton, Miranda S. Fram, Cathy M. Munday, Kenneth Belitz
2010, Data Series 534
Groundwater quality in the approximately 25,500-square-mile Sierra Nevada study unit was investigated in June through October 2008, as part of the Priority Basin Project of the Groundwater Ambient Monitoring and Assessment (GAMA) Program. The GAMA Priority Basin Project is being conducted by the U.S. Geological Survey (USGS) in cooperation with...
Age and sex specific timing, frequency, and spatial distribution of horseshoe crab spawning in Delaware Bay: Insights from a large-scale radio telemetry array
David R. Smith, L. J. Brousseau, Mary T. Mandt, Michael J. Millard
2010, Current Zoology (56) 563-574
To study horseshoe crab Limulus polyphemus spawning behavior and migration over a large-spatial extent (>100 km), we arrayed fixed station radio receivers throughout Delaware Bay and deployed radio transmitters and archival tags on adult horseshoe crabs prior to their spawning season. We tagged and released 160 females and 60 males in 2004...
Survival of captive and free-ranging Harlequin Ducks (Histrionicus histrionicus) following surgical liver biopsy
Daniel M. Mulcahy, Daniel Esler
2010, Journal of Wildlife Diseases (46) 1325-1329
We measured intra- and postoperative mortality rates of captive and free-ranging Harlequin Ducks (Histrionicus histrionicus) undergoing surgical liver biopsy sampling for determination of the induction of cytochrome P4501A, a biomarker of oil exposure. Liver biopsies were taken from and radio transmitters were implanted into 157 free-ranging Harlequin Ducks over three...
The carbon budget of the northern cryosphere region
A. David McGuire, Robie W. Macdonald, Edward A.G. Schuur, Jennifer W. Harden, Peter Kuhry, Daniel J. Hayes, Torben R. Christensen, Martin Heimann
2010, Current Opinion in Environmental Sustainability (2) 231-236
The northern cryosphere is undergoing substantial warming of permafrost and loss of sea ice. Release of stored carbon to the atmosphere in response to this change has the potential to affect the global climate system. Studies indicate that the northern cryosphere has been not only a substantial sink for atmospheric...
Lessons from (triggered) tremor
Joan Gomberg
2010, Journal of Geophysical Research B: Solid Earth (115)
I test a “clock-advance” model that implies triggered tremor is ambient tremor that occurs at a sped-up rate as a result of loading from passing seismic waves. This proposed model predicts that triggering probability is proportional to the product of the ambient tremor rate and a function describing the efficacy...
Hydrovolcanic features on Mars: Preliminary analysis of one Mars year of HiRISE observations
Laszlo P. Keszthelyi, Windy L. Jaeger, Colin M. Dundas, Sara Martinez-Alonso, Alfred S. McEwen, Moses P. Milazzo
2010, Icarus (205) 211-229
We provide an overview of features indicative of the interaction between water and lava and/or magma on Mars as seen by the High Resolution Imaging Science Experiment (HiRISE) camera during the Primary Science Phase of the Mars Reconnaissance Orbiter (MRO) mission. The ability to confidently resolve meter-scale features from orbit...
Founding population size of an aquatic invasive species
Steven T. Kalinowski, Clint C. Muhlfeld, Christopher S. Guy, Benjamin Cox
2010, Conservation Genetics (11) 2049-2053
Non-native species of fish threaten native fishes throughout North America, and in the Rocky Mountains, introduced populations of lake trout threaten native populations of bull trout. Effective management of lake trout and other exotic species require understanding the dynamics of invasion in order to either suppress non-native populations or to...
Fundamental changes in the activity of the natrocarbonatite volcano Oldoinyo Lengai, Tanzania
Matthieu Kervyn, Gerald G.J. Ernst, Jorg Keller, R. Greg Vaughan, Jurgis Klaudius, Evelyne Pradal, Frederic Belton, Hannes B. Mattsson, Evelyne Mbede, Patric Jacobs
2010, Bulletin of Volcanology (72) 913-931
On September 4, 2007, after 25 years of effusive natrocarbonatite eruptions, the eruptive activity of Oldoinyo Lengai (OL), N Tanzania, changed abruptly to episodic explosive eruptions. This transition was preceded by a voluminous lava eruption in March 2006, a year of quiescence, resumption of natrocarbonatite eruptions in June 2007, and a...
Tree growth and mortality during 20 years of managing a Green-Tree Reservoir in Arkansas, USA
Bobby D. Keeland, Rassa O. Draugelis-Dale, John W. McCoy
2010, Wetlands (30) 405-416
Green-Tree Reservoirs (GTR) are bottomland hardwood forests that are flooded during late fall and winter to provide waterfowl habitat. Early reports suggested that increased moisture improved tree growth and mast production; however, recent reports showed reduced vigor and growth. This study examines the effects of 20 years of GTR management practices...
Persistent organic pollutants in the blood of free-ranging sea otters (Enhydra lutris ssp.) in Alaska and California
David A. Jessup, Christine K. Johnson, James A. Estes, Daphne Carlson-Bremer, Walter M. Jarman, Stacey Reese, Erin Dodd, M. Tim Tinker, Michael H. Ziccardi
2010, Journal of Wildlife Diseases (46) 1214-1233
As part of tagging and ecologic research efforts in 1997 and 1998, apparently healthy sea otters of four age-sex classes in six locations in Alaska and three in California were sampled for persistent organic pollutants (POPs) and other chemicals of ecologic or environmental concern (COECs). Published techniques for the detection...
Wayward youth: Trans-Beringian movement and differential southward migration by juvenile sharp-tailed sandpipers
Colleen M. Handel, Robert E. Gill Jr.
2010, Arctic (63) 273-288
The sharp-tailed sandpiper (Calidris acuminata) is a long-distance migrant that travels each year from breeding grounds in the Russian Arctic to nonbreeding areas in Australasia. Most adults migrate rapidly from breeding grounds along a largely inland route through Asia. Here we report on the highly unusual migratory strategy of this...
Development of characterization technology for fault zone hydrology
K. Karasaki, Celia Tiemi Onishi, Erika Gasperikova, Junichi Goto, Hiroyuki Tsuchi, Tadashi Miwa, Keiichi Ueta, Kenzo Kiho, Kimio Miyakawa
2010, Conference Paper, Conference proceedings: International Conference on Environmental Remediation and Radioactive Waste Management
Several deep trenches were cut, and a number of geophysical surveys were conducted across the Wildcat Fault in the hills east of Berkeley, California. The Wildcat Fault is believed to be a strike-slip fault and a member of the Hayward Fault System, with over 10 km of displacement. So far,...
Monitoring land-surface deformation on Bicycle Lake playa, Fort Irwin, California, USA
Jill N. Densmore, Kevin Ellett, James F. Howle, Michael C. Carpenter, Michelle Sneed
2010, Conference Paper, Eighth International Symposium on Land Subsidence
No abstract available....
Historical seismograms for unravelling a mysterious earthquake: The 1907 Sumatra Earthquake
Hiroo Kanamori, Luis Rivera, W.H.K. Lee
2010, Geophysical Journal International (183) 358-374
History of instrumental seismology is short. Seismograms are available only for a little more than 100 years; high-quality seismograms are available only for the last 50 years and the seismological database is very limited in time. To extend the database, seismograms of old events are of vital importance. Many unusual...
Effects of light and nutrients on seasonal phytoplankton succession in a temperate eutrophic coastal lagoon
Jeana L. Drake, Edward J. Carpenter, Mary Cousins, Kara L. Nelson, Alejandro Guido-Zarate, Keith A. Loftin
2010, Hydrobiologia (654) 177-192
Rodeo Lagoon, a low-salinity coastal lagoon in the Golden Gate National Recreation Area, California, United States, has been identified as an important ecosystem due to the presence of the endangered goby (Eucyclogobius newberri). Despite low anthropogenic impacts, the lagoon exhibits eutrophic conditions and supports annual episodes of very...
Creative use of pilot points to address site and regional scale heterogeneity in a variable-density model
Alyssa M. Dausman, John Doherty, Christian D. Langevin
2010, Book, PEST Conference 2009 Proceedings
Pilot points for parameter estimation were creatively used to address heterogeneity at both the well field and regional scales in a variable-density groundwater flow and solute transport model designed to test multiple hypotheses for upward migration of fresh effluent injected into a highly transmissive saline carbonate aquifer. Two sets of...
A population genetic analysis of the midget faded rattlesnake in Wyoming
Sara J. Oyler-McCance, J.M. Parker
2010, Conservation Genetics (11) 1623-1629
Little is known about the population biology of midget faded rattlesnakes, a sensitive subspecies of the Western Rattlesnake, despite conservation efforts to protect them. We conducted a molecular genetic study of midget faded rattlesnakes in southwestern Wyoming to investigate population genetic structure in this area, particularly with reference to Flaming...
Determination of biologically significant hydrologic condition metrics in urbanizing watersheds: an empirical analysis over a range of environmental settings
Jeffrey J. Steuer, Krista A. Stensvold, Mark B. Gregory
2010, Hydrobiologia (654) 27-55
We investigated the relations among 83 hydrologic condition metrics (HCMs) and changes in algal, invertebrate, and fish communities in five metropolitan areas across the continental United States. We used a statistical approach that employed Spearman correlation and regression tree analysis to identify five HCMs that are strongly associated with observed...
Bison conservation initiative: Bison conservation genetics workshop: Report and recommendations
Peter J. Gogan, Peter Dratch
2010, Natural Resource Report NPS/NRPC/BRMD/NRR—2010/257
One of the first outcomes of the Department of the Interior (DOI) Bison Conservation Initiative was the Bison Conservation Genetics Workshop held in Nebraska in September 2008. The workshop brought together scientists from government agencies and non-governmental organizations with professional population geneticists to develop guidance for the genetic management of...
Quarterly wildlife mortality report April to June 2010
Anne Ballmann, C. LeAnn White, Jennifer Bradsby
2010, Wildlife Disease Association Newsletter 9-11
No abstract available....
Improving and integrating data on invasive species collected by citizen scientists
2010, Biological Invasions (12) 3419-3428
Limited resources make it difficult to effectively document, monitor, and control invasive species across large areas, resulting in large gaps in our knowledge of current and future invasion patterns. We surveyed 128 citizen science program coordinators and interviewed 15 of them to evaluate their potential role in filling these gaps....
Habitat use by fishes in groundwater-dependent streams of southern Oklahoma
Titus S. Seilheimer, William L. Fisher
2010, The American Midland Naturalist (164) 201-216
Habitat use by fishes in groundwater-dependent ecosystems with springs and spring-fed creeks is not widely studied or well understood. We evaluated habitat use by three disjunct populations of fish species (Phoxinus erythrogaster, Nocomis asper and Etheostoma microperca) and, a widespread species, E. spectabile in spring-fed streams draining the Arbuckle-Simpson aquifer of southern Oklahoma. Habitat preference...
Efficacy of commercial canarypox vaccine for protecting Hawai'i 'Amakihi from field isolates of Avipoxvirus
Carter T. Atkinson, Kimberly C. Wiegand, Dennis Triglia, Susan I. Jarvi
2010, Report, Hawaii Cooperative Studies Unit Technical Report HCSU-019
At least three variants of avian pox virus are present in Hawai‘i - Fowlpox from domestic poultry and a group of genetically distinct viruses that cluster within two clades (Pox Variant 1 and Pox Variant 2) that are most similar to Canarypox based on DNA sequence of the virus 4b...
Chemical and textural controls on phosphorus mobility in drylands of southeastern Utah
Susan E. Buckingham, Jason Neff, Behan Titiz-Maybach, Richard L. Reynolds
2010, Biogeochemistry (100) 105-120
We investigated several forms of phosphorus (P) in dryland soils to examine the chemical and textural controls on P stabilization on a diverse set of substrates. We examined three P fractions including labile, moderately labile, and occluded as determined by a modified Hedley fractionation technique. The P fractions were compared...
To burn or not to burn Oriental bittersweet: A fire manager’s conundrum
Noel B. Pavlovic, Stacey A. Leicht-Young, Krystal Frohnapple, Dan Morford, Neal Mulconrey
2010, Report
This is the second progress report detailing the research about Oriental bittersweet (Celastrus orbiculatus) and fire which has been ongoing for two years. We highlight the further results from three components of the study: 1) Susceptibility of different habitats to invasion of Oriental bittersweet, 2) The impact of fire on...