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Not all publications have extents, not all extents are completely accurate
The changing effects of Alaska’s boreal forests on the climate system
E.S. Euskirchen, A. David McGuire, F.S. Chapin, T.S. Rupp
2010, Canadian Journal of Forest Research (40) 1336-1346
In the boreal forests of Alaska, recent changes in climate have influenced the exchange of trace gases, water, and energy between these forests and the atmosphere. These changes in the structure and function of boreal forests can then feed back to impact regional and global climates. In this manuscript, we...
Hurricane Influences on Vegetation Community Change in Coastal Louisiana
Gregory D. Steyer, Kari Foster Cretini, Sarai C. Piazza, Leigh A. Sharp, Gregg A. Snedden, Sijan Sapkota
2010, Open-File Report 2010-1105
The impacts of Hurricanes Katrina and Rita in 2005 on wetland vegetation were investigated in Louisiana coastal marshes. Vegetation cover, pore-water salinity, and nutrients data from 100 marsh sites covering the entire Louisiana coast were sampled for two consecutive growing seasons after the storms. A mixed-model nested ANOVA with Tukey's...
Uncovering a latent multinomial: Analysis of mark–recapture data with misidentification
W.A. Link, J. Yoshizaki, L.L. Bailey, K. H. Pollock
2010, Biometrics (66) 178-185
Natural tags based on DNA fingerprints or natural features of animals are now becoming very widely used in wildlife population biology. However, classic capture-recapture models do not allow for misidentification of animals which is a potentially very serious problem with natural tags. Statistical analysis of misidentification processes is...
Immediate and long-term fire effects on total mercury in forests soils of northeastern Minnesota
Laurel G. Woodruff, William F. Cannon
2010, Environmental Science and Technology (44) 5371-5376
Within the Boundary Waters Canoe Area Wilderness in northeastern Minnesota, soils were collected from 116 sites in areas of primarily virgin forest with fire-origin stand years (year of last recognizable stand-killing wildfire) that range from the 1759 to 1976. Median concentrations for total mercury in soils for this span of...
Avipoxvirus
Dennis LaPointe
2010, Book chapter, Invasive Species Compendium
Biological pathways of exposure and ecotoxicity values for uranium and associated radionuclides: Chapter D in Hydrological, geological, and biological site characterization of breccia pipe uranium deposits in Northern Arizona
Jo Ellen Hinck, Greg L. Linder, Susan E. Finger, Edward E. Little, Donald E. Tillitt, Wendy Kuhne
2010, Scientific Investigations Report 2010-5025-D
This chapter compiles available chemical and radiation toxicity information for plants and animals from the scientific literature on naturally occurring uranium and associated radionuclides. Specifically, chemical and radiation hazards associated with radionuclides in the uranium decay series including uranium, thallium, thorium, bismuth, radium, radon, protactinium, polonium, actinium, and francium were...
Assessing societal vulnerability of U.S. Pacific Northwest communities to storm-induced coastal change
Heather M. Baron, Nathan J. Wood, Peter Ruggerio, Jonathan Allan, Patrick Corcoran
2010, Conference Paper, Shifting shorelines: Adapting to the future
Progressive increases in storm intensities and extreme wave heights have been documented along the U.S. West Coast. Paired with global sea level rise and the potential for an increase in El Niño occurrences, these trends have substantial implications for the vulnerability of coastal communities to natural coastal hazards. Community vulnerability...
Surface-Water Quality Conditions and Long-Term Trends at Selected Sites within the Ambient Water-Quality Monitoring Network in Missouri, Water Years 1993-2008
Miya N. Barr, Jerri V. Davis
2010, Scientific Investigations Report 2010-5078
The U.S. Geological Survey, in cooperation with the Missouri Department of Natural Resources, collects data pertaining to the surface-water resources of Missouri. These data are collected as part of the Missouri Ambient Water-Quality Monitoring Network and constitute a valuable source of reliable, impartial, and timely information for developing an improved...
Responding to climate change: A toolbox of management strategies: Chapter 11
David Cole, Nathan L. Stephenson, Constance I. Millar
2010, Book chapter, Beyond Naturalness: Rethinking Park and Wilderness Stewardship in an Era of Rapid Change
Climate change and its effects are writ large across the landscape and in the natural and cultural heritage of parks and wilderness. They always have been and always will be. The sculpted walls of Yosemite National Park and the jagged scenery of the Sierra Nevada wilderness would not be as...
Productivity, embryo and eggshell characteristics, and contaminants in bald eagles from the Great Lakes, USA, 1986 to 2000
David A. Best, Kyle Elliott, William Bowerman, Mark C. Shieldcastle, Sergej Postupalsky, Timothy J. Kubiak, Donald E. Tillitt, John E. Elliott
2010, Environmental Toxicology and Chemistry (29) 1581-1592
Chlorinated hydrocarbon concentrations in eggs of fish-eating birds from contaminated environments such as the Great Lakes of North America tend to be highly intercorrelated, making it difficult to elucidate mechanisms causing reproductive impairment, and to ascribe cause to specific chemicals. An information- theoretic approach was used on data from 197...
Shifting environmental foundations: The unprecedented and unpredictable future: Chapter 4
Nathan L. Stephenson, Constance I. Millar, David Cole
2010, Book chapter, Beyond Naturalness: Rethinking Park and Wilderness Stewardship in an Era of Rapid Change
As described in Chapter 2, protected area managers have been directed, through statutes and agency policy, to preserve natural conditions in parks and wilderness. Although preserving naturalness has always been a challenge for managers, there has never been much question about whether this is the right thing to do. But...
Sequence analysis of the internal transcribed spacer (ITS) region reveals a novel clade of Ichthyophonus sp. from rainbow trout
C. Rasmussen, M. K. Purcell, J.L. Gregg, S. E. LaPatra, J. R. Winton, P.K. Hershberger
2010, Diseases of Aquatic Organisms (89) 179-183
The mesomycetozoean parasite Ichthyophonus hoferi is most commonly associated with marine fish hosts but also occurs in some components of the freshwater rainbow trout Oncorhynchus mykiss aquaculture industry in Idaho, USA. It is not certain how the parasite was introduced into rainbow trout culture, but it might have been associated...
Microbial oxidation of arsenite in a subarctic environment: diversity of arsenite oxidase genes and identification of a psychrotolerant arsenite oxidiser
Thomas H. Osborne, Heather E. Jamieson, Karen A. Hudson-Edwards, D. Kirk Nordstrom, Stephen R. Walker, Seamus A. Ward, Joanne M. Santini
2010, BMC Microbiology (10)
Arsenic is toxic to most living cells. The two soluble inorganic forms of arsenic are arsenite (+3) and arsenate (+5), with arsenite the more toxic. Prokaryotic metabolism of arsenic has been reported in both thermal and moderate environments and has been shown to be involved in the redox cycling of...
Estimated Withdrawals and Other Elements of Water Use in the Great Lakes Basin of the United States in 2005
P.C. Mills, Jennifer B. Sharpe
2010, Scientific Investigations Report 2010-5031
Estimates of water withdrawals in the United States part of the Great Lakes Basin and 107 of its watersheds designated by the 8-digit hydrologic unit code (HUCs) indicate that about 30.3 billion gallons per day (Bgal/d) were withdrawn for practically all categories of use in 2005. Virtually all water withdrawn...
Land Disturbance Associated with Oil and Gas Development and Effects of Development-Related Land Disturbance on Dissolved-Solids Loads in Streams in the Upper Colorado River Basin, 1991, 2007, and 2025
Susan G. Buto, Terry A. Kenney, Steven J. Gerner
2010, Scientific Investigations Report 2010-5064
Oil and gas resource development in the Upper Colorado River Basin (UCRB) has increased substantially since the year 2000. The UCRB encompasses several significant oil and gas producing areas that have the potential for continued oil and gas resource development. Land disturbance associated with oil and gas resource development is...
Gas, oil, and water production from Grand Valley, Parachute, Rulison, and Mamm Creek fields in the Piceance Basin, Colorado
Philip H. Nelson, Stephen L. Santus
2010, Open-File Report 2010-1110
Gas, oil, and water production data for tight gas reservoirs were compiled from selected wells in western Colorado. These reservoir rocks—the relatively shallow Paleogene Wasatch G sandstone interval in the Parachute and Rulison fields and fluvial sandstones in the deeper Upper Cretaceous Mesaverde Group in the Grand Valley, Parachute, Rulison,...
Coastal Change on Gulf Islands National Seashore during Hurricane Gustav: West Ship, East Ship, Horn, and Petit Bois Islands
Hilary F. Stockdon, Kara S. Doran, Katherine A. Serafin
2010, Open-File Report 2010-1090
INTRODUCTION Hurricane Gustav made landfall on September 1, 2008, near Cocodrie, Louisiana, as a category 2 storm, with maximum sustained winds near 170 km/hr. Hurricane-force winds, with speeds in excess of 119 km/hr, extended along 270 km of the Louisiana coastline, from Marsh Island to the central barrier islands. Tropical-storm-force winds...
Chemical Constituents in Groundwater from Multiple Zones in the Eastern Snake River Plain Aquifer at the Idaho National Laboratory, Idaho, 2005-08
Roy C. Bartholomay, Brian V. Twining
2010, Scientific Investigations Report 2010-5116
From 2005 to 2008, the U.S. Geological Survey's Idaho National Laboratory (INL) Project office, in cooperation with the U.S. Department of Energy, collected water-quality samples from multiple water-bearing zones in the eastern Snake River Plain aquifer. Water samples were collected from six monitoring wells completed in about 350-700 feet of...
Paleoclimates: Understanding climate change past and present
Thomas M. Cronin
2010, Book
The field of paleoclimatology relies on physical, chemical, and biological proxies of past climate changes that have been preserved in natural archives such as glacial ice, tree rings, sediments, corals, and speleothems. Paleoclimate archives obtained through field investigations, ocean sediment coring expeditions, ice sheet coring programs, and other projects allow...
Climate change, cranes, and temperate floodplain ecosystems
Sammy L. King
2010, Conference Paper, Cranes, agriculture, and climate change
Floodplain ecosystems provide important habitat to cranes globally. Lateral, longitudinal, vertical, and temporal hydrologic connectivity in rivers is essential to maintaining the functions and values of these systems. Agricultural development, flood control, water diversions, dams, and other anthropogenic activities have greatly affected hydrologic connectivity of river systems worldwide and altered...
Mineralogy and stratigraphy of phyllosilicate-bearing and dark mantling units in the greater Mawrth Vallis/west Arabia Terra area: Constraints on geological origin
E.Z. Noe Dobrea, J.L. Bishop, N.K. McKeown, R. Fu, C.M. Rossi, J.R. Michalski, C. Heinlein, V. Hanus, F. Poulet, R.J.F. Mustard, S. Murchie, A. S. McEwen, G. Swayze, J.-P. Bibring, E. Malaret, C. Hash
2010, Journal of Geophysical Research (115)
Analyses of MRO/CRISM images of the greater Mawrth Vallis region of Mars affirm the presence of two primary phyllosilicate assemblages throughout a region ∼1000 × 1000 km. These two units consist of an Fe/Mg-phyllosilicate assemblage overlain by an Al-phyllosilicate and hydrated silica assemblage. The lower unit contains Fe/Mg-smectites, sometimes combined...
Climate change and wildlife health: direct and indirect effects
Erik K. Hofmeister, Gail Moede Rogall, Katherine E. Wesenberg, Rachel C. Abbott, Thierry M. Work, Krysten Schuler, Jonathan M. Sleeman, James Winton
2010, Fact Sheet 2010-3017
Climate change will have significant effects on the health of wildlife, domestic animals, and humans, according to scientists. The Intergovernmental Panel on Climate Change projects that unprecedented rates of climate change will result in increasing average global temperatures; rising sea levels; changing global precipitation patterns, including increasing amounts and variability;...
Flood of September 2008 in Northwestern Indiana
Kathleen K. Fowler, Moon H. Kim, Chad D. Menke, Donald V. Arvin
2010, Open-File Report 2010-1098
During September 12-15, 2008, rainfall ranging from 2 to more than 11 inches fell on northwestern Indiana. The rainfall resulted in extensive flooding on many streams within the Lake Michigan and Kankakee River Basins during September 12-18, causing two deaths, evacuation of hundreds of residents, and millions of dollars of...
Structured decision-making and rapid prototyping to plan a management response to an invasive species
S. M. Blomquist, Trisha D. Johnson, David R. Smith, Geoff P. Call, Brant N. Miller, W. Mark Thurman, Jamie E. McFadden, Mary J. Parkin, G. Scott Bloomer
2010, Journal of Fish and Wildlife Management (1) 19-32
We developed components of a decision structure that could be used in an adaptive management framework for responding to invasion of hemlock woolly adelgid Adeleges tsugae on the Cumberland Plateau of northern Tennessee. Hemlock woolly adelgid, an invasive forest pest, was first detected in this area in 2007. We used a structured...
Long-term trends in submersed aquatic vegetation (SAV) in Chesapeake Bay, USA, related to water quality
Robert J. Orth, Michael R. Williams, Scott R. Marion, David J. Wilcox, Tim J. B. Carruthers, Kenneth A. Moore, W. M. Kemp, William C. Dennison, Nancy B. Rybicki, Peter Bergstrom, Richard A. Batiuk
2010, Estuaries and Coasts (33) 1144-1163
Chesapeake Bay supports a diverse assemblage of marine and freshwater species of submersed aquatic vegetation (SAV) whose broad distributions are generally constrained by salinity. An annual aerial SAV monitoring program and a bi-monthly to monthly water quality monitoring program have been conducted throughout Chesapeake Bay since 1984. We performed an...