Gene movement and genetic association with regional climate gradients in California valley oak (Quercus lobata Née) in the face of climate change
Victoria L. Sork, Frank W. Davis, Robert Westfall, Alan L. Flint, Makihiko Ikegami, Hongfang Wang, Delphine Grivet
2010, Molecular Ecology (19) 3806-3823
Rapid climate change jeopardizes tree populations by shifting current climate zones. To avoid extinction, tree populations must tolerate, adapt, or migrate. Here we investigate geographic patterns of genetic variation in valley oak, Quercus lobata Née, to assess how underlying genetic structure of populations might influence this species’ ability...
Shallow subsurface structure of the Wasatch fault, Provo segment, Utah, from integrated compressional and shear-wave seismic reflection profiles with implications for fault structure and development
J.H. McBride, W. J. Stephenson, R. A. Williams, J. K. Odum, D. M. Worley, J.V. South, A.R. Brinkerhoff, R.W. Keach, A. O. Okojie-Ayoro
2010, Geological Society of America Bulletin (122) 1800-1814
Integrated vibroseis compressional and experimental hammer-source, shear-wave, seismic reflection profiles across the Provo segment of the Wasatch fault zone in Utah reveal near-surface and shallow bedrock structures caused by geologically recent deformation. Combining information from the seismic surveys, geologic mapping, terrain analysis, and previous seismic first-arrival modeling provides a well-constrained...
Effect of imperfect detectability on adaptive and conventional sampling: Simulated sampling of freshwater mussels in the upper Mississippi River
D. R. Smith, B. R. Gray, T.J. Newton, D. Nichols
2010, Environmental Monitoring and Assessment (170) 499-507
Adaptive sampling designs are recommended where, as is typical with freshwater mussels, the outcome of interest is rare and clustered. However, the performance of adaptive designs has not been investigated when outcomes are not only rare and clustered but also imperfectly detected. We address this combination of challenges using data...
Depositional setting, petrology and chemistry of Permian coals from the Paraná Basin: 2. South Santa Catarina Coalfield, Brazil
W. Kalkreuth, M. Holz, A. Mexias, M. Balbinot, J. Levandowski, J. Willett, R. Finkelman, H. Burger
2010, International Journal of Coal Geology (84) 213-236
In Brazil economically important coal deposits occur in the southern part of the Paraná Basin, where coal seams occur in the <a title="Learn more about Permian from ScienceDirect's AI-generated Topic...
Long-term reductions in anthropogenic nutrients link to improvements in Chesapeake Bay habitat
H. Ruhl, N. B. Rybicki
2010, Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences of the United States of America (107) 16566-16570
Great effort continues to focus on ecosystem restoration and reduction of nutrient inputs thought to be responsible, in part, for declines in estuary habitats worldwide. The ability of environmental policy to address restoration is limited, in part, by uncertainty in the relationships between costly restoration and benefits. Here, we present...
Evidence for a twelfth large earthquake on the southern hayward fault in the past 1900 years
J. J. Lienkaemper, P. L. Williams, T.P. Guilderson
2010, Bulletin of the Seismological Society of America (100) 2024-2034
We present age and stratigraphic evidence for an additional paleoearthquake at the Tyson Lagoon site. The acquisition of 19 additional radiocarbon dates and the inclusion of this additional event has resolved a large age discrepancy in our earlier earthquake chronology. The age of event E10 was previously poorly constrained, thus...
High tsunami frequency as a result of combined strike-slip faulting and coastal landslides
M.J. Hornbach, N. Braudy, R.W. Briggs, M.-H. Cormier, M.B. Davis, J.B. Diebold, N. Dieudonne, R. Douilly, C. Frohlich, S.P.S. Gulick, H. E. Johnson III, P. Mann, C. McHugh, K. Ryan-Mishkin, C.S. Prentice, L. Seeber, C.C. Sorlien, M.S. Steckler, S.J. Symithe, F. W. Taylor, J. Templeton
2010, Nature Geoscience (3) 783-788
Earthquakes on strike-slip faults can produce devastating natural hazards. However, because they consist predominantly of lateral motion, these faults are rarely associated with significant uplift or tsunami generation. And although submarine slides can generate tsunami, only a few per cent of all tsunami are believed to be triggered in this...
Effects of prescribed fire on vegetation and passerine birds in northern mixed-grass prairie
T.A. Grant, E.M. Madden, T.L. Shaffer, J.S. Dockens
2010, Journal of Wildlife Management (74) 1841-1851
Prescribed fire is used widely to manage grasslands on National Wildlife Refuges and other public lands in the northern Great Plains, but its effects on habitat use or production of wildlife in the region are poorly understood. During 19982003, we used point counts to examine effects of prescribed fire on...
Development of a new toxic-unit model for the bioassessment of metals in streams
Travis S. Schmidt, W.H. Clements, K.A. Mitchell, Stanley E. Church, Richard B. Wanty, David L. Fey, Philip L. Verplanck, Carma A. San Juan
2010, Environmental Toxicology and Chemistry (29) 2432-2442
Two toxic-unit models that estimate the toxicity of trace-metal mixtures to benthic communities were compared. The chronic criterion accumulation ratio (CCAR), a modification of biotic ligand model (BLM) outputs for use as a toxic-unit model, accounts for the modifying and competitive influences of major cations (Ca2+, Mg2+, Na+, K+, H+),...
Geochemical and mineralogical evidence for Sahara and Sahel dust additions to Quaternary soils on Lanzarote, eastern Canary Islands, Spain
D.R. Muhs, J. Budahn, G. Skipp, J.M. Prospero, D. Patterson, E. Arthur Bettis III
2010, Terra Nova (22) 399-410
Africa is the most important source of dust in the world today, and dust storms are frequent on the nearby Canary Islands. Previous workers have inferred that the Sahara is the most important source of dust to Canary Islands soils, with little contribution from the Sahel region. Soils overlying a...
Locating non-volcanic tremor along the San Andreas Fault using a multiple array source imaging technique
T. Ryberg, C.H. Haberland, G. S. Fuis, W.L. Ellsworth, D.R. Shelly
2010, Geophysical Journal International (183) 1485-1500
Non-volcanic tremor (NVT) has been observed at several subduction zones and at the San Andreas Fault (SAF). Tremor locations are commonly derived by cross-correlating envelope-transformed seismic traces in combination with source-scanning techniques. Recently, they have also been located by using relative relocations with master events, that is low-frequency earthquakes that...
Patterns of ancestry and genetic diversity in reintroduced populations of the slimy sculpin: Implications for conservation
D.D. Huff, L.M. Miller, B. Vondracek
2010, Conservation Genetics (11) 2379-2391
Reintroductions are a common approach for preserving intraspecific biodiversity in fragmented landscapes. However, they may exacerbate the reduction in genetic diversity initially caused by population fragmentation because the effective population size of reintroduced populations is often smaller and reintroduced populations also tend to be more geographically isolated than native populations....
Holocene aggradation of the Dry Tortugas coral reef ecosystem
J. C. Brock, M. Palaseanu-Lovejoy, R.Z. Poore, A. Nayegandhi, C. W. Wright
2010, Coral Reefs (29) 857-868
Radiometric age dating of reef cores acquired at the Dry Tortugas coral reef ecosystem (DTCRE) was merged with lidar topographic mapping to examine Holocene reef development linked to spatial variation in growth and erosion under the control of sea level. Analysis of variance of lidar topography confirmed the presence of...
An evaluation of the influence of substrate on the response of juvenile freshwater mussels (fatmucket, Lampsilis siliquoidea) in acute water exposures to ammonia
J. Miao, M.C. Barnhart, Eric L. Brunson, Douglas K. Hardesty, Christopher G. Ingersoll, Ning Wang
2010, Environmental Toxicology and Chemistry (29) 2112-2116
Acute 96-h ammonia toxicity to three-month-old juvenile mussels (Lampsilis siliquoidea) was evaluated in four treatments (water-only, water-only with feeding, water and soil, and water and sand) using an exposure unit designed to maintain consistent pH and ammonia concentrations in overlying water and in pore water surrounding the substrates. Median effect...
Impact of sampling techniques on measured stormwater quality data for small streams
R. D. Harmel, R.M. Slade Jr., R.L. Haney
2010, Journal of Environmental Quality (39) 1734-1742
Science-based sampling methodologies are needed to enhance water quality characterization for setting appropriate water quality standards, developing Total Maximum Daily Loads, and managing nonpoint source pollution. Storm event sampling, which is vital for adequate assessment of water quality in small (wadeable) streams, is typically conducted by manual grab or integrated...
Sediment contamination of residential streams in the metropolitan Kansas City area, USA: Part II. whole-sediment toxicity to the amphipod hyalella azteca
J. Tao, Christopher G. Ingersoll, Nile E. Kemble, J.R. Dias, J.B. Murowchick, G. Welker, D. Huggins
2010, Archives of Environmental Contamination and Toxicology (59) 370-381
This is the second part of a study that evaluates the influence of nonpoint sources on the sediment quality of five adjacent streams within the metropolitan Kansas City area, central United States. Physical, chemical, and toxicity data (Hyalella azteca 28-day whole-sediment toxicity test) for 29 samples collected in 2003 were...
Algal blooms and "Marine snow": Mechanisms that enhance preservation of organic carbon in ancient fine-grained sediments
Joe H.S. Macquaker, Margaret A. Keller, Sarah J. Davies
2010, Journal of Sedimentary Research (80) 934-942
Combined petrographic and geochemical methods are used to investigate the microfabrics present in thin sections prepared from representative organic carbon-rich mudstones collected from three successions (the Kimmeridge Clay Formation, the Jet Rock Member of the Whitby Mudstone Formation, and the pebble shale and Hue Shale). This study was initiated...
Natural chlorate in the environment: Application of a new IC-ESI/MS/MS method with a Cl18O3- internal standard
Balaji Rao, Paul B. Hatzinger, J.K. Bohlke, Neil C. Sturchio, Brian J. Andraski, Frank D. Eckardt, W. Andrew Jackson
2010, Environmental Science & Technology (44) 8429-8434
A new ion chromatography electrospray tandem mass spectrometry (IC-ESI/MS/MS) method has been developed for quantification and confirmation of chlorate (ClO3−) in environmental samples. The method involves the electro-chemical generation of isotopically labeled chlorate internal standard (Cl18O3−) using 18O water (H218O). The standard was added to all samples prior to analysis...
Carbon and hydrogen isotopic evidence for the origin of combustible gases in water-supply wells in north-central Pennsylvania
K. M. Revesz, K. J. Breen, A.J. Baldassare, R.C. Burruss
2010, Applied Geochemistry (25) 1845-1859
The origin of the combustible gases in groundwater from glacial-outwash and fractured-bedrock aquifers was investigated in northern Tioga County, Pennsylvania. Thermogenic methane (CH4) and ethane (C2H6) and microbial CH4 were found. Microbial CH4 is from natural in situ processes in the shale bedrock and occurs chiefly in the bedrock aquifer....
Urbanization in a great plains river: Effects on fishes and food webs
J.L. Eitzmann, C.P. Paukert
2010, River Research and Applications (26) 948-959
Spatial variation of habitat and food web structure of the fish community was investigated at three reaches in the Kansas River, USA to determine if ??13C variability and ??15N values differ longitudinally and are related to urbanization and instream habitat. Fish and macroinvertebrates were collected at three river reaches in...
Arsenic Geochemistry and Hydrostratigraphy in Midwestern U.S. Glacial Deposits
Terry L. Root, M.B. Gotkowitz, J.M. Bahr, J.W. Attig
2010, Ground Water (48) 903-912
Arsenic concentrations exceeding the U.S. EPA's 10 ??g/L standard are common in glacial aquifers in the midwestern United States. Previous studies have indicated that arsenic occurs naturally in these aquifers in association with metal-(hydr)oxides and is released to groundwater under reducing conditions generated by microbial oxidation of organic matter. Despite...
Tree-ring 14C links seismic swarm to CO2 spike at Yellowstone, USA
William C. Evans, D. Bergfeld, J. P. McGeehin, J.C. King, H. Heasler
2010, Geology (38) 1075-1078
Mechanisms to explain swarms of shallow seismicity and inflation-deflation cycles at Yellowstone caldera (western United States) commonly invoke episodic escape of magma-derived brines or gases from the ductile zone, but no correlative changes in the surface efflux of magmatic constituents have ever been documented. Our analysis of individual growth rings...
Forest responses to increasing aridity and warmth in the southwestern United States
A.P. Williams, Craig D. Allen, C. I. Millar, T.W. Swetnam, J. Michaelsen, C.J. Still, Steven W. Leavitt
2010, PNAS (107) 21289-21294
In recent decades, intense droughts, insect outbreaks, and wildfires have led to decreasing tree growth and increasing mortality in many temperate forests. We compared annual tree-ring width data from 1,097 populations in the coterminous United States to climate data and evaluated site-specific tree responses to climate variations throughout the 20th...
Unifying quantitative life-history theory and field endocrinology to assess prudent parenthood in a long-lived seabird
W.H. Satterthwaite, A.S. Kitaysky, Scott A. Hatch, John F. Piatt, M. Mangel
2010, Evolutionary Ecology Research (12) 779-792
Question: Can field measurements of stress hormones help us to assess the prudent parent hypothesis in a long-lived seabird?Organism: Black-legged kittiwake, Rissa tridactyla.Location: Duck and Gull Islands, Cook Inlet, Alaska, USA.Methods: We examined the statistical relationship between the stress hormone corticosterone and mortality in black-legged kittiwakes. We built a demographic model of the kittiwake life...
Sediment contamination of residential streams in the metropolitan Kansas City area, USA: Part I. distribution of polycyclic aromatic hydrocarbon and pesticide-related compounds
J. Tao, D. Huggins, G. Welker, J.R. Dias, Christopher G. Ingersoll, J.B. Murowchick
2010, Archives of Environmental Contamination and Toxicology (59) 352-369
This is the first part of a study that evaluates the influence of nonpoint-source contaminants on the sediment quality of five streams within the metropolitan Kansas City area, central United States. Surficial sediment was collected in 2003 from 29 sites along five streams with watersheds that extend from the core...