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Page 1885, results 47101 - 47125

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Response of benthic macroinvertebrate communities to highway construction in an Appalachian watershed
Lara B. Hedrick, S.A. Welsh, James T. Anderson, L.-S. Lin, Y. Chen, X. Wei
2010, Hydrobiologia (641) 115-131
Highway construction in mountainous areas can result in sedimentation of streams, negatively impacting stream habitat, water quality, and biotic communities. We assessed the impacts of construction of a segment of Corridor H, a four-lane highway, in the Lost River watershed, West Virginia, by monitoring benthic macroinvertebrate communities and water quality,...
Relevance of risk predictions derived from a chronic species sensitivity distribution with cadmium to aquatic populations and ecosystems
C.A. Mebane
2010, Risk Analysis (30) 203-223
Criteria to protect aquatic life are intended to protect diverse ecosystems, but in practice are usually developed from compilations of single-species toxicity tests using standard test organisms that were tested in laboratory environments. Species sensitivity distributions (SSDs) developed from these compilations are extrapolated to set aquatic ecosystem criteria. The protectiveness...
Community variations in social vulnerability to Cascadia-related tsunamis in the U.S. Pacific Northwest
N.J. Wood, C.G. Burton, S.L. Cutter
2010, Natural Hazards (52) 369-389
Tsunamis generated by Cascadia subduction zone earthquakes pose significant threats to coastal communities in the U. S. Pacific Northwest. Impacts of future tsunamis to individuals and communities will likely vary due to pre-event socioeconomic and demographic differences. In order to assess social vulnerability to Cascadia tsunamis, we adjust a social...
Propagule pressure and stream characteristics influence introgression: Cutthroat and rainbow trout in British Columbia
S.N. Bennett, J.R. Olson, J. L. Kershner, P. Corbett
2010, Ecological Applications (20) 263-277
Hybridization and introgression between introduced and native salmonids threaten the continued persistence of many inland cutthroat trout species. Environmental models have been developed to predict the spread of introgression, but few studies have assessed the role of propagule pressure. We used an extensive set of fish stocking records and geographic...
Patterns of mercury dispersion from local and regional emission sources, rural Central Wisconsin, USA
A. Kolker, M.L. Olson, David P. Krabbenhoft, Michael T. Tate, Mark A. Engle
2010, Atmospheric Chemistry and Physics Discussions (10) 1823-1846
Simultaneous real-time changes in mercury (Hg) speciation-reactive gaseous Hg (RGM), elemental Hg (Hg??), and fine particulate Hg (Hg-PM2.5), were determined from June to November 2007, in ambient air at three locations in rural Central Wisconsin. Known Hg emission sources within the airshed of the monitoring sites include: 1) a 1114...
Seasonal groundwater contribution to crop-water use assessed with lysimeter observations and model simulations
Y. Luo, M. Sophocleous
2010, Journal of Hydrology (389) 325-335
Groundwater evaporation can play an important role in crop-water use where the water table is shallow. Lysimeters are often used to quantify the groundwater evaporation contribution influenced by a broad range of environmental factors. However, it is difficult for such field facilities, which are operated under limited conditions within limited...
Contingency table analysis of pebble lithology and roundness: A case study of Huangshui River, China and comparison to rivers in the Rocky Mountains, USA
X. Miao, D. A. Lindsey, Z. Lai, Xiuying Liu
2010, Sedimentary Geology (224) 49-53
Contingency table analysis of pebble lithology and roundness is an effective way to identify the source terrane of a drainage basin and to distinguish changes in basin size, piracy, tectonism, and other events. First, the analysis to terrace gravel deposited by the Huangshui River, northeastern Tibet Plateau, China, shows statistically...
The response of stream fish to local and reach-scale variation in the occurrence of a benthic aquatic macrophyte
J.E. Argentina, Mary C. Freeman, B. J. Freeman
2010, Freshwater Biology (55) 643-653
The aquatic macrophyte Podostemum ceratophyllum has been shown to increase stream productivity, abundance and biomass of benthic invertebrates, and local occurrences of some stream fishes. However, experimental evidence that fishes preferentially associate with Podostemum is lacking, and the value of Podostemum as a predictor of stream fish assemblage composition has...
Do larval fishes exhibit diel drift patterns in a large, turbid river?
K.S. Reeves, D.L. Galat
2010, Journal of Applied Ichthyology (26) 571-577
Previous research suggested larval fishes do not exhibit a diel drift cycle in turbid rivers (transparency <30 cm). We evaluated this hypothesis in the turbid, lower Missouri River, Missouri. We also reviewed diel patterns of larval drift over a range of transparencies in rivers worldwide. Larval fishes were collected from...
Hyperspectral analysis of columbia spotted frog habitat
J.P. Shive, D. S. Pilliod, C.R. Peterson
2010, Journal of Wildlife Management (74) 1387-1394
Wildlife managers increasingly are using remotely sensed imagery to improve habitat delineations and sampling strategies. Advances in remote sensing technology, such as hyperspectral imagery, provide more information than previously was available with multispectral sensors. We evaluated accuracy of high-resolution hyperspectral image classifications to identify wetlands and wetland habitat features important...
Early observations on an emerging Great Lakes invader Hemimysis anomala in Lake Ontario
Maureen G. Walsh, Brian F. Lantry, Brent Boscarino, Kelly Bowen, Jocelyn Gerlofsma, Ted Schaner, Richard Back, Jennifer Questel, A. Garry Smythe, Roberta Cap, Michael Goehle, Bryan Young, Marc A. Chalupnicki, James H. Johnson, James E. McKenna
2010, Journal of Great Lakes Research (36) 499-504
Hemimysis anomala, a Ponto-Caspian littoral mysid, is an emerging Great Lakes invader that was discovered in Lakes Michigan and Ontario in 2006. Similar to the native mysid Mysis diluviana, Hemimysis exhibits a diel vertical migration pattern but generally inhabits shallower and warmer waters than M. diluviana. Because basic information on...
Fine scale daily movements and habitat use of East Pacific green turtles at a shallow coastal lagoon in Baja California Sur, Mexico
Jesse Senko, Volker Koch, William M. Megill, Raymond R. Carthy, R.obert P. Templeton, Wallace J. Nichols
2010, Journal of Experimental Marine Biology and Ecology (391) 92-100
Green turtles spend most of their lives in coastal foraging areas where they face multiple anthropogenic impacts. Therefore, understanding their spatial use in this environment is a priority for conservation efforts. We studied the fine scale daily movements and habitat use of East Pacific green turtles (Chelonia mydas) at Laguna...
A late Miocene-early Pliocene chain of lakes fed by the Colorado River: Evidence from Sr, C, and O isotopes of the Bouse Formation and related units between Grand Canyon and the Gulf of California
J. A. Roskowski, P. J. Patchett, J.E. Spencer, P. A. Pearthree, D. L. Dettman, J. E. Faulds, A. C. Reynolds
2010, Geological Society of America Bulletin (122) 1625-1636
We report strontium isotopic results for the late Miocene Hualapai Limestone of the Lake Mead area (Arizona-Nevada) and the latest Miocene to early Pliocene Bouse Formation and related units of the lower Colorado River trough (Arizona-California-Nevada), together with parallel oxygen and carbon isotopic analyses of Bouse samples, to constrain the...
Anthropogenic influence on recent bathymetric change in west-central San Francisco Bay
Patrick L. Barnard, Rikk G. Kvitek
2010, San Francisco Estuary and Watershed Science (8)
Two multibeam sonar surveys of west-central San Francisco Bay, California, were conducted in 1997 and 2008. Bathymetric change analysis between the two surveys indicates a loss of 14.1 million cubic meters (-3.1 cm/yr) of sediment during this time period, representing an approximately three-fold acceleration of the rate that was observed...
Modern climate challenges and the geological record
Thomas M. Cronin
2010, American Paleontologist (18) 10-12
Today's changing climate poses challenges about the influence of human activity, such as greenhouse gas emissions and land use changes, the natural variability of Earth's climate, and complex feedback processes. Ice core and instrumental records show that over the last century, atmospheric carbon dioxide (CO2) concentrations have risen to 390...
Aeolian bedforms, yardangs, and indurated surfaces in the Tharsis Montes as seen by the HiRISE Camera: Evidence for dust aggregates
Nathan T. Bridges, Maria E. Banks, Ross A. Beyer, Frank C. Chuang, Eldar Z. Noe Dobrea, Kenneth E. Herkenhoff, Laszlo P. Keszthelyi, K.E. Fishbaugh, Alfred S. McEwen, Timothy I. Michaels, B.J. Thomson, James J. Wray
2010, Icarus (205) 165-182
HiRISE images of Mars with ground sampling down to 25 cm/pixel show that the dust-rich mantle covering the surfaces of the Tharsis Montes is organized into ridges whose form and distribution are consistent with formation by aeolian saltation. Other dusty areas near the volcanoes and elsewhere on the planet exhibit...
New and interesting species of the genus Muelleria (Bacillariophyta) from the Antarctic region and South Africa
B. Van De Vijver, G. Mataloni, L. Stanish, S. A. Spaulding
2010, Phycologia (49) 22-41
During a survey of the terrestrial diatom flora of some sub-Antarctic islands in the southern Indian and Atlantic Oceans and of the Antarctic continent, more than 15 taxa belonging to the genus Muelleria were observed. Nine of these taxa are described as new species using light and scanning electron microscopy....
Increase in lake trout reproduction in Lake Huron following the collapse of alewife: Relief from thiamine deficiency or larval predation?
J.D. Fitzsimons, S. Brown, L. Brown, D. Honeyfield, J. He, J.E. Johnson
2010, Aquatic Ecosystem Health & Management (13) 73-84
In the Great Lakes there is still uncertainty as to the population level effects of a thiamine deficiency on salmonines caused by high consumption of alewives Alosa pseudoharengus. A resurgence of lake trout Salvelinus namaycush reproduction in Lake Huron following the crash of alewife stocks between 2002 and 2004 provided...
Potential economic benefits of adapting agricultural production systems to future climate change
Daniel B. Fagre, Gregory Pederson, Lindsey E. Bengtson, Tony Prato, Zeyuan Qui, Jimmie R. Williams
2010, Environmental Management (45) 577-589
Potential economic impacts of future climate change on crop enterprise net returns and annual net farm income (NFI) are evaluated for small and large representative farms in Flathead Valley in Northwest Montana. Crop enterprise net returns and NFI in an historical climate period (1960–2005) and future climate period (2006–2050) are...
Relationship of voluminous ignimbrites to continental arc plutons: Petrology of Jurassic ignimbrites and contemporaneous plutons in southern California
N. K. Fohey-Breting, A. P. Barth, J. L. Wooden, F.K. Mazdab, C.A. Carter, E.R. Schermer
2010, Journal of Volcanology and Geothermal Research (189) 1-11
Volcanism was broadly associated in both space and time with Mesozoic plutonism in the Cordillera continental margin arc, but the precise petrogenetic relationships between volcanic rocks and adjacent zoned plutons are not known. Igneous rocks in a tilted crustal section in California include four laterally extensive Jurassic ash flow tuffs...
First Results of the Regional Earthquake Likelihood Models Experiment
D. Schorlemmer, J.D. Zechar, M.J. Werner, E. H. Field, D.D. Jackson, T.H. Jordan
2010, Pure and Applied Geophysics (167) 859-876
The ability to successfully predict the future behavior of a system is a strong indication that the system is well understood. Certainly many details of the earthquake system remain obscure, but several hypotheses related to earthquake occurrence and seismic hazard have been proffered, and predicting earthquake behavior is a worthy...
Rodents and lagomorphs (Mammalia) from the Hemphillian (late Miocene) of Utah
W.W. Korth, D. D. De Blieux
2010, Journal of Vertebrate Paleontology (30) 226-235
Four species of rodents (two heteromyids and two cricetids) and one lagomorph are identified from the late Tertiary Sevier River Formation of Utah. The heteromyids include a new genus and species of heteromyine, Metaliomys sevierensis, which is intermediate in morphology between the Clarendonian and early Hemphillian Diprionomys Kellogg and the...
The spatial and temporal variability of groundwater recharge in a forested basin in northern Wisconsin
W. R. Dripps, K. R. Bradbury
2010, Hydrological Processes (24) 383-392
Recharge varies spatially and temporally as it depends on a wide variety of factors (e.g. vegetation, precipitation, climate, topography, geology, and soil type), making it one of the most difficult, complex, and uncertain hydrologic parameters to quantify. Despite its inherent variability, groundwater modellers, planners, and policy makers often ignore recharge...
Influence of organic matter on the transport of Cryptosporidium parvum oocysts in a ferric oxyhydroxide-coated quartz sand saturated porous medium
R.A. Abudalo, J. N. Ryan, Ronald W. Harvey, David W. Metge, Lee L. Landkamer
2010, Water Research (44) 1104-1113
To assess the effect of organic matter on the transport of Cryptosporidium parvum oocysts in a geochemically heterogeneous saturated porous medium, we measured the breakthrough and collision efficiencies of oocysts as a function of dissolved organic matter concentration in a flow-through column containing ferric oxyhydroxide-coated sand. We characterized the surface...