Predicting fractional bed load transport rates: Application of the Wilcock‐Crowe equations to a regulated gravel bed river
David Gaeuman, E.D. Andrews, Andreas Krause, Wes Smith
2009, Water Resources Research (45)
Bed load samples from four locations in the Trinity River of northern California are analyzed to evaluate the performance of the Wilcock‐Crowe bed load transport equations for predicting fractional bed load transport rates. Bed surface particles become smaller and the fraction of sand on the bed increases with distance downstream...
Geochemical evidence for African dust and volcanic ash inputs to terra rossa soils on carbonate reef terraces, northern Jamaica, West Indies
D.R. Muhs, J. R. Budahn
2009, Quaternary International (196) 13-35
The origin of red or reddish-brown, clay-rich, "terra rossa" soils on limestone has been debated for decades. A traditional qualitative explanation for their formation has been the accumulation of insoluble residues as the limestone is progressively dissolved over time. However, this mode of formation often requires unrealistic or impossible amounts...
Polymorphic microsatellite loci for the sand pocket mouse Chaetodipus arenarius, an endemic from the Baja California Peninsula
A. Munguia-Vega, R. Rodriguez-Estrella, M. Nachman, M. Culver
2009, Molecular Ecology Resources (9) 305-307
Fifteen polymorphic microsatellite loci were isolated from an enriched genomic library of the sand pocket mouse Chaetodipus arenarius. The mean number of alleles per locus was 11.53 (range five to 19) and the average observed heterozygosity was 0.764 (range 0.121 to 1.0). The markers will be used for detecting the...
Effects of an invasive plant on a desert sand dune landscape
C.W. Barrows, E.B. Allen, M.L. Brooks, M.F. Allen
2009, Biological Invasions (11) 673-686
Given the abundance of non-native species invading wildland habitats, managers need to employ informed triage to focus control efforts on weeds with the greatest potential for negative impacts. Our objective here was to determine the level of threat Sahara mustard, Brassica tournefortii, represents to meeting regional goals for protecting biodiversity....
Modeling carbon dioxide, pH, and un-ionized ammonia relationships in serial reuse systems
J. Colt, B. Watten, M. Rust
2009, Aquacultural Engineering (40) 28-44
In serial reuse systems, excretion of metabolic carbon dioxide has a significant impact on ambient pH, carbon dioxide, and un-ionized ammonia concentrations. This impact depends strongly on alkalinity, water flow rate, feeding rate, and loss of carbon dioxide to the atmosphere. A reduction in pH from metabolic carbon dioxide can...
Microbial characterization of nitrification in a shallow, nitrogen-contaminated aquifer, Cape Cod, Massachusetts and detection of a novel cluster associated with nitrifying Betaproteobacteria
D.N. Miller, R. L. Smith
2009, Journal of Contaminant Hydrology (103) 182-193
Groundwater nitrification is a poorly characterized process affecting the speciation and transport of nitrogen. Cores from two sites in a plume of contamination were examined using culture-based and molecular techniques targeting nitrification processes. The first site, located beneath a sewage effluent infiltration bed, received treated effluent containing O2(> 300 µM) and NH4+ (51–800 µM). The second site was...
Sulfur- and oxygen-isotopes in sediment-hosted stratiform barite deposits
C. A. Johnson, P. Emsbo, F. G. Poole, R. O. Rye
2009, Geochimica et Cosmochimica Acta (73) 133-147
Sulfur- and oxygen-isotope analyses have been obtained for sediment-hosted stratiform barite deposits in Alaska, Nevada, Mexico, and China to examine the environment of formation of this deposit type. The barite is contained in sedimentary sequences as old as Late Neoproterozoic and as young as Mississippian. If previously published data for...
Fire intensity, fire severity and burn severity: A brief review and suggested usage
Jon E. Keeley
2009, International Journal of Wildland Fire (18) 116-126
Several recent papers have suggested replacing the terminology of fire intensity and fire severity. Part of the problem with fire intensity is that it is sometimes used incorrectly to describe fire effects, when in fact it is justifiably restricted to measures of energy output. Increasingly, the term has created confusion...
Stress evolution following the 1999 Chi-Chi, Taiwan, earthquake: Consequences for afterslip, relaxation, aftershocks and departures from Omori decay
C.-H. Chan, R.S. Stein
2009, Geophysical Journal International (177) 179-192
We explore how Coulomb stress transfer and viscoelastic relaxation control afterslip and aftershocks in a continental thrust fault system. The 1999 September 21 Mw = 7.6 Chi-Chi shock is typical of continental ramp-d??collement systems throughout the world, and so inferences drawn from this uniquely well-recorded event may be widely applicable....
Possible sources of archaeological maize found in Chaco Canyon and Aztec Ruin, New Mexico
L. V. Benson, J.R. Stein, Howard E. Taylor
2009, Journal of Archaeological Science (36) 387-407
Maize played a major role in Chaco's interaction with outlying communities in the southern Colorado Plateau. This paper seeks to determine where archaeological corn cobs brought to Chaco Canyon were grown. Strontium-isotope and trace-metal ratios of 180 soil-water and 18 surface-water sites in the Southern Colorado Plateau have revealed possible...
Case study of a full-scale evapotranspiration cover
Patrick E. McGuire, Brian J. Andraski, Ryan E. Archibald
2009, Journal of Geotechnical and Geoenvironmental Engineering (135) 316-332
The design, construction, and performance analyses of a 6.1ha evapotranspiration (ET) landfill cover at the semiarid U.S. Army Fort Carson site, near Colorado Springs, Colo. are presented. Initial water-balance model simulations, using literature reported soil hydraulic data, aided selection of borrow-source soil type(s) that resulted in predictions...
Titan's surface at 2.2-cm wavelength imaged by the Cassini RADAR radiometer: Calibration and first results
M.A. Janssen, R. D. Lorenz, R. West, F. Paganelli, R.M. Lopes, R. L. Kirk, C. Elachi, S. D. Wall, W.T.K. Johnson, Y. Anderson, R.A. Boehmer, P. Callahan, Y. Gim, G.A. Hamilton, K.D. Kelleher, L. Roth, B. Stiles, Gall A. Le
2009, Icarus (200) 222-239
The first comprehensive calibration and mapping of the thermal microwave emission from Titan's surface is reported based on radiometric data obtained at 2.2-cm wavelength by the passive radiometer included in the Cassini Radar instrument. The data reported were accumulated from 69 separate observational segments in Titan passes from Ta (October...
Evaluating the spatial variation of total mercury in young-of-year yellow perch (Perca flavescens), surface water and upland soil for watershed-lake systems within the southern Boreal Shield
M.C. Gabriel, R. Kolka, T. Wickman, E. Nater, Laurel G. Woodruff
2009, Science of the Total Environment (407) 4117-4126
The primary objective of this research is to investigate relationships between mercury in upland soil, lake water and fish tissue and explore the cause for the observed spatial variation of THg in age one yellow perch (Perca flavescens) for ten lakes within the Superior National Forest. Spatial relationships between yellow...
Acoustic estimates of abundance and distribution of spawning lake trout on Sheboygan Reef in Lake Michigan
D.M. Warner, R.M. Claramunt, J. Janssen, D.J. Jude, N. Wattrus
2009, Journal of Great Lakes Research (35) 147-153
Efforts to restore self-sustaining lake trout (Salvelinus namaycush) populations in the Laurentian Great Lakes have had widespread success in Lake Superior; but in other Great Lakes, populations of lake trout are maintained by stocking. Recruitment bottlenecks may be present at a number of stages of the reproduction process. To study...
Localized double-array stacking analysis of PcP: D″ and ULVZ structure beneath the Cocos plate, Mexico, central Pacific, and north Pacific
Alexander R. Hutko, Thorne Lay, Justin Revenaugh
2009, Physics of the Earth and Planetary Interiors (173) 60-74
A large, high quality P-wave data set comprising short-period and broadband signals sampling four separate regions in the lowermost mantle beneath the Cocos plate, Mexico, the central Pacific, and the north Pacific is analyzed using regional one-dimensional double-array stacking and modelling with reflectivity synthetics. A data-screening criterion retains only events...
Dietary flexibility in three representative waterbirds across salinity and depth gradients in salt ponds of San Francisco Bay
John Y. Takekawa, A.K. Miles, D. C. Tsao-Melcer, D. H. Schoellhamer, S. Fregien, N.D. Athearn
2009, Hydrobiologia (626) 155-168
Salt evaporation ponds have existed in San Francisco Bay, California, for more than a century. In the past decade, most of the salt ponds have been retired from production and purchased for resource conservation with a focus on tidal marsh restoration. However, large numbers of waterbirds are found in salt...
Decline in bloater fecundity in Southern Lake Michigan after decline of Diporeia
D.B. Bunnell, S.R. David, C.P. Madenjian
2009, Journal of Great Lakes Research (35) 45-49
Population fecundity can vary through time, sometimes owing to changes in adult condition. Consideration of these fecundity changes can improve understanding of recruitment variation. Herein, we estimated fecundity of Lake Michigan bloater Coregonus hoyi during December 2005 and February 2006. Bloater recruitment has been highly variable from 1962 to present,...
Coalbed methane: Clean energy for the world
A.-J. Ahmed, S. Johnston, C. Boyer, S.W. Lambert, O.A. Bustos, J.C. Pashin, A. Wray
2009, Oilfield Review (21) 4-13
Coalbed methane (CBM) has the potential to emerge as a significant clean energy resource. It also has the potential to replace other diminishing hydrocarbon reserves. The latest developments in technologies and methodologies are playing a key role in harnessing this unconventional resource. Some of these developments include adaptations of existing...
Temporal variability in chlorophyll fluorescence of back-reef corals in Ofu, American Samoa
G.A. Piniak, E.K. Brown
2009, Biological Bulletin (216) 55-67
Change in the yield of chlorophyll a fluorescence is a common indicator of thermal stress in corals. The present study reports temporal variability in quantum yield measurements for 10 coral species in Ofu, American Samoa—a place known to experience elevated and variable seawater temperatures. In winter, the zooxanthellae generally had higher dark-adapted...
Scenario liquefaction hazard maps of Santa Clara Valley, Northern California
T.L. Holzer, T.E. Noce, M.J. Bennett
2009, Bulletin of the Seismological Society of America (99) 367-381
Maps showing the probability of surface manifestations of liquefaction in the northern Santa Clara Valley were prepared with liquefaction probability curves. These curves were based on complementary cumulative frequency distributions of the liquefaction potential index (LPI) for surficial geologic units in the study area. LPI values were computed with extensive...
How does landscape structure influence catchment transit time across different geomorphic provinces?
D. Tetzlaff, J. Seibert, K.J. McGuire, H. Laudon, Douglas A. Burns, S.M. Dunn, C. Soulsby
2009, Hydrological Processes (23) 945-953
Despite an increasing number of empirical investigations of catchment transit times (TTs), virtually all are based on individual catchments and there are few attempts to synthesize understanding across different geographical regions. Uniquely, this paper examines data from 55 catchments in five geomorphic provinces in northern temperate regions (Scotland, United States...
'Natural background' soil water repellency in conifer forests of the north-western USA: Its prediction and relationship to wildfire occurrence
S.H. Doerr, S.W. Woods, D.A. Martin, M. Casimiro
2009, Journal of Hydrology (371) 12-21
Soils under a wide range of vegetation types exhibit water repellency following the passage of a fire. This is viewed by many as one of the main causes for accelerated post-fire runoff and soil erosion and it has often been assumed that strong soil water repellency present after wildfire is...
Evaluation of irrigation canal networks to assess stream connectivity in a watershed
M.E. Colvin, C.M. Moffitt
2009, River Research and Applications (25) 486-496
We used digital data sets, aerial photos and direct field observations in a geographical information system to evaluate the stream habitat in an Idaho watershed affected by agriculture. We found that the scale of the digital data sets affected the outcome of the assessment due to the presence of dewatered...
Metals and trace elements in giant garter snakes (Thamnophis gigas) from the Sacramento Valley, California, USA
Glenn D. Wylie, Roger L. Hothem, D.R. Bergen, Lisa L. Martin, Robert J. Taylor, Brianne E. Brussee
2009, Archives of Environmental Contamination and Toxicology (56) 577-587
The giant garter snake (GGS; Thamnophis gigas) is a federally listed threatened species endemic to wetlands of the Central Valley of California. Habitat destruction has been the main factor in the decline of GGS populations, but the effects of contaminants on this species are unknown. To contribute to the...
Habitat occupancy and detection of the pacific sheath-tailed bat (emballonura semicaudata) on aguiguan, commonwealth of the northern Mariana Islands
P. M. Gorresen, F.J. Bonaccorso, C.A. Pinzari
2009, Acta Chiropterologica (11) 331-342
Occupancy analysis was used to quantify Pacific sheath-tailed bat (Emballonura semicaudata) foraging activity and its relationship to forest structure and proximity to cave roosts on Aguiguan Island in the Commonwealth of the Northern Mariana Islands. Bat occurrence was most closely associated with canopy cover, vegetation stature and distance to known...