Dramatic declines of DDE and other organochlorines in spring migrant Peregrine Falcons from Padre Island, Texas, 1978-2004
Charles J. Henny, M.A. Yates, W.S. Seegar
2009, Journal of Raptor Research (43) 37-42
Peregrine Falcons (Falco peregrinus) captured in the spring at Padre Island, Texas, nest across the arctic and subarctic from Alaska to Greenland and winter throughout Latin America. Padre Island, located immediately north of the Mexican border, is the peregrines' first landfall in the U.S.A. after spending about 6 mo in...
Habitat selection for parasite-free space by hosts of parasitic cowbirds
J.T. Forsman, T. E. Martin
2009, Oikos (118) 464-470
Choice of breeding habitat can have a major impact on fitness. Sensitivity of habitat choice to environmental cues predicting reproductive success, such as density of harmful enemy species, should be favored by natural selection. Yet, experimental tests of this idea are in short supply. Brown-headed cowbirds Molothrus ater commonly reduce...
Environmental contaminants in freshwater fish and their risk to piscivorous wildlife based on a national monitoring program
J.E. Hinck, C. J. Schmitt, K.A. Chojnacki, D. E. Tillitt
2009, Environmental Monitoring and Assessment (152) 469-494
Organochlorine chemical residues and elemental concentrations were measured in piscivorous and benthivorous fish at 111 sites from large U.S. river basins. Potential contaminant sources such as urban and agricultural runoff, industrial discharges, mine drainage, and irrigation varied among the sampling sites. Our objectives were to provide summary statistics for chemical...
Afraid to Start Because the Outcome is Uncertain?: Social Site Characterization as a Tool for Informing Public Engagement Efforts
S. Wade, S. Greenberg
2009, Conference Paper, Energy Procedia
This paper introduces the concept of social site characterization as a parallel effort to technical site characterization to be used in evaluating and planning carbon dioxides capture and storage (CCS) projects. Social site characterization, much like technical site characterization, relies on a series of iterative investigations into public attitudes towards...
Evidence for prolonged El Nino-like conditions in the Pacific during the Late Pleistocene: a 43 ka noble gas record from California groundwaters
J.T. Kulongoski, David R. Hilton, J. A. Izbicki, K. Belitz
2009, Quaternary Science Reviews (28) 2465-2473
Information on the ocean/atmosphere state over the period spanning the Last Glacial Maximum - from the Late Pleistocene to the Holocene - provides crucial constraints on the relationship between orbital forcing and global climate change. The Pacific Ocean is particularly important in this respect because of its dominant role in...
What is "fallback"?: metrics needed to assess telemetry tag effects on anadromous fish behavior
Holly J. Frank, Martha E. Mather, Joseph M. Smith, Robert M. Muth, John T. Finn, Stephen D. McCormick
2009, Hydrobiologia (635) 237-249
Telemetry has allowed researchers to document the upstream migrations of anadromous fish in freshwater. In many anadromous alosine telemetry studies, researchers use downstream movements (“fallback”) as a behavioral field bioassay for adverse tag effects. However, these downstream movements have not been uniformly reported or interpreted. We quantified movement trajectories of...
Aggressive defensive behavior by free-ranging white-tailed deer
T.W. Grovenburg, J.A. Jenks, C.N. Jacques, R. W. Klaver, C. C. Swanson
2009, Journal of Mammalogy (90) 1218-1223
Maternal investment plays a critical role in neonate survival, and adults can improve survival of offspring by defending them against predators. However, limited information exists documenting ungulate aggression toward humans in defense of neonates. During captures of neonates in spring 2007 and 2008 in north-central South Dakota, we documented 24...
Seed banks in a degraded desert shrubland: Influence of soil surface condition and harvester ant activity on seed abundance
L.A. DeFalco, T. C. Esque, J.M. Kane, M.B. Nicklas
2009, Journal of Arid Environments (73) 885-893
We compared seed banks between two contrasting anthropogenic surface disturbances (compacted, trenched) and adjacent undisturbed controls to determine whether site condition influences viable seed densities of perennial and annual Mojave Desert species. Viable seeds of perennials were rare in undisturbed areas (3-4 seeds/m2) and declined to <1 seed/m2 within disturbed...
Storm clouds on Saturn: Lightning-induced chemistry and associated materials consistent with Cassini/VIMS spectra
K. H. Baines, M.L. Delitsky, T.W. Momary, R. H. Brown, B. J. Buratti, R. N. Clark, P. D. Nicholson
2009, Planetary and Space Science (57) 1650-1658
Thunderstorm activity on Saturn is associated with optically detectable clouds that are atypically dark throughout the near-infrared. As observed by Cassini/VIMS, these clouds are ~20% less reflective than typical neighboring clouds throughout the spectral range from 0.8 ??m to at least 4.1 ??m. We propose that active thunderstorms originating in...
Subsurface control on seafloor erosional processes offshore of the Chandeleur Islands, Louisiana
David Twichell, Elizabeth A. Pendleton, Wayne E. Baldwin, James G. Flocks
2009, Geo-Marine Letters (29) 349-358
The Chandeleur Islands lie on the eastern side of the modern Mississippi River delta plain, near the edge of the St. Bernard Delta complex. Since abandonment approximately 2,000 years b.p., this delta complex has undergone subsidence and ravinement as the shoreline has transgressed across it. High-resolution seismic-reflection, sidescan-sonar, and...
Comparison of traditional and molecular analytical methods for detecting biological agents in raw and drinking water following ultrafiltration
D.S. Francy, R.N. Bushon, A.M.G. Brady, E.E. Bertke, C.M. Kephart, C.A. Likirdopulos, B.E. Mailot, F. W. Schaefer III, H.D. Alan Lindquist
2009, Journal of Applied Microbiology (107) 1479-1491
Aims: To compare the performance of traditional methods to quantitative polymerase chain reaction (qPCR) for detecting five biological agents in large-volume drinking-water samples concentrated by ultrafiltration (UF). Methods and Results: Drinking-water samples (100 l) were seeded with Bacillus anthracis, Cryptospordium parvum, Francisella tularensis, Salmonella Typhi, and Vibrio cholerae and concentrated...
Expansion of Dreissena into offshore waters of Lake Michigan and potential impacts on fish populations
D.B. Bunnell, C.P. Madenjian, J.D. Holuszko, J.V. Adams, J. R. P. French III
2009, Journal of Great Lakes Research (35) 74-80
Lake Michigan was invaded by zebra mussels (Dreissena polymorpha) in the late 1980s and then followed by quagga mussels (D. bugensis) around 1997. Through 2000, both species (herein Dreissena) were largely restricted to depths less than 50??m. Herein, we provide results of an annual lake-wide bottom trawl survey in Lake...
Nature versus nurture: functional assessment of restoration effects on wetland services using Nuclear Magnetic Resonance Spectroscopy
P.V. Sundareshwar, C.J. Richardson, R.A. Gleason, P.J. Pellechia, S. Honomichl
2009, Geophysical Research Letters (36)
Land-use change has altered the ability of wetlands to provide vital services such as nutrient retention. While compensatory practices attempt to restore degraded wetlands and their functions, it is difficult to evaluate the recovery of soil biogeochemical functions that are critical for restoration of ecosystem services. Using solution 31P Nuclear...
Forecasting urban growth across the United States-Mexico border
L.M. Norman, M. Feller, Guertin D. Phillip
2009, Computers, Environment and Urban Systems (33) 150-159
The sister-city area of Nogales, Arizona, and Nogales, Sonora, Mexico, is known collectively as Ambos (both) Nogales. This area was historically one city and was administratively divided by the Gadsden Purchase in 1853. These arid-lands have limited and sensitive natural resources. Environmental planning can support sustainable development to accommodate the...
The adrenocortical response of greater sage grouse (Centrocercus urophasianus) to capture, ACTH injection, and confinement, as measured in fecal samples
M.D. Jankowski, D.J. Wittwer, D.M. Heisey, J. Christian Franson, Erik K. Hofmeister
2009, Physiological and Biochemical Zoology (82) 190-201
Investigators of wildlife populations often utilize demographic indicators to understand the relationship between habitat characteristics and population viability. Assessments of corticosterone may enable earlier detection of populations at risk of decline because physiological adjustments to habitat disturbance occur before reproductive diminutions. Noninvasive methods to accomplish these assesments are important in...
Effect of grain-coating mineralogy on nitrate and sulfate storage in the unsaturated zone
T. J. Reilly, N.S. Fishman, A. L. Baehr
2009, Vadose Zone Journal (8) 75-85
Unsaturated-zone sediments and the chemistry of shallow groundwater underlying a small (∼8-km2) watershed were studied to identify the mechanisms responsible for anion storage within the Miocene Bridgeton Formation and weathered Coastal Plain deposits in southern New Jersey. Lower unsaturated-zone sediments and shallow groundwater samples were collected and concentrations of selected...
Emsian (late Early Devonian) sponges from west-central and south-central Alaska
J.K. Rigby, R. B. Blodgett, N.K. Anderson
2009, Journal of Paleontology (83) 293-298
Relatively common specimens of the hypercalcified agelasiid sponge Hormospongia labyrinthica Rigby and Blodgett, 1983 and specimens of associated species of Hormospongia have been previously reported from Emsian and Eifelian stratigraphic units at several localities in south-central and southeastern Alaska (Rigby and Blodgett, 1983). Those sponges were first described from the...
Diets of aquatic birds reflect changes in the Lake Huron ecosystem
Craig E. Hebert, D.V. Chip Weseloh, Abode Idrissi, Michael T. Arts, Edward F. Roseman
2009, Aquatic Ecosystem Health & Management (12) 37-44
Human activities have affected the Lake Huron ecosystem, in part, through alterations in the structure and function of its food webs. Insights into the nature of food web change and its ecological ramifications can be obtained through the monitoring of high trophic level predators such as aquatic birds. Often, food...
Using the Sonoran Desert test site to monitor the long-term radiometric stability of the Landsat TM/ETM+ and Terra MODIS sensors
A. Angal, X. Xiong, T. Choi, G. Chander, A. Wu
2009, Conference Paper, Proceedings of SPIE - The International Society for Optical Engineering
Pseudo-invariant ground targets have been extensively used to monitor the long-term radiometric calibration stability of remote sensing instruments. The NASA MODIS Characterization Support Team (MCST), in collaboration with members from the U.S. Geological Survey (USGS) Earth Resources Observation and Science (EROS) Center, has previously demonstrated the use of pseudo-invariant ground...
Characterization of Mars' seasonal caps using neutron spectroscopy
T.H. Prettyman, W. C. Feldman, T.N. Titus
2009, Journal of Geophysical Research E: Planets (114)
Mars' seasonal caps are characterized during Mars years 26 and 27 (April 2002 to January 2006) using data acquired by the 2001 Mars Odyssey Neutron Spectrometer. Time-dependent maps of the column abundance of seasonal CO 2 surface ice poleward of 60?? latitude in both hemispheres are determined from spatially deconvolved,...
Delta lobe degradation and hurricane impacts governing large-scale coastal behavior, South-central Louisiana, USA
M.D. Miner, M.A. Kulp, D. M. FitzGerald, J. G. Flocks, H.D. Weathers
2009, Geo-Marine Letters (29) 441-453
A large deficit in the coastal sediment budget, high rates of relative sea-level rise (???0.9 cm/year), and storm-induced current and wave erosion are forcing barrier shoreface retreat along the periphery of the Mississippi River delta plain. Additionally, conversion of interior wetlands to open water has increased the bay tidal prism,...
Investigating different mechanisms for biogenic selenite transformations: Geobacter sulfurreducens, Shewanella oneidensis and Veillonella atypica
C.I. Pearce, R.A.D. Pattrick, N. Law, J.M. Charnock, V.S. Coker, J.W. Fellowes, R.S. Oremland, J.R. Lloyd
2009, Environmental Technology (30) 1313-1326
The metal-reducing bacteria Geobacter sulfurreducens, Shewanella oneidensis and Veillonella atypica, use different mechanisms to transform toxic, bioavailable sodium selenite to less toxic, non-mobile elemental selenium and then to selenide in anaerobic environments, offering the potential for in situ and ex situ bioremediation of contaminated soils, sediments, industrial effluents, and agricultural...
Relationships between nutritional condition of adult females and relative carrying capacity for rocky mountain Elk
J.R. Piasecke, Louis C. Bender
2009, Rangeland Ecology and Management (62) 145-152
Lactation can have significant costs to individual and population-level productivity because of the high energetic demands it places on dams. Because the difference in condition between lactating and dry Rocky Mountain elk (Cervus elaphus nelsoni) cows tends to disappear as nutritional quality rises, the magnitude of that difference could be...
U.S. Department of Energy's Regional Carbon Sequestration Partnership Program: Overview
J. Litynski, S. Plasynski, L. Spangler, R. Finley, E. Steadman, D. Ball, K.J. Nemeth, B. McPherson, L. Myer
2009, Conference Paper, Energy Procedia
The U.S. Department of Energy (DOE) has formed a nationwide network of seven regional partnerships to help determine the best approaches for capturing and permanently storing gases that can contribute to global climate change. The Regional Carbon Sequestration Partnerships (RCSPs) are tasked with determining the most suitable technologies, regulations, and...
Isoscapes to address large-scale earth science challenges
G.J. Bowen, J. B. West, B. H. Vaughn, T. E. Dawson, J.R. Ehleringer, M. L. Fogel, K. Hobson, J. Hoogewerff, C. Kendall, C.-T. Lai, C.C. Miller, D. Noone, H. Schwarcz, C.J. Still
2009, Eos, Transactions, American Geophysical Union (90) 109-110
No abstract available....