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A 21st Century butterfly net: Using eDNA to detect the imperiled Dakota skipper
David S. Pilliod, Michaela Ray Grossklaus, Stacie A. Kageyama, Cale Nordmeyer, Jerry Reinisch, Erik Runquist, Stephen Frank Spear
2025, Global Ecology and Conservation (62)
The development of environmental DNA (eDNA) methods for terrestrial arthropods could be transformative for the difficult task of assessing the status of species of conservation concern. The primary goal of this study was to investigate the efficacy of detecting the Dakota skipper (Hesperia dacotae) from its DNA left behind on...
New constraints on location and timing of the Great Lakes tectonic zone, central Upper Peninsula, Michigan, USA
Benjamin J. Drenth, Amanda Souders, William F. Cannon, Jay Michael Thompson
2025, Canadian Journal of Earth Sciences (62) 1459-1473
The Great Lakes tectonic zone (GLTZ) forms the boundary between the Wawa–Abitibi and Minnesota River Valley subprovinces within the Archean Superior Province. The GLTZ is concealed for all of its 1100 km length, except for a segment in the central Upper Peninsula of Michigan. There, it is exposed as a northwest-striking...
Desert ecosystems shape diversification in glossy snakes (genus Arizona) requiring a re-alignment of evolutionary and conservation units
Dustin Wood, Jonathan Q. Richmond, Michael F. Westphal, Bradford D. Hollingsworth, Robert D. Fisher, Amy G. Vandergast
2025, Molecular Phylogenetics and Evolution (213)
Subspecies are often targets for conservation, yet many lack the genetic data necessary to validate their status as distinctive evolutionary lineages. In 2016, conservationists faced this issue when designating the California glossy snake, Arizona elegans occidentalis, as a Species of Special Concern in California, a decision prompted by population declines and...
Contribution of traffic emissions to PM2.5 concentrations at bus stops in Denver, Colorado
Priyanka deSouza, Phillip Hopke, Christian L'Orange, Peter Christian Ibsen, Carl Green Jr., Brady Graeber, Brendan Cicione, Ruth Mekonnen, Saadhana Purushothama, Patrick Kinney, John Volckens
2025, Sustainability (17)
Individuals are routinely exposed to traffic-related air pollution on their commutes, which has significant health impacts. Mitigating exposure to traffic-related pollution is a key urban sustainability concern. In Denver, Colorado, low-income Americans are more likely to rely on buses and spend time waiting at bus stops. Evaluating the contribution of...
High-resolution multi-pollutant mapping in Denver, Colorado
Priyanka deSouza, Benjamin Crawford, John L. Durant, Neelakshi Hudda, Peter Christian Ibsen, Christian L'Orange, Jose Jimenez, Brady Graeber, Brendan Cicione, Ruth Mekonnen, Saadhana Purushothama, Ralph Kahn, Patrick L. Kinney, John Volckens
2025, Atmospheric Environment X (27)
Characterizing traffic-related air pollutants (TRAPs), which significantly impact health, and greenhouse gases (GHGs) can be challenging in urban environments. Mobile monitoring has the potential to capture the spatial distribution of these pollutants. We present results from a campaign using the Denver Mobile Monitoring Laboratory (DMML) in the summer of 2023...
A crosswalk of the 2015 World Terrestrial Ecosystems to the International Union for the Conservation of Nature Global Ecosystem Typology Framework
Kelly B. Sides, Nadia Naji, Amber Kremer, Devon Burton, Roger Sayre
2025, Open-File Report 2025-1043
To support ecosystem mapping and accounting applications, we aligned the 2015 U.S. Geological Survey/Esri/The Nature Conservancy-World Terrestrial Ecosystems (WTEs) with the International Union for Conservation of Nature Global Ecosystem Typology (GET) framework. This process, known as “crosswalking,” enabled the development of a global map of GET level 3 Ecosystem Functional...
Perceptions and management of chronic wasting disease in Washington State: A survey of cervid hunters
Megan Callahan, Melia DeVivo, Brian Kertson, Hunter Westacott, Michael C Mcinturff
2025, Report
Chronic wasting disease (CWD) is a fatal neurological disease caused by a misfolded protein, or prion, and is found in cervids (e.g., deer, elk, moose). It represents a serious threat to cervid populations and is one of the most important ungulate management issues facing state wildlife management agencies. Issues associated...
Monitoring cyanobacteria temporal trends in a hypereutrophic lake using remote sensing: From multispectral to hyperspectral
Samantha L. Sharp, Alicia Cortes, Alexander L. Forrest, Carl J. Legleiter, Liane S. Guild, Yufang Jin, S. Geoffrey Schladow
2025, Remote Sensing Applications: Society and Environment (39)
Cyanobacterial harmful algal blooms (cyanoHABs) and associated cyanotoxins are a concern for inland waters. Due to the extensive spatial coverage and frequent availability of satellite images, multispectral remote sensing tools demonstrate utility for monitoring these blooms. The next frontier for remote sensing of cyanoHABs in inland waters is hyperspectral data....
Favorability mapping for hydrothermal power resource assessments of the Great Basin, USA
Stanley Paul Mordensky, Erick R. Burns, John Lipor, Jacob DeAngelo
2025, Geothermics (133)
The U.S. Geological Survey (USGS) is updating the 2008 assessment of conventional hydrothermal resources for the Great Basin in the western United States. As part of this work, the workflow for hydrothermal resource favorability maps is being modified to integrate modern data-driven machine learning (ML) methods. Improvements include: [1] using...
Ten lessons for controlling invasive species: Wisdom from the long-standing sea lamprey control program on the Laurentian Great Lakes
Steven J. Cooke, Carrie Baker, Julie L. Mida Hinderer, Michael Siefkes, Jessica Barber, Todd B. Steeves, Margaret F. Docker, Weiming Li, Michael Wilkie, Michael L. Jones, Kelly Filer Robinson, Erin S. Dunlop, Cory Brant, Nicholas S. Johnson, William Mattes, Marc Gaden, Andrew M. Muir
2025, BioScience (75) 985-996
Sea lamprey (Petromyzon marinus) control in the Laurentian Great Lakes of North America is among the largest and most successful control programs of an invasive species anywhere on the planet. The effort began more than 75 years ago; it unites multiple nations, states, and provinces with the common goal of...
Methodology and technical input for the 2025 U.S. List of Critical Minerals—Assessing the potential effects of mineral commodity supply chain disruptions on the U.S. economy
Nedal T. Nassar, David Pineault, Sydney M. Allen, Dalton M. McCaffrey, Abraham J. Padilla, Jamie L. Brainard, Mani Bayani, Ensieh Shojaeddini, John W. Ryter, Sara Lincoln, Elisa Alonso
2025, Open-File Report 2025-1047
The Secretary of the Interior, acting through the Director of the U.S. Geological Survey, is tasked by section 7002 (“Mineral Security”) of title VII (“Critical Minerals”) of the Energy Act of 2020 (Public Law 116–260, December 27, 2020, 116th Congress) with reviewing and revising the methodology used to evaluate mineral...
U.S. Geological Survey science strategy to address white-nose syndrome and bat health in 2025–2029
M. Camille Hopkins, Amy E. George, Rebecca McCaffery
2025, Circular 1560
Since its discovery in 2006, the fungal disease known as white-nose syndrome (WNS) has killed millions of bats. Of the 47 bat species native to the conterminous United States, Alaska, Hawaii, and Canada, 12 have been affected by WNS, including 3 endangered species and 1 proposed endangered species. WNS has also been detected in...
The role of fire on Earth
Juli G. Pausas, Jon Keeley, William J. Bond
2025, BioScience
Fire is a defining feature of our biosphere, having appeared when the first plants colonized the land, and it continues to occur across the planet at different frequencies and intensities. Fire has been and remains as an evolutionary force in many plant and animal lineages and contributes to explaining the...
Contrasting long-term trends in channel width and shoreline complexity
Elizabeth Rachaelann Skaggs, Jonathan M. Friedman, Christopher Holmquist-Johnson
2025, Geomorphology (489)
Drought and reservoir management in the Colorado River Watershed have decreased peak flows and sediment loads reducing the ability of rivers to change their channels. Multiple studies have documented the resulting decrease in channel width, but less attention has been paid to long-term trends in shoreline complexity, including the number...
Python Hyperspectral Analysis Tool (PyHAT) user guide
Ryan B. Anderson, Itiya P. Aneece, Travis S.J. Gabriel
2025, Open-File Report 2025-1038
This report is a user guide for the 0.1.2 release of the Python Hyperspectral Analysis Tool (PyHAT) and its graphical user interface (GUI). The GUI is intended to provide an intuitive front end to allow users to apply sophisticated preprocessing and analysis methods to spectroscopic data. Though the PyHAT package...
Geologic framework and hydrostratigraphy of the Edwards and Trinity aquifers within Hays County, Texas
Allan K. Clark, Robert R. Morris, Alexis P. Lamberts
2025, Scientific Investigations Map 3540
During 2023–24, the U.S. Geological Survey, in cooperation with the Edwards Aquifer Authority, revised a previous publication of the geologic framework and hydrostratigraphy of the Edwards and Trinity aquifers that was completed during 2018 within Hays County, Texas. The purpose of this report is to present the updated geologic framework...
Using periodic matrix models to simulate the effectiveness of alternative reintroduction strategies for lizards on a seasonal tropical island
Jonathan P. Rose, Brian Halstead, Melia G. Nafus
2025, Animal Conservation
Conservation translocations and reintroductions are widely used to improve conservation outcomes for declining species. Reintroductions are unlikely to be successful if the threats that led to the extirpation of the focal species, such as non-native predators, have not been ameliorated. The non-native brown treesnake (Boiga irregularis) was introduced to Guam...
The bat signal: An ultraviolet light lure to increase acoustic detection of bats
Samuel R. Freeze, Sabrina M. Deeley, Amber S. Litterer, J. Mark Freeze, W. Mark Ford
2025, Animals (15)
Bats are a taxa of high conservation concern and are facing numerous threats including widespread mortality due to White-Nose Syndrome (WNS) in North America. With this decline comes increasing difficulty in monitoring imperiled bat species due to lower detection probabilities of both mist-netting and acoustic surveys. Lure...
Spatial mapping of dissolved methane using an in situ sensor in Puget Sound
Alexandra M. Padilla, William Pardis, Jason Kapit, Tor A. Bjorklund, Nicholas D. Ward, Daniel J. Fornari, Susan Hautala, William F. Waite, H. Paul Johnson, Anna P. Michel
2025, Limnology and Oceanography Methods (23) 804-814
Release of methane, as gas bubbles or in the dissolved phase, from the seafloor has been observed in coastal waters (< 200 m) and deep ocean basins (> 1000 m). Methane dissolution within the water column affects the geochemistry of the surrounding water, leading to localized oxygen loss and potential escape to the atmosphere,...
Home range, seasonality, and the importance of canopy cover for Texas Tortoises (Gopherus berlandieri)
Daniel A. Guerra, Todd C. Esque, Drew R. Davis, Joseph A. Veech
2025, Herpetologica (81) 224-235
Texas Tortoises (Gopherus berlandieri) are understudied compared to federally protected congeners. Despite important early studies on the basic ecology of G. berlandieri, quantitative identification of habitat associations with specific environmental conditions has been limited. Gopherus berlandieri inhabits Tamaulipan thornscrub across its range, and coastal populations are historically associated with low-relief clay ridges with...
Revised marine bird collision and displacement vulnerability index for U.S. Pacific Outer Continental Shelf offshore wind energy development
Emma C. Kelsey, Jonathan J. Felis, David M. Pereksta, Josh Adams
2025, Data Report 1214
The installation of offshore wind energy infrastructure (OWEI) at sea may affect marine birds by increasing the risk of mortality from collision with OWEI (Collision Vulnerability) and causing disturbance and displacement from important habitats (Displacement Vulnerability). In 2017, we published the first comprehensive database quantifying marine bird Collision Vulnerability and...
Collaborative drought science planning in the Colorado River Basin
Patrick J. Anderson, Jeanne E. Godaire, Daniel K. Jones, William J. Andrews, Alicia A. Torregrosa, Meghan T. Bell, JoAnn M. Holloway, Molly A. Blakowski, Joseph A. Hevesi, Sharon L. Qi
2025, Open-File Report 2025-1041
The U.S. Geological Survey (USGS) is using collaborative, interdisciplinary planning to develop data and tools needed to optimize the management of water resources and land use by resource management agencies during an ongoing, multidecadal drought in the Colorado River Basin. The USGS Actionable and Strategic Integrated Science and Technology team...
Gravity and magnetic surveys of the Skaergaard intrusion, East Greenland
Mark E. Gettings
2025, Open-File Report 2025-1030
Aeromagnetic and gravity surveys of the Skaergaard intrusion in East Greenland were carried out in July–August 1971 as part of a grant to the University of Oregon Center for Volcanology to refine the models of crystallization and differentiation of the intrusion, specifically to test whether the intrusion is underlain by...
The story of the Penobscot River Ecology Mural: A 10-step process for scientists to create public art
Jillian Fedarick, Christina Amy Murphy, Sydne Record, Allison H. Roy, Annette Dodd, Susan L. Smith
2025, Fisheries
Rivers are home to a wide variety of biota, including fishes, amphibians, reptiles, birds, freshwater mussels, aquatic insects, and microscopic organisms that fill unique niches to support broader ecosystem functions. While the general public may be aware of recreationally relevant biological life (e.g., fishes and insects to model flyfishing flies...