Evaluating intercepts from demographic models to understand resource limitation and resource thresholds
M. J. Reynolds-Hogland, J.S. Hogland, M.S. Mitchell
2008, Ecological Modelling (211) 424-432
Understanding resource limitation is critical to effective management and conservation of wild populations, however resource limitation is difficult to quantify partly because resource limitation is a dynamic process. Specifically, a resource that is limiting at one time may become non-limiting at another time, depending upon changes in its availability and...
Distribution of pesticides, PAHs, PCBs, and bioavailable metals in depositional sediments of the lower Missouri River, USA
K. R. Echols, W. G. Brumbaugh, C.E. Orazio, T.W. May, B.C. Poulton, P.H. Peterman
2008, Archives of Environmental Contamination and Toxicology (55) 161-172
The lower Missouri River was studied to determine the distribution of selected persistent organic pollutants and bioavailable metals in depositional sediments. Nineteen sites between Omaha, Nebraska and Jefferson City, Missouri were sampled. This stretch of the river receives point-source and non-point-source inputs from industrial, urban, and agricultural activities. As part...
Response of pendulums to complex input ground motion
V. Graizer, E. Kalkan
2008, Soil Dynamics and Earthquake Engineering (28) 621-631
Dynamic response of most seismological instruments and many engineering structures to ground shaking can be represented via response of a pendulum (single-degree-of-freedom oscillator). In most studies, pendulum response is simplified by considering the input from uni-axial translational motion alone. Complete ground motion however, includes not only translational components but also...
Fish passage in a western Iowa stream modified by grade control structures
M.E. Litvan, C.L. Pierce, T.W. Stewart, C.J. Larson
2008, North American Journal of Fisheries Management (28) 1384-1397
Grade control structures (GCSs) are commonly used in streams of western Iowa to control bank erosion and channel headcutting but may be barriers to fish passage. From May 2002 to May 2006, we used mark-recapture methods to evaluate fish passage over a total of five GCSs, ranging in slope (run...
Stratigraphic and compositional complexities of the late Quaternary Lethe tephra in South-central Alaska
J.R. Riehle, T. A. Ager, R.D. Reger, D.S. Pinney, D. S. Kaufman
2008, Quaternary International (178) 210-228
Recently discovered Lethe tephra has been proposed as a latest Pleistocene marker bed in Bristol Bay lowland NE to the Cook Inlet region, Alaska, on the basis of correlations involving a single "Lethe average" glass composition. Type deposits in the Valley of Ten Thousand Smokes, however, are chemically heterogeneous-individual lapilli...
Determination of dominant biogeochemical processes in a contaminated aquifer-wetland system using multivariate statistical analysis
S. E. Baez-Cazull, J.T. McGuire, I.M. Cozzarelli, M.A. Voytek
2008, Journal of Environmental Quality (37) 30-46
Determining the processes governing aqueous biogeochemistry in a wetland hydrologically linked to an underlying contaminated aquifer is challenging due to the complex exchange between the systems and their distinct responses to changes in precipitation, recharge, and biological activities. To evaluate temporal and spatial processes in the wetland-aquifer system, water samples...
Transient simulations of nitrogen load for a coastal aquifer and embayment, Cape Cod, MA
J.A. Colman, John P. Masterson
2008, Environmental Science & Technology (42) 207-213
A time-varying, multispecies, modular, three-dimensional transport model (MT3DMS) was developed to simulate groundwater transport of nitrogen from increasing sources on land to the shore of Nauset Marsh, a coastal embayment of the Cape Cod National Seashore. Simulated time-dependent nitrogen loads at the coast can be used to correlate with current...
A basin-scale approach to estimating stream temperatures of tributaries to the lower Klamath River, California
L. E. Flint, A. L. Flint
2008, Journal of Environmental Quality (37) 57-68
Stream temperature is an important component of salmonid habitat and is often above levels suitable for fish survival in the Lower Klamath River in northern California. The objective of this study was to provide boundary conditions for models that are assessing stream temperature on the main stem for the purpose...
Sources of organochlorine contaminants and mercury in seabirds from the Aleutian archipelago of Alaska: Inferences from spatial and trophic variation
Mark A. Ricca, A. Keith Miles, Robert G. Anthony
2008, Science of the Total Environment (406) 308-323
Persistent organochlorine compounds and mercury (Hg) have been detected in numerous coastal organisms of the Aleutian archipelago of Alaska, yet sources of these contaminants are unclear. We collected glaucous-winged gulls, northern fulmars, and tufted puffins along a natural longitudinal gradient across the western and central Aleutian Islands (Buldir, Kiska, Amchitka,...
Late Devonian glacial deposits from the eastern United States signal an end of the mid-Paleozoic warm period
D. K. Brezinski, C. B. Cecil, V.W. Skema, R. Stamm
2008, Palaeogeography, Palaeoclimatology, Palaeoecology (268) 143-151
A Late Devonian polymictic diamictite extends for more than 400 km from northeastern Pennsylvania across western Maryland and into east-central West Virginia. The matrix-supported, unbedded, locally sheared diamictite contains subangular to rounded clasts up to 2 m in diameter. The mostly rounded clasts are both locally derived and exotic; some exhibit striations, faceting, and polish. The diamictite commonly is...
A multi-residue method for the analysis of pesticides and pesticide degradates in water using HLB solid-phase extraction and gas chromatography-ion trap mass spectrometry
M.L. Hladik, K.L. Smalling, K.M. Kuivila
2008, Bulletin of Environmental Contamination and Toxicology (80) 139-144
A method was developed for the analysis of over 60 pesticides and degradates in water by HLB solid-phase extraction and gas-chromatography/mass spectrometry. Method recoveries and detection limits were determined using two surface waters with different dissolved organic carbon (DOC) concentrations. In the lower DOC water, recoveries and detection limits...
Fall diets of red-breasted merganser (Mergus serrator) and walleye (Sander vitreus) in Sandusky Bay and adjacent waters of western Lake Erie
M.T. Bur, M.A. Stapanian, G. Bernhardt, M.W. Turner
2008, American Midland Naturalist (159) 147-161
Although published studies indicate the contrary, there is concern among many sport anglers that migrating red-breasted mergansers (Mergus serrator) and other waterbirds pose a competitive threat to sport fish species such as walleye (Sander vitreus) in Lake Erie. We quantified the diet of autumn-migrant mergansers and walleye during 1998-2000 in...
Identification, prediction, and mitigation of sinkhole hazards in evaporite karst areas
F. Gutierrez, A.H. Cooper, K.S. Johnson
2008, Conference Paper, Environmental Geology
Sinkholes usually have a higher probability of occurrence and a greater genetic diversity in evaporite terrains than in carbonate karst areas. This is because evaporites have a higher solubility and, commonly, a lower mechanical strength. Subsidence damage resulting from evaporite dissolution generates substantial losses throughout the world, but the causes...
Molecular and phenotypic diversity in Chionactis occipitalis (Western Shovel-nosed Snake), with emphasis on the status of C. o. klauberi (Tucson Shovel-nosed Snake).
D.A. Wood, J.M. Meik, A.T. Holycross, Robert N. Fisher, Amy G. Vandergast
2008, Conservation Genetics (9) 1489-1507
Chionactis occipitalis (Western Shovel-nosed Snake) is a small colubrid snake inhabiting the arid regions of the Mojave, Sonoran, and Colorado deserts. Morphological assessments of taxonomy currently recognize four subspecies. However, these taxonomic proposals were largely based on weak morphological differentiation and inadequate geographic sampling. Our goal was to explore evolutionary...
Phylogenetic and ecological characteristics associated with thiaminase activity in Laurentian Great Lakes fishes
S.C. Riley, A.N. Evans
2008, Transactions of the American Fisheries Society (137) 147-157
Thiamine deficiency complex (TDC) causes mortality and sublethal effects in Great Lakes salmonines and results from low concentrations of egg thiamine that are thought to be caused by thiaminolytic enzymes (i.e., thiaminase) present in the diet. This complex has the potential to undermine efforts to restore lake trout Salvelinus namaycush...
Arrested development of the myxozoan parasite, Myxobolus cerebralis, in certain populations of mitochondrial 16S lineage III Tubifex tubifex
D.V. Baxa, G.O. Kelley, K.S. Mukkatira, K.A. Beauchamp, C. Rasmussen, R.P. Hedrick
2008, Parasitology Research (102) 219-228
Laboratory populations of Tubifex tubifex from mitochondrial (mt)16S ribosomal DNA (rDNA) lineage III were generated from single cocoons of adult worms releasing the triactinomyxon stages (TAMs) of the myxozoan parasite, Myxobolus cerebralis. Subsequent worm populations from these cocoons, referred to as clonal lines, were tested for susceptibility to infection with...
The A and m coefficients in the Bruun/Dean equilibrium profile equation seen from the Arctic
F. Are, E. Reimnitz
2008, Journal of Coastal Research (24) 243-249
The Bruun/Dean relation between water depth and distance from the shore with a constant profile shape factor is widely used to describe shoreface profiles in temperate environments. However, it has been shown that the sediment scale parameter (A) and the profile shape factor (m) are interrelated variables. An analysis of...
American pikas (Ochotona princeps) in northwestern Nevada: A newly discovered population at a low-elevation site
E.A. Beever, J.L. Wilkening, D.E. McIvor, S.S. Weber, P. F. Brussard
2008, Western North American Naturalist (68) 8-14
The central tenet of island biogeography theory - that species assemblages on islands are functions of island area, isolation from mainlands, and vicariance - has been altered by the demonstrable effects that rapid climate change is imposing on insular faunas, at least in isolated mountaintops. Although populations of American pikas...
Influence of wind and lake morphometry on the interaction between two rivers entering a stratified lake
S. Morillo, J. Imberger, J.P. Antenucci, P. F. Woods
2008, Journal of Hydraulic Engineering (134) 1579-1589
The interaction of two rivers flowing into Coeur d’Alene Lake (United States) was investigated with a field experiment and three-dimensional numerical simulations. The focus was on the influence of basin morphology, wind speed, and wind direction on the fate and transport of the inflowing water. Data from...
Computing nonhydrostatic shallow-water flow over steep terrain
R.P. Denlinger, D. R. H. O’Connell
2008, Journal of Hydraulic Engineering (134) 1590-1602
Flood and dambreak hazards are not limited to moderate terrain, yet most shallow-water models assume that flow occurs over gentle slopes. Shallow-water flow over rugged or steep terrain often generates significant nonhydrostatic pressures, violating the assumption of hydrostatic pressure made in most shallow-water codes. In this paper,...
A model of earthquake triggering probabilities and application to dynamic deformations constrained by ground motion observations
J. Gomberg, K. Felzer
2008, Journal of Geophysical Research B: Solid Earth (113)
We have used observations from Felzer and Brodsky (2006) of the variation of linear aftershock densities (i.e., aftershocks per unit length) with the magnitude of and distance from the main shock fault to derive constraints on how the probability of a main shock triggering a single aftershock at a point,...
Fish assemblages in a western Iowa stream modified by grade control structures
M.E. Litvan, C.L. Pierce, T.W. Stewart, C.J. Larson
2008, North American Journal of Fisheries Management (28) 1398-1413
Over 400 riprap grade control structures (GCSs) have been built in streams of western Iowa to reduce erosion and protect bridges, roads, and farmland. In conjunction with a companion study evaluating fish passage over GCSs in Turkey Creek, we evaluated the differences in fish assemblage and habitat characteristics in reaches...
Three-dimensional P-wave velocity structure and precise earthquake relocation at Great Sitkin Volcano, Alaska
Jeremy Pesicek, Clifford H. Thurber, Heather R. DeShon, Stephanie G. Prejean, Haijiang Zhang
2008, Bulletin of the Seismological Society of America (98) 2428-2448
Waveform cross-correlation with bispectrum verification is combined with double-difference tomography to increase the precision of earthquake locations and constrain regional 3D P-wave velocity heterogeneity at Great Sitkin volcano, Alaska. From 1999 through 2005, the Alaska Volcano Observatory (AVO) recorded ∼1700 earthquakes in the vicinity of Great Sitkin, including two ML 4.3 earthquakes that...
Differences in aggression, activity and boldness between native and introduced populations of an invasive crayfish
L.M. Pintor, A. Sih, M.L. Bauer
2008, Oikos (117) 1629-1636
Aggressiveness, along with foraging voracity and boldness, are key behavioral mechanisms underlying the competitive displacement and invasion success of exotic species. However, do aggressiveness, voracity and boldness of the invader depend on the presence of an ecologically similar native competitor in the invaded community? We conducted four behavioral assays to...
Deepwater demersal fish community collapse in Lake Huron
S.C. Riley, E.F. Roseman, S. J. Nichols, T. P. O’Brien, C.S. Kiley, J.S. Schaeffer
2008, Transactions of the American Fisheries Society (137) 1879-1890
Long-term fish community surveys were carried out in the Michigan waters of Lake Huron using bottom trawls from 1976 to 2006. Trends in abundance indices for common species (those caught in 10% or more of trawl tows) were estimated for two periods: early (1976-1991) and late (1994-2006). All common species...