Evaluating elk distribution and conflict under proposed management alternatives at the National Elk Refuge in Jackson, Wyoming
Gavin G. Cotterill, Paul C. Cross, Eric K. Cole, Jonathan D. Cook, Margaret C. McEachran, Tabitha A. Graves
2025, Scientific Investigations Report 2025-5076-C
We evaluated measurable attributes describing the current and future distribution of Cervus elaphus canadensis (elk) across a region surrounding Jackson, Wyoming, for five feedground management alternatives proposed by the U.S. Fish and Wildlife Service as a revision to the 2007 “Bison and Elk Management Plan” of the National Elk Refuge....
Decision analysis in support of the National Elk Refuge bison and elk management plan
Jonathan D. Cook, Paul C. Cross, editor(s)
2025, Scientific Investigations Report 2025-5076
Preface This report was developed to evaluate the performance of a set of proposed alternatives for Cervus elaphus canadensis (elk) and Bison bison (bison) management at the National Elk Refuge (NER) in Wyoming, U.S.A., and to inform a National Environmental Policy Act Environmental Impact Statement focused on developing the next “Bison...
Bison population dynamics, harvest, and human conflict potential under feedground management alternatives at the National Elk Refuge in Jackson, Wyoming
Jonathan D. Cook, Margaret C. McEachran, Gavin G. Cotterill, Eric K. Cole
2025, Scientific Investigations Report 2025-5076-D
Bison bison were once abundant across North America but declined due to overharvesting in the late 1800s. The reintroduced population in and around Jackson, Wyoming has averaged 485 individuals between 2018–2023 and is the subject of a planning process to inform management strategies that will guide the U.S. Fish and...
Estimating the social and economic consequences of proposed management alternatives at the National Elk Refuge in Jackson, Wyoming
Margaret C. McEachran, Andrew Don Carlos, Gavin G. Cotterill, Eric K. Cole, Jonathan D. Cook
2025, Scientific Investigations Report 2025-5076-E
The National Elk Refuge (Refuge) is managed by the U.S. Fish and Wildlife Service and includes habitats for bison and elk. Bison and elk provide opportunities for wildlife-related recreation and contribute to the tourism industry in and around Jackson, Wyoming. Over the last century, the Refuge has provisioned supplemental feed...
Predictions of elk, chronic wasting disease dynamics, and socioeconomics under alternative D at the National Elk Refuge in Jackson, Wyoming, and surrounding areas
Jonathan D. Cook, Gavin G. Cotterill, Eric K. Cole, Paul C. Cross
2025, Scientific Investigations Report 2025-5076-F
This chapter presents a description and quantitative evaluation of a collaborative alternative (alternative D) focused on near-term elk population reduction and chronic wasting disease (CWD) monitoring as part of winter elk and bison feedground operations on the National Elk Refuge adjacent to Jackson, Wyoming. Alternative D was developed by the...
Assessing American eel (Anguilla rostrata) distribution in a heavily dammed watershed using eDNA : The Penobscot River watershed, Maine, USA
Shawn Snyder, Cody Dillingham, Lara S. Katz, Michael T. Kinnison, Joseph D. Zydlewski
2025, River Research and Applications (41) 1970-1981
Catadromous American eel ( Anguilla rostrata ) are native to Maine's Penobscot River watershed and historically have migrated through many of its tributaries prior to extensive damming. Recent restoration efforts, including dam removals, have improved connectivity in the lower reaches of the Penobscot River. Characterizing the extent of the American eel's distribution...
Bridging theory and practice to inform seed selection for restoration
Laura Cecilia Shriver, Samuel E. Jordan, Robert Massatti, Seth Munson
2025, Restoration Ecology (33)
Introduction Land managers often face the critical decision of what plant materials to select for ecological restoration. Selection depends on factors that span ecological conditions and human interventions in the restoration process, which can strongly influence the recovery of a degraded ecosystem. Objectives To improve the seed selection process, we...
Low genetic diversity in populations of a clonal invasive plant limits sexual reproduction
Ian S. Pearse, Zoe Becker, Paul J. Ode, John F. Gaskin, Natalie West
2025, American Journal of Botany (112)
PremiseClonality, a form of asexual reproduction and spread, is common among invasive plants, though sexual reproduction via seeds is often still important for their long-range dispersal. In small populations, clonality has been hypothesized to interfere with sexual reproduction by limiting outcrossing opportunities of a plant.MethodsWe developed a structural equation model...
Magnitude, depth and methodological variations of spectral stress drop within the SCEC/USGS Community Stress Drop Validation Study using the 2019 Ridgecrest Earthquake Sequence
Rachel E. Abercrombie, Annemarie S. Baltay Sundstrom
2025, Bulletin of the Seismological Society of America (115) 2741-2768
We present the first ensemble analysis of the 56 different sets of results submitted to the ongoing Community Stress Drop Validation Study using the 2019 Ridgecrest, California, earthquake sequence. Different assumptions and methods result in different estimation of the source contribution to recorded seismograms, and hence to the source parameters...
Some of these are not like the others: Relative thermal sensitivity among anuran species of the Southeast United States
Traci P. Dubose, Chloe E. Moore, Vincent R. Farallo, Abigail Benson, William A. Hopkins, Samuel Silknetter, Meryl C. Mims
2025, Ecosphere (16)
Estimating how close a species is to its upper thermal limits (i.e., warming tolerance, a thermal sensitivity index) and how that proximity changes across space enables spatially explicit identification of species with increased extinction risk as temperatures increase. Yet, thermal sensitivity is often difficult to calculate because it is the...
Turning trash into treasure: Leveraging discarded filters for national-scale aquatic eDNA biomonitoring
Devin Nicole Jones-Slobodian, Daniel J. Wieferich, Noah Fierer, Joseph Crane, Adam Sepulveda
2025, Aquaculture, Fish and Fisheries (5)
Monitoring biodiversity changes over large spatiotemporal scales is critical for effective ecosystem conservation and management. This study investigates the potential of environmental DNA (eDNA) metabarcoding to enhance national-scale biomonitoring of freshwater diversity by leveraging discarded filters associated with routine water quality sampling from the U.S. Geological Survey's (USGS) National Water...
Young explosive eruptions from the Clear Lake volcanic field
Jessica L. Ball, Seth D. Burgess, Dawnika L. Blatter
2025, Fact Sheet 2025-3020
The Clear Lake volcanic field is the northernmost and youngest field in a chain of volcanic fields in and near the California Coast Range mountains. For 2 million years, numerous eruptions have happened around (and through) Clear Lake. The most recent period of activity in the Clear Lake volcanic field...
Increased soil greenhouse gas emissions from the combined use of cover crops and no‐tillage in producer‐ managed fields
Yu Peng, Pierre-Andre Jacinthe, Edward G. Dobrowolski, Lixin Wang
2025, Earth's Future (13)
Cover crop adoption offers multiple benefits and climate mitigation potential for agroecosystems, but is still an underutilized conservation practice. Recently, the combined use of cover cropping plus no-tillage (CCNT) has been increasingly promoted to achieve its synergistic effectiveness. Yet, how this combined practice affects soil greenhouse gas (GHG) emission remains...
Multi-scale habitat characteristics influence Paleback Darter occupancy and detection probability
Maxwell L. Hartman, Katie M. Morris, Jonathan J. Spurgeon, Steve E. Lochmann
2025, Transactions of the American Fisheries Society (154) 585-594
ObjectiveThe limited distribution of the Paleback Darter Etheostoma pallididorsum, which is often associated with dynamic headwater streams, makes the species vulnerable to changes in its environment in west-central Arkansas. A detailed understanding of habitat characteristics that support the species at multiple spatial scales is limited. This project assessed the relative influences...
Perceptions of climate vulnerability for subsistence inland fisheries in the United States
Caitlin Montano, Abigail Lynch, Ian Harrison, Denielle M. Perry
2025, Fisheries
Globally, inland fisheries are important sources of food, particularly for some communities where fishing is socially or culturally important or where local community economics require families to find cheap sources of food. However, little information specific to subsistence inland fisheries and their dependent communities is available for the United States,...
Alternating movement strategies of a tropical raptor
Eben H. Paxton, Kristina L. Paxton
2025, Scientific Reports (15)
The majority of raptor species reside in the tropics, yet very little is known about their movement ecology. However, quantifying movement behavior can provide otherwise elusive information on resource needs, habitat selection, and ecological constraints, which is important for understanding ecological patterns and the management of species of conservation concern....
Seismic anomalies expand Alaska’s Umiat Anticline potential
Paul McColgan, Nilesh Dixit, Jacob T. Murchek
2025, Oil and Gas Journal
Recent seismic advancements, including AVO analysis, have redefined Alaska's Umiat field potential, revealing deeper reservoirs and increasing estimated oil in place....
Two million years of climate-driven cave-sediment aggradation and valley incision in the southern Ozark Plateau from Fitton Cave, northern Arkansas, USA
Mark R. Hudson, James B. Paces, Darryl E. Granger, Kathleen Rodrigues, Amanda Keen-Zebert, Charles J. Bitting, Kenzie J. Turner, Kayla N. Sapkota
2025, Quaternary Research (128) 102-125
Landscape evolution in karst terrains affects both subterranean and surface settings. For better understanding of controlling processes and connections between the two, multiple geochronometers were used to date sediments and speleothems in upper-level passages of Fitton Cave adjacent to the Buffalo River, northern Arkansas, within the southern Ozark Plateau. Burial...
Effects of climate on temporal variability in streamflow and salinity in the Upper Colorado River Basin
Natalie K. Day, Patrick C. Longley, Daniel Wise, Morgan C. McDonnell
2025, Journal of Hydrology: Regional Studies (61)
Study RegionThe Upper Colorado River Basin, a critical water source for more than 40 million people in the western United States.Study FocusPotential decreasing streamflow and elevated salinity concentrations threaten this resource. Climate variability has a large...
Spatially explicit power analyses to inform occupancy‐based multi‐species wildlife monitoring programmes
Joshua P. Twining, Angela K. Fuller
2025, Journal of Applied Ecology (62) 2746-2763
1. Current and accurate information on wildlife populations is integral to successful biodiversity management and conservation globally. Nevertheless, many monitoring programs fail in their attempts to accurately monitor populations of interest due to interlinked issues including insufficient sample sizes, inappropriate duration, lack of reproducibility, and lack of clearly stated objectives....
Sparse genetic data limit biodiversity assessments in protected areas globally
Ivan Paz-Vinas, Amy G. Vandergast, Chloé Schmidt, Deborah M. Leigh, Simon Blanchet, René D. Clark, Eric D. Crandall, Hanne De Kort, Jeff T. Falgout, Colin J. Garroway, Eleana Karachaliou, Francine Kershaw, David O’Brien, Malin L. Pinsky, Gernot Segelbacher, Rachel H. Toczydlowski, Margaret Hunter
2025, Frontiers in Ecology and the Environment (23)
Global conservation targets include protecting genetic diversity within species. Yet few studies have assessed whether protected areas (PAs) include genetically diverse populations across species globally. A first step is understanding the availability of population genetic data that could be used in these assessments. We surveyed georeferenced population-level nuclear (as opposed...
Metabolomic profiling identifies the mitochondria as a target of pentachlorophenol toxicity in the blood clam (Tegillarca granosa)
Yuyao Jiang, Yujia Yan, Yanru Guan, Jason Tyler Magnuson, Zijie Ding, Qingqing Ke, Aoxue Wang, Kun Qiao, Shuying Li, Wenjun Gui, Daniel Schlenk
2025, Marine Pollution Bulletin (221)
The pervasive presence of pentachlorophenol (PCP) in aquatic-benthic ecosystems poses a threat to organisms. However, the toxicological mechanisms of PCP in benthic organisms are limited. In this study, Tegillarca granosa, a representative bivalve species, was treated with environmentally relevant concentrations of PCP (1, 10, and 100 μg/kg) and positive control for 28 days via sediment...
Insights and strategic opportunities from the USGS 2024 Per- and Polyfluoroalkyl Substances (PFAS) Interagency Workshop
Deborah D. Iwanowicz, Kimberly R. Beisner, Paul M. Bradley, Patricia R. Bright, Juliane B. Brown, Christopher J. Churchill, Stephanie E. Gordon, Natalie Karouna-Renier, Dana W. Kolpin, Rebecca B. Lambert, Erin L. Pulster, Rip S. Shively, Kelly Smalling, Jeffery A. Steevens, Andrea K. Tokranov
2025, Open-File Report 2025-1044
Introduction In 2021, the U.S. Geological Survey (USGS) published Circular 1490 titled, “Integrated Science for the Study of Perfluoroalkyl and Polyfluoroalkyl Substances (PFAS) in the Environment: A Strategic Science Vision for the U.S. Geological Survey” (Tokranov and others, 2021). Circular 1490 was created to be a resource for USGS scientists prioritizing...
The U.S. Geological Survey National Water Quality Network—Surface Water, 2024
Melissa L. Riskin
2025, General Information Product 259
The U.S. Geological Survey (USGS) National Water Quality Network for surface water (NWQN-SW) was established in 2013 to develop long-term, comparable assessments of surface-water quality in support of national, regional, State, and local needs related to water-quality management and policy. Water-quality samples are collected at each site and measured for...
anadrofish: Anadromous fish population responses to dams
Daniel S. Stich, Joshua D. Hardesty, Nicholas T. Jordan, Samuel G. Roy, Timothy F. Sheehan, Shawn D. Snyder, Joseph D. Zydlewski
2025, Journal of Open Source Software (10)
Diadromous fishes world-wide experienced precipitous declines during the 19th and 20th centuries due to a combination of overfishing, pollution, and freshwater habitat loss through construction of dams (Limburg & Waldman, 2009). Following wide-spread fishing closures and large-scale remediation of many historical pollution sources, dams in coastal rivers remain as the...