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Page 265, results 6601 - 6625

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Not all publications have extents, not all extents are completely accurate
Groundwater quality in the Mohawk and western New York River Basins, New York, 2016
Devin L. Gaige, Tia-Marie Scott, James E. Reddy, Meaghan R. Keefe
2023, Open-File Report 2022-1021
Water samples were collected from July through December 2016 from 9 production wells and 13 domestic wells in the Mohawk River Basin, and from 17 production wells and 17 domestic wells in the western New York River Basins. The samples were collected and processed by using standard U.S. Geological Survey...
Mass mortality of collector urchins Tripneustes gratilla in Hawai`i
Thierry M. Work, Julie Dagenais, Robert Rameyer, Renee Breeden, Tina Weatherby
2023, Diseases of Aquatic Organisms (153) 17-29
As grazers, sea urchins are keystone species in tropical marine ecosystems, and their loss can have important ecological ramifications. Die-offs of urchins are frequently described, but their causes are often unclear, in part because systematic examinations of animal tissues at gross and microscopic level are not done. In some...
Field evaluation of semi-automated moisture estimation from geophysics using machine learning
Neil Terry, F.D. Day-Lewis, John W. Lane, Carole D. Johnson, Dale Werkema
2023, Vadose Zone Journal (22)
Geophysical methods can provide three-dimensional (3D), spatially continuous estimates of soil moisture. However, point-to-point comparisons of geophysical properties to measure soil moisture data are frequently unsatisfactory, resulting in geophysics being used for qualitative purposes only. This is because (1) geophysics requires models that relate...
Creek and quarry water quality at Pipestone National Monument and pilot study of pathogen detection methods in waterfall mist at Winnewissa Falls, Pipestone, Minnesota, 2018–19
Aliesha L. Krall, Kerensa A. King, Victoria G. Christensen, Joel P. Stokdyk, Barbara C. Scudder Eikenberry, S. A. Stevenson
2023, Scientific Investigations Report 2022-5122
Pipestone National Monument is a 301-acre site sacred to many Native American Tribes, providing cultural exhibits and walking trails to Pipestone Creek, Winnewissa Falls, and historical pipestone quarries for numerous visitors each year. However, the Minnesota Pollution Control Agency has determined turbidity and fecal coliform bacteria occur in Pipestone Creek...
Rapid pre-explosion increase in dome extrusion rate at La Soufrière, St. Vincent quantified from synthetic aperture radar backscatter
Edna Dualeh, Susanna Ebmeier, Tim J. Wright, Michael Poland, Raphael Grandin, Adam Stinton, M. Camejo-Harry, B. Esse, Mike Burton
2023, Earth and Planetary Science Letters (603)
The extrusion rate of a lava dome is a critical parameter for monitoring silicic eruptions and forecasting their development. Satellite radar backscatter can provide unique information about dome growth during a volcanic eruption when other datasets (e.g., optical, thermal, ground-based measurements, etc.) may be limited. Here, we present an approach for estimating volcanic topography from individual...
Buzzards Bay salt marshes: Vulnerability and adaptation potential
R. W Jakuba, A. Besterman, L. Hoffart, J. E. Costa, Neil K. Ganju, L. Deegan
2023, Report
Salt marshes with lush grass meadows teeming with shorebirds are iconic features of the Buzzards Bay coast and provide opportunities for recreation, aesthetic enjoyment, as well as important environmental benefits. These productive coastal wetlands are important because they protect properties from storm surges, remove nutrients from the water and carbon...
Central Beaufort Sea Wave and Hydrodynamic Modeling Study--Report 1: Field measurements and model development
Jeremy L. Kasper, Li H. Erikson, Thomas M. Ravens, Peter A. Bieniek, Anita C Engelstad, Cornelis M. Nederhoff, Paul X. Duvoy, Stephanie Fisher, Eloise Petrone Brown, Yaman Man, Borja Reguero
2023, OCS Study BOEM 2022-078
Renewed interest in nearshore oil exploration and production in the shallow waters of the Central Beaufort Sea Shelf has created a need to advance our understanding of the past, current, and future atmospheric and oceanographic conditions that affect existing and planned infrastructure and nearshore ecosystems. At the time of writing...
Integration of weed-suppressive bacteria with herbicides to reduce exotic annual grasses and wildfire problems on ITD right-of-ways
Brynne E. Lazarus, Matthew J. Germino, Toby M. Maxwell
2023, Research Report RP 284
Invasion by exotic-annual grasses such as cheatgrass is impacting semiarid rangelands and especially transportation corridors, where it causes increased wildfire and many other environmental issues. Methods of reducing exotic annual grasses and restoring native perennials are needed, particularly testing of their intended target or unintended, non-target effects. In a series...
Evaluation of Landsat image compositing algorithms
Shi Qiu, Zhe Zhu, Pontus Olofsson, Curtis Woodcock, Suming Jin
2023, Remote Sensing of Environment (285)
We proposed a new image compositing algorithm (MAX-RNB) based on the maximum ratio of Near Infrared (NIR) to Blue band (RNB), and evaluated it together with nine other compositing algorithms: MAX-NDVI (maximum Normalized Difference Vegetation Index), MED-NIR (median NIR band), WELD (conterminous United States Web-Enabled Landsat Data), BAP (Best Available...
Equilibrated gas and carbonate standard-derived dual (Δ47 and Δ48) clumped isotope values
Jamie K Lucarelli, Hannah M. Carroll, Robert N. Ulrich, Ben M. Elliott, Tyler B. Coplen, Robert A. Eagle, Aradhna K. Tripati
2023, Geochemistry, Geophysics, Geosystems (24)
Carbonate clumped isotope geochemistry has primarily focused on mass spectrometric determination of m/z 47 CO2 for geothermometry, but theoretical calculations and recent experiments indicate paired analysis of the m/z 47 (13C18O16O) and m/z 48 (12C18O18O) isotopologues (referred to as Δ47 and Δ48) can be used to study non-equilibrium isotope fractionations and refine temperature estimates. We utilize 5,448 Δ47 and...
Behavioral and reproductive effects of the lampricides TFM and TFM:1% Niclosamide on native freshwater mussels
Teresa J. Newton, Michael A. Boogaard, Nicholas Schloesser, Courtney Kirkeeng, Justin Schueller, Sherwin G. Toribio
2023, Journal of Great Lakes Research (49) 303-317
The lampricides TFM (3-trifluoromethyl-4′-nitrophenol) and Niclosamide (NIC, 2′, 5-dichloro-4′-nitrosalicylanilide) are used to control sea lamprey populations in the Great Lakes and associated tributaries. Niclosamide is often used as an additive to TFM to reduce the amount of TFM required to control sea lamprey. Concern is growing over the risk that...
Ecology and ecosystem impacts of submerged and floating aquatic vegetation in the Sacramento-San Joaquin Delta
Mairgareth A. Christman, Shruti Khanna, Judith Z. Drexler, Matthew J. Young
2023, San Francisco Estuary and Watershed Science (20)
Substantial increases in non-native aquatic vegetation have occurred in the upper San Francisco Estuary over the last 2 decades, largely from the explosive growth of a few submerged and floating aquatic plant species. Some of these species act as ecosystem engineers by creating conditions that favor their further growth and...
Change in climatically suitable breeding distributions reduces hybridization potential between Vermivora warblers
Jessica N. Hightower, Dolly L. Crawford, Wayne E. Thogmartin, Kyle R. Aldinger, Sara Barker Swarthout, David A. Buehler, John Confer, Christian Friis, Jeff Larkin, James D. Lowe, Martin Piorkowski, Ronald W. Rohrbaugh, Kenneth V. Rosenberg, Curtis G. Smalling, Petra B. Wood, Rachel Vallender, Amber M. Roth
2023, Diversity and Distributions (29) 254-271
AimClimate change is affecting the distribution of species and subsequent biotic interactions, including hybridization potential. The imperiled Golden-winged Warbler (GWWA) competes and hybridizes with the Blue-winged Warbler (BWWA), which may threaten the persistence of GWWA due to introgression. We examined how climate change is likely to alter...
Toward consistent change detection across irregular remote sensing time series observations
Heather J. Tollerud, Zhe Zhu, Kelcy Smith, Danika F. Wellington, Reza Hussain, Donna Viola
2023, Remote Sensing of Environment (285)
The use of remote sensing in time series analysis enables wall-to-wall monitoring of the land surface and is critical for assessing and understanding land cover and land use change and for understanding the Earth system as a whole. However, variability in remote...
Wild rodents harbor high diversity of Arthroderma
Stepanka Moulikova, Miroslav Kolarik, Jeffrey M. Lorch, Daniela Kolarczykova, Vit Hubka, Adela Cmokova
2023, Persoonia - Molecular Phylogeny and Evolution of Fungi (50) 27-47
Arthroderma is the most diverse genus of dermatophytes, and its natural reservoir is considered to be soil enriched by keratin sources. During a study on the diversity of dermatophytes in wild small rodents in the Czech Republic, we isolated several strains of Arthroderma. To explore the...
Where forest may not return in the western United States
James Wickham, Anne Neale, Kurt H. Riitters, Maliha Nash, Jon Dewitz, Suming Jin, Megan van Fossen, D Rosenbaum
2023, Ecological Indicators (146)
Droughts that are hotter, more frequent, and last longer; pest outbreaks that are more extensive and more common; and fires that are more frequent, more extensive, and perhaps more severe have raised concern that forests in the western United States may not...
Does hatchery rearing of lake trout affect their reproductive behavior in the wild?
Thomas Binder, Christopher Holbrook, Charles R. Bronte, Ji He, Charles Kreuger
2023, Journal of Great Lakes Research (49) 288-302
Stocking of hatchery-reared fishes has been used with variable success as a management action to promote the recovery of populations and species. The practice has been controversial for several reasons, including uncertainty about whether the hatchery rearing experience may affect reproduction...
A recently discovered trachyte-hosted rare earth element-niobium-zirconium occurrence in northern Maine, USA
Chunzeng Wang, John F. Slack, Anjana K. Shah, Martin G. Yates, David R. Lentz, Amber T.H. Whittaker, Robert G. Marvinney
2023, Economic Geology (118) 1-13
Reported here are geological, geophysical, mineralogical, and geochemical data on a previously unknown trachyte-hosted rare earth element (REE)-Nb-Zr occurrence at Pennington Mountain in northern Maine, USA. This occurrence was newly discovered by a regional multiparameter, airborne radiometric survey that revealed anomalously high equivalent Th (eTh) and U (eU), confirmed by...
Timing of rhyolite intrusion and Carlin-type gold mineralization at the Cortez Hills Carlin-type deposit, Nevada, USA
Christopher D. Henry, David A. John, Robert W. Leonardson, William T McIntosh, Matt T. Heizler, Joseph P. Colgan, Kathryn E. Watts
2023, Economic Geology (118) 57-91
Carlin-type gold deposits (CTDs) of Nevada are the largest producers of gold in the United States, a leader in world gold production. Although much has been resolved about the characteristics and origin of CTDs in Nevada, major questions remain, especially about (1) the...
Agricultural conservation practices could help offset climate change impacts on cyanobacterial harmful algal blooms in Lake Erie
Michael E. Fraker, Noel R Aloysius, Jay F. Martin, S. Conor Keitzer, David A Dippold, Haw Yen, Jeffrey G. Arnold, Prasad Daggupati, Mari-Vaughn Virginia Johnson, Dale M. Robertson, Scott P. Sowa, Michael J. White, Stuart A. Ludsin
2023, Journal of Great Lakes Research (49) 209-219
Harmful algal blooms (HABs) are a recurring problem in many temperate large lake and coastal marine ecosystems, caused mainly by anthropogenic eutrophication. Implementation of agricultural conservation practices (ACPs) offers a means to reduce non-point source nutrient runoff and mitigate HABs. However,...
Finchite, Sr(UO2)2(V2O8)·5H2O, a new uranyl sorovanadate with the francevillite anion topology
Tyler P. Spear, Travis Olds, Susan Hall, Bradley S. Van Gosen, Anthony Kampf, Peter Burns, Joe Marty
2023, American Mineralogist (108) 383-388
Finchite (IMA2017-052), Sr(UO2)2(V2O8)·5H2O, is the first uranium mineral known to contain essential Sr. The new mineral occurs as yellow-green blades up to ~10 µm in length in surface outcrops of the calcrete-type uranium deposit at Sulfur Springs Draw, Martin County, Texas, U.S.A....
Effects of freshwater residence time on reproductive success in anadromous alewife (Alosa pseudoharengus): climate change implications
Meghna N. Marjadi, Allison H. Roy, Matthew T. Devine, Benjamin I. Gahagan, Adrian Jordaan, Julianne Rosset, Andrew R. Whiteley
2023, Canadian Journal of Fisheries and Aquatic Sciences (80) 563-576
Earlier spring warming and anadromous fish migrations prompted by climate change are linked to shorter freshwater residency. Impacts of phenological change on anadromous fish populations are poorly understood with limited studies focused on iteroparous non-salmonids. We assessed freshwater residence time and reproductive success in an iteroparous clupeid, alewife (Alosa pseudoharengus)...
Fish assemblages in the Penobscot River: A decade after dam removal
Kory A. Whittum, Joseph D. Zydlewski, Stephen M. Jr. Coghlan, Daniel B. Hayes, Jonathan Watson, Ian Kiraly
2023, Marine and Coastal Fisheries: Dynamics, Management, and Ecosystem Science (15)
The Penobscot River Restoration Project in Maine was a large river rehabilitation project that culminated in the removal of the two lowermost dams and improvements to fish passage on several remaining dams. Fish assemblages were surveyed for 3 years prior to rehabilitation, 3 years after rehabilitation, and 8 years after rehabilitation. Approximately 475 km...