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Page 33, results 801 - 825

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Publication Extents

Not all publications have extents, not all extents are completely accurate
3D habitat complexity and coral morphology modulate reef fish functional structure in a marine national park
Sofia B. Ferreira, John H.R. Burns, Atsuko Fukunaga, Lillian Joy Tuttle Raz, Sheila A. McKenna, Kailea Annandale, Ryan J. Monello
2025, Ecology and Evolution (15)
The ongoing degradation of coral reef habitats is widely acknowledged to have adverse effects on the abundance and diversity of reef fish populations, yet the direct effects on ecosystem functions remain uncertain. This study used a quantitative approach to determine the mechanistic links between fish assemblages and...
Refining PAH and PCB bioavailability predictions in industrial sediments using source-fingerprinting, particle size, and bulk carbon, Puget Sound, Washington
Kathleen Conn, Andrew R. Spanjer, Renee Takesue
2025, Marine Pollution Bulletin (222)
Nearshore marine sediments in a Puget Sound, Washington industrial embayment had elevated levels of PAHs, PCBs and DDTs. Chemical fingerprints implicated nearshore sources including creosote, industrial oil and tar waste, and a landfill. Elevated concentrations were confined to an approximate 300-m shoreline buffer in the industrial waterfront, suggesting high site...
Induced earthquakes are generally not tidally triggered in Oklahoma and Kansas
Margaret Elizabeth Glasgow, Justin Rubinstein, Jeanne L. Hardebeck
2025, JGR Solid Earth (130)
Human-induced earthquakes occur along critically stressed faults as injected wastewater simultaneously heightens fluid pressure and pushes faults to failure. We investigate the possibility that small stresses imposed by Earth tides could trigger earthquakes in the induced seismicity region of Oklahoma and Kansas from 2011 to 2018. We...
Fluvial sediment dynamics in the Shoshone River and tributaries around Willwood Dam, Park County, Wyoming
Jason S. Alexander, Haylie M. Brown, Cheryl A. Eddy-Miller, Jason Burckhardt, Laura Burckhardt, Christopher A. Ellison, Carmen McIntyre, Travis Moger, Lindsay Patterson, Chace Tavelli, David Waterstreet, Mahonri Williams
2025, Scientific Investigations Report 2025-5077
Sedimentation affects many of the aging reservoirs in the United States. Dams and water diversions from rivers have been central elements of infrastructure supporting agricultural irrigation in the arid and semiarid regions of the Western United States for more than a century. The Willwood Irrigation District diversion dam (hereafter referred...
Nocturnal flight call monitoring reveals in-flight behavioral alteration by avian migrants in response to artificial light at night
Dylan M. Osterhaus, Kelley C. Boland, Abigail Jean Lawson, Kyle G. Horton, Benjamin M. Van Doren, Patricia L. Cutler, Timothy F. Wright, Martha J. Desmond
2025, Biological Conservation (311)
The world in which birds evolved to migrate has been drastically altered in the Anthropocene by artificial light. Sources of light such as urban centers or bright upward-facing lights attract migrants, altering their behavior, especially during inclement weather, often leading to mortality. Seemingly less extreme sources, such...
Projecting stream water quality using Weighted Regression on Time, Discharge, and Season (WRTDS): An example with drought conditions in the Delaware River Basin
Christopher Green, Robert M. Hirsch, Hedeff Essaid, Ward E. Sanford
2025, Science of the Total Environment (999)
Future water availability depends on understanding the responses of constituent concentrations to hydrologic change. Projecting future water quality remains a methodological challenge, particularly when using discrete observations with limited temporal resolution. This study introduces Weighted Regression on Time, Discharge, and Season for Projection (WRTDS-P), a novel, computationally efficient method that...
National Park Service staff perspectives on how climate change affects visitor use
Sarah Lynn Rappaport Keener, Emily J. Wilkins, Wylie Carr, Samantha G. Winder, Julianne Reas, Daniela B. Daniele, Spencer A. Wood
2025, People and Nature (7) 2346-2360
1. Many public lands, including those managed by the U.S. National Park Service(NPS), have the purpose of conserving natural and cultural resources and providing opportunities for visitors to recreate in and enjoy these areas. Achieving this mission becomes more challenging as drought, flooding, increasing temperatures and other climatic change effects...
Regional high-frequency monitoring revealed chloride concentrations in exceedance of ecological benchmarks in urban streams across the Delaware River Basin, USA
Rosemary M. Fanelli, Michelle Morency, Brandon J. Fleming, Joel Moore, Deanna Hardesty, Megan E. Shoda
2025, Environmental Monitoring and Assessment
Rising chloride concentrations pose critical risks to freshwater stream ecosystems in temperate regions like the Delaware River Basin (DRB), USA, where winter deicer applications (i.e., road salt) are common. Increasing chloride concentrations have been documented in the region, but the extent to which chloride exceeds regulatory benchmarks remains unclear because...
The Benefits Knowledges Learning Framework: A tool for learning across diverse knowledge systems in ecosystem valuation
Kristin R. Hoelting, Doreen E. Martinez, Lucas Bair, Rudy Schuster, Michael C. Gavin
2025, Ecosystem Services (75)
Sustainable and just environmental management depends on meaningful consideration of the plural values of nature, as they arise in association with diverse worldviews and understandings of well-being. To achieve value pluralism in decision-making, we must also attend to knowledge pluralism, in terms of recognizing the validity and decision relevance of...
Dispersal and survival of sea lamprey in Lake Erie and connected waterways
Sean Alois Lewandoski, Christopher Holbrook
2025, Canadian Journal of Fisheries and Aquatic Sciences (82) 1-13
Invasive sea lamprey inhabiting the North American Laurentian Great Lakes are the target of the world’s longest running vertebrate invasive species control program. However, metapopulation dynamics comprising survival and dispersal during the sea lampreys’ lake-resident life stages are poorly understood. We applied acoustic telemetry and continuous-time multistate capture-recapture modeling to...
Breaking down Palila decline: Assessing the role of drought and vegetation health in the population loss of an endangered Hawaiian honeycreeper
Erica M. Gallerani, Richard J. Camp, Paul C. Banko, Austin Madson, Chunyu Dong, Lucas Fortini, Zhimin Ma, Thomas W. Gillespie
2025, Global Ecology and Conservation (62)
The Palila (Loxioides bailleui), the last member of the once speciose finch-billed Hawaiian honeycreeper clade (Drepanidinae) in the main Hawaiian Islands, faces critical conservation challenges as an endangered species. Understanding the drivers of its decline is essential for effective management. We used additive decomposition models to examine temporal trends in...
U.S. Geological Survey monitoring milestones—Chagrin River at Willoughby, OH (04209000)
Claire Bunch
2025, General Information Product 261
The Chagrin River at Willoughby, OH (04209000), streamgage is the 1,000th U.S. Geological Survey (USGS) streamgage to reach Centennial status. Centennial Streamgages are USGS streamgages that have been in operation for 100 years or more. Collecting water data since 1925, it celebrated its 100th birthday on August 1, 2025....
Food habits of nonnative Smallmouth Bass in Coeur d’Alene Lake, Idaho
Michael C. Quist, John D. Walrath, Jon A. Firehammer
2025, Northwest Science (98) 99-115
Smallmouth Bass (Micropterus dolomieu) has been widely introduced beyond its native distribution where interactions with other organisms are largely unknown. We examined the food habits of Smallmouth Bass in Coeur d'Alene Lake, Idaho. Smallmouth Bass were sampled monthly from March 2012 to May 2013 using short duration (1–2 hr sets)...
Wetland ecohydrology
Mark D. Dixon, W. Carter Johnson, Beth Middleton
Alan Dixon, Ian Maddock, editor(s)
2025, Book chapter, Routledge handbook of wetlands
Ecohydrology emphasizes the interactions between ecological and hydrological patterns and processes in wetlands. Given that wetlands are fundamentally defined by prolonged saturation or flooding of land, an ecohydrological perspective is implicit in wetland ecology. In this review, we provide examples of how variation in hydrologic processes in space and time...
Sulfide stress tolerance as a controller of methane production in temperate wetlands
Emily Bechtold, Jared B. Ellenbogen, Danhui Xin, Marcia Pacheco, Brandy M. Toner, Yu-Ping Chin, William A. Arnold, Sheel Bansal, Michael J. Wilkins
2025, International Society of Microbial Ecology Journal (19)
Wetlands are a major source of methane emissions and contribute to the observed increase in atmospheric methane over the last 20 years. Methane production in wetlands is the final step of carbon decomposition performed by anaerobic archaea. Although hydrogen/carbon dioxide and acetate are the substrates most often attributed to methanogenesis, other...
Detection of deer at remote camera sites in relation to snow conditions
Kaitlyn S. Vega, Adrienne M. Marshall, Leona Kay Svancara, David Edward Ausband, Timothy E Link
2025, Journal of Wildlife Management (89)
In the rain-snow transition zone of the Pacific Northwest, climate change is expected to alter the incidence of rain-on-snow and freeze-thaw events, which will change snow density and hardness dynamics. In winter, the ability of economically and ecologically important wildlife species, such as deer (Odocoileus spp.), to efficiently...
Hiding in plain sight: Genomic characterization of a novel nackednavirus and evidence of diverse adomaviruses in a hyperpigmented lesion of a largemouth bass (Micropterus salmoides)
Clayton D. Raines, John Odenkirk, Michael Isel, Patricia Mazik, Morgan Alexandra Biggs, Luke Iwanowicz
2025, Viruses (17)
Largemouth bass (LMB; Micropterus nigricans) are popular both as a sportfish and an aquaculture species. At present, six described viruses are associated with LMB, of which two are typically considered in cases of LMB mortality events. Advances in discovery and diagnostic capabilities using next-generation sequencing have augmented surveillance efforts and...
A synthesis engine for constructing geologic maps of the United States
Samuel Johnstone, Joseph P. Colgan, Warren P. Roe
2025, Data Report 1210
The geologic history of the United States is cataloged in thousands of geologic maps produced during many decades. However, the disparate nature of these individual maps makes it challenging to assess resources, research geologic histories, or characterize natural hazards holistically across the Nation. The U.S. House of Representatives 2020 appropriations...
Streamflow extents and hydraulic characteristics of Meadow Valley Wash at Stuart Ranch, near Rox, Nevada
Laura A. Dye, Christopher M. Morris, Hampton K. Childres
2025, Scientific Investigations Report 2025-5069
The former Stuart Ranch, now managed by the Bureau of Land Management, is transected by Meadow Valley Wash, where 4,600 feet of perennial stream and adjacent riparian vegetation provide critical habitat for several wildlife and aquatic species protected under the Endangered Species Act. The stream has been altered by prior...
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 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...