Local environment and individuals’ beliefs: The dynamics shaping public support for sustainability policy in an agricultural landscape
Gabriel Granco, Marcellus Caldas, Jason Bergtold, Jessica L. Heier Stamm, Martha E. Mather, Matthew Sanderson, Melinda Daniels, Aleksey Y. Sheshukov, David A. Haukos, Steven M. Ramsey
2022, Journal of Environmental Management (301)
Agricultural landscapes are the bleeding-edge in the advancement of sustainability and climate change adaptation. Our study focuses on how individual support for sustainability policy is shaped in coupled natural and human systems. We present an agent-based model in which a cultural decision-rule quantifies the probability that a stakeholder decides to...
Rayleigh-wave ellipticity in weakly heterogeneous layered media
Matthew M. Haney, Victor C. Tsai
2022, Geophysical Journal International (228) 1313-1323
We derive approximate expressions for the ellipticity (i.e. horizontal-to-vertical or vertical-to-horizontal ratio) of Rayleigh waves propagating in a layered medium. The approximation is based on the generalized energy equation for Rayleigh waves, which has been used previously to obtain perturbational results for ellipticity. For a medium with weakly heterogeneous layers,...
Population genetics of Brook Trout (Salvelinus fontinalis) in the southern Appalachian Mountains
David C. Kazyak, Barbara A. Lubinski, Matt A. Kulp, K. C. Pregler, Andrew R. Whiteley, Eric M. Hallerman, Jason A. Coombs, Y. Kanno, Jacob Rash, Raymond P. Morgan II, Jim Habera, Jason Henegar, T. Casey Weathers, Matthew T. Sell, Anthony Rabern, Dan Rankin, Tim L. King
2022, Transactions of the American Fisheries Society (151) 127-149
Broad-scale patterns of genetic diversity for Brook Trout remain poorly understood across their endemic range in the eastern United States. We characterized variation at 12 microsatellite loci in 22,020 Brook Trout among 836 populations from Georgia, USA to Quebec, Canada to the western Great Lakes region. Within-population diversity was typically...
Defining aquatic habitat zones across northern Gulf of Mexico estuarine gradients through submerged aquatic vegetation species assemblage and biomass data
K. E. DeMarco, E. R. Hillmann, J. A. Nyman, Brady Couvillion, Megan K. La Peyre
2022, Estuaries and Coasts (45) 148-167
Submerged aquatic vegetation (SAV) creates highly productive habitats in coastal areas, providing support for many important species of fish and wildlife. Despite the importance and documented loss of SAV across fresh to marine habitats globally, we lack consistent baseline data on estuarine SAV resources, particularly in the northern Gulf of...
Estimating urban air pollution contribution to South Platte River nitrogen loads with National Atmospheric Deposition Program data and SPARROW model
Gregory A. Wetherbee, Michael Wieczorek, Dale M. Robertson, David A. Saad, Jon Novick, M. Alisa Mast
2022, Journal of Environmental Management (301)
Air pollution is commonly disregarded as a source of nutrient loading to impaired surface waters managed under the Clean Water Act per states’ 303(d) list programs. The contribution of air pollution to 2017–2018 South Platte River nitrogen (N) loads was estimated from the headwaters to...
Quantifying the spatial structure of invasive lake trout in Yellowstone Lake to improve suppression efficacy
Jacob R. Williams, Christopher S. Guy, Patricia E. Bigelow, Todd M. Koel
2022, North American Journal of Fisheries Management (42) 50-62
Invasive Lake Trout Salvelinus namaycush have altered the once-pristine Yellowstone Lake ecosystem through top-down effects by consuming Yellowstone Cutthroat Trout Oncorhynchus clarkii bouvieri. To conserve Yellowstone Cutthroat Trout and restore the ecosystem, a Lake Trout gillnetting program was implemented to suppress the invasive population. We evaluated the spatial structure of Lake Trout in...
Sampling design workflows and tools to support adaptive monitoring and management
Nelson G. Stauffer, Michael C. Duniway, Jason W. Karl, Travis W. Nauman
2022, Rangelands (44) 8-16
On the Ground• Adaptive land management requires monitoring of resource conditions, which requires choices about where and when to monitor a landscape.• Designing a sampling design for a monitoring program can be broken down in to eight steps: identifying questions, defining objectives, selecting reporting units, deciding data collection methods, defining...
Populations using public-supply groundwater in the conterminous U.S. 2010; Identifying the wells, hydrogeologic regions, and hydrogeologic mapping units
Tyler D. Johnson, Kenneth Belitz, Leon J. Kauffman, Elise Watson, John T. Wilson
2022, Science of the Total Environment (806)
Most Americans receive their drinking water from publicly supplied sources, a large portion of it from groundwater. Mapping these populations consistently and at a high resolution is important for understanding where the resource is used and needs to be protected. The results show that...
Development of aquaculture protocols and gonadal differentiation of green sunfish (Lepomis cyanellus)
Chad N. Teal, Daniel J. Schill, Susan B. Fogelson, Colby M. Roberts, Kevin Fitzsimmons, Scott A. Bonar
2022, Aquaculture (547)
We provide detailed rearing methods and describe green sunfish (Lepomis cyanellus) gonadal development and histological differentiation for both sexes. Developing in-depth aquaculture protocols and describing the gonadal differentiation of green sunfish could facilitate strategies to control nuisance populations, enhance stocking programs, and provide information for this species' use in bioassay trials or toxicology studies. Our methods...
Improved fire severity mapping in the North American boreal forest using a hybrid composite method
Lisa M. Holsinger, Sean Parks, Lisa Saperstein, Rachel A. Loehman, Ellen Whitman, Jennifer L. Barnes, Marc-André Parisien
2022, Remote Sensing in Ecology and Conservation (8) 222-235
Fire severity is a key driver shaping the ecological structure and function of North American boreal ecosystems, a biome dominated by large, high-intensity wildfires. Satellite-derived burn severity maps have been an important tool in these remote landscapes for both fire and resource management. The conventional methodology to produce satellite-inferred fire...
Developing landslide chronologies using landslide-dammed lakes in the Oregon Coast Range
Logan Wetherell, William Struble, Sean Richard LaHusen
Adam M. Booth, Anita L. Grunder, editor(s)
2022, Book chapter, GSA field guide: From terranes to terrains: Geologic field guides on the construction and destruction of the Pacific Northwest
The Oregon Coast Range is a dynamic landscape that is continually shaped by shallow and deep-seated landslides that can have disastrous consequences to infrastructure and human lives. Searching for evidence of potentially coseismic mass wasting is incredibly difficult, particularly when historical observations are limited. Landslide-dammed lakes with submerged “ghost forests”...
Lake sturgeon seasonal movements in regulated and unregulated Missouri River tributaries
M.J. Moore, Craig P. Paukert, B. Brooke, T. Moore
2022, Ecohydrology (15)
Spatio-temporal movement patterns of aquatic organisms drive many ecological processes. However, dams block migrations and alter the hydrologic and thermal regimes influencing movement behaviour of freshwater fishes. In North America, many recovering southern Lake Sturgeon populations occur in rivers with hydroelectric dams, but few studies have examined the impact of...
Imaging the next Cascadia earthquake: Optimal design for a seafloor GNSS- A network
Eileen L. Evans, Sarah E. Minson, David Chadwell
2022, Geophysical Journal International (228) 944-957
The Cascadia subduction zone in the Pacific Northwest of the United States of America capable of producing magnitude ∼9 earthquakes, likely often accompanied by tsunamis. An outstanding question in this region is the degree and spatial extent of interseismic strain accumulation on the subduction megathrust. Seafloor geodetic methods combining GNSS...
A stable isotope record of late Quaternary hydrologic change in the northwestern Brooks Range, Alaska (eastern Beringia)
Amanda L. King, Lesleigh Anderson, Mark B. Abbott, Mary Edwards, Matthew S. Finkenbinder, Bruce P. Finney, Matthew Wooller
2022, Journal of Quaternary Science (37) 928-943
A submillennial-resolution record of lake water oxygen isotope composition (δ18O) from chironomid head capsules is presented from Burial Lake, northwest Alaska. The record spans the Last Glacial Maximum (LGM; ~20–16k cal a bp) to the present and shows a series of large lake δ18O shifts (~5‰)....
Elevated levels of radiocarbon in methane dissolved in seawater reveal likely local contamination from nuclear powered vessels
D.J. Joung, Carolyn D. Ruppel, J. Southon, John D. Kessler
2022, Science of the Total Environment (806)
Measurements of the natural radiocarbon content of methane (14C-CH4) dissolved in seawater and freshwater have been used to investigate sources and dynamics of methane. However, during investigations along the Atlantic, Pacific, and Arctic Ocean Margins of the United States, as well as in the...
Multi-run migratory behavior of adult male lake sturgeon in a short river
Donna L. Parrish, Lisa K. Izzo, Gayle Barbin Zydlewski
2022, Journal of Great Lakes Research (47) 1400-1409
Lake sturgeon (Acipenser fulvescens) can migrate long distances to spawn, but many populations currently spawn in systems where the length of accessible riverine migratory habitat has been greatly reduced by dam construction. With the increased prevalence of shortened rivers, focusing on migratory dynamics in short rivers (<30 km) is beneficial to understanding...
Targeted and non-targeted analysis of young-of-year smallmouth bass using comprehensive two-dimensional gas chromatography coupled with time-of-flight mass spectrometry
Paige Teehan, Megan K. Schall, Vicki S. Blazer, Frank L Dorman
2022, Science of the Total Environment (806)
Smallmouth bass in the Susquehanna River Basin, Chesapeake Bay Watershed, USA, have been exhibiting clinical signs of disease and reproductive endocrine disruption (e.g., intersex, male plasma vitellogenin) for over fifteen years. Previous histological and targeted chemical analyses have identified infectious agents and pollutants in fish tissues including organic contaminants, mercury,...
The 6 May 1947 Milwaukee, Wisconsin, earthquake
Susan E. Hough
2022, Seismological Research Letters (93) 402-412
The State of Wisconsin is not known for earthquake activity. The authoritative public‐facing U.S. Geological Survey Comprehensive Catalog of earthquakes includes only three small (magnitude < 2) earthquakes in the state, all instrumentally recorded. Although other catalogs include more events in Wisconsin, experience has...
Integrating seabird dietary and groundfish stock assessment data: Can puffins predict pollock spawning stock biomass in the North Pacific?
William J. Sydeman, Sarah Ann Thompson, John F. Piatt, Stephani Zador, Martin W. Dorn
2022, Fish and Fisheries (23) 213-226
Information on the annual variability in abundance and growth of juvenile groundfish can be useful for predicting fisheries stocks, but is often poorly known owing to difficulties in sampling fish in their first year of life. In the Western Gulf of Alaska (WGoA) and Eastern Bering...
Rapid colonisation post-displacement contributes to native fish resilience
Samantha L. Alford, Annika W. Walters
2022, Ecology of Freshwater Fish (31) 347-357
Native freshwater fish are experiencing global declines. Determining what drives native fish resilience to disturbance is crucial to understanding their persistence in the face of multiple stressors. Fish colonisation ability may be one factor affecting population resilience after disturbance. We conducted displacement experiments in headwater streams in Wyoming, USA, to...
Urban proximity while breeding is not a predictor of perfluoroalkyl substance contamination in the eggs of brown pelicans
B. P. Wilkinson, A. R. Robuck, R. Lohman, H. M. Pickard, Patrick G.R. Jodice
2022, Science of the Total Environment (803)
Identifying sources of exposure to chemical stressors is difficult when both target organisms and stressors are highly mobile. While previous studies have demonstrated that populations of some organisms proximal to urban centers may display increased burdens of human-created chemicals compared to more distal populations, this relationship may not be universal...
Effect of fixing earthquake depth in ShakeAlert algorithms on performance for intraslab earthquakes
Mika Thompson, J. Renate Hartog, Erin A. Wirth
2022, Seismological Research Letters (93) 277-287
We investigate whether assuming a fixed shallow depth in the ShakeAlert network‐based earthquake early warning system is sufficient to produce accurate ground‐motion based alerts for intraslab earthquakes. ShakeAlert currently uses a fixed focal depth of 8 km to estimate earthquake location and magnitude. This is...
Post-fire temporal trends in soil-physical and -hydraulic properties and simulated runoff generation: Insights from different burn severities in the 2013 Black Forest Fire, CO, USA
Brian A. Ebel, John A. Moody, Deborah A. Martin
2022, Science of the Total Environment (802) 1-14
Burn severity influences on post-fire recovery of soil-hydraulic properties controlling runoff generation are poorly understood despite the importance for parameterizing infiltration models. We measured soil-hydraulic properties of field-saturated hydraulic conductivity (Kfs), sorptivity (S), and wetting front potential (ψf) for four years after the 2013 Black Forest Fire, Colorado, USA at...
Evidence for interannual persistence of infectious influenza A viruses in Alaska wetlands
Andrew M. Ramey, Andrew B. Reeves, Benjamin Joel Lagasse, Vijay P. Patil, Laura E. Hubbard, Dana W. Kolpin, R. Blaine McCleskey, Deborah A. Repert, David E. Stallknecht, Rebecca L. Poulson
2022, Science of the Total Environment (803)
Influenza A viruses (IAVs) deposited by wild birds into the environment may lead to sporadic mortality events and economically costly outbreaks among domestic birds. There is a paucity of information, however, regarding the persistence of infectious IAVs within the environment following deposition. In this investigation, we assessed the persistence of...
Nearshore microfossil assemblages in a Caribbean reef environment show variable rates of recovery following Hurricane Irma
Stephen Mitchell, Jessica Pilarczyk, Michaela Spiske, Bruce E. Jaffe
2022, Sedimentology (69) 1209-1230
Modern microfossil distributions reflect site-specific habitats and provide an opportunity to assess sediment transport pathways in the nearshore environment. When applied to overwash deposits in the geological record, they provide insight into sediment provenance and transport, factors important for understanding patterns of frequency and intensity of...