Assessing the population consequences of disturbance and climate change for the Pacific walrus
Devin L. Johnson, Joseph Michael Eisaguirre, Rebecca L. Taylor, Joel L. Garlich-Miller
2024, Marine Ecology Progress Series (740) 193-211
Climate change and anthropogenic disturbance are increasingly affecting wildlife at a global scale. Predicting how varying types and degrees of disturbance may interact to influence population dynamics is a key management challenge. Population consequences of disturbance (PCoD) models provide a framework to link effects of anthropogenic disturbance on an...
The 3D Elevation Program—Supporting Michigan’s economy
Cynthia M. Rachol
2024, Fact Sheet 2024-3031
High-quality elevation data are proving to be a resource of value in addressing many important economic issues in Michigan. The expanding statewide availability of current and accurate high-resolution elevation data can help support agriculture and precision farming, natural resource conservation, flood risk management, and geologic resource assessment and hazard mitigation....
Restoration of common loon (Gavia immer) in Minnesota—2023 annual report
William S. Beatty, Kelly Amoth, Katelyn Bergstrom, Luke J. Fara, Brian R. Gray, Steven C. Houdek, Jayden Jech, Kevin P. Kenow, Robert Rabasco, Spencer Rettler, Michael Wellik, Steven Yang
2024, Open-File Report 2024-1044
The Deepwater Horizon mobile drilling platform exploded on April 20, 2010. The resulting massive oil spill injured natural resources in the Gulf of Mexico, including wintering common loons (Gavia immer). We report on activities completed under the “Restoration of Common Loons in Minnesota” project in calendar year 2023, which was...
Assessment of undiscovered conventional oil and gas resources of offshore East Africa and the Seychelles, 2022
Christopher J. Schenk, Tracey J. Mercier, Cheryl A. Woodall, Phuong A. Le, Andrea D. Cicero, Ronald M. Drake II, Geoffrey S. Ellis, Thomas M. Finn, Michael H. Gardner, Sarah E. Gelman, Jane S. Hearon, Benjamin G. Johnson, Jenny H. Lagesse, Heidi M. Leathers-Miller, Kristen R. Marra, Kira K. Timm, Scott S. Young
2024, Fact Sheet 2024-3010
Using a geology-based assessment methodology, the U.S. Geological Survey estimated undiscovered, technically recoverable mean resources of 5.1 billion barrels of oil and 79.1 trillion cubic feet of gas in offshore East Africa and the Seychelles....
Potential for spatial coexistence of a transboundary migratory species and wind energy development
Ta-Ken Huang, Xiao Feng, Jonathan J. Derbridge, Kaitlin Libby, James E. Diffendorfer, Wayne E. Thogmartin, Gary McCracken, Rodrigo Medellin, Laura Lopez-Hoffman
2024, Scientific Reports (14)
Global expansion in wind energy development is a notable achievement of the international community’s effort to reduce carbon emissions during energy production. However, the increasing number of wind turbines have unintended consequences for migratory birds and bats. Wind turbine curtailment and other mitigation strategies can reduce fatalities, but improved spatial...
Photogrammetry of the deep seafloor from archived unmanned submersible exploration dives
Claudia Flores, Uri S. ten Brink
2024, Journal of Marine Science and Engineering (12)
Large amounts of video images have been collected for decades by scientific and governmental organizations in deep (>1000 m) water using manned and unmanned submersibles and towed cameras. The collected images were analyzed individually or were mosaiced in small areas with great effort. Here, we provide a workflow for utilizing...
Gape-limited invasive predator frequently kills avian prey that are too large to swallow
Martin Kastner, Scott Michael Goetz, Kayla M Baker, Shane R. Siers, Eben H. Paxton, Melia Gail Nafus, Haldre Rogers
2024, Ecology and Evolution (14)
Gape-limited predators (e.g., snakes, many fish) are not generally expected to pose a predation threat to prey that are too large for them to swallow. However, the extent to which snakes predate on prey that exceed their gape limitation remains largely unknown. We conducted the first study to investigate the...
Cathodoluminescence imaging and spectrometry of a jadeite microbeam reference crystal: Detection of Ce3+
Thomas Lameris, Heather A. Lowers, Scott A. Wight, Edward P. Vicenzi
2024, Microscopy and Microanalysis (30) 25-28
Options for selecting a high Na concentration mineral for instrument calibration that are suitably stable under the electron beam are limited [1]. NaCl (approximately a mass fraction of 39 % Na) is not practical for use alongside other embedded and polished...
Correlating quantified cathodoluminescence spectra in jadeite with micro-scale color measurements in visible-near infrared reflectance spectrometry
Edward P. Vicenzi, Thomas Lameris, Heather A. Lowers, Colin MacRae
2024, Microscopy and Microanalysis (30) 21
Cultures throughout history have valued jadeite jade (hereinafter jade), a natural material assemblage composed predominately of the NaAl endmember pyroxene, jadeite (NaAlSi2O6) that is prized for its mechanical properties and enticing coloration [1, 2]....
Compositional and structural mapping of Northwest Africa 15507 angrite
Heather A. Lowers, Paul C. Carpenter, Jay Michael Thompson, Anthony Irving
2024, Microscopy and Microanalysis (30) 15-17
Angrite meteorites represent interesting sampling of planetary crustal environments. Quench-textured angrites with strong crystal zoning originated from the shallow surface region, with evidence of reducing conditions during solidification. Plutonic angrites have more coarse-grained igneous and metamorphic textures with comparatively less zoning and are interpreted as having equilibrated at greater...
Mercury concentrations in Seaside Sparrows and Marsh Rice Rats differ across the Mississippi River Estuary
Andrea Bonisoli-Alquati, Allyson K. Jackson, Collin A. Eagles-Smith, Sydney Moyo, Anna A. Perez-Umphre, Michael J. Polito, Allison M. Snider, S. Tyler Williams, Stefan Woltmann, Philip C. Stouffer, Sabrina S. Taylor
2024, Ecotoxicology (33) 959-971
Mercury (Hg) concentrations and their associated toxicological effects in terrestrial ecosystems of the Gulf of Mexico are largely unknown. Compounding this uncertainty, a large input of organic matter from the 2010 Deepwater Horizon oil spill may have altered Hg cycling and bioaccumulation dynamics. To test this...
NASA Champions 2024: Data strategies for when to use cloud, coding strategies for parallelization, & first examples of big science in the Cloud
Michele Thornton, Catalina Taglialatela, Luis Lopez, Matt Fisher, Alexis Hunzinger, Mahsa Jami, Brianna M. Lind, Cassie Nickles, Andy Teucher, Aronne Merrelli, Erin Robinson, Julie Lowndes
2024, Report
From April-May 2024, the NASA Mentors who span eleven Distributed Active Archive Centers (DAACs) co-led the third Champions Cohort with the NASA Openscapes project team, this year focusing on, teaching lessons they adapted for geospatial and cloud analysis. The Cohort included nine international research teams from academia and government that...
The Native American Research Assistantship Program—Building capacity for Indigenous water-resources monitoring
Electa Hare-Red Corn, Robert F. Breault, Jason R. Sorenson
2024, Fact Sheet 2024-3026
Intertribal networks for collecting and analyzing hydrologic and environmental data are growing. The U.S. Geological Survey can be a key partner with Tribal Nations in the further development of network capacity. A first step is the internship opportunity available through the partnership between the USGS and The Wildlife Society: The...
Delineating draft inventory analysis units for National Scenic and Historic Trails inventory, assessment, and monitoring programs
Sarah M. Lindley, Emily J. Wilkins, Carin Farley, Karla Rogers, Rudy Schuster
2024, Scientific Investigations Report 2024-5060
As of 2024, there are 32 National Scenic and Historic Trails (NSHTs) in the system administered by the Bureau of Land Management (BLM), National Park Service, and U.S. Department of Agriculture Forest Service. The BLM administers, manages, and protects 19 of these trails as part of its system of national...
Assessing the attractiveness of native wildflower species to bees (Hymenoptera: Anthophila) in the southeastern United States
Anthony P. Abbate, Joshua W. Campbell, Steven Mark Grodsky, Geoffrey R. Williams
2024, Ecological Solutions and Evidence (5)
Habitat loss, agricultural intensification, pesticide use, disease and climate change have contributed to the decline of numerous insect groups. Recent government initiatives have recognized the importance of supplementary wildflower plantings to support native bee populations, yet little information exists on the attractiveness of recommended plant species to bees.With the...
Projecting the long-term effects of large-scale human influence on the spatial and functional persistence of extant longleaf pine ecosystems in the Florida Flatwoods Pyrome
Lilian Hutchens, John A. Kupfer, Peng Gao, Georgina M. Sanchez, Ross K. Meentemeyer, Adam Terando, J. Kevin Hiers
2024, Conservation Science and Practice (6)
Decades of human activities and fire suppression have adversely affected longleaf pine (Pinus palustris) ecosystems, which are home to high levels of diversity and endemism. These iconic ecosystems also now face challenges from urbanization and climate change, which will alter conservation outcomes over the remainder of the 21st century. To...
Global variability of the composition and temperature at the 410-km discontinuity from receiver function analysis of dense arrays
Margaret Elizabeth Glasgow, Hankui K. Zhang, Brandon Schmandt, Wen-Yi Zhou, Jinchi Zhang
2024, Earth and Planetary Science Letters (643)
Seismic boundaries caused by phase transitions between olivine polymorphs in Earth's mantle provide thermal and compositional markers that inform mantle dynamics. Seismic studies of the mantle transition zone often use either global averaging with sparse arrays or regional sampling from a single dense array. The intermediate approach of this study...
A semi-mechanistic model for partitioning evapotranspiration reveals transpiration dominates the water flux in drylands
E.G. Reich, K. Samuels-Crow, John B. Bradford, M. Litvak, Daniel Rodolphe Schlaepfer, K. Ogle
2024, Journal of Geophysical Research: Biogeosciences (129)
Popular evapotranspiration (ET) partitioning methods make assumptions that might not be well-suited to dryland ecosystems, such as high sensitivity of plant water-use efficiency (WUE) to vapor pressure deficit (VPD). Our objectives were to (a) create an ET partitioning model that can produce fine-scale estimates of transpiration (T) in drylands, and...
Evaluating distributed snow model resolution and meteorology parameterizations against streamflow observations: Finer Is not always better
Theodore B. Barnhart, Annie L. Putman, Aaron Joseph Heldmyer, David M. Rey, John C. Hammond, Jessica M. Driscoll, Graham A. Sexstone
2024, Water Resources Research (60)
Estimating snow conditions is often done using numerical snowpack evolution models at spatial resolutions of 500 m and greater; however, snow depth in complex terrain often varies on sub-meter scales. This study investigated how the spatial distribution of simulated snow conditions varied across seven model spatial resolutions from 30 to 1,000 m...
Isotopic evidence against North Pacific Deep Water formation during late Pliocene warmth
Joseph Novak, Rocio Caballero-Gill, Rebecca Rose, Timothy D. Herbert, Harry J. Dowsett
2024, Nature Geoscience (17) 795-802
Several modelling and observational studies suggest deep water formation in the subpolar North Pacific as a possible alternative mode of thermohaline circulation that occurred in the warm Pliocene, a time when global atmospheric partial pressure of carbon dioxide was like the modern atmosphere (~400 ppm). We...
Debris avalanches in the northern California Coast Range triggered by plate boundary earthquakes
Jessie K. Pearl, Harvey Kelsey, Stephen J. Angster, Dylan Caldwell, Ian Pryor, Brian Sherrod
2024, Bulletin of the Seismological Society of America (114) 3183-3201
Determining the timing and cause for ancient hillslope failures proves difficult in the western United States, yet critical as it ties directly into groundmotion estimates for hazardous events. This knowledge gap is important to confront as hillslope failures are candidates to be triggered by earthquakes along active plate boundaries. We...
Urban tree cover provides consistent mitigation of extreme heat in arid but not humid cities
Peter Christian Ibsen, Benjamin Crawford, Lucila Marie Corro, Kenneth J. Bagstad, Brandon E McNellis, G. Darrel Jenerette, James E. Diffendorfer
2024, Sustainable Cities and Society (113)
Urban land cover types influence the urban microclimates. However, recent work indicates the magnitude of land cover's microclimate influence is affected by aridity. Moreover, this variation in cooling and warming potentials of urban land cover types can substantially alter the exposure of...
The effect of myiasis on Eastern Box Turtle (Terrapene carolina carolina) body condition, movement, and habitat use at Camp Edwards in Massachusetts
Andrew B. Gordon Jr., Donovan Drummey, Anthony Tur, Annie E. Curtis, Jacob C. McCumber, Michael T. Jones, Jeremy C. Andersen, Graziella Vittoria DiRenzo
2024, Northeastern Naturalist. (31) T55-T76
In 2020, natural resource managers at Camp Edwards, Barnstable County, MA, observed Terrapene carolina carolina (Eastern Box Turtle) individuals infected by myiasis, where parasitic flesh flies larviposit into the living tissue of a host. The hypothesized parasite was Dexosarcophaga cistudinis, but its impacts on the host's body condition,...
Parameter ESTimation with the Gauss–Levenberg–Marquardt algorithm: An intuitive guide
Michael N. Fienen, Jeremy White, Mohamed Hayek
2024, Groundwater (63) 93-104
In this paper, we review the derivation of the Gauss–Levenberg–Marquardt (GLM) algorithm and its extension to ensemble parameter estimation. We explore the use of graphical methods to provide insights into how the algorithm works in practice and discuss the implications of both algorithm tuning parameters...
Recent expansion of the Cascades Volcano Observatory geophysical network at Mount Rainier for improved volcano and lahar monitoring
Rebecca Kramer, Weston Thelen, Alexandra M. Iezzi, Seth C. Moran, Benjamin Pauk
2024, Seismological Research Letters (95) 2707-2721
The U.S. Geological Survey Cascades Volcano Observatory (CVO) recently expanded its continuous geophysical monitoring at Mount Rainier, an active stratovolcano in Washington state. CVO monitors volcanoes in Oregon, Washington, and Idaho to characterize volcanic systems and detect unrest. Mount Rainier has a history of large lahar occurrences in the Holocene,...