The economics of roadside bear viewing
Leslie Richardson, Tatjana Rosen, Kerry Gunther, Chuck Schwartz
2014, Journal of Environmental Management (140) 102-110
Viewing bears along roadside habitats is a popular recreational activity in certain national parks throughout the United States. However, safely managing visitors during traffic jams that result from this activity often requires the use of limited park resources. Using unique visitor survey data, this study quantifies economic values associated with...
U-Pb detrital zircon geochronology as evidence for the origin of the Nome Complex, northern Alaska, and implications for regional and trans-Arctic correlations
Alison Till, Jeffrey M. Amato, John N. Aleinikoff, Heather A. Bleick
2014, Book chapter, Reconstruction of a Late Proterozoic to Devonian continental margin sequence, northern Alaska, its paleogeographic significance, and contained base-metal sulfide deposits
Detrital zircons from the Nome Complex, a metamorphic terrane in northern Alaska, reveal important constraints on the early Paleozoic history of the Arctic Alaska–Chukotka terrane, a microcontinental block with an origin exotic to Laurentia.Twenty-two samples (17 in this study, five previously published) produce three detrital zircon population patterns (called themes),...
Development of eighteen microsatellite loci in walleye (Sander vitreus)
D. Katharine Coykendall, Cheryl L. Morrison, Wendylee Stott, Marcus J. Springmann
2014, Conservation Genetics Resources (6) 1019-1021
A suite of tri- and tetra-nucleotide microsatellite loci were developed for walleye (Sander vitreus) from 454 pyrosequencing data. Eighteen of the 50 primer sets tested amplified consistently in 35 walleye from two lakes on Isle Royale, Lake Superior: Chickenbone Lake and Whittlesey Lake. The loci displayed moderate levels...
Evolution of puma lentivirus in bobcats (Lynx rufus) and mountain lions (Puma concolor) in North America
Justin S. Lee, Sarah N. Bevins, Laurel E.K. Serieys, Winston Vickers, Ken A. Logan, Mat Aldredge, Erin E. Boydston, Lisa M. Lyren, Roy McBride, Melody Roelke-Parker, Jill Pecon-Slattery, Jennifer L. Troyer, Seth P. Riley, Walter M. Boyce, Kevin R. Crooks, Sue VandeWoude
2014, Journal of Virology (88) 7727-7737
Mountain lions (Puma concolor) throughout North and South America are infected with puma lentivirus clade B (PLVB). A second, highly divergent lentiviral clade, PLVA, infects mountain lions in southern California and Florida. Bobcats (Lynx rufus) in these two geographic regions are also infected with PLVA, and to date, this is...
Experimental design and quality assurance: in situ fluorescence instrumentation
Robyn N. Conmy, Carlos E. Del Castillo, Bryan D. Downing, Robert F. Chen
2014, Book chapter, Aquatic organic matter fluorescence
Both instrument design and capabilities of fluorescence spectroscopy have greatly advanced over the last several decades. Advancements include solid-state excitation sources, integration of fiber optic technology, highly sensitive multichannel detectors, rapid-scan monochromators, sensitive spectral correction techniques, and improve data manipulation software (Christian et al., 1981, Lochmuller and Saavedra, 1986; Cabniss...
Monitoring rationale, strategy, issues, and methods: UMRR-EMP LTRMP fish component
Brian S. Ickes, Jennifer S. Sauer, James T. Rogala
2014, Report
The Long Term Resource Monitoring Program (LTRMP), an element of the multiagency partnership Upper Mississippi River Restoration-Environmental Management Program, has been monitoring fishes in the Upper Mississippi River System (UMRS) for over two decades, using scientific and highly standardized methods. Today, the LTRMP’s data assets represent one of the world’s...
Preface
Julie A. Dumoulin, Alison Till
2014, Book chapter, Reconstruction of a Late Proterozoic to Devonian continental margin sequence, northern Alaska, its paleogeographic significance, and contained base-metal sulfide deposits
The tectonic evolution of the Arctic realm, particularly in the Mesozoic, remains a subject of considerable uncertainty. The nature of the crustal entities involved, their origins, and the nature, location, and age of major tectonic boundaries are incompletely studied and understood (Pease, 2011). The largest...
Long Term Resource Monitoring Program procedures: fish monitoring
Eric N. Ratcliff, Eric J. Glittinger, T. Matt O’Hara, Brian S. Ickes
2014, Report
This manual constitutes the second revision of the U.S. Army Corps of Engineers’ Upper Mississippi River Restoration-Environmental Management Program (UMRR-EMP) Long Term Resource Monitoring Program (LTRMP) element Fish Procedures Manual. The original (1988) manual merged and expanded on ideas and recommendations related to Upper Mississippi River fish sampling presented in...
Pb isotope geochemistry of stratabound Zn-Pb(-Ag-Au-Ba-F) deposits and occurrences in the Nome Complex, Seward Peninsula, Alaska: Metal sources and regional comparisons
Robert A. Ayuso, Alison Till, John F. Slack, Francesca Forni
2014, Book chapter, Reconstruction of a Late Proterozoic to Devonian continental margin sequence, northern Alaska, its paleogeographic significance, and contained base-metal sulfide deposits
A detailed study of the Pb isotope geochemistry of Zn-Pb(-Ag-Au-Ba-F) stratabound sulfide deposits within metasedimentary rocks of the Neoproterozoic to Mississippian(?) Nome Complex provides key information for understanding deposit genesis and crustal evolution. A total of 106 new analyses of galena (and other sulfi des) and metasedimentary rocks hosting the...
Characteristics of sandhill crane roosts in the Sacramento-San Joaquin delta of California
Gary L. Ivey, Bruce D. Dugger, Caroline P. Herziger, Michael L. Casazza, Joseph P. Fleskes
2014, Book, Proceedings of the North American Crane Workshop
The Sacramento-San Joaquin Delta (Delta) region of California is an important wintering region for 2 subspecies of Pacific Flyway sandhill cranes (Grus canadensis): the Central Valley Population of the greater sandhill crane (G. c. tabida) and the Pacific Flyway Population of the lesser sandhill crane (G. c. canadensis). During the winters of...
Statistical analysis of the water-quality monitoring program, Upper Klamath Lake, Oregon, and optimization of the program for 2013 and beyond
Sara L. Caldwell Eldridge, Susan A. Wherry, Tamara M. Wood
2014, Open-File Report 2014-1009
Upper Klamath Lake in south-central Oregon has become increasingly eutrophic over the past century and now experiences seasonal cyanobacteria-dominated and potentially toxic phytoplankton blooms. Growth and decline of these blooms create poor water-quality conditions that can be detrimental to fish, including two resident endangered sucker species. Upper Klamath Lake is...
Geologic map and upper Paleozoic stratigraphy of the Marble Canyon area, Cottonwood Canyon quadrangle, Death Valley National Park, Inyo County, California
Paul Stone, Calvin H. Stevens, Paul Belasky, Isabel P. Montanez, Lauren G. Martin, Bruce R. Wardlaw, Charles A. Sandberg, Elmira Wan, Holly A. Olson, Susan S. Priest
2014, Scientific Investigations Map 3298
This geologic map and pamphlet focus on the stratigraphy, depositional history, and paleogeographic significance of upper Paleozoic rocks exposed in the Marble Canyon area in Death Valley National Park, California. Bedrock exposed in this area is composed of Mississippian to lower Permian (Cisuralian) marine sedimentary rocks and the Jurassic Hunter...
Effects of environmental amenities and locational disamenities on home values in the Santa Cruz watershed: a hedonic analysis using census data
Gaurav Arora, George Frisvold, Laura Norman
2014, Book, Santa Cruz River Researchers� Day 2012
For this study, we used the hedonic pricing method to measure the effects of natural amenities on home prices in the U.S-side of the Santa Cruz Watershed. We employed multivariate spatial regression techniques to estimate how difference factors affect median home values in 613 census block groups of the...
Trends in conservation research and management in Hawai‘i over the past 20 years
Daniela Dutra Elliott, Lucas B. Fortini, David Cameron Duffy
2014, Pacific Conservation Biology (20) 392-400
Hawaiʻi, an archipelago of the most isolated inhabited islands on the planet, faces unique and extreme challenges to its biodiversity. We examined how the conservation community has responded to these challenges and how the responses have changed over time, using twenty years of abstracts from the Hawaiʻi Conservation Conference, a...
Roadside bear viewing opportunities in Yellowstone National Park: characteristics, trends, and influence of whitebark pine
Mark A. Haroldson, Kerry Gunther
2014, Ursus (24) 27-41
Opportunities for viewing grizzly bears (Ursus arctos) and American black bears (U. americanus) from roadways in Yellowstone National Park (YNP) have increased in recent years. Unlike the panhandling bears common prior to the 1970s, current viewing usually involves bears feeding on natural foods. We define roadside bear viewing opportunities that...
Continuous uplift near the seaward edge of the Prince William Sound megathrust: Middleton Island, Alaska
James C. Savage, George Plafker, Jerry L. Svarc, Michael Lisowski
2014, Journal of Geophysical Research B: Solid Earth (119) 6067-6079
Middleton Island, located at the seaward edge of the continental shelf 50 km from the base of the inner wall of the Aleutian Trench, affords an opportunity to make land-based measurements of uplift near the toe of the Prince William Sound megathrust, site of the 1964, M = 9.2, Alaska earthquake. Leveling surveys...
Ecological tracers reveal resource convergence among prey fish species in a large lake ecosystem
Gord Paterson, Scott A. Rush, Michael T. Arts, Ken G. Drouillard, G. Doug Haffner, Tim B. Johnson, Brian F. Lantry, Craig E. Hebert, Daryl J. McGoldrick, Sean M. Backus, Aaron T. Fisk
2014, Freshwater Biology (59) 2150-2161
1. We measured stable isotopes of carbon (δ13C) and nitrogen (δ15N) and fatty acid profiles in Lake Ontario alewife (Alosa pseudoharengus), rainbow smelt (Osmerus mordax), slimy sculpin (Cottus cognatus) and round goby (Neogobius melanostomus) collected from 1982 to 2008 to investigate how temporal variability in these ecological tracers can relate...
Tracking an unprecedented invasion
Amy J. Benson
2014, Coral: The Reef & Marine Aquarium Magazine (11) 66-68
No abstract available....
Prolactin and teleost ionocytes: new insights into cellular and molecular targets of prolactin in vertebrate epithelia
Jason P. Breves, Stephen D. McCormick, Rolf O. Karlstrom
2014, General and Comparative Endocrinology (203) 21-28
The peptide hormone prolactin is a functionally versatile hormone produced by the vertebrate pituitary. Comparative studies over the last six decades have revealed that a conserved function for prolactin across vertebrates is the regulation of ion and water transport in a variety of tissues including those responsible for whole-organism ion homeostasis. In teleost fishes,...
Arroyo channel head evolution in a flash-flood-dominated discontinuous ephemeral stream system
Stephen B. DeLong, Joel P. L. Johnson, Kelin X. Whipple
2014, Geological Society of America Bulletin (126) 1683-1701
We study whether arroyo channel head retreat in dryland discontinuous ephemeral streams is driven by surface runoff, seepage erosion, mass wasting, or some combination of these hydrogeomorphic processes. We monitored precipitation, overland flow, soil moisture, and headcut migration over several seasonal cycles at two adjacent rangeland channel heads in southern...
A test of the compensatory mortality hypothesis in mountain lions: a management experiment in West-Central Montana
Hugh S. Robinson, Richard Desimone, Cynthia Hartway, Justin A. Gude, Michael J. Thompson, Michael S. Mitchell, Mark Hebblewhite
2014, Journal of Wildlife Management (78) 791-807
Mountain lions (Puma concolor) are widely hunted for recreation, population control, and to reduce conflict with humans, but much is still unknown regarding the effects of harvest on mountain lion population dynamics. Whether human hunting mortality on mountain lions is additive or compensatory is debated. Our primary objective was to...
Engineering uses of physics-based ground motion simulations
Jack W. Baker, Nicolas Luco, Norman A. Abrahamson, Robert W. Graves, Phillip J. Maechling, Kim Olsen
2014, Conference Paper, Proceedings of the 10th National Conference in Earthquake Engineering
This paper summarizes validation methodologies focused on enabling ground motion simulations to be used with confidence in engineering applications such as seismic hazard analysis and dynmaic analysis of structural and geotechnical systems. Numberical simullation of ground motion from large erthquakes, utilizing physics-based models of earthquake rupture and wave propagation, is...
Assessment of mitochondrial DNA damage in little brown bats (Myotis lucifugus) collected near a mercury-contaminated river
Natalie K. Karouna-Renier, Carl White, Christopher R. Perkins, John J. Schmerfeld, David Yates
2014, Ecotoxicology (23) 1419-1429
Historical discharges of Hg into the South River near the town of Waynesboro, VA, USA, have resulted in persistently elevated Hg concentrations in sediment, surface water, ground water, soil, and wildlife downstream of the discharge site. In the present study, we examined mercury (Hg) levels in in little brown bats...
Screening native botanicals for bioactivity: an interdisciplinary approach
Anik Boudreau, Diana M. Cheng, Carmen Ruiz, David Ribnicky, Larry K. Allain, C. Ray Brassieur, D. Phil Turnipseed, William T. Cefalu, Z. Elizabeth Floyd
2014, Nutrition (30) S11-S16
Objective: Plant-based therapies have been used in medicine throughout recorded history. Information about the therapeutic properties of plants often can be found in local cultures as folk medicine is communicated from one generation to the next. The aim of this study was to identify native Louisiana plants from Creole folk...
Comparative responses to endocrine disrupting compounds in early life stages of Atlantic salmon, Salmo salar
Tara A. Duffy, Luke R. Iwanowicz, Stephen D. McCormick
2014, Aquatic Toxicology (152) 1-10
Atlantic salmon (Salmo salar) are endangered anadromous fish that may be exposed to feminizing endocrine disrupting compounds (EDCs) during early development, potentially altering physiological capacities, survival and fitness. To assess differential life stage sensitivity to common EDCs, we carried out short-term (four day) exposures using three doses each of 17α-ethinylestradiol...