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Page 1722, results 43026 - 43050

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Publication Extents

Not all publications have extents, not all extents are completely accurate
Divergence in forest-type response to climate and weather: Evidence for regional links between forest-type evenness and net primary productivity
J.B. Bradford
2011, Ecosystems (14) 975-986
Climate change is altering long-term climatic conditions and increasing the magnitude of weather fluctuations. Assessing the consequences of these changes for terrestrial ecosystems requires understanding how different vegetation types respond to climate and weather. This study examined 20 years of regional-scale remotely sensed net primary productivity (NPP) in forests of the...
Feasibility of waveform inversion of Rayleigh waves for shallow shear-wave velocity using a genetic algorithm
C. Zeng, J. Xia, R. D. Miller, G.P. Tsoflias
2011, Journal of Applied Geophysics (75) 648-655
Conventional surface wave inversion for shallow shear (S)-wave velocity relies on the generation of dispersion curves of Rayleigh waves. This constrains the method to only laterally homogeneous (or very smooth laterally heterogeneous) earth models. Waveform inversion directly fits waveforms on seismograms, hence, does not have such a limitation. Waveforms of...
Breeding chorus indices are weakly related to estimated abundance of boreal chorus frogs
P.S. Corn, E. Muths, A.M. Kissel, R. D. Scherer
2011, Copeia (2011) 365-371
Call surveys used to monitor breeding choruses of anuran amphibians generate index values that are frequently used to represent the number of male frogs present, but few studies have quantified this relationship. We compared abundance of male Boreal Chorus Frogs (Pseudacris maculata), estimated using capture–recapture methods in two populations in...
Passage and behaviour of cultured Lake Sturgeon in a prototype side-baffle fish ladder: I. Ladder hydraulics and fish ascent
B. Kynard, D. Pugh, T. Parker
2011, Journal of Applied Ichthyology (27) 77-88
Research and development of a fish ladder for sturgeons requires understanding ladder hydraulics and sturgeon behaviour in the ladder to insure the ladder is safe and provides effective passage. After years of research and development, we designed and constructed a full‐scale prototype side‐baffle ladder inside a spiral flume (38.3 m long × 1 m...
Comparative phylogeography of a coevolved community: Concerted population expansions in Joshua trees and four Yucca moths
C.I. Smith, S. Tank, W. Godsoe, J. Levenick, Espen Strand, T. Esque, O. Pellmyr
2011, PLoS ONE (6)
Comparative phylogeographic studies have had mixed success in identifying common phylogeographic patterns among co-distributed organisms. Whereas some have found broadly similar patterns across a diverse array of taxa, others have found that the histories of different species are more idiosyncratic than congruent. The variation in the results of comparative phylogeographic...
Secular trends in storm-level geomagnetic activity
J.J. Love
2011, Annales Geophysicae (29) 251-262
Analysis is made of K-index data from groups of ground-based geomagnetic observatories in Germany, Britain, and Australia, 1868.0–2009.0, solar cycles 11–23. Methods include nonparametric measures of trends and statistical significance used by the hydrological and climatological research communities. Among the three observatory groups, German K data systematically record the highest disturbance levels,...
Gas geochemistry of the Mount Elbert Gas Hydrate Stratigraphic Test Well, Alaska North Slope: implications for gas hydrate exploration in the Arctic
T.D. Lorenson, T. S. Collett, R.B. Hunter
2011, Marine and Petroleum Geology (28) 343-360
Gases were analyzed from well cuttings, core, gas hydrate, and formation tests at the BPXA-DOE-USGS Mount Elbert Gas Hydrate Stratigraphic Test Well, drilled within the Milne Point Unit, Alaska North Slope. The well penetrated a portion of the Eileen gas hydrate deposit, which overlies the more deeply buried Prudhoe Bay,...
Biomarkers of mercury exposure in two eastern Ukraine cities
H. Gibb, C. Haver, K. Kozlov, J.A. Centeno, V. Jurgenson, Allan Kolker, Kathryn M. Conko, Edward R. Landa, H. Xu
2011, Journal of Occupational and Environmental Hygiene (8) 187-193
This study evaluates biomarkers of mercury exposure among residents of Horlivka, a city in eastern Ukraine located in an area with geologic and industrial sources of environmental mercury, and residents of Artemivsk, a nearby comparison city outside the mercury-enriched area. Samples of urine, blood, hair, and...
Remote compositional analysis of lunar olivine-rich lithologies with Moon Mineralogy Mapper (M3) spectra
P.J. Isaacson, C.M. Pieters, S. Besse, Roger N. Clark, J.W. Head, R.L. Klima, J.F. Mustard, N.E. Petro, M.I. Staid, J.M. Sunshine, L.A. Taylor, K.G. Thaisen, S. Tompkins
2011, Journal of Geophysical Research E: Planets (116)
A systematic approach for deconvolving remotely sensed lunar olivine‐rich visible to near‐infrared (VNIR) reflectance spectra with the Modified Gaussian Model (MGM) is evaluated with Chandrayaan‐1 Moon Mineralogy Mapper (M3) spectra. Whereas earlier studies of laboratory reflectance spectra focused only on complications due to chromite inclusions in lunar olivines, we develop...
Defining conservation priorities for freshwater fishes according to taxonomic, functional, and phylogenetic diversity
A. L. Strecker, J. D. Olden, Joanna B. Whittier, Craig P. Paukert
2011, Ecological Applications (21) 3002-3013
To date, the predominant use of systematic conservation planning has been to evaluate and conserve areas of high terrestrial biodiversity. Although studies in freshwater ecosystems have received recent attention, research has rarely considered the potential trade-offs between protecting different dimensions of biodiversity and the ecological processes that maintain diversity. We...
Geostatistical modeling of riparian forest microclimate and its implications for sampling
B.N.I. Eskelson, P. D. Anderson, J.C. Hagar, H. Temesgen
2011, Canadian Journal of Forest Research (41) 974-985
Predictive models of microclimate under various site conditions in forested headwater stream - riparian areas are poorly developed, and sampling designs for characterizing underlying riparian microclimate gradients are sparse. We used riparian microclimate data collected at eight headwater streams in the Oregon Coast Range to compare ordinary kriging (OK), universal...
Adaptive management of natural resources-framework and issues
Byron K. Williams
2011, Journal of Environmental Management (92) 1346-1353
Adaptive management, an approach for simultaneously managing and learning about natural resources, has been around for several decades. Interest in adaptive decision making has grown steadily over that time, and by now many in natural resources conservation claim that...
Depth as an organizer of fish assemblages in floodplain lakes
Leandro E. Miranda
2011, Aquatic Sciences (73) 211-221
Depth reduction is a natural process in floodplain lakes, but in many basins has been accelerated by anthropogenic disturbances. A diverse set of 42 floodplain lakes in the Yazoo River Basin (Mississippi, USA) was examined to test the hypothesis of whether depth reduction was a key determinant of water quality...
A puzzling migratory detour : Are fueling conditions in Alaska driving the movement of juvenile sharp -tailed sandpipers ?
A. Lindstrom, Robert E. Gill Jr., S.E. Jamieson, B. McCaffery, Liv Wennerberg, M. Wikelski, M. Klaassen
2011, Condor (113) 129-139
Making a detour can be advantageous to a migrating bird if fuel-deposition rates at stopover sites along the detour are considerably higher than at stopover sites along a more direct route. One example of an extensive migratory detour is that of the Sharp-tailed Sandpiper (Calidris acuminata), of which large numbers...
The effects of isolation on the demography and genetic diversity of long-lived species: Implications for conservation and management of the gopher tortoise (Gopherus polyphemus)
J.R. Ennen, R.D. Birkhead, B.R. Kreiser, D.L. Gaillard, C.P. Qualls, J.E. Lovich
2011, Herpetological Conservation and Biology (6) 202-214
In the southeastern United States, habitat loss has fragmented the landscape and isolated many populations of this region's flora and fauna, which has presumably resulted in smaller population sizes and reduced levels of genetic diversity. For example, forestry practices and anthropogenic disturbances are both cited as factors fragmenting the once...
A wavelength-dependent visible and infrared spectrophotometric function for the Moon based on ROLO data
B. J. Buratti, M.D. Hicks, J. Nettles, M. Staid, C.M. Pieters, J. Sunshine, J. Boardman, Thomas C. Stone
2011, Journal of Geophysical Research E: Planets (116)
The USGS's Robotic Lunar Observatory (ROLO) dedicated ground‐based lunar calibration project obtained photometric observations of the Moon over the spectral range attainable from Earth (0.347–2.39 μm) and over solar phase angles of 1.55°–97°. From these observations, we derived empirical lunar surface solar phase functions for both the highlands and maria that...
Effects of uncertain topographic input data on two-dimensional flow modeling in a gravel-bed river
C.J. Legleiter, P.C. Kyriakidis, R. R. McDonald, J. M. Nelson
2011, Water Resources Research (47)
Many applications in river research and management rely upon two-dimensional (2D) numerical models to characterize flow fields, assess habitat conditions, and evaluate channel stability. Predictions from such models are potentially highly uncertain due to the uncertainty associated with the topographic data provided as input. This study used a spatial stochastic...
Future directions in geobiology and low-temperature geochemistry
Katherine H. Freeman, M. B. Goldhaber
2011, Elements (7) 138-139
Humanity is confronted with an enormous challenge, as succinctly stated by the late Steven Schneider (2001; quoted by Jantzen 2004*): “Humans are forcing the Earth’s environmental systems to change at a rate that is more advanced than their knowledge of the consequences.” Geobiologists and low-temperature geochemists characterize material from the...
Prototyping an online wetland ecosystem services model using open model sharing standards
M. Feng, S. Liu, N.H. Euliss, Caitlin Young, D.M. Mushet
2011, Environmental Modelling and Software (26) 458-468
Great interest currently exists for developing ecosystem models to forecast how ecosystem services may change under alternative land use and climate futures. Ecosystem services are diverse and include supporting services or functions (e.g., primary production, nutrient cycling), provisioning services (e.g., wildlife, groundwater), regulating services (e.g., water purification, floodwater retention), and...
Biogeochemistry of microbial coal-bed methane
D. Strc, Maria Mastalerz, K. Dawson, J. MacAlady, A.V. Callaghan, B. Wawrik, C. Turich, M. Ashby
2011, Annual Review of Earth and Planetary Sciences (39) 617-656
Microbial methane accumulations have been discovered in multiple coal-bearing basins over the past two decades. Such discoveries were originally based on unique biogenic signatures in the stable isotopic composition of methane and carbon dioxide. Basins with microbial methane contain either low-maturity coals with predominantly microbial methane gas or uplifted coals...
Reply to Effect of concentration of organic matter on optical maturity parameters. Interlaboratory results of the organic matter concentration working group of the ICCP. Discussion by Vinay K. Sahay
J.G. Mendonca Filho, C.V. Araujo, A.G. Borrego, A. Cook, D. Flores, Paul C. Hackley, J.C. Hower, M.L. Kern, K. Kommeren, J. Kus, Maria Mastalerz, J.O. Mendonca, T.R. Menezes, J. Newman, P. Ranasinghe, I.V.A.F. Souza, I. Suarez-Ruiz, Y. Ujiie
2011, International Journal of Coal Geology (86) 289-290
This reply is motivated by Sahay's comments on the paper published by Mendonça Filho et al. (2010) dealing with the effect of concentration of an organic matter on optical maturity parameters. Four points were raised by Sahay: suggestion to use of chemical parameters to assess the effect of isolation, indication...
Female white-tailed deer survival across ecoregions in Minnesota and South Dakota
T.W. Grovenburg, C. C. Swanson, C.N. Jacques, C.S. Deperno, R. W. Klaver, J.A. Jenks
2011, American Midland Naturalist (165) 426-435
Survival and cause-specific mortality of female white-tailed deer (Odocoileus virginianus) have been well documented in forested and agricultural landscapes, but limited information has been collected in grassland habitats typical of the Northern Great Plains. Our objectives were to document and compare survival and cause-specific mortality of adult female white-tailed deer...
Rayleigh-based, multi-element coral thermometry: A biomineralization approach to developing climate proxies
G.A. Gaetani, A.L. Cohen, Z. Wang, John Crusius
2011, Geochimica et Cosmochimica Acta (75) 1920-1932
This study presents a new approach to coral thermometry that deconvolves the influence of water temperature on skeleton composition from that of “vital effects”, and has the potential to provide estimates of growth temperatures that are accurate to within a few tenths of a degree Celsius from both tropical and...
Effects of ignition location models on the burn patterns of simulated wildfires
A. Bar-Massada, A.D. Syphard, Todd Hawbaker, S. I. Stewart, V. C. Radeloff
2011, Environmental Modelling and Software (26) 583-592
Fire simulation studies that use models such as FARSITE often assume that ignition locations are distributed randomly, because spatially explicit information about actual ignition locations are difficult to obtain. However, many studies show that the spatial distribution of ignition locations, whether human-caused or natural, is non-random. Thus, predictions from fire...