Water-Level Changes in the High Plains Aquifer, Predevelopment to 2007, 2005-06, and 2006-07
V. L. McGuire
2009, Scientific Investigations Report 2009-5019
The High Plains aquifer underlies 111.6 million acres (174,000 square miles) in parts of eight States - Colorado, Kansas, Nebraska, New Mexico, Oklahoma, South Dakota, Texas, and Wyoming. Water-level declines began in parts of the High Plains aquifer soon after the beginning of substantial irrigation with ground water in the...
Occurrence of Pesticides in Ground Water of Wyoming, 1995-2006
Timothy T. Bartos, Cheryl A. Eddy-Miller, Laura L. Hallberg
2009, Scientific Investigations Report 2009-5024
Little existing information was available describing pesticide occurrence in ground water of Wyoming, so the U.S. Geological Survey, in cooperation with the Wyoming Department of Agriculture and the Wyoming Department of Environmental Quality on behalf of the Wyoming Ground-water and Pesticides Strategy Committee, collected ground-water samples twice (during late summer/early...
Occurrence of Selected Nutrients, Trace Elements, and Organic Compounds in Streambed Sediment in the Lower Chena River Watershed near Fairbanks, Alaska, 2002-03
Ben W. Kennedy, Cassidee C. Hall
2009, Scientific Investigations Report 2009-5067
In 2002-03, the U.S. Geological Survey collected samples of streambed sediment at 18 sites in the lower Chena River watershed for analysis of selected nutrients, traces elements, and organic compounds. The purpose of the project was to provide Federal, State, and local agencies as well as neighborhood committees, with information...
Pesticides in Ground Water of Wyoming, 1995-2006
Cheryl A. Eddy-Miller, Timothy T. Bartos, Laura L. Hallberg
2009, Fact Sheet 2009-3006
In 1991, members of local, State, and Federal governments, as well as industry and interest groups, formed the Ground-water and Pesticides Strategy Committee (GPSC) to prepare the State of Wyoming Generic Management Plan for Pesticides in Ground Water. Little existing information was available describing pesticide occurrence in ground water; therefore,...
Estimation of Streamflow Characteristics for Charles M. Russell National Wildlife Refuge, Northeastern Montana
Steven K. Sando, Timothy J. Morgan, DeAnn M. Dutton, Peter McCarthy
2009, Scientific Investigations Report 2009-5009
Charles M. Russell National Wildlife Refuge (CMR) encompasses about 1.1 million acres (including Fort Peck Reservoir on the Missouri River) in northeastern Montana. To ensure that sufficient streamflow remains in the tributary streams to maintain the riparian corridors, the U.S. Fish and Wildlife Service is negotiating water-rights issues with the...
RESIS-II: An Updated Version of the Original Reservoir Sedimentation Survey Information System (RESIS) Database
Katherine V. Ackerman, David M. Mixon, Eric T. Sundquist, Robert F. Stallard, Gregory E. Schwarz, David W. Stewart
2009, Data Series 434
The Reservoir Sedimentation Survey Information System (RESIS) database, originally compiled by the Soil Conservation Service (now the Natural Resources Conservation Service) in collaboration with the Texas Agricultural Experiment Station, is the most comprehensive compilation of data from reservoir sedimentation surveys throughout the conterminous United States (U.S.). The database is a...
Federal standards and procedures for the National Watershed Boundary Dataset (WBD)
Kimberly A. Jones, Lily S. Niknami, Susan G. Buto, Drew Decker
2009, Techniques and Methods 11-A3
The Watershed Boundary Dataset (WBD) is a seamless, national hydrologic unit dataset developed using the guidelines and specifications outlined in this document. A hydrologic unit defines the areal extent of surface-water drainage to an outlet point on a dendritic stream network or to outlet points where the stream network is...
Derivation of Nationally Consistent Indices Representing Urban Intensity Within and Across Nine Metropolitan Areas of the Conterminous United States
Thomas F. Cuffney, James A. Falcone
2009, Scientific Investigations Report 2008-5095
Two nationally consistent multimetric indices of urban intensity were developed to support studies of the effects of urbanization on streams in nine metropolitan areas of the conterminous United States: Atlanta, Georgia; Birmingham, Alabama; Boston, Massachusetts; Dallas-Fort Worth, Texas; Denver, Colorado; Milwaukee-Green Bay, Wisconsin; Portland, Oregon; Raleigh, North Carolina; and Salt...
Integrated Science: Florida Manatees and Everglades Hydrology
Catherine A. Langtimm, Eric D. Swain, Bradley Stith, James P. Reid, Daniel H. Slone, Jeremy Decker, Susan M. Butler, Terry Doyle, R.W. Snow
2009, Fact Sheet 2009-3002
Predicting and monitoring restoration effects on Florida manatees, which are known to make extended movements, will be incomplete if modeling and monitoring are limited to the smaller areas defined by the various res-toration components. U.S. Geological Survey (USGS) efforts, thus far, have focused on (1) collecting manatee movement data throughout...
Geologic Map of the Needles 7.5' quadrangle, California and Arizona
Daniel V. Malmon, Keith A. Howard, Susan S. Priest
2009, Scientific Investigations Map 3062
The Needles 7.5' quadrangle straddles the Colorado River in the southern part of the Mohave Valley, in Mohave County, Arizona, and San Bernardino County, California. The quadrangle contains part of the Havasu National Wildlife Refuge, sections of the Fort Mojave Indian Reservation, most of the city of Needles, and several...
Development of a Flood-Warning System and Flood-Inundation Mapping for the Blanchard River in Findlay, Ohio
Matthew T. Whitehead, Chad J. Ostheimer
2009, Scientific Investigations Report 2008-5234
Digital flood-inundation maps of the Blanchard River in Findlay, Ohio, were created by the U.S. Geological Survey (USGS) in cooperation with the City of Findlay, Ohio. The maps, which correspond to water levels at the USGS streamgage at Findlay (04189000), were provided to the National Weather Service (NWS) for incorporation...
Ground-water quality data in the San Francisco Bay study unit, 2007: Results from the California GAMA Program
Mary C. Ray, Justin T. Kulongoski, Kenneth Belitz
2009, Data Series 396
Ground-water quality in the approximately 620-square-mile San Francisco Bay study unit (SFBAY) was investigated from April through June 2007 as part of the Priority Basin project of the Ground-Water Ambient Monitoring and Assessment (GAMA) Program. The GAMA Priority Basin project was developed in response to the Groundwater Quality Monitoring Act...
Evaluation of the effects of precipitation on ground-water levels from wells in selected alluvial aquifers in Utah and Arizona, 1936-2005
Philip M. Gardner, Victor M. Heilweil
2009, Scientific Investigations Report 2008-5242
Increased withdrawals from alluvial aquifers of the southwestern United States during the last half-century have intensified the effects of drought on ground-water levels in valleys where withdrawal for irrigation is greatest. Furthermore, during wet periods, reduced withdrawals coupled with increased natural recharge cause rising ground-water levels. In order to manage...
Changing perceptions of change: The role of scientists in tamarix and river management
Juliet C. Stromberg, Matthew K. Chew, Pamela L. Nagler, Edward P. Glenn
2009, Restoration Ecology (17) 177-186
Initially introduced to western United States to provide ecosystem services such as erosion control, Tamarix by the mid-1900s had became vilified as a profligate waster of water. This large shrub continues, today, to be indicted for various presumed environmental and economic costs, and millions of dollars are expended on its eradication. In...
Predator avoidance performance of larval fathead minnows (Pimephales promelas) following short-term exposure to estrogen mixtures
Meghan R. McGee, Matthew L. Julius, Alan M. Vajda, David O. Norris, Larry B. Barber, Heiko L. Schoenfuss
2009, Aquatic Toxicology (91) 355-361
Aquatic organisms exposed to endocrine disrupting compounds (EDCs) at early life-stages may have reduced reproductive fitness via disruption of reproductive and non-reproductive behavioral and physiological pathways. Survival to reproductive age relies upon optimal non-reproductive trait expression, such as adequate predator avoidance responses, which may be impacted through EDC exposure. During...
Persistence of dragonfly exuviae on vegetation and rock substrates
Maria A. Aliberti Lubertazzi, H. S. Ginsberg
2009, Northeastern Naturalist (16) 141-147
Surveys of dragonfly exuviae have been used to assess rare species' habitats, lake water quality status, and wetland restoration programs. Knowledge of the persistence of exuviae on various substrates is necessary to accurately interpret exuvial surveys. In 2006, we recorded exuvial persistence at defined areas in a variety of small...
Titan's surface at 2.2-cm wavelength imaged by the Cassini RADAR radiometer: Calibration and first results
M.A. Janssen, R. D. Lorenz, R. West, F. Paganelli, R.M. Lopes, Randolph L. Kirk, C. Elachi, S. D. Wall, W.T.K. Johnson, Y. Anderson, R.A. Boehmer, P. Callahan, Y. Gim, G.A. Hamilton, K.D. Kelleher, L. Roth, B. Stiles, A. Le Gall, The Cassini Radar Team
2009, Icarus (200) 222-239
The first comprehensive calibration and mapping of the thermal microwave emission from Titan's surface is reported based on radiometric data obtained at 2.2-cm wavelength by the passive radiometer included in the Cassini Radar instrument. The data reported were accumulated from 69 separate observational segments in Titan passes from Ta (October 2004) through T30 (May 2007) and...
The legacy of wetland drainage on the remaining peat in the Sacramento-San Joaquin Delta, California, USA
Judith Z. Drexler, Christian S. de Fontaine, Steven J. Deverel
2009, Wetlands (29) 372-386
Throughout the world, many extensive wetlands, such as the Sacramento-San Joaquin Delta of California (hereafter, the Delta), have been drained for agriculture, resulting in land-surface subsidence of peat soils. The purpose of this project was to study the in situ effects of wetland drainage on the remaining peat in the...
The authors respond (Response to Roberts and Frimpong)
Martha E. Mather, Donna L. Parrish, John M. Dettmers
2009, Fisheries (34) 144-145
No abstract available....
Vegetation effects on fish distribution in impounded salt marshes
Eric D. Stolen, Jaime Collazo, H. Franklin Percival
2009, Southeastern Naturalist (8) 503-514
We compared the density and biomass of resident fish in vegetated and unvegetated flooded habitats of impounded salt marshes in the northern Indian River Lagoon (IRL) Estuary of east-central Florida. A 1-m2 throw trap was used to sample fish in randomly located, paired sample plots (n = 198 pairs) over 5...
Mapping Hurricane Rita inland storm tide
Charles Berenbrock, Mason Jr., Stephen F. Blanchard
2009, Journal of Flood Risk Management (2) 76-82
Flood‐inundation data are most useful for decision makers when presented in the context of maps of affected communities and (or) areas. But because the data are scarce and rarely cover the full extent of the flooding, interpolation and extrapolation of the information are needed. Many geographic information systems provide various...
Integrated watershed scale response to climate change for selected basins across the United States
Steven L. Markstrom, Lauren E. Hay
2009, Water Resources Impact (11) 8-10
As the questions of climate change has moved from “if” it is happening to “how” it is changing our environment, it has become important to have regional assessment designs to allow us to better understand how changes are occurring now and in the future. The authors are using the Precipitatation...
New satellite observations and rainfall forecasts help provide earlier warning of African drought
Chris Funk
2009, Earth Observer (21) 23-27
The poor nations of sub-Saharan Africa face a constant struggle against weather and climate. The outcome of that struggle profoundly influences these nations’ economic growth, health, and social stability. Advances in climate monitoring and forecasting can help African nations and international aid organizations reduce the impact of these natural hazards....
Introduction NE Forests 2100: A synthesis of climate change impacts on forests of the northeastern US and eastern Canada
L. E. Rustad, J.L. Campbell, R. M. Cox, J. S. Dukes, Thomas G. Huntington, A. H. Magill, J. E. Mohan, A.D. Richardson, N. L. Rodenhouse, M. R. Watson
2009, Canadian Journal of Forest Research (39) v-x
No abstract available....
Map of the Rinconada and Reliz Fault Zones, Salinas River Valley, California
Lewis I. Rosenberg, Joseph C. Clark
2009, Scientific Investigations Map 3059
The Rinconada Fault and its related faults constitute a major structural element of the Salinas River valley, which is known regionally, and referred to herein, as the 'Salinas Valley'. The Rinconada Fault extends 230 km from King City in the north to the Big Pine Fault in the south. At...