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Page 2027, results 50651 - 50675

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Characteristics, extent and origin of hydrothermal alteration at Mount Rainier Volcano, Cascades Arc, USA: Implications for debris-flow hazards and mineral deposits
D. A. John, T. W. Sisson, G. N. Breit, R. O. Rye, J.W. Vallance
2008, Journal of Volcanology and Geothermal Research (175) 289-314
Hydrothermal alteration at Mount Rainier waxed and waned over the 500,000-year episodic growth of the edifice. Hydrothermal minerals and their stable-isotope compositions in samples collected from outcrop and as clasts from Holocene debris-flow deposits identify three distinct hypogene argillic/advanced argillic hydrothermal environments: magmatic-hydrothermal, steam-heated, and magmatic steam (fumarolic), with minor...
Allowing macroalgae growth forms to emerge: Use of an agent-based model to understand the growth and spread of macroalgae in Florida coral reefs, with emphasis on Halimeda tuna
A.T. Yniguez, J.W. McManus, D.L. DeAngelis
2008, Ecological Modelling (216) 60-74
The growth patterns of macroalgae in three-dimensional space can provide important information regarding the environments in which they live, and insights into changes that may occur when those environments change due to anthropogenic and/or natural causes. To decipher these patterns and their attendant mechanisms and influencing factors, a spatially explicit...
Spatial patterns and movements of red king and Tanner crabs: Implications for the design of marine protected areas
S. James Taggart, Jennifer Mondragon, A.G. Andrews, J.K. Nielsen
2008, Marine Ecology Progress Series (365) 151-163
Most examples of positive population responses to marine protected areas (MPAs) have been documented for tropical reef species with very small home ranges; the utility of MPAs for commercially harvested temperate species that have large movement patterns remains poorly tested. We measured the distribution and abundance of red king Paralithodes...
The roles of fractional crystallization, magma mixing, crystal mush remobilization and volatile-melt interactions in the genesis of a young basalt-peralkaline rhyolite suite, the greater Olkaria volcanic complex, Kenya Rift valley
R. Macdonald, H. E. Belkin, J.G. Fitton, N.W. Rogers, K. Nejbert, A.G. Tindle, A.S. Marshall
2008, Journal of Petrology (49) 1515-1547
The Greater Olkaria Volcanic Complex is a young (???20 ka) multi-centred lava and dome field dominated by the eruption of peralkaline rhyolites. Basaltic and trachytic magmas have been erupted peripherally to the complex and also form, with mugearites and benmoreites, an extensive suite of magmatic inclusions in the rhyolites. The...
Conserving waste rice for wintering waterfowl in the Mississippi Alluvial Valley
J.P. Kross, R.M. Kaminski, K. J. Reinecke, A.T. Pearse
2008, Journal of Wildlife Management (72) 1383-1387
Rice lost before or during harvest operations (hereafter waste rice) provides important food for waterfowl in the Mississippi Alluvial Valley, USA, but >70% of waste rice is lost during autumn. We conducted experiments in 19 production rice fields in Arkansas and Mississippi during autumns 2003 and 2004 to evaluate the...
The decline of winter monsoon velocity in the South China Sea through the 20th century: Evidence from the Sr/Ca records in corals
Yajing Liu, Z. Peng, T. Chen, G. Wei, W. Sun, R. Sun, J. He, Gaisheng Liu, C. L. Chou, R. E. Zartman
2008, Global and Planetary Change (63) 79-85
A modern massive Porites coral was collected from the Longwan Bay (19??20???N, 110??39???E) on the east coast of the Hainan Island, China. The coral was sectioned vertical to the growth axis into discs of double density-bands representing annual growth. The samples were analyzed for the Sr/Ca ratio by inductively coupled...
Restoration of Circum-Arctic Upper Jurassic source rock paleolatitude based on crude oil geochemistry
K. E. Peters, L.S. Ramos, J.E. Zumberge, Z. C. Valin, C.R. Scotese
2008, Organic Geochemistry (39) 1189-1196
Tectonic geochemical paleolatitude (TGP) models were developed to predict the paleolatitude of petroleum source rock from the geochemical composition of crude oil. The results validate studies designed to reconstruct ancient source rock depositional environments using oil chemistry and tectonic reconstruction of paleogeography from coordinates of the present day collection site....
Mapping regional distribution of a single tree species: Whitebark pine in the Greater Yellowstone Ecosystem
L. Landenburger, R.L. Lawrence, S. Podruzny, C.C. Schwartz
2008, Sensors (8) 4983-4994
Moderate resolution satellite imagery traditionally has been thought to be inadequate for mapping vegetation at the species level. This has made comprehensive mapping of regional distributions of sensitive species, such as whitebark pine, either impractical or extremely time consuming. We sought to determine whether using a combination of moderate resolution...
Modeling the effect of toe clipping on treefrog survival: Beyond the return rate
J.H. Waddle, K.G. Rice, F.J. Mazzotti, H.F. Percival
2008, Journal of Herpetology (42) 467-473
Some studies have described a negative effect of toe clipping on return rates of marked anurans, but the return rate is limited in that it does not account for heterogeneity of capture probabilities. We used open population mark-recapture models to estimate both apparent survival (ϕ) and the recapture probability (p)...
Arsenic(III) fuels anoxygenic photosynthesis in hot spring biofilms from Mono Lake, California
T.R. Kulp, S.E. Hoeft, M. Asao, M.T. Madigan, J.T. Hollibaugh, J.C. Fisher, J.F. Stolz, C.W. Culbertson, L.G. Miller, R.S. Oremland
2008, Science (321) 967-970
Phylogenetic analysis indicates that microbial arsenic metabolism is ancient and probably extends back to the primordial Earth. In microbial biofilms growing on the rock surfaces of anoxic brine pools fed by hot springs containing arsenite and sulfide at high concentrations, we discovered light-dependent oxidation of arsenite [As(III)] to arsenate [As(V)]...
50,000 years of vegetation and climate history on the Colorado Plateau, Utah and Arizona, USA
Larry L. Coats, Kenneth L. Cole, Jim I. Mead
2008, Quaternary Research (70) 322-338
Sixty packrat middens were collected in Canyonlands and Grand Canyon National Parks, and these series include sites north of areas that produced previous detailed series from the Colorado Plateau. The exceptionally long time series obtained from each of three sites (> 48,000 14C yr BP to present) include some of the...
First observed instance of polygyny in Flammulated Owls
B.D. Linkhart, E.M. Evers, J.D. Megler, E.C. Palm, C.M. Salipante, S.W. Yanco
2008, Wilson Journal of Ornithology (120) 645-648
We document the first observed instance of polygyny in Flammulated Owls (Otus flammeolus) and the first among insectivorous raptors. Chronologies of the male's two nests, which were 510 m apart, were separated by nearly 2 weeks. Each brood initially consisted of three owlets, similar to the mean brood size in...
Interaction between urbanization and climate variability amplifies watershed nitrate export in Maryland
S.S. Kaushal, P.M. Groffman, L.E. Band, C.A. Shields, R.P. Morgan, Margaret A. Palmer, K.T. Belt, C.M. Swan, S.E.G. Findlay, G. T. Fisher
2008, Environmental Science & Technology (42) 5872-5878
We investigated regional effects of urbanization and land use change on nitrate concentrations in approximately 1,000 small streams in Maryland during record drought and wet years in 2001-2003. We also investigated changes in nitrate-N export during the same time period in 8 intensively monitored small watersheds across an urbanization gradient...
Evaluation of morphological indices and total body electrical conductivity to assess body composition in big brown bats
R.D. Pearce, T. J. O'Shea, B.A. Wunder
2008, Acta Chiropterologica (10) 153-159
Bat researchers have used both morphological indices and total body electric conductivity (TOBEC) as proxies for body condition in a variety of studies, but have typically not validated these indices against direct measurement of body composition. We quantified body composition (total carcass lipids) to determine if morphological indices were useful...
Significance of model credibility in estimating climate projection distributions for regional hydroclimatological risk assessments
L.D. Brekke, M. D. Dettinger, E.P. Maurer, M. Anderson
2008, Climatic Change (89) 371-394
Ensembles of historical climate simulations and climate projections from the World Climate Research Programme's (WCRP's) Coupled Model Intercomparison Project phase 3 (CMIP3) multi-model dataset were investigated to determine how model credibility affects apparent relative scenario likelihoods in regional risk assessments. Methods were developed and applied in a Northern California case...
Seasonal variation in size-dependent survival of juvenile Atlantic salmon (Salmo salar): Performance of multistate capture-mark-recapture models
B. H. Letcher, G.E. Horton
2008, Canadian Journal of Fisheries and Aquatic Sciences (65) 1649-1666
We estimated the magnitude and shape of size-dependent survival (SDS) across multiple sampling intervals for two cohorts of stream-dwelling Atlantic salmon (Salmo salar) juveniles using multistate capture-mark-recapture (CMR) models. Simulations designed to test the effectiveness of multistate models for detecting SDS in our system indicated that error in SDS estimates...
Weathering of the Rio Blanco quartz diorite, Luquillo Mountains, Puerto Rico: Coupling oxidation, dissolution, and fracturing
H.L. Buss, P.B. Sak, S.M. Webb, S.L. Brantley
2008, Geochimica et Cosmochimica Acta (72) 4488-4507
In the mountainous Rio Icacos watershed in northeastern Puerto Rico, quartz diorite bedrock weathers spheroidally, producing a 0.2-2 m thick zone of partially weathered rock layers (???2.5 cm thickness each) called rindlets, which form concentric layers around corestones. Spheroidal fracturing has been modeled to occur when a weathering reaction with...
Species traits influence the genetic consequences of river fragmentation on two co-occurring redhorse (Moxostoma) species
S.M. Reid, C.C. Wilson, L.M. Carl, T.G. Zorn
2008, Canadian Journal of Fisheries and Aquatic Sciences (65) 1892-1904
We used microsatellite DNA markers to test whether fragmentation of the Trent River (Ontario, Canada) has reduced genetic diversity and increased genetic differentiation among populations of river redhorse (Moxostoma carinatum) and shorthead redhorse (Moxostoma macrolepidotum). Allelic richness of both species was significantly greater along the free-flowing Muskegon River (Michigan, USA)...
Performance of a prototype surface collector for juvenile salmonids at Bonneville dam's first powerhouse on the Columbia River, Oregon
S.D. Evans, N.S. Adams, D.W. Rondorf, J.M. Plumb, B.D. Ebberts
2008, River Research and Applications (24) 960-974
During April-July 2000, we radio-tagged and released juvenile Chinook salmon (Oncorhynchus tshawytscha) and steelhead (Oncorhynchus mykiss) to evaluate a prototype surface flow bypass at Bonneville Dam on the Columbia River. The mock bypass, called a prototype surface collector (PSC), had six vertical slot entrances that were each 6 m wide...
Trade-offs of predation and foraging explain sexual segregation in African buffalo
C.T. Hay, P.C. Cross, P.J. Funston
2008, Journal of Animal Ecology (77) 850-858
1. Many studies have investigated why males and females segregate spatially in sexually dimorphic species. These studies have focused primarily on temperate zone ungulates in areas lacking intact predator communities, and few have directly assessed predation rates in different social environments. 2. Data on the movement, social affiliation, mortality and...
Grazed riparian management and stream channel response in southeastern Minnesota (USA) streams
J.A. Magner, B. Vondracek, K.N. Brooks
2008, Environmental Management (42) 377-390
The U.S. Department of Agriculture-Natural Resources Conservation Service has recommended domestic cattle grazing exclusion from riparian corridors for decades. This recommendation was based on a belief that domestic cattle grazing would typically destroy stream bank vegetation and in-channel habitat. Continuous grazing (CG) has caused adverse environmental damage, but along cohesive-sediment...
Evaluating regional patterns in nitrate sources to watersheds in national parks of the Rocky Mountains using nitrate isotopes
L. Nanus, M.W. Williams, K. Campbell, E.M. Elliott, C. Kendall
2008, Environmental Science & Technology (42) 6487-6493
In the Rocky Mountains, there is uncertainty about the source areas and emission types that contribute to nitrate (NO3) deposition, which can adversely affect sensitive aquatic habitats of high-elevation watersheds. Regional patterns in NO3 deposition sources were evaluated using NO3 isotopes in five National Parks, including 37 lakes and 7...
Trace elements in hydrothermal quartz: Relationships to cathodoluminescent textures and insights into vein formation
B.G. Rusk, H.A. Lowers, M.H. Reed
2008, Geology (36) 547-550
High-resolution electron microprobe maps show the distribution of Ti, Al, Ca, K, and Fe among quartz growth zones revealed by scanning electron microscope-cathodoluminescence (SEM-CL) from 12 hydrothermal ore deposits formed between ???100 and e1750 ??C. The maps clearly show the relationships between trace elements and CL intensity in quartz. Among...