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Publication Extents

Not all publications have extents, not all extents are completely accurate
Tree swallow (Tachycineta bicolor) demographics and metal(loid) concentrations in egg contents from the Kootenai River basin, Montana nest box colonies
Brian C. Balmer, Joseph P. Skorupa, Katherine B. Adams, Bridger M. Creel, Gregory C. Hoffman, Megan A. Fylling, Stephanie Le, Jacob M. Martin, W. Scott McBride, Jacob T. Williams, Travis S. Schmidt
2025, Environmental Monitoring and Assessment (197)
Selenium (Se) levels in water have been increasing in Lake Koocanusa and the Kootenai River below Libby Dam in Montana due to coal mining in the drainage basin of the Elk River, British Columbia. Aquatic monitoring of Se is ongoing to assess potential effects; however, exposure to terrestrial, aquatic-dependent wildlife...
Wildfire risk information sources and the acceptability of fuels treatments near select WUI communities in the Western United States
Kelly Wallace, Hannah Brenkert-Smith, Patricia A. Champ, James Meldrum, Grant Webster, Christine Taniguchi, Julia B. Goolsby, Colleen Donovan, Carolyn Wagner, Christopher M. Barth, Josh Kuehn, Suzanne Wittenbrink
2025, Journal of Forest Policy and Economics (176)
Fuels treatments intended to reduce fuel loads and improve forest health on public lands offer one way to reduce wildfire hazards in the wildland-urban interface (WUI), where the natural and built environments meet. However, for fuels treatment implementation to be successful, it must comply with regulatory and scientific standards and...
Critical minerals in mine waste
Nadine M. Piatak, Sarah Jane White, Sarah M. Hayes, Robert R. Seal, II
2025, Fact Sheet 2025-3026
Introduction Critical minerals are commodities with vulnerable supply chains that play a vital role in supporting the United States’ economy, national defense and security, emerging technologies, and energy independence. The prosperity of our Nation depends on generating a resilient supply of domestic critical minerals; mine waste may be an untapped source...
Spatial patterns and temporal trends in water quality in Idaho’s lower Boise River and its tributaries, 1994–2023
Austin K. Baldwin, Tyler V. King
2025, Scientific Investigations Report 2025-5033
The lower Boise River in southwestern Idaho is a vital cultural, economic, and ecological resource, but some of its beneficial uses are impaired by excess algae, sediment, nutrients, and bacteria. In response, a variety of water quality improvement projects and regulations have been implemented in recent decades. A recent study...
Restoration of Gavia immer (common loon) in Minnesota—2024 annual report
William S. Beatty, Kelly Amoth, Luke J. Fara, Brian R. Gray, Kristin Hall, Steven C. Houdek, Jayden Jech, Kevin P. Kenow, Mike J. Wellik, Steven Yang
2025, Open-File Report 2025-1029
In cooperation with the Minnesota Department of Natural Resources, the U.S. Geological Survey monitored 98 common loon (Gavia immer) focal territories and an additional 37 nonfocal territories in 2024 across 53 study lakes in Minnesota. Focal territories were those territories from which study inferences will be made, whereas nonfocal territories...
Photographic guide to the leaf litter arthropod community of the lowland wet forest ecosystem of the Island of Hawaiʻi
Trebor Hall, Robert W. Peck, Anuhea Robins, Maya Munstermann, Rebecca Ostertag, Esther Sebastian Gonzalez, Nicole DiManno, Susan Cordell, Paul C. Banko
2025, Hawaii Cooperative Studies Unit Technical Report HCSU-116
Leaf litter arthropods are important components of the food web in forests, and their presence and diversity can provide information on forest health. There has been very little documentation of the leaf litter arthropods in Hawaiian forest ecosystems. This technical report is a photographic guide to some common arthropods collected...
Meet the people where they are: Assessing user needs for aftershock forecast products in El Salvador, Mexico and the United States
Max Schneider, Anne Wein, Sara K. McBride, Nicholas van der Elst, Julia Becker, Raul Castro, Manuel Diaz, Hector Gonzalez-Huizar, Jeanne L. Hardebeck, Andrew J. Michael, Luis E. Mixco, Morgan T. Page
2025, International Journal for Disaster Risk Reduction (125)
Aftershock forecasts can help communities reduce their seismic risk by conveying how many aftershocks can be expected following a large earthquake, and how the expected number of aftershocks and their corresponding ground shaking evolves over time and space. Prior work finds that graphical forecast products may communicate such information better...
Hydrogeologic mapping and three-dimensional geologic modeling of glacial deposits in a multicounty area of southeastern Michigan, northeastern Indiana, and northwestern Ohio
Alexander D. Riddle, Leslie D. Arihood, Shawn Naylor, David C. Lampe
2025, Scientific Investigations Report 2025-5008
The glacial deposits underlying southeastern Michigan, northeastern Indiana, and northwestern Ohio are a substantial source of water to communities, agriculture, and industry in the region. Previous efforts to characterize aquifer materials in the area cited a need for additional information about the underlying hydrogeologic characteristics and related groundwater availability as...
Magmatic volatiles in the Yellowstone Plateau volcanic field: The knowns, the unknowns, and the uncertainties
Shaul Hurwitz, Jacob B. Lowenstern
2025, Conference Paper, Proceedings of the 3rd IAGC international conference: Water rock interaction-18 & applied isotope geochemistry-15
The Yellowstone Plateau volcanic field has a large magmatic system supplying heat and mass into the overlying hydrothermal system. To interpret changes in the composition and/or emission rates of hydrothermal fluids as possible indicators of volcanic unrest requires discriminating between magmatic, crustal, hydrothermal, and hybrid sources and processes. Significant progress in characterizing the composition and...
Climate-driven sulfate export in alpine watersheds may stimulate methylmercury production
Hannah R. Miller, Charles T. Driscoll, Sarah E. Janssen, Eve-Lyn S. Hinckley
2025, Environmental Research Letters (20)
Climate change is increasing sulfate export and changing wetland extent in mountain regions. These changes may increase microbially mediated production of the neurotoxic substance methylmercury due to enhanced sulfate metabolism in mountain environments. Here, we assess methylmercury concentrations and formation rates across high-elevation wetlands in the Colorado Rocky Mountains. We...
Formation of the Mount Weld rare earth element deposit, Western Australia: A carbonatite-derived laterite
Philip Verplanck, Jay Michael Thompson, Cameron Mark Mercer, Ganesh Bhat, Heather A. Lowers, Adam Boehlke
2025, Conference Paper, Proceedings of the 3rd IAGC international conference
Carbonatite-hosted rare earth element (REE) deposits are the primary source of the world’s light REEs. The Mount Weld REE deposit in Western Australia is hosted in a lateritic sequence that reflects supergene enrichment of the underlying carbonatite. Water-rock interaction is a key to the formation of this world-class deposit. REE...
Pysochron: A Python-based solution for calculating cosmogenic 26Al/10Be isochron burial ages
William Elijah Odom
2025, Quaternary Geochronology (89)
Cosmogenic 26Al/10Be isochron burial dating is a powerful tool for dating sediment burial over the past several million years. By measuring in-situ 26Al and 10Be in a suite of samples from the same depth in a buried deposit, it is possible to quantify the inventory of cosmogenic nuclides produced after burial, date the...
Simulation of the impacts of projected climate change on groundwater resources in the urban, semiarid Yucaipa Valley watershed, southern California using an integrated hydrologic model
Derek W. Ryter, Ayman H. Alzraiee, Richard G. Niswonger
2025, Journal of Hydrology, Regional Studies (60)
Managing water resources in semiarid watersheds is challenging due to limited supply and uncertain future climate conditions. This paper examines the impact of future climate changes on an urban watershed in southern California using an integrated hydrologic model. GSFLOW modeling software is used to simulate the nonlinear relationships between climate...
Estimating the magnitude and frequency of floods at ungaged locations on streams in Tennessee through the 2013 water year
David Ladd, Paul A. Ensminger
2025, Scientific Investigations Report 2024-5130
To improve estimates of the frequency of annual peak flows for ungaged locations on non-urban, unregulated streams in Tennessee, generalized least-squares multiple linear-regression techniques were used to relate annual peak flows from streamgages operated by the U.S. Geological Survey to physical, climatic, and land-use characteristics of their drainage basins. Geospatial...
On the importance and practical conservation of nongame fishes.
Niall G. Clancy, Frank J. Rahel, Brandon K. Peoples, Annika W. Walters, John Lyons, Nicholas E. Mandrak, Phaedra E. Budy, Emmanuel A Frimpong, Wyatt F. Cross
2025, Fisheries
Fisheries management has historically focused conservation efforts on game or sport species. However, most species are nongame—those not traditionally captured for sport or harvest in countries where recreational fisheries predominate. Greater conservation of nongame species could help ensure that population declines do not go unnoticed. Unfortunately, fisheries managers already manage...
Constraints and enablers for meaningful consideration of plural values through integration of cultural ecosystem services (CES) in decision-making
Kristen R Hoelting, Rachelle K. Gould, Amanda E. Cravens, Brian D. Winter
Pamela D. McElwee, Karen E. Allen, Rachelle K. Gould, Minna Hsu, Jun He, editor(s)
2025, Book chapter, Routledge handbook of cultural ecosystem services
This chapter presents and applies five constraint/enabler categories that influence integration of the plural values of cultural ecosystem services (CES) in decision-making, highlighting how diverse forms of CES knowledge can intersect with decision making contexts. CES make foundational contributions to human well-being, and yet they are consistently underrepresented in research...
First evidence of natural reproduction and recruitment of reintroduced Lake Sturgeon in the Coosa River, Georgia
Martin J. Hamel, Matthew A. Phillips, Savannah R. Perry, Brian J. Irwin, John D. Damer
2025, North American Journal of Fisheries Management (45) 516-522
Objective Lake Sturgeon Acipenser fluences became extirpated from the Coosa River system in Georgia and Alabama during the 1970s. The Georgia Department of Natural Resources began stocking hatchery-raised Lake Sturgeon in 2002 with the goal of reestablishing a self-sustaining population. Stocking lapsed in 2020 due to the COVID-19 pandemic, which allowed an opportunity...
Distribution, abundance, and breeding activities of Southwestern Willow Flycatchers (Empidonax traillii extimus) at select locations on the San Luis Rey River, San Diego County, California—2024 data summary
Scarlett L. Howell, Barbara E. Kus
2025, Data Report 1212
We surveyed for Southwestern Willow Flycatchers (Empidonax traillii extimus; flycatcher) at select locations along the San Luis Rey River, including along the middle San Luis Rey River near Bonsall and the upper San Luis Rey River near Santa Ysabel, California, in 2024. Surveys were completed at six locations: two along...
2023 Earthquake Ground-Motion Workshop for the Central and Eastern United States, with a focus on the Gulf and Atlantic Coastal Plains—Agenda and abstracts
Oliver S. Boyd, Julie A. Herrick, Ashly Cabas, Sean Kamran Ahdi
2025, Scientific Investigations Report 2025-5025
The U.S. Geological Survey held a virtual workshop December 7–8, 2023, to share research and ideas about earthquake ground motions in the Central and Eastern United States, with a focus on the Atlantic and Gulf Coastal Plains. The workshop was organized to learn about potential regionalization of ground-motion characteristics (source,...
The 3D Elevation Program—Supporting Connecticut's economy
Laura Harrington, Dan Walters
2025, Fact Sheet 2025-3030
Introduction Connecticut has a diverse, largely forested landscape characterized by hills and low mountains in the Western Upland, hills in the Eastern Upland, ridges and broad valleys in the Central Lowland, and many beaches and harbors along the coast of Long Island Sound. Connecticut is manufacturing and service focused, ranking almost...
Denning black bear response to anthropogenic disturbance and implications for cub survival in Florida
Darcy Doran-Myers, Kaili Gregory, Conor P. McGowan, Vanessa Hull, Brian K. Scheick
2025, Ursus (2525) 1-20
Wildlife research and management can be disruptive to wildlife. By advancing our understanding of the impacts of these activities, we can reduce adverse effects, improve decision-making, and enhance the outcomes of research and management. During 2017–2019, we observed the responses of denning female American black bears (Ursus americanus) to 3...
Reproductive output of the rare plant Arctomecon californica does not appear to be limited by its floral visitor community
Kelsey K. Graham, Lesley A. DeFalco, Terry Griswold
2025, Plant Ecology
The majority of plants rely on animal-mediated pollination for reproduction. Reductions in pollinator visitations can lead to pollen limitation and declines in seed production. Arctomecon californica, the Las Vegas bearpoppy, is a rare plant native to the northeastern Mojave Desert. It is pollinator dependent for reproduction as it is self-incompatible, but associated...
Coexistence beyond disciplinary silos: Five dimensions of analysis for more convivial human-predator interactions
Judith E. Krauss, Valentina Fiasco, Silvio Marchini, Michael C Mcinturff, Laila T. Sandroni, Peter S. Alagona, Dan Brockington, Bram Büscher, Rosaleen Duffy, Katia Maria P.M. de Barros Ferraz, Rob Fletcher, Wilhelm Andrew Kiwango, Sanna Komi, Mathew Bukhi Mabele, Kate Massarella, Anja Nygren
2025, Biological Conservation (308)
Understanding human-predator interactions has been a central goal of conservation for decades, yet many previous efforts have approached this challenge from disciplinary perspectives focused on single case studies. There is a need for more transdisciplinary and multi-sited research to enrich our understandings of the complexity of human-nonhuman interactions and to...
The functional traits behind fish rarity in an impounded river basin
Leandro E. Miranda, Hayden G. Funk, Kevin W. Jones, Corey Garland Dunn, Kurt M. Lakin
2025, Reviews in Fish Biology and Fisheries (35) 1279-1299
Reservoirs alter flows and aquatic habitats, reordering rarity patterns of reservoir ichthyofauna by allowing certain fish traits to flourish while filtering others. We reviewed the composition of fish species in an impounded river basin (Tennessee River, USA) to identify traits that influence rarity. We delineate levels of rarity based on...
Combining acoustic telemetry and side-scan sonar to estimate abundance of endangered shortnose sturgeon in the Hudson River, New York
Amanda Higgs, Shannon L. White, John Madsen, David C. Kazyak, Dewayne Fox, Richard Pendleton, Adam Bonemery, Tomasz Smolinski, Amanda Simmonds, Patrick Sullivan
2025, Canadian Journal of Fisheries and Aquatic Sciences (82) 1-12
For endangered shortnose sturgeon (Acipenser brevirostrum), the ability to estimate and monitor population size is critical for tracking species’ recovery. Yet, contemporary abundance estimates have not been completed for many shortnose sturgeon populations, largely owing to the difficulty in using traditional abundance estimators for sturgeons. Here, we estimate the adult...