Yellowstone Volcano Observatory 2018 annual report
Yellowstone Volcano Observatory
2021, Circular 1474
The Yellowstone Volcano Observatory (YVO) monitors volcanic and hydrothermal activity associated with the Yellowstone magmatic system, conducts research into magmatic processes occurring beneath Yellowstone Caldera, and issues timely warnings and guidance related to potential future geologic hazards. This report summarizes the activities and findings of YVO during the year 2018,...
Effectiveness of rapid 'ōhi'a death management strategies at a focal disease outbreak on Hawai'i Island
Kylle Roy, Carolina Granthon, Robert W. Peck, Carter T. Atkinson
2021, Hawaii Cooperative Studies Unit Technical Report Series 99
The ongoing spread of rapid ‘ōhi‘a death (ROD) in the Hawaiian Islands threatens the long-term sustainability of ‘ōhi‘a lehua (Metrosideros polymorpha) forests throughout the state. First identified in the Puna district of Hawai‘i Island in 2014, the disease caused by the novel fungi Ceratocystis lukuohia and Ceratocystis huliohia has now...
Performance of subyearling fall Chinook salmon tagged with 8‐, 9‐, and 12‐mm passive integrated transponder tags in the Snake River
Kenneth Tiffan, Tobyn Rhodes, Brad Bickford, Dalton Dirk Lebeda, William P. Connor, Frank L. Mullins
2021, North American Journal of Fisheries Management (41) 176-186
Inferences based on tagged individuals from a population are limited in part by the minimum size of fish that can be tagged. Smaller tags allow a greater proportion of a population to be represented by tagging and should...
Waterfowl use of wetland habitats informs wetland restoration designs for multi‐species benefits
Michael L. Casazza, Fiona McDuie, Scott Jones, Austen Lorenz, Cory T. Overton, Julie L. Yee, Cliff L. Feldheim, Josh T. Ackerman, Karen M. Thorne
2021, Journal of Applied Ecology (58) 1910-1920
Extensive global estuarine wetland losses have prompted intensive focus on restoration of these habitats. In California, substantial tracts of freshwater, brackish and tidal wetlands have been lost. Given the anthropogenic footprint of development and urbanization in this region, wetland restoration must rely on conversion of existing habitat types rather...
Multi‐constrained catchment scale optimization of groundwater abstraction using linear programming
Mehrdis Danapour, Michael N. Fienen, Anker Lajer Hojberg, Karsten Hogh Jensen, Simon Stisen
2021, Groundwater (59) 503-516
Due to increasing water demands globally, freshwater ecosystems are under constant pressure. Groundwater resources, as the main source of accessible freshwater, are crucially important for irrigation worldwide. Over‐abstraction of groundwater leads to declines in groundwater levels; consequently, the groundwater inflow to streams decreases. The reduction in base flow and alteration...
Body condition of wintering Pacific greater white-fronted geese
Daniel A. Skalos, John M. Eadie, Daniel R. Yparraguirre, Melanie L. Weaver, Shaun L. Oldenburger, Craig R. Ely, Julie L. Yee, Joseph P. Fleskes
2021, Journal of Wildlife Management (85) 484-497
Extreme changes to key waterfowl habitats in the Klamath Basin (KB) on the Oregon–California border and the Sacramento Valley (SV) in California, USA, have occurred since 1980. The spatial distribution of Pacific greater white‐fronted geese (Anser albifrons sponsa; geese) has likewise changed among these areas and population size has grown...
Summary of fish communities along Underwood Creek, Milwaukee, Wisconsin, 2004–2019
Amanda H. Bell, Daniel J. Sullivan, Barbara C. Scudder Eikenberry
2021, Open-File Report 2020-1112
Beginning in 2010, sections of Underwood Creek in Milwaukee County, Wisconsin, have undergone reconstruction to allow for improved fish habitat and better management of storm flows. In addition, dam and drop structures were removed to help improve fish migration while reintroducing several native fish species. With the reconstruction of Underwood...
Acetylene-fueled trichloroethene reductive dechlorination in a groundwater enrichment culture
Sara Gushgari-Doyle, Ronald S. Oremland, Ray Keren, Shaun Baesman, Denise M. Akob, Jillian F. Banfield, Lisa Alvarez-Cohen
2021, mBio
In aquifers, acetylene (C2H2) is a product of abiotic degradation of trichloroethene (TCE) catalyzed by in situ minerals. C2H2 can, in turn, inhibit multiple microbial processes including TCE dechlorination and metabolisms that commonly support dechlorination, in addition to supporting the growth of acetylenotrophic microorganisms. Previously, C2H2 was shown to support TCE reductive dechlorination in...
Divergent species‐specific impacts of whole ecosystem warming and elevated CO2 on vegetation water relations in an ombrotrophic peatland
Jeffrey M . Warren, Anna M Jensen, Eric Ward, Anirban Guha, Joanne Childs, Stan D. Wullschleger, Paul J Hanson
2021, Global Change Biology (27) 1820-1835
Boreal peatland forests have relatively low species diversity and thus impacts of climate change on one or more dominant species could shift ecosystem function. Despite abundant soil water availability, shallowly rooted vascular plants within peatlands may not be able to meet foliar demand for water under drought or heat events...
Effect of nanoparticle size and natural organic matter composition on the bioavailability of polyvinylpyrrolidone- coated platinum nanoparticles to a model freshwater invertebrate
Mithun Sikder, Marie Noele Croteau, Brett Poulin, Mohammed Baalousha
2021, Environ. Sci. Technol. (55) 2452-2461
The bioavailability of dissolved Pt(IV) and polyvinylpyrrolidone-coated platinum nanoparticles (PtNPs) of five different nominal hydrodynamic diameters (20, 30, 50, 75, and 95 nm) was characterized in laboratory experiments using the model freshwater snail Lymnaea stagnalis. Dissolved Pt(IV) and all nanoparticle sizes were bioavailable to L. stagnalis. Platinum bioavailability, inferred from conditional uptake...
Summary of available data from the monarch overwintering colonies in central Mexico, 1976–1991
Erin R Zylstra, Wayne E. Thogmartin, M. Isabel Ramirez, Elise F. Zipkin
2021, Open-File Report 2020-1150
Historical estimates of the area occupied by overwintering Danaus plexippus (monarchs) in central Mexico (between winters of 1976 and 1991) were published in García-Serrano and others (2004) and more recently in Mawdsley and others (2020). Our primary objectives were to identify the specific data that informed those estimates and, importantly,...
Retention of passive integrated transponder tags in a small-bodied catfish
Timothy W. D’Amico, Dana L. Winkelman, Tyler R. Swarr, Christopher A. Myrick
2021, North American Journal of Fisheries Management (41) 187-195
Members of the freshwater catfishes (order Siluriformes) are capable of transintestinal expulsion of foreign bodies, including internally implanted tags, which can bias movement and survival estimates. We evaluated long-term (120-week) retention rates of passive integrated transponder (PIT) tags in a laboratory setting to assess potential tag loss in Stonecat Noturus...
In-situ monitoring of infiltration-induced instability of I-70 embankment west of the Eisenhower-Johnson Memorial Tunnels, phase III
Alexandra Wayllace, Ning Lu, Benjamin B. Mirus
2021, Colorado Department of Transportation Report 2021-08
A new methodology that uses recent advances in unsaturated soil mechanics and hydrology was developed and tested. The approach consists of using soil suction and moisture content field information in the prediction of the likelihood of landslide movement. The testing ground was an active landslide on I-70 west of the...
Effectiveness of a distance sampling from roads program for white-tailed deer in the National Capital Region parks
Nicholas S. Green, Mark L. Wildhaber, Janice L. Albers
2021, Natural Resource Report 2021/2224
We evaluated the effectiveness of a distance sampling from roads program for estimating population sizes of white-tailed deer (Odocoileus virginianus) from 2001 to 2015 in parks of the National Capital Region (NCR), National Parks Service. Distance sampling is a method for estimating the density of organisms using a distribution of...
Second fin ray shows promise for estimating ages of juvenile but not adult Lake Sturgeon
Lisa K. Izzo, Donna L. Parrish, Gayle Barbin Zydlewski, Ryan P. Koenigs
2021, North American Journal of Fisheries Management (41) 217-228
The first marginal pectoral fin ray (fin spine) is the most common structure used for estimating the age of sturgeons, including Lake Sturgeon Acipenser fulvescens. However, conflicting results from studies on the effects of fin spine removal have made some managers hesitant about the practice. We investigated whether the second pectoral...
Fluid-earthquake and earthquake-earthquake interactions in southern Kansas, USA
A. Verdecchia, Elizabeth S. Cochran, R. M Harrington
2021, JGR Solid Earth (126)
An increase in injection activity associated with energy production in southern Kansas starting in 2013 has been linked to the occurrence of more than 130,000 earthquakes (M −1.5 to 4.9) between 2014 and 2017. Studies suggest that the dramatic increase in seismicity rate is related to wastewater injection into the...
Sex-specific behaviors of hunted mule deer during rifle season
Patrick A. Rodgers, Hall Sawyer, Tony W. Mong, Sam Stephens, Matthew Kauffman
2021, Journal of Wildlife Management (85) 215-227
Animal populations face increased threats to mobility and access to critical habitat from a variety of human disturbances including roads, residential development, agriculture, and energy development. Disturbance from human hunting is known to alter habitat use in ungulates, but recent work suggests that hunting may also trigger the onset of...
Mineral deposits of the Mesoproterozoic Midcontinent Rift System in the Lake Superior region – Metallogeny of the prolifically mineralized Keweenawan LIP
Laurel G. Woodruff, Klaus Schulz, Suzanne Nicholson, Connie L. Dicken
2021, Newsletter, Large Igneous Province of the Month (http://www.largeigneousprovinces.org/LOM)
The Keweenawan large igneous province (LIP) of the Midcontinent Rift System (MRS) of North America is perhaps the most prolifically and diversely mineralized LIP known on Earth (Nicholson et al., 1992). The MRS is an approximately 2,200 km curvilinear continental rift that stretches from Kansas northeast to the Lake Superior...
Hybridization between historically allopatric Chinook salmon populations in the White Salmon River, WA
Christian A. Smith, Jennifer Von Bargen, Justin H. Bohling, David Hand, Ian Jezorek
2021, Report
Chinook Salmon spawning in the White Salmon River consist of members of three historically distinct populations: spring Chinook Salmon, Tule fall Chinook Salmon and Upriver Bright (URB) fall Chinook Salmon. Previous work examined juveniles captured in 2006-2008 and reported hybridization between introduced URBs, and the native threatened Tules. Recent increases...
Monitoring the status and trends of the Shenandoah salamander in Shenandoah National Park
Evan H. Campbell Grant, Adrianne Brand, John E. B. Wofford
2021, Natural Resource Report NPS/SHEN/NRR-2021/2226
The Shenandoah salamander (Plethodon shenandoah) is a federally endangered salamander whose distribution is restricted to high-elevation habitats in Shenandoah National Park (SHEN). During the ranking of vital signs monitoring priorities for this park, “Federal Threatened and Endangered Species” received the 2nd highest ranking for terrestrial vital signs because of ecological,...
Sea state from single optical images: A methodology to derive wind-generated ocean waves from cameras, drones and satellites
Rafael Almar, Erwin W. J. Bergsma, Patrico A. Catalan, Rodrigo Cienfuegos, Leandro Suarez, Felipe Lucero, Alexandre Nicolae Lerma, Franck Desmazes, Eleonora Perugini, Margaret L. Palmsten, Chris Chickadel
2021, Remote Sensing (13)
Sea state is a key variable in ocean and coastal dynamics. The sea state is either sparsely measured by wave buoys and satellites or modelled over large scales. Only a few attempts have been devoted to sea state measurements covering a large domain; in particular its estimation from optical images. With...
Incomplete bioinformatic filtering and inadequate age and growth analysis lead to an incorrect inference of harvested-induced changes
Wesley Larson, Daniel A. Isermann, Zachary S. Feiner
2021, Evolutionary Applications (14) 278-289
Understanding the evolutionary impacts of harvest on fish populations is important for informing fisheries management and conservation and has become a growing research topic over the last decade. However, the dynamics of fish populations are highly complex, and phenotypes can be influenced by many biotic and abiotic factors. Therefore, it...
Breeding at higher latitude is associated with higher photoperiodic threshold and delayed reproductive development in a songbird
Devraj Singh, S. M. Reed, A. A. Kimmitt, K. A. Alford, Craig A. Stricker, P. D. Polly, Ellen D. Ketterson
2021, Hormones and Behavior (128)
Many seasonally breeding animals exhibit a threshold day length (critical photoperiod; CPP) for gonadal growth, and populations breeding at higher latitudes typically have a higher CPP. Much less is known about latitudinal variation in CPP in migratory population that winter away from their breeding range and must time their...
Sap flow evidence of chilling injury and recovery in mangroves following a spring cold spell
Xiaoxuan Gu, Chen Yang, Hewei Zhao, Naxu Hu, Ken Krauss, Chuanyuan Deng, Luzhen Chen
2021, Trees: Structure and Function (35) 907-917
Mangroves are periodically influenced in negative ways by non-freezing temperatures across their global sub-tropical range. However, physiological and morphological evidence of chilling influences to non-freezing chilling events has not been measured in field settings. In this study, we measured sap flow (Js) during such a chilling (but non-freezing) event in...
Relative influence of antecedent topography and sea-level rise on barrier-island migration
Justin L. Shawler, Daniel J. Ciarletta, Jennifer E. Connell, Bianca Q. Boggs, Jorge Lorenzo-Trueba, Christopher J. Hein
2021, Sedimentology (68) 639-669
The response of barrier islands to sea-level rise is modulated by combinations of coastal processes, eco-geomorphic feedbacks, and structural controls, such as antecedent topography. Interactions among these drivers can lead to complex and non-linear changes in island morphology and transitions between migrational, erosional, or progradational states. This study seeks to...