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Comparison of beaver density estimates from aerial surveys of waterways versus transects
Shannon Barber-Meyer
2019, Canadian Wildlife Biology and Management (8) 9-16
Historic beaver-sign (Castor canadensis) survey flights were often conducted over waterways to maximize beaver detections. However, densities determined from strip transect surveys are more useful to compare across and within study areas than waterway indices based on observations per distance flown because transects are more representative of the wider landscape....
Wild canid distribution and co-existence in a natural–urban matrix of the Pioneer Valley of Western Massachusetts
Eric G. LeFlore, Todd K. Fuller, John T. Finn, John F. Organ, Stephen DeStefano
2019, Northeastern Naturalist (26) 325-342
Although development and urbanization are typically believed to have negative impacts on carnivoran species, some species can successfully navigate an urban matrix. Sympatric carnivorans compete for limited resources in urban areas, likely with system-specific impacts to their distributions and activity patterns. We used automatically triggered wildlife cameras to assess the...
Monitoring five-needle pine on Bureau of Land Management lands in Wyoming summary report for 2013, 2014, 2016, 2017
Erin Shanahan, Kristin Legg, Rob Daley, Kathryn Irvine, Siri Wilmoth, Joshua Jackson
2019, Report
Whitebark pine (Pinus albicaulis) grows at high elevations and in subalpine communities in the Pacific Northwest and Northern Rocky Mountains. Limber pine (Pinus flexilis) occurs in western North America across a broad elevational gradient from the Canadian Rocky Mountains into parts of New Mexico and Arizona and from southern California...
Surrogate model development for coastal dune erosion under storm conditions
Victor Malagon-Santos, Thomas Wahl, Joseph W Long, Davina Passeri, Nathaniel G. Plant
2019, Conference Paper, Proceedings of the 9th Coastal Sediments Conference
Early coastal dune erosion predictions are essential to avoid potential flood consequences but most dune erosion numerical models are computationally expensive, hence their application in Early Warning Systems is limited. Here, based on a combination of optimally sampled synthetic sea storms with a calibrated and validated XBeach model, we develop...
Handbook to the partners in flight population estimates database, version 3.0
Tom Will, Jessica C. Stanton, Kenneth V. Rosenberg, Arvind O. Panjabi, Alaine Camfield, Allison Shaw, Wayne E. Thogmartin, Peter J. Blancher
2019, Partners in Flight Technical Publication 7
This document describes the content of Version 3.0 of the Partners in Flight (PIF) Population Estimates Database, which provides population estimates for breeding USA/Canada landbirds at several geographic scales following the Partners in Flight approach described initially in Rich et al. (2004) and by Rosenberg and Blancher (2005) and most...
Daily to decadal variability of beach morphology at NASA-Kennedy Space Center: Storm influences across timescales
Matthew P. Conlin, Peter N. Adams, Nathaniel Plant, John M. Jaeger, Richard Mackenzie
2019, Conference Paper, Coastal sediments 2019
Shoreline variability over timescales ranging from days to decades is examined at NASA-Kennedy Space Center on the Atlantic coast of Florida. Three sources of shoreline position data are utilized to complete this analysis: hourly video-image observations, monthly Real Time Kinematic GPS observations, and historical aerial imagery dating back to 1943....
Hawaiian hoary bat (Lasiurus cinereus semotus) activity and prey availability at Kaloko-Honokohau National Historical Park
Kristina Montoya-Aiona, Corinna A. Pinzari, Frank J Bonaccorso
2019, Report
We examined habitat use and foraging activity of the endangered Hawaiian hoary bat (Lasiurus cinereus semotus), as well as nocturnal aerial insect abundance at Kaloko-Honōkohau National Historical Park located in the coastal region of Kailua-Kona, Hawai‘i Island. We evaluated bat activity in two habitat types, wooded shorelines beside brackish water...
Insights into pāhoehoe lava emplacement using visible and thermal structure-from-motion photogrammetry
Sebastien Biass, Tim R. Orr, Bruce F. Houghton, Matthew R. Patrick, Mike R. James, Nick Turner
2019, Journal of Geophysical Research: Solid Earth (124) 5678-5695
We present the evolution over 3 months of a 2016–2017 pāhoehoe flow at Kīlauea as it changed from a narrow sheet flow into a compound lava field fed by a stable system of tubes. The portion of the flow located on Kīlauea's coastal plain was characterized...
Method for observing breach geomorphic evolution: Satellite observation of the Fire Island Wilderness breach
Timothy Nelson, Jennifer L. Miselis
2019, Conference Paper, Coastal Sediments 2019
Satellite derived shorelines are extracted using the Google Earth Engine API for Landsat and Sentinel satellites from 1984 through 2018. These shorelines are evaluated against existing surveys and show satellite-derived breach shorelines are in good agreement with directly-observed shorelines and capture the trend of the Fire Island wilderness breach evolution....
Forest restoration, wildfire, and habitat selection by female mule deer
Tanya M. Roerick, James W. Cain III, J. V. Gedir
2019, Forest Ecology and Management (447) 169-179
Decades of fire suppression, logging, and overgrazing have led to increased densities of small diameter trees which have been associated with decreases in biodiversity, reduced habitat quality for wildlife species, degraded foraging conditions for ungulates, and more frequent and severe wildfires. In response, land managers are implementing forest restoration treatments...
Evaluation of five pulicides to suppress fleas on black-tailed prairie dogs: Encouraging long-term results with systemic 0.005% fipronil
David Austin Eads, Dean E. Biggins, Kristina Broerman, Jonathan Bowser, Travis Livieri, Eddie Childers, Phillip Dobesh, Randall Griebel
2019, Vector-Borne and Zoonotic Diseases (19) 400-406
Plague, a flea-borne disease, hampers efforts to restore populations of black-footed ferrets (Mustela nigripes), which occupy colonies of prairie dogs (Cynomys spp.) in North America. Plague is managed by infusing prairie dog burrows with DeltaDust® 0.05% deltamethrin, a pulicide that kills fleas. Experiments are needed to identify pulicides that can be used...
Geophysical assessment of a proposed landfill site in Fredericktown, Missouri
Carole D. Johnson, Eric A. White, Dale D. Werkema, Neil Terry, Stephanie N. Phillips, Robert Ford, John W. Lane Jr.
2019, Conference Paper, Symposium on the application of geophysics to engineering and environmental problems proceedings
In June 2018, U.S. Geological Survey in cooperation with the U.S. Environmental Protection Agency (EPA) collected geophysical measurements to help evaluate the suitability of a proposed landfill site for disposing mine-waste materials in Fredericktown, MO. The geophysical investigation included electromagnetic induction, electrical resistivity tomography, horizontal-to-vertical spectral ratio passive seismic, and...
Signatures of adaptive divergence among populations of an avian species of conservation
Shawna J Zimmerman, Cameron L. Aldridge, Kevin P Oh, Robert S. Cornman, Sara J. Oyler-McCance
2019, Evolutionary Applications (12) 1661-1677
Understanding the genetic underpinning of adaptive divergence among populations is a key goal of evolutionary biology and conservation. Gunnison sage‐grouse (Centrocercus minimus) is a sagebrush obligate species with a constricted range consisting of seven discrete populations, each with distinctly different habitat and climatic conditions. Though geographically...
Guidance for assessing interregional ecoystem service flows
Thomas Koellner, Aletta Bonn, Sebastian Arnhold, Kenneth J. Bagstad, Dor Friedman, Carlos Guerra, Thomas Kastner, Meidad Kissinger, Janina Kleeman, Christian Kuhlicke, Jianguo Liu, Laura Lopez-Hoffman, Alexandra Marques, Berta Martin-Lopez, Catharina J. E. Schulp, Sarah Wolff, Matthias Schroter
2019, Ecological Indicators (105) 92-106
Ecosystem services (ES) assessments commonly focus on a specific biophysical region or nation and take its geographic borders as the system boundary. Most geographical regions are, however, not closed systems but are open and telecoupled with other regions through ES imports and exports, which are mediated by fluxes of matter,...
Managing the trifecta of disease, climate, and contaminants: Searching for robust choices under multiple sources of uncertainty
Kelly Smalling, Collin Eagles-Smith, Rachel A. Katz, Evan Grant
2019, Biological Conservation (236) 153-161
Wood frogs, like other amphibian species worldwide, are experiencing population declines due to multiple stressors. In the northeastern United States, wood frog declines are thought to result from a reduction in successful metamorphosis in part due to climate change, disease (specifically ranavirus) and contaminant exposure. The presence of multiple stressors...
Seeking shelter from the storm: Conservation and management of imperiled species in a changing climate
Susan Walls, William Barichivich, Jonathan Chandler, Ashley M. Meade, Marysa Milinichik, Katherine O'Donnell, Megan E. Owens, Terry Peacock, Joseph Reinman, Rebecca C. Watling, Olivia E. Wetsch
2019, Ecology and Evolution (9) 7122-7133
Climate change is anticipated to exacerbate the extinction risk of species whose persistence is already compromised by habitat loss, invasive species, disease, or other stressors. In coastal areas of the southeastern United States (USA), many imperiled vertebrates are vulnerable to hurricanes, which climate models predict to become more severe in...
Methane and nitrous oxide temporal and spatial variability in two midwestern USA streams containing high nitrate concentrations
Richard L. Smith, J.K. Bohlke
2019, Science of the Total Environment (685) 574-588
Concentrations and emissions of greenhouse gases CO2, CH4, and N2O commonly are examined individually in aquatic environments in which each is expected to be relatively important; however, their co-occurrence and dynamic interactions in fluvial settings could provide important information about their controlling biogeochemical processes and potential contributions to global climate...
Variability in shelf sedimentation in response to fluvial sediment supply and coastal erosion over the past 1,000 years in Monterey Bay, CA, United States
Joseph Carlin, Jason A. Addison, Amy Wagner, Valerie Evelyn Schwartz, Jamie Hayward, Victoria Severin
2019, Frontiers in Earth Science (7)
Continental shelf environments are uniquely situated to capture some of the most dynamic processes on Earth including climatic variability and anthropogenic modifications to coastal systems. Understanding how these processes have affected sediment delivery and accumulation on the shelf in the past may provide insight into potential changes in...
Early genetic outcomes of American black bear reintroductions in the Central Appalachians, USA
Sean M. Murphy, John T. Hast, Ben C. Augustine, David W. Weisrock, Joseph D. Clark, David. M Kocka, Christopher W. Ryan, Jaime L. Sajecki, John J. Cox
2019, Ursus (29) 110-133
Habitat loss and overexploitation extirpated American black bears (Ursus americanus) from most of the Central Appalachians, USA, by the early twentieth century. To attempt to restore bears to the southwestern portion of this region, 2 reintroductions that used small founder groups (n = 27 and 55 bears), but different release...
The influence of body size, condition, and age on recruitment of four Alaskan brown bear populations
Grant V. Hilderbrand, David Gustine, Kyle Joly, Buck Mangipane, William Leacock, Matthew Cameron, Mathew Sorum, Lindsey Mangipane, Joy Erlenbach
2019, Ursus (2) 111-118
Recruitment of brown bear (Ursus arctos) offspring into a population is the product of initial cub production and subsequent survival and is a critical component of overall population status and trend. We investigated the relationship between maternal body size, body condition, and age (as a surrogate for gained experience) and...
Characterizing seismogenic fault structures in Oklahoma using a relocated template matched catalog
Robert Skoumal, Joern Kaven, Jake Water
2019, Seismological Research Letters (90) 1535-1543
Oklahoma is one of the most seismically active places in the United States as a result of industry activities. In order to characterize the fault networks responsible for these earthquakes in Oklahoma, we relocated a large-scale template matching catalog between 2010-2016 using the GrowClust algorithm . This relocated catalog is...
Impacts of saltwater intrusion on wetland prey production and composition in a historically freshwater marsh
Stephanie Romanach, James M. Beerens, Brett Patton, Julia P. Chapman, Matt Hanson
2019, Estuaries and Coasts (42) 1600-1611
Sea level rise is a fundamental driver of ecosystem change and has the potential to shift the spatial distributions of habitats more rapidly than species can adapt. Rapid sea level rise and associated saltwater intrusion have negative impacts on coastal environments, including loss of habitat for species such as sea...
Simulation of the regional groundwater-flow system in the St. Louis River basin, Minnesota
Megan J. Haserodt, Randall J. Hunt, Timothy K. Cowdery, Andrew T. Leaf, Anna C. Baker
2019, Scientific Investigations Report 2019-5033
The St. Louis River Basin (SLRB) covers 3,600 square miles in northeastern Minnesota, with headwaters in the Mesabi Range and extensive wetlands and lakes throughout the basin. To better understand the regional groundwater system in the SLRB, a two-dimensional, steady-state groundwater-flow model of the SLRB was developed by the U.S....