Natural resource condition assessment: Olympic National Park
Rebecca McCaffery, Kurt J. Jenkins, editor(s)
2018, Natural Resource Report NPS/OLYM/NRR—2018/1826
The Natural Resource Assessment Program aims to document condition and trends of selected park resources while identifying emerging issues and information needs. This information is intended to serve as a platform for natural resource managers to use in developing future resource stewardship priorities and planning.Olympic National Park (OLYM) on Washington’s...
Strategic and critical metals in produced geothermal fluids from Nevada and Utah
Stuart F. Simmons, Stephe H. Kirby, Philip L. Verplanck, Karen Duttweiler Kelley
2018, Conference Paper, Proceedings 43rd Stanford Geothermal Workshop
Herein we summarize the results of an investigation dealing with the concentrations and inventories of strategic, critical and valuable materials (SCVM) in produced fluids from geothermal and hydrocarbon reservoirs (50-250° C) in Nevada and Utah. Water samples were collected from thirty-four production wells across eight geothermal fields, the Uinta Basin...
Effects of simulated magnitude 9 earthquake motions on structures in the Pacific Northwest
Nasser A. Marafi, M. Eberhard, J. Berman, Erin A. Wirth, Arthur D. Frankel, J. Vidale
2018, Conference Paper
The Cascadia Subduction Zone (CSZ) produces long-duration, large-magnitude earthquakes that could severely affect structures in the Pacific Northwest (PNW). The impact of synthetic M9.0 CSZ earthquakes on buildings in the Pacific Northwest is studied using eight reinforced concrete wall archetypes that range from 4 to 40 stories. These archetypes were...
Zone identification and oil saturation prediction in a waterflooded field: Residual oil zone, East Seminole Field, Texas, Permian Basin
Jacqueline Roueche, C. Ozgen Karacan
2018, Conference Paper
Recently, the miscible CO2-EOR tertiary process used in the main pay zone (MP) of suitable reservoirs has broadened to include exploitation of the underlying residual oil zone (ROZ) where a significant amount of oil may remain. The objective of this study is to identify the ROZ and to assess...
California gull (Larus californicus) space use and timing of movements in relation to landfills and breeding colonies
Josh T. Ackerman, Sarah H. Peterson, Danika C Tsao, John Y. Takekawa
2018, Waterbirds (41) 384-400
Expanding gull (Laridae) populations throughout the world have been attributed to the availability of anthropogenic food subsidies. The influence of landfills on California Gull (Larus californicus) space use and the timing of their movements was evaluated in San Francisco Bay, California, USA. Using radio telemetry, 108 California Gulls were tracked,...
Contaminants of emerging concern in the environment: Where we have been and what does the future hold?
William A. Battaglin, Dana W. Kolpin, Edward T. Furlong, Susan Glassmeyer, Brett R. Blackwell, Steven Corsi, Michael T. Meyer, Paul M. Bradley
2018, Water Resources Impact (20) 8-11
In 1962, Rachel Carson’s book Silent Spring alerted the nation to the dangers of manmade chemicals and indiscriminate use of pesticides. DDT was the culprit and its use threatened a variety of wildlife, including the national bird, bald eagles. In 1969, pressured by scientists and the public, the United States...
Predicting biological conditions for small headwater streams in the Chesapeake Bay watershed
Kelly O. Maloney, Zachary M. Smith, Claire Buchanan, Andrea Nagel, John A. Young
2018, Freshwater Science (4) 795-809
A primary goal for Chesapeake Bay watershed restoration is to improve stream health and function in 10% of stream miles by 2025. Predictive spatial modeling of stream conditions, when accurate, is one method to fill gaps in monitoring coverage and estimate baseline conditions for restoration goals. Predictive modeling can also...
Double loop learning in adaptive management: the need, the challenge, and the opportunity
Byron K. Williams, Ellie Brown
2018, Environmental Management (62) 995-1006
Adaptive management addresses uncertainty about the processes influencing resource dynamics, as well as the elements of decision making itself. The use of management to reduce both kinds of uncertainty is known as double-loop learning. Though much work has been done on the theory and procedures to address structural uncertainty, there...
A full annual-cycle conservation strategy for Sprague’s Pipit, Chestnut-collared and McCown’s Longspurs, and Baird’s Sparrow
Scott G. Somershoe, Lawrence Igl, Jessica A. Larson, Cheryl A. Mandich, Neal D. Niemuth, Marisa K. Sather, Sean P. Fields, Barry G. Robinson, Corrie C. Borgman, Maureen D. Correll, Kevin S. Ellison, Robert P. Ford, Arvind O. Panjabi, Dan Casey, Sarah D. Hewitt, Sandy K. Johnson, Catherine A. Wightman, Allison J.P. Begley
Scott G. Somershoe, editor(s)
2018, Report
Sprague’s Pipit (Anthus spragueii), Chestnut-collared Longspur (Calcarius ornatus), McCown’s Longspur (Rhynchophanes mccownii), and Baird’s Sparrow (Centronyx bairdii) [hereafter, “the Species”] are North American grassland-obligate songbirds whose populations have experienced significant annual population declines and are the focus of increasing conservation concern. The purpose of this strategy is to summarize current...
A proposed seismic velocity profile database model
Shamsher Sadiq, Okan Ilkan, Sean K Ahdi, Yousef Bozorgina, Youssef M.A. Hashash, Dong Youp Kwak, Duhee Park, Alan Yong, Jonathan P. Stewart
2018, Conference Paper
We describe the data model that we intend to use in a publicly available site profile database under development for the United States. The initial implementation of the database contains data from California. Currently, our prototype data model consists of JavaScript Object Notation (JSON) format files for storing metadata and...
Comparing growth and body condition of indoor-reared, outdoor-reared, and direct-released juvenile Mojave desert tortoises
J. A. Daly, K. A. Buhlman, B. D. Todd, Clinton T. Moore, J. M. Peaden, T. D. Tuberville
2018, Herpetological Conservation and Biology (13) 622-633
Desert tortoise populations have declined, and head-starting hatchlings in captivity until they are larger and older — and presumably more likely to survive — is one strategy being evaluated for species recovery. Previous studies have reared hatchlings in outdoor, predator-proof pens for 5–9 years before release, in efforts to produce...
A geophysical characterization of the structural framework of the Camas Prairie Geothermal System, southcentral Idaho
Jonathan M.G. Glen, Lee Liberty, Jared R. Peacock, Erika Gasperikova, Tait E. Earney, William D. Schermerhorn, Drew L. Siler, John Shervais, Patrick Dobson
2018, Conference Paper, Geothermal's role in today's energy market
Play Fairway Analysis methods, utilizing existing geologic, thermal, geochemical, and geophysical data were employed in an initial assessment of geothermal resources in the Snake River Plain. These efforts identified the Camas Prairie in southcentral Idaho as a region with elevated resource potential. Subsequent efforts included structural and geophysical data collection...
Geothermal potential of the Umatilla Indian Reservation, Oregon: Evidence from detailed geophysical investigations
Brent Ritzinger, Jonathan M.G. Glen, Jared R. Peacock, Richard J. Blakely, Patrick Mills, Lydia M. Staisch, Scott E.K. Bennett, Brian Sherrod
2018, Conference Paper, Geothermal's role in today's energy market
Recent geologic and geophysical investigations were undertaken in northeastern Oregon to better assess earthquake hazards in the region and determine relative favorability for geothermal energy development on lands of the Confederated Tribes of the Umatilla Indian Reservation (CTUIR). This work was funded in part by a Bureau of Indian Affairs...
Effects of rearing environment on behavior of captive-reared whooping cranes
Christy L. Sadowski, Glenn H. Olsen, M. Elsbeth McPhee
2018, Conference Paper, Proceedings of the fourteenth North American Crane Workshop
Whooping cranes (Grus americana) are 1 of the most endangered bird species in North America. In 1999 the Whooping Crane Eastern Partnership was formed to establish a migratory population of whooping cranes in eastern North America. These efforts have been extremely successful in terms of adult survival but reproductive success...
Estimating metal concentrations with regression analysis and water-quality surrogates at nine sites on the Animas and San Juan Rivers, Colorado, New Mexico, and Utah
M. Alisa Mast
2018, Scientific Investigations Report 2018-5116
The purpose of this report is to evaluate the use of site-specific regression models to estimate metal concentrations at nine U.S. Geological Survey streamflow-gaging stations on the Animas and San Juan Rivers in Colorado, New Mexico, and Utah. Downstream users could use these regression models to determine if metal concentrations...
The conceptual schema in geospatial data standard design with application to GroundWaterML2
Boyan Brodaric, Eric Boisvert, Peter Dahlhaus, Sylvain Grellet, Alexander Kmoch, Francois Letourneau, Jessica Lucido, Bruce Simons, Bernhard Wagner
2018, Open Geospatial Data, Software and Standards (3) 1-15
The explosive growth of geospatial data has stimulated the development of many standards aimed at decreasing data heterogeneity and enhancing data use. Well-established design methods for geospatial data standards typically involve the creation of two schemas for data structure, designated here as logical and physical, but this can lead to...
Assessing the impact of open-ocean and back-barrier shoreline change on Dauphin Island, Alabama, at multiple time scales over the last 75 years
Christopher G. Smith, Joseph W. Long, Rachel E. Henderson, Paul R. Nelson
2018, Open-File Report 2018-1170
Dauphin Island and Little Dauphin Island, collectively, make up a geomorphically complex barrier island system located along Alabama’s southern coast, separating Mississippi Sound from the Gulf of Mexico and Mobile Bay. The barrier island system provides numerous economical (tourism, fisheries) and natural (habitat for migratory birds, natural protection of inland...
Estimating soil respiration in a subalpine landscape using point, terrain, climate and greenness data
Erin Michele Berryman, Melanie K. Vanderhoof, John B. Bradford, Todd Hawbaker, Paul D. Henne, Sean P. Burns, John M. Frank, Richard A. Birdsey, Michael G. Ryan
2018, Journal of Geophysical Research G: Biogeosciences (123) 3231-3249
Landscape carbon (C) flux estimates are necessary for assessing the ability of terrestrial ecosystems to buffer further increases in anthropogenic carbon dioxide (CO2) emissions. Advances in remote sensing have allowed for coarse-scale estimates of gross primary productivity (GPP) (e.g., MODIS 17), yet efforts to assess spatial patterns in respiration lag...
Sewage loading and microbial risk in urban waters of the Great Lakes
Sandra L. McLellan, Elizabeth P. Sauer, Steven R. Corsi, Melinda J. Bootsma, Alexandria B. Boehm, Susan K. Spencer, Mark A. Borchardt
2018, Elementa: Science of the anthropocene (6) 1-15
Despite modern sewer system infrastructure, the release of sewage from deteriorating pipes and sewer overflows is a major water pollution problem in US cities, particularly in coastal watersheds that are highly developed with large human populations. We quantified fecal pollution sources and loads entering Lake Michigan from a large watershed...
Serpentinite‐rich gouge in a creeping segment of the Bartlett Springs Fault, northern California: Comparison with SAFOD and implications for seismic hazard
Diane E. Moore, Robert J. McLaughlin, James J. Lienkaemper
2018, Tectonics (37) 4515-4534
An exposure of a creeping segment of the Bartlett Springs Fault (BSF), part of the San Andreas Fault system in northern California, is a ~1.5‐m‐wide zone of serpentinite‐bearing fault gouge cutting through Late Pleistocene fluvial deposits. The fault gouge consists of porphyroclasts of antigorite serpentinite, talc, chlorite, and tremolite‐actinolite, along...
Characteristic earthquake magnitude frequency distributions on faults calculated from consensus data in California
Thomas E. Parsons, Eric L. Geist, Rodolfo Console, Roberto Carluccio
2018, Journal of Geophysical Research B: Solid Earth (123) 10,761-10,784
An estimate of the expected earthquake rate at all possible magnitudes is needed for seismic hazard forecasts. Regional earthquake magnitude frequency distributions obey a negative exponential law (Gutenberg‐Richter), but it's unclear if individual faults do. We add three new methods to calculate long‐term California earthquake rupture rates to the existing...
A video surveillance system to monitor breeding colonies of common terns (Sterna Hirundo)
J.L. Wall, Paul Marban, D.F. Brinker, J.D. Sullivan, M. Zimnik, J.L. Murrow, P. C. McGowan, Carl R. Callahan, Diann J. Prosser
2018, Journal of Visualized Experiments (137)
Many waterbird populations have faced declines over the last century, including the common tern (Sterna hirundo), a waterbird species with a widespread breeding distribution, that has been recently listed as endangered in some habitats of its range. Waterbird monitoring programs exist to track populations through time; however, some of the...
Tidal Wetlands and Estuaries
Lisamarie Windham-Myers, Wei Jun Cai, Simone Alin, Andreas Andersson, Joseph Crosswell, Kenneth Dunton, Jose Martin Hernandez-Ayon, Maria Herrmann, Audra L. Hinson, Charles Hopkinson, Jennifer Howard, Xinping Hu, Sara H. Knox, Kevin Kroeger, David Lagomasino, Patrick Megonigal, Raymond Najjar, May-Linn Paulsen, Dorothy Peteet, Emily Pidgeon, Karina Schafer, Zhaohui Aleck Wang, Maria Tzortziou, Elizabeth Watson
Jennifer Howard, Emily Pidgeon, editor(s)
2018, Book chapter, Second state of the carbon cycle report (SOCCR2): A sustained assessment report
1. The top 1 m of tidal wetland soils and estuarine sediments of North America contains 1,886 ± 1046 teragrams of carbon (Tg C). [High confidence, Very likely] 2. Soil carbon accumulation rate (i.e., sediment burial) in North American tidal wetlands is currently 9 ± 5 Tg C per year...
GSFLOW-GRASS v1.0.0: GIS-enabled hydrologic modeling of coupled groundwater–surface-water systems
G.-H. Crystal Ng, Andrew D. Wickert, Lauren D. Somers, Leila Saberi, Collin Cronkite-Ratcliff, Richard G. Niswonger, Jeffrey M. McKenzie
2018, Geoscientific Model Development (11) 4755-4777
The importance of water moving between the atmosphere and aquifers has led to efforts to develop and maintain coupled models of surface water and groundwater. However, developing inputs to these models is usually time-consuming and requires extensive knowledge of software engineering, often prohibiting their use by many researchers and water...
Propagation of endangered moapa dace
Jack E. Ruggirello, Scott A. Bonar, Olin G. Feuerbacher, Lee H. Simons, Chelsea Powers
2018, Copeia (106) 652-662
We report successful captive spawning and rearing of the highly endangered Moapa Dace, Moapa coriacea (approximately 650 individual fish in existence at time of this study). We simulated conditions under which this stream-dwelling southern Nevada cyprinid and similar species spawned and reared in the wild by varying temperature, photoperiod, flow, and substrate...