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Page 83, results 2051 - 2075

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Publication Extents

Not all publications have extents, not all extents are completely accurate
Evaluating mountain lion diet before and after a removal of feral horses in a semiarid environment
Peter C. Iacono, Kathryn A. Schoenecker, Kezia R. Manlove, Pat J. Jackson, David C. Stoner
2025, Ecosphere (15)
Non-native species can affect ecosystems by influencing native predator-prey dynamics. Therefore, management interventions designed to remove non-natives may inadvertently lead to increased predation on native species. Feral horses are widely distributed throughout the arid parts of western North America. A growing body of research indicates that horses can be an...
The dynamic feasibility of resisting (R), accepting (A), or directing (D) ecological change
Amanda E. Cravens, Katherine R. Clifford, Corrine N. Knapp, William Travis
2025, Conservation Biology (39)
Ecological transformations are occurring as a result of climate change, challenging traditional approaches to land management decision-making. The resist–accept–direct (RAD) framework helps managers consider how to respond to this challenge. We examined how the feasibility of the choices to resist, accept, and direct shifts in...
Effect of water delivery and irrigation for riparian restoration in the Colorado River Delta, Mexico
Pamela L. Nagler, Ibrahima Sall, Martha Gomez-Sapiens, Karl W. Flessa, Armando Barreto-Muñoz, Kamel Didan
2025, Restoration Ecology (33)
Along Mexico's arid Colorado River Delta, the riparian corridor lacks water due to a reduction in frequent flows, climate change, human infrastructure, and altered riparian landcover from disturbances to invasive species, fire, and high soil and water salinities, which have led to declines in riparian plant health in recent decades....
Connecting tributary mercury loads to nearshore and offshore sediments in Lake Superior
Sarah E. Janssen, Michael T. Tate, Eric D. Dantoin, Christopher T. Filstrup, Euan D Reavie, Robert M Stewart, Chris Robinson, Craig J Allan, Dale M. Robertson, David P. Krabbenhoft
2025, Journal of Great Lakes Research (51)
Lake Superior has a vast and largely undeveloped watershed in comparison to the other Great Lakes, which makes it challenging to study mercury (Hg) sources and cycling. To examine Hg inputs to Lake Superior, we conducted an expansive binational assessment in 40 watersheds from a diverse range of landcover types....
Geological context and significance of the clay-sulfate transition region in Mount Sharp, Gale crater, Mars: An integrated assessment based on orbiter and rover data
Melissa J. Meyer, Ralph E. Milliken, Kathryn M. Stack, Lauren A. Edgar, Elizabeth B. Rampe, Madison L. Turner, Kevin W. Lewis, Edwin S. Kite, Gwenael Caravaca, Ashwin R. Vasavada, William E. Dietrich, Alex B. Bryk, Olivier Gasnault, Stephane Le Mouelic, Christina H. Seeger, Rachel Y. Sheppard
2025, GSA Bulletin (137) 82-115
On Mars, phyllosilicate (“clay”) minerals are often associated with older terrains, and sulfate minerals are associated with younger terrains, and this dichotomy is taken as evidence that Mars’ surface dried up over time. Therefore, in situ investigation of the Mount Sharp strata in Gale crater, which record a shift from...
Spaceborne imaging spectroscopy enables carbon trait estimation in cover crop and cash crop residues
Jyoti Jennewein, W. Dean Hively, Brian T. Lamb, Craig S.T. Daughtry, Resham Thapa, Alison Thieme, Chris Reberg-Horton, Steven Mirsky
2025, Precision Agriculture (25) 2165-2197
PurposeCover crops and reduced tillage are two key climate smart agricultural practices that can provide agroecosystem services including improved soil health, increased soil carbon sequestration, and reduced fertilizer needs. Crop residue carbon traits (i.e., lignin, holocellulose, non-structural carbohydrates) and nitrogen concentrations largely mediate decomposition rates and amount of plant-available nitrogen...
Turbidite correlation for paleoseismology
Nora M. Nieminski, Zoltan Sylvester, Jake Covault, Joan S. Gomberg, Lydia M. Staisch, Ian McBrearty
2025, Geological Society of America Bulletin (137) 29-40
Marine turbidite paleoseismology relies on the assumption of synchronous triggering of turbidity currents by earthquake shaking to infer rupture extent and recurrence. Such inference commonly depends on age dating and correlation of the physical stratigraphy of deposits carried by turbidity currents (i.e., turbidites) across great distances. Along the Cascadia subduction...
Valuing wildlife sightings at the species-wide and individual animal levels: An approach and application to bear viewing in Yellowstone National Park
Leslie Richardson, Aaron Joey Enriquez
2025, Human Dimensions of Wildlife (30) 201-209
Wildlife viewing is a popular recreation activity in parks and protected areas around the world, yet information on the nonmarket value that visitors derive from viewing specific species, and how that value is affected by small-scale population changes, is lacking. We devised an approach to fill the gap. First, we...
Hydrodynamic and salinity tesponse to tidal restoration in the Herring River Estuary, MA, considering present and future sea levels
Kasra Naseri, Michelle A. Hummel, Kevin M. Befus, Timothy P. Smith, Meagan J. Eagle, Kevin D. Kroeger
2025, Conference Paper
Coastal salt marshes are crucial ecosystems that provide habitat for a variety of species, improve water quality, and play a major role in the global carbon cycle. However, many salt marshes have been severely damaged by human activities such as diking and draining for urban development. Recently, there has been...
GRAPES: Earthquake early warning by passing seismic vectors through the grapevine
Timothy Hugh Clements, Elizabeth S. Cochran, Annemarie S. Baltay Sundstrom, Sarah E. Minson, Clara Yoon
2025, Geophysical Research Letters (51)
Estimating an earthquake's magnitude and location may not be necessary to predict shaking in real time; instead, wavefield-based approaches predict shaking with few assumptions about the seismic source. Here, we introduce GRAph Prediction of Earthquake Shaking (GRAPES), a deep learning model trained to characterize and propagate earthquake shaking across a...
Submarine avalanche deposits hold clues to past earthquakes
Valerie J. Sahakian, Debi Kilb, Joan S. Gomberg, Nora M. Nieminski, Jake Covault
2025, EOS Transactions
Earthquakes and other natural events sometimes shake the seafloor near coastlines severely enough to cause underwater avalanches that rush down steep slopes, scouring the seabed and carrying sediment to greater depths. These fast-moving sediment-laden flows, called turbidity currents, have at times damaged underwater infrastructure like pipelines and communications cables, as they...
Accurately characterizing climate change scenario planning in the U.S. National Park Service: Comment on Murphy et al. 2023
Joel H. Reynolds, Brian W. Miller, Gregor W. Schuurman, Wylie A. Carr, Amy Symstad, John E. Gross, Amber N. Runyon
2025, Society and Natural Resources (38) 293-298
We more accurately locate the boundary between current practice and research priorities regarding climate change scenario planning in U.S. federal land management agencies by supplementing the characterization in a recent article (“Understanding perceptions of climate change scenario planning in United States public land management agencies”) of its use...
Quaternary-active faults and the role of inherited structures in the Sacramento-San Joaquin Delta, western Central Valley, northern California
Charles Cashman Trexler, Jack Willard, Belle E. Philibosian
2025, Tektonika (2) 67
Seismic sources and their associated hazards within the Sacramento-San Joaquin Delta region of north-central California are relatively poorly characterized as compared to other, more heavily studied regions of northern California, such as the San Francisco Bay Area. Here we present a synthesis of subsurface, bedrock geology, and geodetic datasets from...
Joint spatial modeling bridges the gap between disparate disease surveillance and population monitoring efforts informing conservation of at-risk bat species
Christian Stratton, Kathryn Irvine, Katharine M. Banner, Emily S. Almberg, Daniel Bachen, Kristina Smucker
2025, Journal of Agricultural, Biological and Environmental Statistics (30) 120-145
White-Nose Syndrome (WNS) is a wildlife disease that has decimated hibernating bats since its introduction in North America in 2006. As the disease spreads westward, assessing the potentially differential impact of the disease on western bat species is an urgent conservation need. The statistical challenge is that the disease surveillance...
Comparing the efficacy of two immobilization drug combinations for the chemical restraint of bobcats (Lynx rufus)
Christopher N. Jacques, Robert W. Klaver, Christopher S. DePerno, Aimee P. Rockhill
2025, Journal of Wildlife Diseases (60) 86-94
Chemical immobilization agents that provide rapid induction time, short duration of action, wide margin of safety, and postreversal recovery are important attributes to the handling process of immobilized animals. We evaluated differences in induction, recovery, and physiologic parameters in 23 (13 female, nine adults and four yearlings; 10 male, nine...
3D Dynamic rupture modeling of the 6 February 2023, Kahramanmaraş, Turkey Mw 7.8 and 7.7 earthquake doublet using early observations
Alice-Agnes Gabriel, Thomas Ulrich, Mathilde Marchandon, James Burkhardt Biemiller, John Rekoske
2025, The Seismic Record (3) 342-356
The 2023 Turkey earthquake sequence involved unexpected ruptures across numerous fault segments. We present 3D dynamic rupture simulations to illuminate the complex dynamics of the earthquake doublet. Our models are constrained by observations available within days of the sequence and deliver timely, mechanically consistent explanations of the unforeseen rupture paths,...
Seasonal spatial ecology of Lake Trout in Lake Erie
Tyler Funnell, Travis Brenden, Richard Kraus, Tom MacDougall, James Markham, Charles Richard Murray, Jason Robinson, Christopher S. Vandergoot
2025, Transactions of the American Fisheries Society (152) 672-693
ObjectiveLake Trout Salvelinus namaycush are native coldwater apex predators that play an important role in maintaining ecosystem functionality and diversity in the Laurentian Great Lakes. Following population collapses, rehabilitation efforts were widely initiated in the Great Lakes to reestablish self‐sustaining Lake Trout populations. Lake Erie may pose a challenge to these rehabilitation...
Reconnaissance basement geology and tectonics of North Zealandia
Nick Mortimer, Simon Williams, Maria Seton, Andrew T. Calvert, Tod Waight, Rose E. Turnbull, Demian Nelson, Mike Palin, Jahandar Ramezani, Matthew W. Sagar, Andy Tulloch, Wanda Stratford, Julien Collot, Samuel Etienne
2025, Tectonics (42)
New rock dredge samples supply key information to establish the tectonic and geological framework of the northern two-thirds of the 95% submerged Zealandia continent. The R/V Investigator voyage IN2016T01 to the Fairway Ridge, Coral Sea, obtained poorly sorted poly-lithologic pebbly to cobbly sandstones, well sorted fine grained sandstones, mudstones, bioclastic limestones, and...
A new genomic resource to enable standardized surveys of SNPs across the native range of brook trout (Salvelinus fontinalis)
Nadya Mamoozadeh, Andrew R. Whiteley, Benjamin Letcher, David C. Kazyak, Charlene Tarsa, Mariah H. Meek
2025, Molecular Ecology Resources (25)
Understanding how genetic diversity is distributed across spatiotemporal scales in species of conservation or management concern is critical for identifying large-scale mechanisms affecting local conservation status and implementing large-scale biodiversity monitoring programmes. However, cross-scale surveys of genetic diversity are often impractical within single studies, and combining datasets to increase spatiotemporal...
Assessing community assembly controls over community-scale nutrient resorption responses to nitrogen deposition
Xiao-Tao Lü, Sasha Reed, Shuang-Li Hou, Guo-Jiao Yang
2025, Oecologia (202) 549-559
Nutrient resorption is a fundamental physiological process in plants, with important ecological controls over numerous ecosystem functions. However, the role of community assembly in driving responses of nutrient resorption to perturbation remains largely unknown. Following the Price equation framework and the Community Assembly and Ecosystem Function framework, we quantified the...
A self-determination approach to understanding leisure identity salience among lapsed hunters
Kyle Smith, Adam C. Landon, David C. Fulton
2025, Leisure Science (47) 1701-1726
This study extended a framework based on self-determination theory (SDT) and leisure constraints to study identity salience in lapsed hunters. Self-determination theory suggests that multiple forms of motivation influence levels of self-determination and addresses how social-contextual factors affect satisfaction of needs. Data were drawn from a survey of recently lapsed...
Pollen records, postglacial: Southeastern North America
Debra A. Willard
2025, Book chapter, Encyclopedia of Quaternary science (Third Edition)
Pollen records from the unglaciated southeastern region of North America provide an overview of biogeographic changes associated with vegetational migration northward following the retreat of the Laurentide Ice Sheet. Changing insolation during the Holocene affected forest composition on the Coastal Plain, and rising sea level controlled the distribution of marsh and forested wetlands throughout the middle...
Estimating recruitment rate and population dynamics at a migratory stopover site using an integrated population model
Anna Maureen Tucker, Conor P. McGowan, Bryan L. Nuse, James E. Lyons, Clinton T. Moore, David R. Smith, John A. Sweka, Kristen A. Anstead, Audrey DeRose-Wilson, Nigel A. Clark
2025, Ecosphere (14)
Consideration of the full annual cycle population dynamics can provide useful insight for conservation efforts, but collecting data needed to estimate demographic parameters is often logistically difficult. For species that breed in remote areas, monitoring is often conducted during migratory stopover or at nonbreeding sites, and the recruitment rate of...
Can big data inform invasive dreissenid mussel risk assessments of habitat suitability?
Adam Sepulveda, Joshua A. Gage, Timothy D. Counihan, Anthony F. Prisciandaro
2025, Hydrobiologia (852) 1153-1164
Invasion risk assessments of habitat suitability provide insight on early detection effort allocation; however, sufficient data are rarely available to inform assessments. We explored tradeoffs of leveraging big data from the National Water Quality Portal (WQP), a standardized water quality database in the United States,...
Host vs. pathogen evolutionary arms race: Effects of exposure history on individual response to a genetically diverse pathogen
Daniel P. Walsh, Brandi L. Felts, E. Frances Cassirer, Thomas E. Besser, Jonathan A. Jenks
2025, Frontiers in Ecology and Evolution (10)
Introduction: Throughout their range, bighorn sheep (Ovis canadensis) populations have seen significant disease-associated declines. Unfortunately, understanding of the underlying epidemiological processes driving the disease dynamics in this species has hindered conservation efforts aimed at improving the health and long-term viability of these populations. Individual response to pathogen exposure emerges from dynamic...