Novel RAD sequence data reveal a lack of genomic divergence between dietary ecotypes in a landlocked salmonid population
Morten T. Limborg, Wesley Larson, Kyle Shedd, Lisa W. Seeb, James E. Seeb
2017, Conservation Genetics Resources (10) 169-171
Preservation of heritable ecological diversity within species and populations is a key challenge for managing natural resources and wild populations. Salmonid fish are iconic and socio-economically important species for commercial, aquaculture, and recreational fisheries across the globe. Many salmonids are known to exhibit ecological divergence within species, including distinct feeding...
Placement of intracoelomic radio transmitters and silicone passive sampling devices in northern leopard frogs (Lithobates pipiens)
Taylor Yaw, Jennifer E. Swanson, Clay Pierce, Erin L. Muths, Kelly L. Smalling, Mark W. Vandever, Bianca Anne Zaffarano
2017, Journal of Herpetological Medicine and Surgery (27) 111-115
Historically, wetland toxin exposure studies have relied on single time point samples from stationary sampling devices. Development of passive sampling devices (PSDs) that can be attached to individual animals within wetland habitats has greatly improved in recent years, presenting an innovative sampling technology that can potentially yield individual-specific, quantifiable data...
Unexpected stasis in a changing world: Lake nutrient and chlorophyll trends since 1990
Samantha K. Oliver, Sarah M. Collins, Patricia A. Soranno, Tyler Wagner, Emily H. Stanley, John R. Jones, Craig A. Stow, Noah R. Lottig
2017, Global Change Biology (23) 5455-5467
The United States (U.S.) has faced major environmental changes in recent decades, including agricultural intensification and urban expansion, as well as changes in atmospheric deposition and climate—all of which may influence eutrophication of freshwaters. However, it is unclear whether or how water quality in lakes across diverse ecological settings has...
Multi-scale 46-year remote sensing change detection of diamond mining and land cover in a conflict and post-conflict setting
Jessica D. Dewitt, Peter G. Chirico, Sarah E. Bergstresser, Timothy A. Warner
2017, Remote Sensing Applications: Society and Environment (8) 126-139
The town of Tortiya was created in the rural northern region of Côte d′Ivoire in the late 1940s to house workers for a new diamond mine. Nearly three decades later, the closure of the industrial-scale diamond mine in 1975 did not diminish the importance of diamond profits to the region's...
Design tradeoffs in long-term research for stream salamanders
Adrianne B. Brand, Evan H. Campbell Grant
2017, Journal of Wildlife Management (81) 1430-1438
Long-term research programs can benefit from early and periodic evaluation of their ability to meet stated objectives. In particular, consideration of the spatial allocation of effort is key. We sampled 4 species of stream salamanders intensively for 2 years (2010–2011) in the Chesapeake and Ohio Canal National Historical Park, Maryland,...
Biological relevance of streamflow metrics: Regional and national perspectives
Daren M. Carlisle, Theodore E. Grantham, Ken Eng, David M. Wolock
2017, Freshwater Science (36) 927-940
Protecting the health of streams and rivers requires identifying ecologically significant attributes of the natural flow regime. Streamflow regimes are routinely quantified using a plethora of hydrologic metrics (HMs), most of which have unknown relevance to biological communities. At regional and national scales, we evaluated which of 509 commonly used...
Benefits of the fire mitigation ecosystem service in the Great Dismal Swamp National Wildlife Refuge, Virginia, USA
Bryan M. Parthum, Emily Pindilli, Dianna M. Hogan
2017, Journal of Environmental Management (203) 375-382
The Great Dismal Swamp (GDS) National Wildlife Refuge delivers multiple ecosystem services, including air quality and human health via fire mitigation. Our analysis estimates benefits of this service through its potential to reduce catastrophic wildfire related impacts on the health of nearby human populations. We used a combination of high-frequency...
Flood-inundation maps for North Fork Salt Creek at Nashville, Indiana
Zachary W. Martin
2017, Scientific Investigations Report 2017-5127
Digital flood-inundation maps for a 3.2-mile reach of North Fork Salt Creek at Nashville, Indiana, were created by the U.S. Geological Survey (USGS) in cooperation with the Indiana Department of Transportation. The flood-inundation maps, which can be accessed through the USGS Flood Inundation Mapping Science website at http://water.usgs.gov/osw/flood_inundation/,...
A three-dimensional mapping of the ocean based on environmental data
Roger Sayre, Dawn J. Wright, Sean P. Breyer, Kevin Butler, Keith Van Graafeiland, Mark John Costello, Peter T. Harris, Kathleen Goodin, John M. Guinotte, Zeenatul Basher, Maria T. Kavanaugh, Patrick N. Halpin, Mark E. Monaco, Noel Cressie, Peter Aniello, Charles Frye, Drew Stephens
2017, Oceanography (30) 90-103
The existence, sources, distribution, circulation, and physicochemical nature of macroscale oceanic water bodies have long been a focus of oceanographic inquiry. Building on that work, this paper describes an objectively derived and globally comprehensive set of 37 distinct volumetric region units, called ecological marine units (EMUs). They are constructed on...
Influence of sediment chemistry and sediment toxicity on macroinvertebrate communities across 99 wadable streams of the Midwestern USA
Patrick W. Moran, Lisa H. Nowell, Nile E. Kemble, Barbara Mahler, Ian R. Waite, Peter C. Van Metre
2017, Science of the Total Environment (599-600) 1469-1478
Simultaneous assessment of sediment chemistry, sediment toxicity, and macroinvertebrate communities can provide multiple lines of evidence when investigating relations between sediment contaminants and ecological degradation. These three measures were evaluated at 99 wadable stream sites across 11 states in the Midwestern United States during the summer of 2013 to assess...
No evidence of critical slowing down in two endangered Hawaiian honeycreepers
Jessica C. Rozek, Richard J. Camp, J. Michael Reed
2017, PLoS ONE (12) 1-18
There is debate about the current population trends and predicted short-term fates of the endangered forest birds, Hawai`i Creeper (Loxops mana) and Hawai`i `Ākepa (L. coccineus). Using long-term population size estimates, some studies report forest bird populations as stable or increasing, while other studies report signs of population decline or impending...
Why were California's wine country fires so destructive?
Jon E. Keeley
2017, The Conversation
As of late October more than a dozen wildfires north of San Francisco had killed more than 40 people, burned approximately 160,000 acres and destroyed more than 7,000 structures.This tragic loss of life and property is unprecedented in California. However, the fires are not anomalous events in terms of their...
High value of ecological information for river connectivity restoration
Suresh Sethi, Jesse R. O’Hanley, Jonathon Gerken, Joshua Ashline, Catherine Bradley
2017, Landscape Ecology (32) 2327-2336
ContextEfficient restoration of longitudinal river connectivity relies on barrier mitigation prioritization tools that incorporate stream network spatial structure to maximize ecological benefits given limited resources. Typically, ecological benefits of barrier mitigation are measured using proxies such as the amount of accessible riverine habitat.<p...
eDNAoccupancy: An R package for multi-scale occupancy modeling of environmental DNA data
Robert Dorazio, Richard A. Erickson
2017, Molecular Ecology Resources (18) 368-380
In this article we describe eDNAoccupancy, an R package for fitting Bayesian, multi-scale occupancy models. These models are appropriate for occupancy surveys that include three, nested levels of sampling: primary sample units within a study area, secondary sample units collected from each primary unit, and replicates of each secondary sample...
Modeling global Hammond landform regions from 250-m elevation data
Deniz Karagulle, Charlie Frye, Roger Sayre, Sean P. Breyer, Peter Aniello, Randy Vaughan, Dawn J. Wright
2017, Transactions in GIS (21) 1040-1060
In 1964, E.H. Hammond proposed criteria for classifying and mapping physiographic regions of the United States. Hammond produced a map entitled “Classes of Land Surface Form in the Forty-Eight States, USA”, which is regarded as a pioneering and rigorous treatment of regional physiography. Several researchers automated Hammond?s model in GIS....
Disturbance hydrology: Preparing for an increasingly disturbed future
Benjamin B. Mirus, Brian A. Ebel, Christian H. Mohr, Nicolas Zegre
2017, Water Resources Research (53) 10007-10016
This special issue is the result of several fruitful conference sessions on disturbance hydrology, which started at the 2013 AGU Fall Meeting in San Francisco and have continued every year since. The stimulating presentations and discussions surrounding those sessions have focused on understanding both the disruption of hydrologic functioning following...
Hydrologic metrics for status-and-trends monitoring in urban and urbanizing watersheds
Derek B. Booth, Christopher P. Konrad
2017, Hydrological Processes (31) 4507-4519
Local governmental agencies are increasingly undertaking potentially costly “status-and-trends” monitoring to evaluate the effectiveness of stormwater control measures and land-use planning strategies, or to satisfy regulatory requirements. Little guidance is presently available for such efforts, and so we have explored the application, interpretation, and temporal limitations of well-established hydrologic metrics...
Sampling uncharted waters: Examining rearing habitat of larval Longfin Smelt (Spirinchus thaleichthys) in the upper San Francisco Estuary
Lenny Grimaldo, Frederick V. Feyrer, Jillian Burns, Donna Maniscalco
2017, Estuaries and Coasts (40) 1771-1784
The southern-most reproducing Longfin Smelt population occurs in the San Francisco Estuary, California, USA. Long-term monitoring of estuarine habitat for this species has generally only considered deep channels, with little known of the role shallow waters play in supporting their early life stage. To address the need for focused research...
Central Arctic Ocean paleoceanography from ∼50 ka to present, on the basis of ostracode faunal assemblages from the SWERUS 2014 expedition
Laura Gemery, Thomas M. Cronin, Robert K. Poirier, Christof Pearce, Natalia Barrientos, Matt O’Regan, Carina Johansson, Andrey Koshurnikov, Martin Jakobsson
2017, Climate of the Past (13) 1473-1489
Late Quaternary paleoceanographic changes at the Lomonosov Ridge, central Arctic Ocean, were reconstructed from a multicore and gravity core recovered during the 2014 SWERUS-C3 Expedition. Ostracode assemblages dated by accelerator mass spectrometry (AMS) indicate changing sea-ice conditions and warm Atlantic Water (AW)inflow to the Arctic Ocean from ∼50 ka to...
Subduction zone slip variability during the last millennium, south-central Chile
Tina Dura, Benjamin P. Horton, Macro Cisternas, Lisa L Ely, Isabel Hong, Alan R. Nelson, Robert L. Wesson, Jessica E. Pilarczyk, Andrew C. Parnell, Daria Nikitina
2017, Quaternary Science Reviews (175) 112-137
The Arauco Peninsula (37°-38°S) in south-central Chile has been proposed as a possible barrier to the along-strike propagation of megathrust ruptures, separating historical earthquakes to the south (1960 AD 1837, 1737, and 1575) and north (2010 AD, 1835, 1751, 1657, and 1570) of the peninsula. However, the 2010 (Mw 8.8)...
Modeling of high‐frequency seismic‐wave scattering and propagation using radiative transfer theory
Yuehua Zeng
2017, Bulletin of the Seismological Society of America (107) 2948-2962
This is a study of the nonisotropic scattering process based on radiative transfer theory and its application to the observation of the M 4.3 aftershock recording of the 2008 Wells earthquake sequence in Nevada. Given a wide range of recording distances from 29 to 320 km, the data provide a unique opportunity...
Understanding recurrent land use processes and long-term transitions in the dynamic south-central United States, c. 1800 to 2006
Mark A. Drummond, Glenn E. Griffith, Roger F. Auch, Michael P. Stier, Janis L. Taylor, D. J. Hester, Jodi L. Riegle, Jamie L. McBeth
2017, Land Use Policy (68) 345-354
Forests have historically been under significant land use pressures that cause periods of degradation, clearance, and recovery. To understand these changes, studies are needed that place trends in a historical landscape context and also examine recent dynamics. Here, we use historical investigation (c. 1800) and an examination of land use...
Future scenarios of land change based on empirical data and demographic trends
Benjamin M. Sleeter, Tamara Wilson, Ethan Sharygin, Jason T. Sherba
2017, Earth's Future (5) 1068-1083
Changes in land use and land cover (LULC) have important and fundamental interactions with the global climate system. Top-down global scale projections of land use change have been an important component of climate change research; however, their utility at local to regional scales is often limited. The goal of this...
Variation in annual clutch phenology of desert tortoises (Gopherus morafkai) in the Sonoran Desert of Arizona
Jeffrey E. Lovich, Roy C. Averill-Murray, Mickey Agha, Joshua R. Ennen, Meaghan Austin
2017, Herpetologica (73) 313-322
The phenology of egg production and oviposition in organisms affects survival and development of neonates and thus, both offspring and maternal fitness. In addition, in organisms with environmental sex determination, clutch phenology can affect hatchling sex ratios with attendant effects on population demography. The rapid rate of contemporary climate change...
Population trends, survival, and sampling methodologies for a population of Rana draytonii
Gary M. Fellers, Patrick M. Kleeman, David A.W. Miller, Brian J. Halstead
2017, Journal of Herpetology (51) 567-573
Estimating population trends provides valuable information for resource managers, but monitoring programs face trade-offs between the quality and quantity of information gained and the number of sites surveyed. We compared the effectiveness of monitoring techniques for estimating population trends of Rana draytonii (California Red-legged Frog) at Point Reyes National Seashore,...