Self-potential tomography preconditioned by particle swarm optimization— Application to monitoring hyporheic exchange in a bedrock river
Scott Ikard, Kenneth C. Carroll, Scott C. Brooks, Dale F. Rucker, Gladisol Smith-Vega, Aubrey Elwes
2024, Water Resources Research (60)
A self-potential (SP) data-inversion algorithm was developed and tested on an analytical model of electrical-potential profile data attributed to single and multiple polarized electrical sources. The developed algorithm was then validated by an application to SP-monitoring field data measured on the floodplain of East Fork Poplar Creek, Oak Ridge, Tennessee,...
Handling effects on dispersal of PIT-tagged Flannelmouth Sucker
Sophia Marie Bonjour, Keith B. Gido, Mark C. McKinstry
2024, North American Journal of Fisheries Management (44) 1111-1120
ObjectiveHandling and tagging migrating fish might alter their behavior, limiting inference from mark–recapture studies. Posthandling flight of tributary spawning Flannelmouth Sucker Catostomus latipinnis was previously identified in Coal Creek in the upper Colorado River basin. Our objective was to determine if similar issues were present at McElmo Creek in...
Imaging of seismic discontinuities using an adjoint method
Frederick Pollitz, Leah Langer
2024, Geophysical Journal International (240) 96-116
For imaging of seismic discontinuities at depth, reverse time migration (RTM) is a powerful method to apply to recordings of seismic events. It is especially powerful when an extensive receiver array, numerous seismic sources, or both, permit adequate reconstruction of incident and scattered wavefields at depth. Reconstructing either the incident...
Radiogenic strontium- and uranium-isotope tracers of water-rock interactions and hydrothermal flow in the Upper Geyser Basin, Yellowstone Plateau Volcanic Field, USA
James B. Paces, Shaul Hurwitz, Lauren N Harrison, Jacob B. Lowenstern, R. Blaine McCleskey
2024, Geochemistry Geophysics, Geosystems (25)
Natural radiogenic isotopes (primarily 87Sr/86Sr) from hot springs in the Upper Geyser Basin of the Yellowstone Plateau volcanic field and associated rocks were used to evaluate groundwater flow patterns, water-rock reactions, and the extent of mixing between various groundwater sources. Thermal waters have very low uranium concentrations and 234U/238U...
A multi-objective approach for timber harvest scheduling to include management of at-risk species and spatial configuration objectives
Max D. Jones, Angela Larsen-Gray, Stephen P. Prisley, Holly L. Munro, Elizabeth Ann Hunter
2024, PLoS ONE (19)
Sustainable forestry typically involves integration of several economic and ecological objectives which, at times, may not be compatible with one another. Multi-objective prioritization via harvest scheduling programs can be used to elucidate these relationships and explore solutions. One such program is a spatially explicit harvest scheduler that adopts the Metropolis-Hastings...
Benthic community metrics track hydrologically stressed mangrove systems
Amanda Demopoulos, Jill Bourque, Jennifer McClain Counts, Nicole Cormier, Ken Krauss
2024, Diversity (16)
Mangrove restoration efforts have increased in order to help combat their decline globally. While restoration efforts often focus on planting seedlings, underlying chronic issues, including disrupted hydrological regimes, can hinder restoration success. While improving hydrology may be more cost-effective and have higher success rates than planting seedlings alone, hydrological restoration...
The geometry of fault reactivation and uplift along the central part of the Maacama fault zone, northern California Coast Ranges (USA)
Benjamin L. Melosh, Robert J. McLaughlin, Henry Ohlin
2024, Geosphere (20) 1511-1532
Fault reactivation of bedrock structures in active fault zones influences stress state and earthquake rupture phenomena through the introduction of weak slip surfaces that impact fault zone geometry and width. Yet, geometric relationships between modern faults and older reactivated faults are difficult to quantify in rocks that have experienced multiple...
Use of a numerical groundwater-flow model and projected climate scenarios to simulate the effects of future climate conditions on base flow for reach 1 of the Washita River alluvial aquifer and Foss Reservoir storage, western Oklahoma
Laura G. Labriola, John H. Ellis, Subhrendu Gangopadhyay, Pierre-Emmanuel Kirstetter, Yang Hong
2024, Scientific Investigations Report 2024-5082
To better understand the relation between climate variability and future groundwater resources in reach 1 of the Washita River alluvial aquifer and Foss Reservoir in western Oklahoma, the U.S. Geological Survey, in cooperation with the Bureau of Reclamation, used a previously published numerical groundwater-flow model and climate-model data to investigate...
Power analysis of water quality of standing water bodies in the Pacific Island Network, 2009–2017
P. Marcos Gorresen, Richard J. Camp, David F Raikow
2024, Report
The National Park Service (NPS) Inventory and Monitoring Division (IMD) aims to provide data on park ecosystems' health to guide management decisions. Since 2007, NPS IMD has monitored water quality in marine areas, streams, anchialine pools, wetlands, and lakes in the Pacific Island Network...
Influence of stream temperature and human disturbance on prespawn mortality of Chinook Salmon in the Willamette River basin
Katherine C. Carey, Michael L. Kent, Carl B. Schreck , Claire E. Couch, Luke Whitman, James Peterson
2024, North American Journal of Fisheries Management (44) 1147-1164
ObjectivePremature mortality of adult female Chinook Salmon Oncorhynchus tshawytscha is a major barrier to population recovery. The Willamette River basin, Oregon, typifies the problems that are faced by fishery managers in the Pacific Northwest (USA). Adult salmon are trapped and transported upstream of dams to access historical spawning...
Cave climate 100 meters below the surface in the pseudokarst of the Kilauea Southwest Rift Zone, Hawaii
Timothy N. Titus, Glen E. Cushing, Chris Okubo, Kaj E. Williams
Eve L. Kuniansky, Lawrence E. Spangler, editor(s)
2024, Conference Paper, U.S. Geological Survey Karst Interest Group Proceedings
Kīlauea volcano hosts numerous pit craters that are inferred to have formed in competent bedrock (lava flows with minor tephra and other sediments), including Wood Valley Pit Crater. The Wood Valley Pit Crater is a 50-meter-deep, nearly circular pit that includes access to a cave entrance, which provides an opportunity...
Silver carp experience metabolic and behavioral changes when exposed to water from the Chicago Area Waterway
Amy E. Schneider, Andrew J. Esbaugh, Aaron R. Cupp, C.D. Suski
2024, Scientific Reports (14)
One of the hallmarks of invasive species is their propensity to spread. Removing an invasive species after establishment is virtually impossible, and so considerable effort is invested in preventing the range expansion of invaders. Silver carp (Hypophthalmichthys molitrix) were discovered in the Mississippi River in 1981 and have spread throughout...
The status and conservation needs of the Micronesian Megapode (Megapodius laperouse laperouse) across the Mariana archipelago
Paul Radley, Richard J. Camp, Frederick A Amidon, Ann P. Marshall, P. Marcos Gorresen, Curt T. Kessler
2024, Pacific Conservation Biology (30)
ContextAccurate baseline data for wildlife populations are important to track trends of these populations over time and to identify threats to their long-term persistence.AimsWe aimed to assess the status and distribution of the little studied megapode (Megapodius laperouse laperouse) across the Mariana Islands.MethodsUsing passive...
A genetic assessment of natural barriers for isolating a habitat network proposed for Greenback Cutthroat Trout reintroduction
Taylor Stack, Matthew P. Fairchild, Rachel Geiger, Sara J. Oyler-McCance, Jennifer A. Fike, Christopher M. Kennedy, Dana L. Winkelman, Yoichiro Kanno
2024, Journal of Fisheries Management (44) 1062-1072
Objective: Native inland trout conservation efforts rely on physical barriers to exclude nonnative salmonids from target habitats. We used genetic techniques to evaluate a series of natural waterfalls for their potential to serve as barriers to prevent nonnative salmonids from entering a proposed reintroduction area for federally threatened Greenback Cutthroat...
Afterslip and creep in the rate-dependent framework: Joint inversion of borehole strain and GNSS displacements for the Mw 7.1 Ridgecrest earthquake
Catherine Hannagan, Richard Bennett, Andrew J. Barbour, Amanda N. Hughes
2024, Journal of Geophysics Research (129)
The elusive transition toward afterslip following an earthquake is challenging to capture with typical data resolution limits. A dense geodetic network recorded the Mw 7.1 Ridgecrest earthquake, including 16 Global Navigation Satellite System (GNSS) stations and 3 borehole strainmeters (BSM). The sub-nanostrain precision and sub-second sampling rate...
Analysis of factors affecting plume remediation in a sole-source aquifer system, southeastern Nassau County, New York
Michael N. Fienen, Nicholas Corson-Dosch, Frederick Stumm, Paul E. Misut, Kalle Jahn, Jillian Troyer, Christopher E. Schubert, Donald A. Walter, Jason S. Finkelstein, Jack Monti Jr., Daniel J. St. Germain, John Williams, Joshua Woda
2024, Scientific Investigations Report 2024-5086
Several plumes of dissolved, chlorinated solvents, including trichloroethylene, have been identified in a sole-source aquifer near the former Northrop Grumman Bethpage Facility and Naval Weapons Industrial Reserve Plant sites in southeastern Nassau County, New York. Past investigations have documented that the groundwater contamination originated from this industrial area and now...
Ice cave climate monitoring at Sunset Crater National Monument, Arizona
Timothy N. Titus, Kaj E. Williams, Glen E. Cushing, Amber L. Gullikson
Eve L. Kuniansky, Lawrence E. Spangler, editor(s)
2024, Conference Paper, U.S. Geological Survey Karst Interest Group Proceedings
The purpose of this project was to monitor the cave climate of the Sunset Crater National Monument “Bonito Flow” Ice Cave. The main purpose of the climate monitoring was to determine if “Ice Cave” was still an ice cave, i.e., a cave that contains perennial ice. The data acquired from...
Taylor-made: The meaning of mentorship in fisheries
Andrew Kenneth Carlson
2024, Aquatic Ecosystem Health & Management (27) 19-20
Thirteen years ago, as a senior in college, I barely knew what research was. Although I spent my senior year conducting fieldwork and writing 50 pages about Brown Trout Salmo trutta population dynamics in southeast Minnesota streams, the essence of research eluded me. It was not until graduate school that things clicked....
Planetary caves from Mercury to Pluto?
Timothy N. Titus, Janna Wynne, Michael J. Malaska, Penelope J. Boston
Eve L. Kuniansky, Lawrence E. Spangler, editor(s)
2024, Conference Paper, USGS Karst Interest Group Workshop
On Earth, caves are unique environments at the intersection of geology, climate, and biology. Given that the same terrestrial speleogenetic processes exist throughout the solar system, it would be surprising if caves beyond Earth did not exist. Thousands of potential cave entrances (or subsurface access points) have been identified from...
Rapid simulation of wave runup on morphologically diverse, reef-lined coasts with the BEWARE-2 (Broad-range Estimator of Wave Attack in Reef Environments) meta-process model
Robert T. McCall, Curt D. Storlazzi, Floortje Roelvink, Stuart Pearson, Roel de Goede, Jose A.A. Antolinez
2024, Natural Hazards and Earth System Sciences (24) 3597-3625
Low-lying, tropical, coral-reef-lined coastlines are becoming increasingly vulnerable to wave-driven flooding due to population growth, coral reef degradation, and sea-level rise. Early-warning systems (EWSs) are needed to enable coastal authorities to issue timely alerts and coordinate preparedness and evacuation measures for their coastal communities. At longer timescales, risk management and adaptation...
Concepts and evolution of urban hydrology.
Tim D. Fletcher, Matthew J. Burns, Kathryn L Russell, Perrine Hamel, Sophie Duchesne, Frédéric Cherqui, Allison H. Roy
2024, Nature Reviews Earth & Environment (5) 789-801
Urbanization and climate change are exacerbating the flood risk and ecosystem degradation in urban catchments, with traditional stormwater management systems often overwhelmed. In this Review, we discuss changes in urban hydrology and approaches to stormwater management. Roughly 90% of rainfall on impervious surfaces and drainage infrastructure becomes run-off, enhancing rainfall...
A case for improved global coordination of volcano observatories
Jacob B. Lowenstern
2024, Annals of Geophysics (67)
The distribution of volcano monitoring networks and volcano expertise does not correlate well with the global distribution of volcanic risk. All countries have cultural, financial, bureaucratic, political, and logistical barriers to effective risk reduction. The lack of parity amongst volcano observatories jeopardizes public safety and curtails scientific research and understanding....
Assessment of pollution and other impairments of US reservoirs based on expert opinion
Leandro E. Miranda, D.J. Shoemaker, R. M. Krogman
2024, Frontiers in Enviornmental Science (12)
A comprehensive understanding of the prevailing pollution and other impairments to reservoirs is necessary at the national level to analyze patterns and causes as well as allocate national resources effectively. Most of these impairments are associated with sedimentation, nutrient contamination, and other pollution factors. The costs involved in conducting on-site...
Effect of oxygenation and location on survival and growth of endangered Lost River Suckers in net pens
Nathan V Banet, Summer M. Burdick, Ryan J Bart, Alta C. Harris, Jacob Richard Krause
2024, Journal of Fish and Wildlife Management (15) 361-379
Acclimation of captively reared fishes to their release environment through soft releases and cage culture can improve survival. Recovery strategies for imperiled Lost River Suckers Deltistes luxatus includes soft releases of captive reared juveniles in net pens in Upper Klamath Lake, Oregon. However, intermittent and sometimes extreme hypoxia in the lake can...
Predictions of groundwater PFAS occurrence at drinking water supply depths in the United States
Andrea K. Tokranov, Katherine Marie Ransom, Laura M. Bexfield, Bruce D. Lindsey, Elise Watson, Danielle Dupuy, Paul Stackelberg, Miranda S. Fram, Stefan Voss, James A. Kingsbury, Bryant Jurgens, Kelly Smalling, Paul M. Bradley
2024, Science (386) 748-755
Per- and polyfluoroalkyl substances (PFAS), known colloquially as “forever chemicals”, have been associated with adverse human health effects and have contaminated drinking water supplies across the United States owing to their long-term and widespread use. People in the United States may unknowingly be drinking water that contains PFAS because of...