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Page 366, results 9126 - 9150

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Publication Extents

Not all publications have extents, not all extents are completely accurate
Toward scoping reviews of individual bird species
Christopher J W McClure, Zackery Szymczycha, David L Anderson, Francisca Helena Aguiar-Silva, Sarah Schulwitz, Leah Dunn, MIchael T Henderson, Leticia Camacho, Jose de Jesus Vargas Gonzalez, Chris N. Parish, Evan R. Buechley, Jesse D’Elia, Sanford Wilbur, Kenneth Johansen, Devin L Johnson, Soren Moller, Ivan Pokrovsky, Todd E. Katzner
2022, Ibis (164) 835-845
Scoping reviews, in which the literature on a given topic is systematically collated and summarized, aid literature searches and highlight knowledge gaps on a given topic, thus hastening scientific progress and informing conservation efforts. Because much research and conservation is targeted at the species level, ornithology...
Site- and individual-level contaminations affect infection prevalence of an emerging infectious disease of amphibians
Kelly L. Smalling, Brittany A. Mosher, Luke R. Iwanowicz, Keith A. Loftin, Adam Boehlke, Michelle L. Hladik, Carly R. Muletz-Wolz, Nandadevi Cortes-Rodriguez, Robin Femmer, Evan H. Campbell Grant
2022, Environmental Toxicology and Chemistry (41) 781-791
Emerging infectious disease outbreaks are one of multiple stressors responsible for amphibian declines globally. In the northeastern United States, ranaviral diseases are prevalent in amphibians and other ectothermic species, but there is still uncertainty as to whether their presence is leading to population level effects. Further, there is also uncertainty...
Assessing vegetation recovery from energy development using a dynamic reference approach
Adrian P. Monroe, Travis W. Nauman, Cameron L. Aldridge, Michael S. O’Donnell, Michael C. Duniway, Brian S. Cade, Daniel Manier, Patrick J. Anderson
2022, Ecology and Evolution (12) 1-22
Ecologically relevant references are useful for evaluating ecosystem recovery, but references that are temporally static may be less useful when environmental conditions and disturbances are spatially and temporally heterogeneous. This challenge is particularly acute for ecosystems dominated by sagebrush (Artemisia spp.), where communities may require decades to recover from disturbance. We...
Face-off: Novel depredation and nest defense behaviors between an invasive and a native predator in the Greater Everglades Ecosystem, Florida, USA
Andrea Faye Currylow, Matthew F. McCollister, Gretchen Erika Anderson, Jillian Maureen Josimovich, Austin Lee Fitzgerald, Christina M. Romagosa, Amy A. Yackel Adams
2022, Ecology and Evolution (12) 1-6
We describe several photo-documented novel interactions between intraguild predators in southern Florida—the native bobcat (Lynx rufus) and the invasive Burmese python (Python bivittatus). Over several days we documented a bobcat's depredation of an unguarded python nest and subsequent python nest defense behavior following the return of both animals to the...
Higher temperature sensitivity of flowering than leaf-out alters the time between phenophases across temperate tree species
Xiaojun Geng, Yongshuo F. Fu, Shilong Piao, Fanghua Hao, Hans J. De Boeck, Xuan Zhang, Shouzhi Chen, Yahui Guo, Janet S. Prevey, Yann Vitasse, Josep Penuelas, Ivan A. Janssens, Nils Christian Stenseth
2022, Global Ecology and Biogeography (31) 901-911
AimThe aims of this study were to evaluate the changes in the length of the time period between leaf-out and flowering across temperate tree species, and associate these changes with potential physiological and environmental drivers to enhance mechanistic insight into these phenomena.LocationCentral Europe.<h3 id="geb13463-sec-0003-title"...
A unified perspective of seismicity and fault coupling along the San Andreas Fault
Y.-K. Liu, Z. Ross, Elizabeth S. Cochran, N. Lapusta
2022, Science Advances (8)
The San Andreas Fault (SAF) showcases the breadth of possible earthquake sizes and occurrence behavior; in particular, the central SAF is a microcosm of such diversity. This section also exhibits the spectrum of fault coupling from locked to creeping. Here, we show that the observations of aseismic slip, temporal clustering...
Coupling process-based and empirical models to assess management options to meet conservation goals
Catherine S. Jarnevich, Catherine Cullinane Thomas, Nicholas E. Young, Perry Grissom, Dana M. Backer, Leonardo Frid
2022, Biological Conservation (256) 1-13
Conservation lands face a mounting threat of ecosystem transformation and the loss of biodiversity from the invasion of fire-prone perennial and annual grasses. Managers must make difficult decisions to find efficient ways to expend limited resources to manage large and complex landscapes amidst substantial uncertainty regarding effective treatment strategies, climates,...
INHABIT: A web-based decision support tool for invasive plant species habitat visualization and assessment across the contiguous United States
Peder Engelstad, Catherine S. Jarnevich, Terri Hogan, Helen Sofaer, Ian Pearse, Jennifer Sieracki, Neil Frakes, Julia Sullivan, Nicholas E. Young, Janet S. Prevey, Pairsa Nicole Belamaric, Jillian Marie Laroe
Daniel de Paiva Silva, editor(s)
2022, PLoSOne (17) 1-15
Narrowing the communication and knowledge gap between producers and users of scientific data is a longstanding problem in ecological conservation and land management. Decision support tools (DSTs), including websites or interactive web applications, provide platforms that can help bridge this gap. DSTs can most effectively disseminate and translate research results...
Fluoride in thermal and non-thermal groundwater: Insights from geochemical modeling
D. Kirk Nordstrom
2022, Science of the Total Evironment (824)
High fluoride (F) groundwaters (>1 mg/L) have been recognized as a water quality problem for nearly a century and occur in many countries worldwide. The affected aquifers can be sedimentary, metamorphic or igneous rocks, but the process giving rise to high-F concentrations has been...
Elevations of mangrove forests of Pohnpei, Micronesia
Joanna C Ellison, Kevin Buffington, Karen M. Thorne, Dean B. Gesch, Jeffrey Irwin, Jeffrey J. Danielson
2022, Estuarine, Coastal and Shelf Science (268)
Mangrove surface elevation is the crux of mangrove vulnerability to sea level rise. Local topography influences critical periods of tidal inundation that govern distributions of mangrove species and dictates future distributions. This study surveyed ground surface elevations of the extensive mangroves of Pohnpei,...
New insights into the occurrence and implications of mobile water in gas hydrate systems
Ray Boswell, Koji Yamamoto, Machiko Tamaki, Timothy S. Collett, George Moridis, Evgeniy Myshakin
2022, Journal of Energy and Fuels (36) 2447-2461
Gas hydrate production technologies commonly feature reservoir depressurization. Depressurization occurs when a pressure gradient is established in a well, drawing mobile water from the reservoir and reducing reservoir pressure. As such, the occurrence of mobile water is a necessary condition for effective gas production from gas...
Volcano geodesy using InSAR in 2020: The past and next decades
Michael Poland, Howard Zebker
2022, Bulletin of Volcanology (84)
The study of volcano deformation has grown significantly through they year 2020 since the development of interferometric synthetic aperture radar (InSAR) in the 1990s. This relatively new data source, which provides evidence of changes in subsurface magma storage and pressure without the need for ground-based equipment, has matured during the past...
Permeability measurement and prediction with nuclear magnetic resonance analysis of gas hydrate-bearing sediments recovered from Alaska North Slope 2018 Hydrate-01 Stratigraphic Test Well
Jun Yoneda, Kiyofumi Suzuki, Yusuke Jin, Satoshi Ohtsuki, Timothy S. Collett, Ray Boswell, Yuki Maehara, Norihiro Okinaka
2022, Energy and Fuels Journal (36) 2515-2529
Permeability of porous media, such as oil and gas reservoirs, is the crucial material parameter for predicting their hydraulic behavior. A nuclear magnetic resonance (NMR) analyzer is widely used as a powerful tool to predict permeability of various media. NMR T2 (transverse or spin–spin) relaxation time distribution, which...
Validating predicted site response in sedimentary basins from 3D ground motion simulations
Chukwuebuka C Nweke, Jonathan P. Stewart, Robert Graves, Christine A. Goulet, Scott J Brandenberg
2022, Earthquake Spectra (38) 2135-2161
We introduce procedures to validate site response in sedimentary basins as predicted using ground motion simulations. These procedures aim to isolate contributions of site response to computed intensity measures relative to those from seismic source and path effects. In one of the validation procedures, simulated motions are...
Characterizing unrest: A retrospective look at 20 years of gas emissions and seismicity at Iliamna Volcano, Alaska
Cynthia Werner, John Power, Peter J. Kelly, Stephanie Prejean, Christoph Kern
2022, Journal of Volcanology and Geothermal Research (422)
Episodes of unrest are not as well documented as eruptions at most volcanoes globally. Iliamna is an andesitic stratovolcano in the Cook Inlet of Alaska that has experienced several episodes of unrest. Unrest in 1996 was previously studied. Here we present data...
Exploring genetic variation and population structure in a threatened species, Noturus placidus, with whole-genome sequence data
Lynsey K. Whitacre, Mark L. Wildhaber, Gary S. Johnson, Harly J. Durbin, Troy N. Rowan, Peoria Tribe, Robert D. Schnabel, Tendai Mhlanga-Mutangadura, Vernon M. Tabor, Daniel Fenner, Jared E. Decker
2022, G3: Genes, Genomes, Genetics (12)
The Neosho madtom (Noturus placidus) is a small catfish, generally less than 3 inches in length, unique to the Neosho-Spring River system within the Arkansas River Basin. It was federally listed as threatened in 1990, largely due to habitat loss. For conservation efforts, we generated whole-genome sequence data from...
Kelp-forest dynamics controlled by substrate complexity
Zachary Randell, Michael C. Kenner, Joseph A. Tomoleoni, Julie L. Yee, Mark Novak
2022, PNAS (119)
The factors that determine why ecosystems exhibit abrupt shifts in state are of paramount importance for management, conservation, and restoration efforts. Kelp forests are emblematic of such abruptly shifting ecosystems, transitioning from kelp-dominated to urchin-dominated states around the world with increasing frequency, yet the underlying processes...
Classifying behavior from short-interval biologging data: An example with GPS tracking of birds
Silas Bergen, Manuela Huso, A. Duerr, Missy A Braham, Todd E. Katzner, Sara Schmuecker, Tricia A. Miller
2022, Ecology and Evolution (12)
Recent advances in digital data collection have spurred accumulation of immense quantities of data that have potential to lead to remarkable ecological insight, but that also present analytic challenges. In the case of biologging data from birds, common analytical approaches to classifying movement behaviors are largely inappropriate for these...
Analyzing the effects of land cover change on the water balance for case study watersheds in different forested ecosystems in the USA
Nathan C. Healey, Jennifer Rover
2022, Land (11)
We analyzed impacts of interannual disturbance on the water balance of watersheds in different forested ecosystem case studies across the United States from 1985 to 2016 using a remotely sensed long-term land cover monitoring record (U.S. Geological Survey Land Change Monitoring, Assessment, and Projection (LCMAP) Collection 1.0 Science products), gridded...
Rainfall triggering of post-fire debris flows over a 28-year period near El Portal, California, USA
Jerome V. De Graff, Dennis M. Staley, Greg M. Stock, Kellen Takenaka, Alan L. Gallegos, Chad K. Neptune
2022, Environmental and Engineering Geoscience (28) 133-145
Wildfires frequently affect the steep hillslopes near El Portal, California (United States), a small community established during the California Gold Rush in the mid-1800s. In addition to the historical significance of El Portal, State Route 140 (SR 140) is a major transportation and economic corridor connecting the San Joaquin Valley...
Rockfall kinematics from massive rock cliffs: Outlier boulders and flyrock from Whitney Portal, California, rockfalls
Brian D. Collins, Skye C. Corbett, Elizabeth Jean Horton, Alan J. Gallegos
2022, Environmental and Engineering Geoscience (28) 3-24
Geologic conditions and topographic setting are among the most critical factors for assessing rockfall hazards. However, other subtle features of rockfall motion may also govern the runout of rockfall debris, particularly for those sourced from massive cliffs where debris can have substantial momentum during transport. Rocks may undergo collisions with...
Unravelling a 2300 year long sedimentary record of megathrust and intraslab earthquakes in proglacial Skilak Lake, south-central Alaska
Nore Praet, Maarten Van Daele, Jasper Moernaut, Thomas Mestdagh, Thomas Vandorpe, Britta J.L. Jensen, Robert C. Witter, Peter J. Haeussler, Marc De Batist
2022, Sedimentology (69) 2151-2180
Seismic hazards in subduction settings typically arise from megathrust, intraslab and crustal earthquake sources. Despite the frequent occurrence of intraslab earthquakes in subduction zones and their potential threat to communities, their long-term recurrence behaviour is barely studied. Sedimentary sequences in lakes may register ground shaking from different seismic sources. This...
Detrital zircon provenance of the Cretaceous-Neogene East Coast Basin reveals changing tectonic conditions and drainage reorganization along the Pacific margin of Zealandia
Jared T. Gooley, Nora Maria Nieminski
2022, Geosphere (18) 616-646
The Upper Cretaceous–Pliocene strata of New Zealand record ~100 m.y. of Zealandia’s evolution, including development of the Hikurangi convergent margin and Alpine transform plate boundary. A comprehensive, new detrital zircon U-Pb data set (8315 analyses from 61 samples) was generated along a ~700 km transect of the East Coast Basin...
Hypotheses and lessons from a native moth outbreak in a low-diversity, tropical rainforest
Paul C. Banko, Robert W. Peck, Stephanie G. Yelenik, Eben H. Paxton, Frank Bonaccorso, Kristina Montoya-Aiona, R. Flint Hughes, Steven Perakis
Uffe Nielsen, editor(s)
2022, Ecosphere (13) 1-41
Outbreaks of defoliating insects in low-diversity tropical forests occur infrequently but provide valuable insights about outbreak ecology in temperate environments and in general. We investigated an extensive outbreak of the endemic koa moth (Scotorythra paludicola), which defoliated endemic koa trees (Acacia koa) over a third of their range on Hawai‘i...
DSWEmod - The production of high-frequency surface water map composites from daily MODIS images
Christopher E. Soulard, Eric Waller, Jessica J. Walker, Roy Petrakis, Britt Windsor Smith
2022, Journal of the American Water Resources Association (58) 248-268
Optical satellite imagery is commonly used for monitoring surface water dynamics, but clouds and cloud shadows present challenges in assembling complete water time series. To test whether the daily revisit rate of Moderate Resolution Imaging Spectroradiometer (MODIS) satellite imagery can reduce cloud obstruction and improve high-frequency...