Spatially dependent responses of a large-river fish assemblage to bank stabilization and side channels
Ann Marie Reinhold, Robert G. Bramblett, Alexander V. Zale, Geoffrey C. Poole, David W. Roberts
2017, Transactions of the American Fisheries Society (146) 967-982
The alteration of rivers by anthropogenic bank stabilization to prevent the erosion of economically valuable lands and structures has become commonplace. However, such alteration has ambiguous consequences for fish assemblages, especially in large rivers. Because most large, temperate rivers have impoundments, it can be difficult to separate the influences of...
Using genetic pedigree reconstruction to estimate effective spawner abundance from redd surveys: an example involving Pacific lamprey (Entosphenus tridentatus)
S.L. Whitlock, L.D. Schultz, Carl B. Schreck, J.E. Hess
2017, Canadian Journal of Fisheries and Aquatic Sciences (74) 1646-1653
Redd surveys are a commonly used technique for indexing the abundance of sexually mature fish in streams; however, substantial effort is often required to link redd counts to actual spawner abundance. In this study, we describe how genetic pedigree reconstruction can be used to estimate effective spawner abundance in a...
Future of Pacific salmon in the face of environmental change: Lessons from one of the world's remaining productive salmon regions
Erik R. Schoen, Mark S. Wipfli, Jamie Trammell, Daniel J. Rinella, Angelica L. Floyd, Jess Grunblatt, Molly D. McCarthy, Benjamin E. Meyer, John M. Morton, James E. Powell, Anupma Prakash, Matthew N. Reimer, Svetlana L. Stuefer, Horacio Toniolo, Brett M. Wells, Frank D. W. Witmer
2017, Fisheries (42) 538-553
Pacific salmon Oncorhynchus spp. face serious challenges from climate and landscape change, particularly in the southern portion of their native range. Conversely, climate warming appears to be allowing salmon to expand northwards into the Arctic. Between these geographic extremes, in the Gulf of Alaska region, salmon are at historically high abundances but...
Spatial and temporal patterns in golden eagle diets in the western United States, with implications for conservation planning
Geoffrey Bedrosian, James W. Watson, Karen Steenhof, Michael N. Kochert, Charles R. Preston, Brian Woodbridge, Gary E. Williams, Kent R. Keller, Ross H. Crandall
2017, Journal of Raptor Research (51) 347-367
Detailed information on diets and predatory ecology of Golden Eagles (Aquila chrysaetos) is essential to prioritize prey species management and to develop landscape-specific conservation strategies, including mitigation of the effects of energy development across the western United States. We compiled published and unpublished data on Golden Eagle diets to (1)...
Using dissolved carbon dioxide to alter the behavior of invasive round goby
Aaron R. Cupp, John Tix, Justin R. Smerud, Richard A. Erickson, Kim T. Fredricks, Jon Amberg, C. D. Suski, Robert Wakeman
2017, Management of Biological Invasions (8) 567-574
Fisheries managers need effective methods to limit the spread of invasive round goby Neogobius melanostomus in North America. Elevating carbon dioxide (CO2) in water at pinch points of rivers (e.g., inside locks) is one approach showing potential to deter the passage of invasive fishes, such as bigheaded carps Hypophthalmichthys spp., but the effectiveness...
Anura—Frogs
Darrel R. Frost, Emily Moriarty Lemmon, Roy W. McDiarmid, Joseph R. Mendelson III
2017, Book chapter, Scientific and Standard English names of amphibians and reptiles of North America north of Mexico, with comments regarding confidence in our understanding (8th)
No abstract available....
Is the impact of eutrophication on phytoplankton diversity dependent on lake volume/ecosystem size?
Didier L. Baho, Stina Drakare, Richard K. Johnson, Craig R. Allen, David G. Angeler
2017, Journal of Limnology (76) 199-210
Research focusing on biodiversity responses to the interactions of ecosystem size and anthropogenic stressors are based mainly on correlative gradient studies, and may therefore confound size-stress relationships due to spatial context and differences in local habitat features across ecosystems. We investigated how local factors related to anthropogenic stressors (e.g.,eutrophication) interact...
Regime shifts and panarchies in regional scale social-ecological water systems
Lance Gunderson, Barbara Cosens, Brian C. Chaffin, Craig Anthony Arnold, Alexander K. Fremier, Ahjond S. Garmestani, Robin Kundis Craig, Hannah Gosnell, Hannah E. Birge, Craig R. Allen, Melinda H. Benson, Ryan R. Morrison, Mark Stone, Joseph A. Hamm, Kristine T. Nemec, Edella Schlager, Dagmar Llewellyn
2017, Ecology and Society (22) 1-12
In this article we summarize histories of nonlinear, complex interactions among societal, legal, and ecosystem dynamics in six North American water basins, as they respond to changing climate. These case studies were chosen to explore the conditions for emergence of adaptive governance in heavily regulated and developed social-ecological systems...
Continuously amplified warming in the Alaskan Arctic: Implications for estimating global warming hiatus
Kang Wang, Tingjun Zhang, Xiangdong Zhang, Gary D. Clow, Elchin E. Jafarov, Irina Overeem, Vladimir Romanovsky, Xiaoqing Peng, Bin Cao
2017, Geophysical Research Letters (44) 9029-9038
Historically, in situ measurements have been notoriously sparse over the Arctic. As a consequence, the existing gridded data of surface air temperature (SAT) may have large biases in estimating the warming trend in this region. Using data from an expanded monitoring network with 31 stations in the Alaskan Arctic, we...
Wastewater disposal and the earthquake sequences during 2016 near Fairview, Pawnee, and Cushing, Oklahoma
Arthur F. McGarr, Andrew J. Barbour
2017, Geophysical Research Letters (44) 9330-9336
Each of the three earthquake sequences in Oklahoma in 2016—Fairview, Pawnee, and Cushing—appears to have been induced by high-volume wastewater disposal within 10 km. The Fairview M5.1 main shock was part of a 2 year sequence of more than 150 events of M3, or greater; the main shock accounted for about half of the...
Durable terrestrial bedrock predicts submarine canyon formation
Elliot Smith, Noah J. Finnegan, Erich R. Mueller, Rebecca J. Best
2017, Geophysical Research Letters (44) 10332-10340
Though submarine canyons are first-order topographic features of Earth, the processes responsible for their occurrence remain poorly understood. Potentially analogous studies of terrestrial rivers show that the flux and caliber of transported bedload are significant controls on bedrock incision. Here we hypothesize that coarse sediment load could exert a similar...
Harvesting wildlife affected by climate change: a modelling and management approach for polar bears
Eric V. Regehr, Ryan H. Wilson, Karyn D. Rode, Michael C. Runge, Harry Stern
2017, Journal of Applied Ecology (54) 1534-1543
The conservation of many wildlife species requires understanding the demographic effects of climate change, including interactions between climate change and harvest, which can provide cultural, nutritional or economic value to humans.We present a demographic model that is based on the polar bear Ursus maritimus life cycle and includes density-dependent...
The story of a Yakima fold and how it informs Late Neogene and Quaternary backarc deformation in the Cascadia subduction zone, Manastash anticline, Washington, USA
Harvey M. Kelsey, Tyler C. Ladinsky, Lydia M. Staisch, Brian L. Sherrod, Richard J. Blakely, Thomas Pratt, William J. Stephenson, Jackson K. Odum, Elmira Wan
2017, Tectonics (36) 2085-2107
The Yakima folds of central Washington, USA, are prominent anticlines that are the primary tectonic features of the backarc of the northern Cascadia subduction zone. What accounts for their topographic expression and how much strain do they accommodate and over what time period? We investigate Manastash anticline, a north vergent...
Martian cave air-movement via Helmholtz resonance
Kaj E. Williams, Timothy N. Titus, Chris Okubo, Glen E. Cushing
2017, International Journal of Speleology (46) 493-444
Infrasonic resonance has previously been measured in terrestrial caves by other researchers, where Helmholtz resonance has been suggested as the plausible mechanism resulting in periodic wind reversals within cave entrances. We extend this reasoning to possible Martian caves, where we examine the characteristics of four atypical pit craters (APCs) on...
Transmission routes maintaining a viral pathogen of steelhead trout within a complex multi-host assemblage
Rachel Breyta, Ilana L. Brito, Paige Ferguson, Gael Kurath, Kerry A. Naish, Maureen K. Purcell, Andrew R. Wargo, Shannon L. LaDeau
2017, Ecology and Evolution (7) 8187-8200
This is the first comprehensive region wide, spatially explicit epidemiologic analysis of surveillance data of the aquatic viral pathogen infectious hematopoietic necrosis virus (IHNV) infecting native salmonid fish. The pathogen has been documented in the freshwater ecosystem of the Pacific Northwest of North America since the 1950s, and the current...
Isotopic characterization of late Neogene travertine deposits at Barrancas Blancas in the eastern Atacama Desert, Chile
J. Quade, E.T. Rasbury, K.W. Huntington, Adam M. Hudson, H. Vonhof, K. Anchukaitis, Julio L. Betancourt, C. Latorre, M. Pepper
2017, Chemical Geology (466) 41-56
Here we explore the potential of spring-related, surface and subsurface carbonates as an archive of paleoenvironmental change at Barrancas Blancas, located in the broadest and driest sector of the Atacama Desert at 24.5°S. From these deposits we present a new stable isotopic record of paleoenvironmental conditions over portions of the...
Compositional signatures in acoustic backscatter over vegetated and unvegetated mixed sand-gravel riverbeds
Daniel D. Buscombe, Paul E. Grams, Matthew A. Kaplinski
2017, Journal of Geophysical Research F: Earth Surface (122) 1771-1793
Multibeam acoustic backscatter has considerable utility for remote characterization of spatially heterogeneous bed sediment composition over vegetated and unvegetated riverbeds of mixed sand and gravel. However, the use of high-frequency, decimeter-resolution acoustic backscatter for sediment classification in shallow water is hampered by significant topographic contamination of the signal. In mixed...
A method for quantifying cloud immersion in a tropical mountain forest using time-lapse photography
Maoya Bassiouni, Martha A. Scholl, Angel J. Torres-Sanchez, Sheila F. Murphy
2017, Agricultural and Forest Meteorology (243) 100-112
Quantifying the frequency, duration, and elevation range of fog or cloud immersion is essential to estimate cloud water deposition in water budgets and to understand the ecohydrology of cloud forests. The goal of this study was to develop a low-cost and high spatial-coverage method to detect occurrence of cloud immersion...
Shifts in an invasive rodent community favoring black rats (Rattus rattus) following restoration of native forest
Aaron B. Shiels, Arthur C. Medeiros, Erica I. von Allmen
2017, Restoration Ecology (25) 759-767
One potential, unintended ecological consequence accompanying forest restoration is a shift in invasive animal populations, potentially impacting conservation targets. Eighteen years after initial restoration (ungulate exclusion, invasive plant control, and out planting native species) at a 4 ha site on Maui, Hawai'i, we compared invasive rodent communities in a restored native...
A fault‐based model for crustal deformation in the western United States based on a combined inversion of GPS and geologic inputs
Yuehua Zeng, Zheng-Kang Shen
2017, Bulletin of the Seismological Society of America (107) 2597-2612
We develop a crustal deformation model to determine fault‐slip rates for the western United States (WUS) using the Zeng and Shen (2014) method that is based on a combined inversion of Global Positioning System (GPS) velocities and geological slip‐rate constraints. The model consists of six blocks with...
Challenges and solutions for applying the travel cost demand model to geographically remote visitor destinations: A case study of bear viewing at Katmai National Park and Preserve
Leslie Richardson, Christopher Huber, John B. Loomis
2017, Human Dimensions of Wildlife (22) 550-563
Remote and unique destinations present difficulties when attempting to construct traditional travel cost models to value recreation demand. The biggest limitation comes from the lack of variation in the dependent variable, defined as the number of trips taken over a set time frame. There are various approaches that can be...
Restricted gene flow between resident Oncorhynchus mykiss and an admixed population of anadromous steelhead
Andrew P. Matala, Brady Allen, Shawn R. Narum, Elaine Harvey
2017, Ecology and Evolution (7) 8349-8362
The species Oncorhynchus mykiss is characterized by a complex life history that presents a significant challenge for population monitoring and conservation management. Many factors contribute to genetic variation in O. mykiss populations, including sympatry among migratory phenotypes, habitat heterogeneity, hatchery introgression, and immigration (stray) rates. The relative influences of these and other factors are contingent...
Taxonomic and compositional differences of ground-dwelling arthropods in riparian habitats in Glen Canyon, Arizona, USA
Barbara Ralston, Neil S. Cobb, Sandra L. Brantley, Jacob Higgins, Charles B. Yackulic
2017, Western North American Naturalist (77) 369-384
The disturbance history, plant species composition, productivity, and structural complexity of a site can exert bottom-up controls on arthropod diversity, abundance, and trophic structure. Regulation alters the hydrology and disturbance regimes of rivers and affects riparian habitats by changing plant quality parameters. Fifty years of regulation along the Colorado River...
Using long-term data to predict fish abundance: the case of Prochilodus lineatus (Characiformes, Prochilodontidae) in the intensely regulated upper Paraná River
Pitagoras A. Piana, Barbara F. Cardoso, Joilson Dias, Luiz C. Gomes, Angelo A. Agostinho, Leandro E. Miranda
2017, Neotropical Ichthyology (15) 1-12
Populations show spatial-temporal fluctuations in abundance, partly due to random processes and partly due to self-regulatory processes. We evaluated the effects of various external factors on the population numerical abundance of curimba Prochilodus lineatus in the upper Paraná River floodplain, Brazil, over a 19-year period. Panel data analysis was applied to examine...
Using pharyngeal teeth and chewing pads to estimate juvenile Silver Carp total length in the La Grange Reach, Illinois River
Eli G. Lampo, Brent C. Knights, Jonathan M. Vallazza, Cory A. Anderson, Will T. Rechkemmer, Levi E. Solomon, Andrew F. Casper, Richard M. Pendleton, James T. Lamer
2017, North American Journal of Fisheries Management (37) 1145-1150
The Silver Carp Hypophthalmichthys molitrix is an invasive species in the Mississippi River basin; an understanding of their vulnerability to predation as juveniles may inform control by native predators and predator enhancement (e.g., stocking). Digestion of Silver Carp prey recovered from diets makes it difficult to determine the size‐classes that are most...