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Page 1336, results 33376 - 33400

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Publication Extents

Not all publications have extents, not all extents are completely accurate
Merging remote sensing data and national agricultural statistics to model change in irrigated agriculture
Jesslyn F. Brown, Md Shahriar Pervez
2014, Agricultural Systems (127) 28-40
Over 22 million hectares (ha) of U.S. croplands are irrigated. Irrigation is an intensified agricultural land use that increases crop yields and the practice affects water and energy cycles at, above, and below the land surface. Until recently, there has been a scarcity of geospatially detailed information about irrigation that...
Relationships among walleye population characteristics and genetic diversity in northern Wisconsin Lakes
Matthew D. Waterhouse, Brian L. Sloss, Daniel A. Isermann
2014, Transactions of the American Fisheries Society (143) 744-756
The maintenance of genetic integrity is an important goal of fisheries management, yet little is known regarding the effects of management actions (e.g., stocking, harvest regulations) on the genetic diversity of many important fish species. Furthermore, relationships between population characteristics and genetic diversity remain poorly understood. We examined relationships among...
Mineral resource of the month: Wollastonite
Robert L. Virta, Bradley S. Van Gosen
2014, Earth (59) 51-51
Wollastonite, a calcium metasilicate, has an ideal composition of 48.3 percent calcium oxide and 51.7 percent silicon dioxide, but it can also contain minor amounts of aluminum, iron, magnesium, manganese, potassium, sodium or strontium substituting for calcium. Wollastonite occurs as prismatic crystals that break into tabular-to-acicular fragments. It is usually...
Reflections on a vision for integrated research and monitoring after 15 years
Peter S. Murdoch, Michael McHale, Jill Baron
2014, Aquatic Geochemistry (20) 363-380
In May of 1998, Owen Bricker and his co-author Michael Ruggiero introduced a conceptual design for integrating the Nation’s environmental research and monitoring programs. The Framework for Integrated Monitoring and Related Research was an organizing strategy for relating data collected by various programs, at multiple spatial and temporal scales, and...
Interacting effects of discharge and channel morphology on transport of semibuoyant fish eggs in large, altered river systems
Thomas A. Worthington, Shannon K. Brewer, Nicole Farless, Timothy B. Grabowski, Mark S. Gregory
2014, PLoS ONE (9)
Habitat fragmentation and flow regulation are significant factors related to the decline and extinction of freshwater biota. Pelagic-broadcast spawning cyprinids require moving water and some length of unfragmented stream to complete their life cycle. However, it is unknown how discharge and habitat features interact at multiple spatial scales to alter...
Cross-ecosystem impacts of stream pollution reduce resource and contaminant flux to riparian food webs
Johanna M. Kraus, Travis S. Schmidt, David Walters, Richard B. Wanty, Robert E. Zuellig, Ruth E. Wolf
2014, Ecological Applications (24) 235-243
The effects of aquatic contaminants are propagated across ecosystem boundaries by aquatic insects that export resources and contaminants to terrestrial food webs; however, the mechanisms driving these effects are poorly understood. We examined how emergence, contaminant concentration, and total contaminant flux by adult aquatic insects changed over a gradient of...
Surface‐wave Green’s tensors in the near field
Matthew M. Haney, Hisashi Nakahara
2014, Bulletin of the Seismological Society of America (104) 1578-1586
We demonstrate the connection between theoretical expressions for the correlation of ambient noise Rayleigh and Love waves and the exact surface‐wave Green’s tensors for a point force. The surface‐wave Green’s tensors are well known in the far‐field limit. On the other hand, the imaginary part of the exact Green’s tensors,...
An intercomparison of three methods for the large-scale isolation of oceanic dissolved organic matter
Nelson W. Green, E. Michael Perdue, George R. Aiken, Kenna D. Butler, Hongmei Chen, Thorsten Dittmar, Jutta Niggemann, Aron Stubbins
2014, Marine Chemistry (161) 14-19
Dissolved organic matter (DOM) was isolated from large volumes of deep (674 m) and surface (21 m) ocean water via reverse osmosis/electrodialysis (RO/ED) and two solid-phase extraction (SPE) methods (XAD-8/4 and PPL) at the Natural Energy Laboratory of Hawaii Authority (NELHA). By applying the three methods to common water samples, the efficiencies...
Modeling the effects of source and path heterogeneity on ground motions of great earthquakes on the Cascadia Subduction Zone Using 3D simulations
Andrew Delorey, Arthur D. Frankel, Pengcheng Liu, William J. Stephenson
2014, Bulletin of the Seismological Society of America (104) 1430-1446
We ran finite‐difference earthquake simulations for great subduction zone earthquakes in Cascadia to model the effects of source and path heterogeneity for the purpose of improving strong‐motion predictions. We developed a rupture model for large subduction zone earthquakes based on a k−2 slip spectrum and scale‐dependent rise times by representing the...
Nearshore energy subsidies support Lake Michigan fishes and invertebrates following major changes in food web structure
Benjamin A. Turschak, David B. Bunnell, Sergiusz J. Czesny, Tomas O. Hook, John Janssen, David M. Warner, Harvey A. Bootsma
2014, Ecology, Evolution, and Systematics (95) 1243-1252
Aquatic food webs that incorporate multiple energy channels (e.g. nearshore benthic or pelagic) with varying productivity and turnover rates convey stability to biological communities by providing multiple independent energy sources. Within the Lake Michigan food web, invasive dreissenid mussels have caused rapid changes to food web structure and potentially altered...
Evaluation of high-frequency mean streamwater transit-time estimates using groundwater age and dissolved silica concentrations in a small forested watershed
Norman E. Peters, Douglas A. Burns, Brent T. Aulenbach
2014, Aquatic Geochemistry (20) 183-202
Many previous investigations of mean streamwater transit times (MTT) have been limited by an inability to quantify the MTT dynamics. Here, we draw on (1) a linear relation (r 2 = 0.97) between groundwater 3H/3He ages and dissolved silica (Si) concentrations, combined with (2) predicted streamwater Si concentrations from a...
Progress in data collection and dissemination in water resources – 1974-2014
Jerad D. Bales
2014, Water Resources Impact (16) 18-23
In the 50 years since the founding of the American Water Resources Association (AWRA), there has been tremendous and likely unforeseen progress in water-re- sources data collection and dissemination. Langford and Doyel (1974) (henceforth L&D) described progress during the decade following the founding of AWRA, and focused their description around...
Home range and movements of American alligators (Alligator mississippiensis) in an estuary habitat
Ikuko Fujisaki, Kristen M. Hart, Frank J. Mazzotti, Michael S. Cherkiss, Autumn R. Sartain-Iverson, Brian M. Jeffery, Jeffrey S. Beauchamp, Mathew J. Denton
2014, Animal Biotelemetry (2)
Background Understanding movement patterns of free-ranging top predators throughout heterogeneous habitat is important for gaining insight into trophic interactions. We tracked the movements of five adult American alligators to delineate their estuarine habitat use and determine drivers of their activity patterns in a seasonally-fluctuating environment. We also compared VHF- and satellite-tracks...
Spatial and temporal trends in occurrence of emerging and legacy contaminants in the Lower Columbia River 2008-2010
David A. Alvarez, Stephanie D. Perkins, Elena B. Nilsen, Jennifer L. Morace
2014, Science of the Total Environment (484) 322-330
The Lower Columbia River in Oregon and Washington, USA, is an important resource for aquatic and terrestrial organisms, agriculture, and commerce. An 86-mile stretch of the river was sampled over a 3 year period in order to determine the spatial and temporal trends in the occurrence and concentration of water-borne...
Assessing reproductive and endocrine parameters in male largescale suckers (Catostomus macrocheilus) along a contaminant gradient in the lower Columbia River, USA
Jill A. Jenkins, H.M. Olivier, R. O. Draugelis-Dale, B.E. Eilts, L. Torres, R. Patiño, Elena B. Nilsen, Steven L. Goodbred
2014, Science of the Total Environment (484) 365-378
Persistent organochlorine pollutants such as polychlorinated biphenyls (PCBs), dichlorodiphenyldichloroethylene (p,p′-DDE), and polybrominated diphenyl ethers (PBDEs) are stable, bioaccumulative, and widely found in the environment, wildlife, and the human population. To explore the hypothesis that reproduction in male fish is associated with environmental exposures in the lower Columbia River (LCR), reproductive...
Long-term citizen-collected data reveal geographical patterns and temporal trends in lake water clarity
Noah R. Lottig, Tyler Wagner, Emily N. Henry, Kendra Spence Cheruvelil, Katherine E. Webster, John A. Downing, Craig A. Stow
2014, PLoS ONE (9)
We compiled a lake-water clarity database using publicly available, citizen volunteer observations made between 1938 and 2012 across eight states in the Upper Midwest, USA. Our objectives were to determine (1) whether temporal trends in lake-water clarity existed across this large geographic area and (2) whether trends were related to...
U.S. Geological Survey Karst Interest Group Proceedings, Carlsbad, New Mexico, April 29-May 2, 2014
Eve L. Kuniansky, Lawrence E. Spangler
Eve L. Kuniansky, Lawrence E. Spangler, editor(s)
2014, Scientific Investigations Report 2014-5035
Karst aquifer systems are present throughout parts of the United States and some of its territories, and have developed in carbonate rocks (primarily limestone and dolomite) that span an interval of time encompassing more than 550 million years. The depositional environments, diagenetic processes, post-depositional tectonic events, and geochemical weathering processes...
1964 Great Alaska Earthquake: a photographic tour of Anchorage, Alaska
Evan E. Thoms, Peter J. Haeussler, Rebecca Anderson, Robert G. McGimsey
2014, Open-File Report 2014-1086
On March 27, 1964, at 5:36 p.m., a magnitude 9.2 earthquake, the largest recorded earthquake in U.S. history, struck southcentral Alaska (fig. 1). The Great Alaska Earthquake (also known as the Good Friday Earthquake) occurred at a pivotal time in the history of earth science, and helped lead to the...
Sediment data collected in 2010 from Cat Island, Mississippi
Noreen A. Buster, Kyle W. Kelso, Jennifer L. Miselis, Jack L. Kindinger
2014, Data Series 834
Scientists from the U.S. Geological Survey, St. Petersburg Coastal and Marine Science Center, in collaboration with the U.S. Army Corps of Engineers, conducted geophysical and sedimentological surveys in 2010 around Cat Island, Mississippi, which is the westernmost island in the Mississippi-Alabama barrier island chain. The objective of the study was...
Evaluating a slope-stability model for shallow rain-induced landslides using gage and satellite data
S. Yatheendradas, D. Kirschbaum, Rex L. Baum, Jonathan W. Godt
2014, Book chapter, Landslide science for a safer geoenvironment
Improving prediction of landslide early warning systems requires accurate estimation of the conditions that trigger slope failures. This study tested a slope-stability model for shallow rainfall-induced landslides by utilizing rainfall information from gauge and satellite records. We used the TRIGRS model (Transient Rainfall Infiltration and Grid-based Regional Slope-stability analysis)...
Diet and habitat use by age-0 deepwater sculpins in northern Lake Huron, Michigan and the Detroit River
Edward F. Roseman
2014, Journal of Great Lakes Research (40) 110-117
Deepwater sculpins (Myoxocephalus thompsonii) are an important link in deepwater benthic foodwebs of the Great Lakes. Little information exists about deepwater sculpin spawning habits and early life history ecology due to difficulty in sampling deep offshore habitats. Larval and age-0 deepwater sculpins collected in northern Lake Huron and the Detroit...
Concentrations of selected constituents in surface-water and streambed-sediment samples collected from streams in and near an area of oil and natural-gas development, south-central Texas, 2011-13
Stephen P. Opsahl, Cassi L. Crow
2014, Data Series 836
During 2011–13, the U.S. Geological Survey, in cooperation with the San Antonio River Authority and the Guadalupe-Blanco River Authority, analyzed surface-water and streambed-sediment samples collected from 10 sites in the San Antonio River Basin to provide data for a broad range of constituents that might be associated with hydraulic fracturing...
Use of main channel and two backwater habitats by larval fishes in the Detroit River
Erik A. McDonald, A. Scott McNaught, Edward F. Roseman
2014, Journal of Great Lakes Research (40) 69-80
Recent investigations in the Detroit River have revealed renewed spawning activity by several important fishes, but little is known about their early life history requirements. We surveyed two main channel and two backwater areas in the lower Detroit River weekly from May to July 2007 to assess habitat use by...