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Page 1669, results 41701 - 41725

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Publication Extents

Not all publications have extents, not all extents are completely accurate
Ecosystem ecology meets adaptive management: food web response to a controlled flood on the Colorado River, Glen Canyon
Wyatt F. Cross, Colden V. Baxter, Kevin C. Donner, Emma J. Rosi-Marshall, Theodore A. Kennedy, Robert O. Hall Jr., Holly A. Wellard Kelly, R. Scott Rogers
2011, Ecological Applications (21) 2016-2033
Large dams have been constructed on rivers to meet human demands for water, electricity, navigation, and recreation. As a consequence, flow and temperature regimes have been altered, strongly affecting river food webs and ecosystem processes. Experimental high‐flow dam releases, i.e., controlled floods, have been implemented on the Colorado River, USA,...
Bioaccumulation dynamics and exposure routes of Cd and Cu among species of aquatic mayflies
Daniel Cain, Marie-Noële Croteau, Samuel Luoma
2011, Environmental Toxicology and Chemistry (30) 2532-2541
Consumption of periphyton is a potentially important route of metal exposure to benthic invertebrate grazers. The present study examined the bioaccumulation kinetics of dissolved and dietary Cd and Cu in five species of mayflies (class Insecta). Artificial stream water and benthic diatoms were separately labeled with enriched stable metal isotopes...
Book review: Extreme ocean waves
Eric L. Geist
2011, Pure and Applied Geophysics (168) 1887-1888
‘‘Extreme Ocean Waves’’ is a collection of ten papers edited by Efim Pelinovsky and Christian Kharif that followed the April 2007 meeting of the General Assembly of the European Geosciences Union. A note on terminology: extreme waves in this volume broadly encompass different types of waves, includ- ing deep-water and...
Site characterization and site response in Port-au-Prince, Haiti
Susan E. Hough, Alan K. Yong, Jean Robert Altidor, Dieuseul Anglade, Douglas D. Given, Saint-Louis Mildor
2011, Earthquake Spectra (27) 137-155
Waveform analysis of aftershocks of the Mw7.0 Haiti earthquake of 12 January 2010 reveals amplification of ground motions at sites within the Cul de Sac valley in which Port-au-Prince is situated. Relative to ground motions recorded at a hard-rock reference site, peak acceleration values are amplified by a factor of...
Persistence and diversification of the Holarctic shrew, Sorex tundrensis (Family Soricidae), in response to climate change
Andrew G. Hope, Eric Waltari, Vadim B. Fedorov, Anna V. Goropashnaya, Sandra L. Talbot, Joseph A. Cook
2011, Molecular Ecology (20) 4346-4370
Environmental processes govern demography, species movements, community turnover and diversification and yet in many respects these dynamics are still poorly understood at high latitudes. We investigate the combined effects of climate change and geography through time for a widespread Holarctic shrew, Sorex tundrensis. We include a comprehensive suite of closely...
A multi-agency nutrient dataset used to estimate loads, improve monitoring design, and calibrate regional nutrient SPARROW models
David A. Saad, Gregory E. Schwarz, Dale M. Robertson, Nathaniel Booth
2011, Journal of the American Water Resources Association (47) 933-949
Stream-loading information was compiled from federal, state, and local agencies, and selected universities as part of an effort to develop regional SPAtially Referenced Regressions On Watershed attributes (SPARROW) models to help describe the distribution, sources, and transport of nutrients in streams throughout much of the United States. After screening, 2,739...
USDA conservation program and practice effects on wetland ecosystem services in the Prairie Pothole Region
Robert A. Gleason, Ned Euliss, Brian Tangen, M. K. Laubhan, B.A. Browne
2011, Ecological Applications (21) S65-S81
Implementation of the U.S. Department of Agriculture (USDA) Conservation Reserve Program (CRP) and Wetlands Reserve Program (WRP) has resulted in the restoration of >2 million ha of wetland and grassland habitats in the Prairie Pothole Region (PPR). Restoration of habitats through these programs provides diverse ecosystem services to society, but...
Proceedings of the 2011 Elwha River Science Symposium
2011, Report
After years of anticipation, volumes of Environmental Impact Statements, multiple mitigation projects, and the multidisciplinary collection of predam removal data, the deconstruction phase of the Elwha River restoration officially began on September 17th, 2011. With their simultaneous decommissioning, the removal of the 64 m tall Glines Canyon Dam and the...
Informal trail monitoring protocols: Denali National Park and Preserve
Jeffrey L. Marion, Jeremy Wimpey
2011, Report
The National Park Service (NPS) accommodates nearly 300 million visitors per year, visitation that presents managers with substantial challenges at some 394 park units across some 83.6 million acres of protected lands. An increasing number of visitors inevitably contribute negative effects to fragile natural and cultural resources. Such visitation -...
A regional modeling framework of phosphorus sources and transport in streams of the southeastern United States
Ana Maria Garcia, Anne B. Hoos, Silvia Terziotti
2011, Journal of the American Water Resources Association (47) 991-1010
We applied the SPARROW model to estimate phosphorus transport from catchments to stream reaches and subsequent delivery to major receiving water bodies in the Southeastern United States (U.S.). We show that six source variables and five land-to-water transport variables are significant (p < 0.05) in explaining 67% of the variability in long-term...
Population differences in host immune factors may influence survival of Gunnison's prairie dogs (Cynomys Gunnisoni) during plague outbreaks
Joseph D. Busch, Roger Van Andel, Jennifer Cordova, Rebecca E. Colman, Paul Keim, Tonie E. Rocke, Jeff G. Leid, William E. Van Pelt, David M. Wagner
2011, Journal of Wildlife Diseases (47) 968-973
Over the past 40 yr, epizootics of plague (Yersinia pestis) in northern Arizona have reduced populations of the Gunnison’s prairie dog (Cynomys gunnisoni), with the exception of a large population found in the Aubrey Valley (AV). To examine potential mechanisms accounting for their survival, we collected prairie dog serum samples...
Nutrients and sediment in frozen-ground runoff from no-till fields receiving liquid-dairy and solid-beef manures
Matthew J. Komiskey, Todd D. Stuntebeck, Dennis R. Frame, Fred W. Madison
2011, Journal of Soil and Water Conservation (66) 303-312
Nutrients and sediment in surface runoff from frozen agricultural fields were monitored within three small (16.0 ha [39.5 ac] or less), adjacent basins at a no-till farm in southwest Wisconsin during four winters from 2003 to 2004 through 2006 to 2007. Runoff depths and flow-weighted constituent concentrations were compared to...
Moment tensor inversions using strong motion waveforms of Taiwan TSMIP data, 1993–2009
Kaiwen Chang, Wu-Cheng Chi, Yuancheng Gung, Douglas Dreger, William H. K. Lee, Hung-Chie Chiu
2011, Tectonophysics (511) 53-66
Earthquake source parameters are important for earthquake studies and seismic hazard assessment. Moment tensors are among the most important earthquake source parameters, and are now routinely derived using modern broadband seismic networks around the world. Similar waveform inversion techniques can also apply to other available data, including strong-motion seismograms. Strong-motion...
DS-Software for analyzing data collected using double sampling
Jonathan Bart, Dana Hartley
2011, Open-File Report 2011-1269
DS analyzes count data to estimate density or relative density and population size when appropriate. The software is no longer available. The software was designed to analyze data collected using double sampling, but it also can be used to analyze index data. DS is not currently configured to apply distance...
Columbia River Estuary ecosystem classification—Concept and application
Charles A. Simenstad, Jennifer L. Burke, Jim E. O'Connor, Charles Cannon, Danelle W. Heatwole, Mary F. Ramirez, Ian R. Waite, Timothy D. Counihan, Krista L. Jones
2011, Open-File Report 2011-1228
This document describes the concept, organization, and application of a hierarchical ecosystem classification that integrates saline and tidal freshwater reaches of estuaries in order to characterize the ecosystems of large flood plain rivers that are strongly influenced by riverine and estuarine hydrology. We illustrate the classification by applying it to...
Holocene and late glacial palaeoceanography and palaeolimnology of the Black Sea: Changing sediment provenance and basin hydrography over the past 20,000 years
David Z. Piper, S.E. Calvert
2011, Geochimica et Cosmochimica Acta (75) 5597-5624
The elemental geochemistry of Late Pleistocene and Holocene sediments of the Black Sea, recovered in box cores from the basin margins and a 5-m gravity core from the central abyssal region of the basin, identifies two terrigenous sediment sources over the last 20 kyrs. One source region includes Anatolia and...
To burn or not to burn Oriental bittersweet: A fire manager’s conundrum
Noel B. Pavlovic, Stacey A. Leicht-Young, Dan Morford, Neal Mulconrey
2011, Report
This is the third progress report detailing the research about Oriental bittersweet (Celastrus orbiculatus) and fire which has been ongoing for three years. We highlight the further results from three components of the study: 1) Susceptibility of different habitats to invasion of Oriental bittersweet, 2) The impact of fire on...
Pb-concentrations and Pb-isotope ratios in soils collected along an east-west transect across the United States
Clemens Reimann, David B. Smith, Laurel G. Woodruff, Belinda Flem
2011, Applied Geochemistry (26) 1623-1631
Analytical results for Pb-concentrations and isotopic ratios from ca. 150 samples of soil A horizon and ca. 145 samples of soil C horizon collected along a 4000-km east–west transect across the USA are presented. Lead concentrations along the transect show: (1) generally higher values in the soil A-horizon than the...
Digital archive of drilling mud weight pressures and wellbore temperatures from 49 regional cross sections of 967 well logs in Louisiana and Texas, onshore Gulf of Mexico basin
Lauri A. Burke, Scott A. Kinney, Temidayo B. Kola-Kehinde
2011, Open-File Report 2011-1266
This document provides the digital archive of in-situ temperature and drilling mud weight pressure data that were compiled from several historical sources. The data coverage includes the states of Texas and Louisiana in the Gulf of Mexico basin. Data are also provided graphically, for both Texas and Louisiana, as plots...
How landscape dynamics link individual- to population-level movement patterns: A multispecies comparison of ungulate relocation data
Thomas Mueller, K.A. Olson, G. Dressler, Peter Leimgruber, Todd K. Fuller, Craig Nicholson, A.J. Novaro, M.J. Bolgeri, David W. Wattles, Stephen DeStefano, J.M. Calabrese, William F. Fagan
2011, Global Ecology and Biogeography (20) 683-694
Aim  To demonstrate how the interrelations of individual movements form large-scale population-level movement patterns and how these patterns are associated with the underlying landscape dynamics by comparing ungulate movements across species.Locations  Arctic tundra in Alaska and Canada, temperate forests in Massachusetts, Patagonian Steppes in Argentina, Eastern Steppes in Mongolia.Methods  We used relocation data...
Geophysical, geochemical, mineralogical, and enivronmental data for rock samples collected in a mineralized volcanic environment, upper Animas River watershed, Colorado
A. E. McCafferty, R. J. Horton, M.R. Stanton, R.R. McDougal, D.L. Fey
2011, Data Series 595
This report provides analyses of 90 rock samples collected in the upper Animas River watershed near Silverton, Colo., from 2001 to 2007. The samples are analyzed for geophysical, geochemical, mineralogical, and environmental rock properties of acid neutralizing capacity and net acid production. The database is derived from both published (n=68)...
Compilation of watershed models for tributaries to the Great Lakes, United States, as of 2010, and identification of watersheds for future modeling for the Great Lakes Restoration Initiative
William F. Coon, Elizabeth A. Murphy, David T. Soong, Jennifer B. Sharpe
2011, Open-File Report 2011-1202
As part of the Great Lakes Restoration Initiative (GLRI) during 2009–10, the U.S. Geological Survey (USGS) compiled a list of existing watershed models that had been created for tributaries within the United States that drain to the Great Lakes. Established Federal programs that are overseen by the National Oceanic and...
Preliminary analysis of Greater Sage-grouse reproduction in the Virginia Mountains of northwestern Nevada
Peter S. Coates, Zachary B. Lockyer, Melissa A. Farinha, Joelle M. Sweeney, Valerie M. Johnson, Matthew G. Meshriy, Shawn P. Espinosa, David J. Delehanty, Michael L. Casazza
2011, Open-File Report 2011-1182
Relationships between habitat selection and population vital rates of greater sage-grouse (Centrocercus urophasianus; hereafter sage-grouse), recently designated as a candidate species under the Endangered Species Act, within the Great Basin are not well-understood. The growing development of renewable energy infrastructure within areas inhabited by sage-grouse is thought to influence predator...