Methods for assessing the stability of slopes during earthquakes-A retrospective
R.W. Jibson
2011, Engineering Geology (122) 43-50
During the twentieth century, several methods to assess the stability of slopes during earthquakes were developed. Pseudostatic analysis was the earliest method; it involved simply adding a permanent body force representing the earthquake shaking to a static limit-equilibrium analysis. Stress-deformation analysis, a later development, involved much more complex modeling of...
Establishing spatial trends in water chemistry and stable isotopes (δ15N and δ13C) in the Elwha River prior to dam removal and salmon recolonization
J.J. Duda, H.J. Coe, S.A. Morley, K.K. Kloehn
2011, River Research and Applications (27) 1169-1181
Two high-head dams on the Elwha River in Washington State (USA) have changed the migratory patterns of resident and anadromous fish, limiting Pacific salmon to the lower 7.9 km of a river that historically supported large Pacific salmon runs. To document the effects of the dams prior to their removal, we...
Landscape drivers of regional variation in the relationship between total phosphorus and chlorophyll in lakes
Tyler Wagner, Patricia A. Soranno, Katherine E. Webster, Kendra Spence Cheruvelil
2011, Freshwater Biology (56) 1811-1824
1. For north temperate lakes, the well-studied empirical relationship between phosphorus (as measured by total phosphorus, TP), the most commonly limiting nutrient and algal biomass (as measured by chlorophyll a, CHL) has been found to vary across a wide range of landscape settings. Variation in the parameters of these TP–CHL regressions has...
A probabilistic seismic risk assessment procedure for nuclear power plants: (II) Application
Y.-N. Huang, A.S. Whittaker, N. Luco
2011, Conference Paper, Nuclear Engineering and Design
This paper presents the procedures and results of intensity- and time-based seismic risk assessments of a sample nuclear power plant (NPP) to demonstrate the risk-assessment methodology proposed in its companion paper. The intensity-based assessments include three sets of sensitivity studies to identify the impact of the following factors on the...
Remote sensing of soil moisture using airborne hyperspectral data
M. Finn, M. Lewis, D. Bosch, Mario Giraldo, K. Yamamoto, D. Sullivan, R. Kincaid, R. Luna, G. Allam, Craig Kvien, Murray Williams
2011, GIScience and Remote Sensing (48) 522-540
Landscape assessment of soil moisture is critical to understanding the hydrological cycle at the regional scale and in broad-scale studies of biophysical processes affected by global climate changes in temperature and precipitation. Traditional efforts to measure soil moisture have been principally restricted to in situ measurements, so remote sensing techniques...
Nutrient sources and transport in the Missouri River Basin, with emphasis on the effects of irrigation and reservoirs
J.B. Brown, L.A. Sprague, J.A. Dupree
2011, Journal of the American Water Resources Association (47) 1034-1060
SPAtially Referenced Regressions On Watershed attributes (SPARROW) models were used to relate instream nutrient loads to sources and factors influencing the transport of nutrients in the Missouri River Basin. Agricultural inputs from fertilizer and manure were the largest nutrient sources throughout a large part of the basin, although atmospheric and...
Portrait of a small population of boreal toads (anaxyrus boreas)
E. Muths, R. D. Scherer
2011, Herpetologica (67) 369-377
Much attention has been given to the conservation of small populations, those that are small because of decline, and those that are naturally small. Small populations are of particular interest because ecological theory suggests that they are vulnerable to the deleterious effects of environmental, demographic, and genetic stochasticity as well...
Black-footed ferrets and Siberian polecats as ecological surrogates and ecological equivalents
E. Biggins, Louis R. Hanebury, B.J. Miller, R. A. Powell
2011, Journal of Mammalogy (92) 710-720
Ecologically equivalent species serve similar functions in different communities, and an ecological surrogate species can be used as a substitute for an equivalent species in a community. Siberian polecats (Mustela eversmanii) and black-footed ferrets (M. nigripes) have long been considered ecological equivalents. Polecats also have been used as investigational surrogates...
Assessing historical rate changes in global tsunami occurrence
E.L. Geist, T. Parsons
2011, Geophysical Journal International (187) 497-509
The global catalogue of tsunami events is examined to determine if transient variations in tsunami rates are consistent with a Poisson process commonly assumed for tsunami hazard assessments. The primary data analyzed are tsunamis with maximum sizes >1m. The record of these tsunamis appears to be complete since approximately 1890....
δ15N constraints on long-term nitrogen balances in temperate forests
S.S. Perakis, E.R. Sinkhorn, J.E. Compton
2011, Oecologia (167) 793-807
Biogeochemical theory emphasizes nitrogen (N) limitation and the many factors that can restrict N accumulation in temperate forests, yet lacks a working model of conditions that can promote naturally high N accumulation. We used a dynamic simulation model of ecosystem N and δ15N to evaluate which combination of N input...
A trans-dimensional Bayesian Markov chain Monte Carlo algorithm for model assessment using frequency-domain electromagnetic data
B. J. Minsley
2011, Geophysical Journal International (187) 252-272
A meaningful interpretation of geophysical measurements requires an assessment of the space of models that are consistent with the data, rather than just a single, ‘best’ model which does not convey information about parameter uncertainty. For this purpose, a trans-dimensional Bayesian Markov chain Monte Carlo (MCMC) algorithm is developed for...
Species replacement by a nonnative salmonid alters ecosystem function by reducing prey subsidies that support riparian spiders
J.R. Benjamin, K.D. Fausch, C. V. Baxter
2011, Oecologia (167) 503-512
Replacement of a native species by a nonnative can have strong effects on ecosystem function, such as altering nutrient cycling or disturbance frequency. Replacements may cause shifts in ecosystem function because nonnatives establish at different biomass, or because they differ from native species in traits like foraging behavior. However, no...
Migration and wintering sites of Pelagic Cormorants determined by satellite telemetry
Scott A. Hatch, V.A. Gill, D.M. Mulcahy
2011, Journal of Field Ornithology (82) 269-278
Factors affecting winter survival may be key determinants of status and population trends of seabirds, but connections between breeding sites and wintering areas of most populations are poorly known. Pelagic Cormorants (Phalacrocorax pelagicus; N= 6) surgically implanted with satellite transmitters migrated from a breeding colony on Middleton Island, northern Gulf...
Mapping and monitoring Louisiana's mangroves in the aftermath of the 2010 Gulf of Mexico Oil spill
S. Giri, J. Long, L. Tieszen
2011, Journal of Coastal Research (27) 1059-1064
Information regarding the present condition, historical status, and dynamics of mangrove forests is needed to study the impacts of the Gulf of Mexico oil spill and other stressors affecting mangrove ecosystems. Such information is unavailable for Louisiana at sufficient spatial and thematic detail. We prepared mangrove forest distribution maps of...
Sewers as a source and sink of chlorinated-solvent groundwater contamination, Marine Corps Recruit Depot, Parris Island, South Carolina
D.A. Vroblesky, M.D. Petkewich, M.A. Lowery, J. E. Landmeyer
2011, Ground Water Monitoring and Remediation (31) 63-69
Groundwater contamination by tetrachloroethene and its dechlorination products is present in two partially intermingled plumes in the surficial aquifer near a former dry‐cleaning facility at Site 45, Marine Corps Recruit Depot, Parris Island, South Carolina. The northern plume originates from the vicinity of former above‐ground storage tanks. Free‐phase tetrachloroethene from...
Phylogeography of a vanishing North American songbird: The Painted Bunting (Passerina ciris)
C.A. Herr, P.W. Sykes Jr., J. Klicka
2011, Conservation Genetics (12) 1395-1410
The breeding distribution of Painted Buntings (Passerina ciris) is comprised of two allopatric populations separated by a 550-km distributional gap in the southeastern United States. Curiously, the boundary between the two recognized P. ciris subspecies does not separate the two allopatric breeding populations but instead runs roughly through the center of the...
Scented guide ropes as a method to enhance brown treesnake (Boiga irregularis) trap capture success on Guam
L.C. Mason, J. A. Savidge, G.H. Rodda, A. A. Yackel Adams
2011, Journal of Herpetology (45) 308-312
Current methods for controlling the invasive Brown Treesnake (Boiga irregularis) on Guam include a modified minnow trap with a live mouse lure. We investigated the effects on capture success of augmenting these traps with scented guide ropes leading to trap entrances. Initial screening of scent preferences was based on...
Groupers on the edge: Shelf edge spawning habitat in and around marine reserves of the northeastern Gulf of Mexico
Felicia C. Coleman, Kathryn M. Scanlon, Christopher C. Koenig
2011, Professional Geographer (63) 456-474
The northeastern Gulf of Mexico contains some of the most diverse and productive marine habitat in the United States. Much of this habitat, located on the shelf edge in depths of 50 to 120 m, supports spawning for many economically important species, including groupers. Here, we couple acoustic surveys with...
Finite volume model for two-dimensional shallow environmental flow
F.J.M. Simoes
2011, Journal of Hydraulic Engineering (137) 173-182
This paper presents the development of a two-dimensional, depth integrated, unsteady, free-surface model based on the shallow water equations. The development was motivated by the desire of balancing computational efficiency and accuracy by selective and conjunctive use of different numerical techniques. The base framework of the discrete model uses Godunov...
An equation of state for hypersaline water in Great Salt Lake, Utah, USA
D. L. Naftz, F.J. Millero, B.F. Jones, W. R. Green
2011, Aquatic Geochemistry (17) 809-820
Great Salt Lake (GSL) is one of the largest and most saline lakes in the world. In order to accurately model limnological processes in GSL, hydrodynamic calculations require the precise estimation of water density (ρ) under a variety of environmental conditions. An equation of state was developed with water samples...
In vivo fitness correlates with host-specific virulence of Infectious hematopoietic necrosis virus (IHNV) in sockeye salmon and rainbow trout
M.M.D. Penaranda, A. R. Wargo, Gael Kurath
2011, Virology (417) 312-319
The relationship between virulence and overall within-host fitness of the fish rhabdovirus Infectious hematopoietic necrosis virus (IHNV) was empirically investigated in vivo for two virus isolates belonging to different IHNV genogroups that exhibit opposing host-specific virulence. U group isolates are more virulent in sockeye salmon and M group isolates are...
Comparison of two methods used to model shape parameters of Pareto distributions
C. Liu, Ronald R. Charpentier, J. Su
2011, Mathematical Geosciences (43) 847-859
Two methods are compared for estimating the shape parameters of Pareto field-size (or pool-size) distributions for petroleum resource assessment. Both methods assume mature exploration in which most of the larger fields have been discovered. Both methods use the sizes of larger discovered fields to estimate the numbers and sizes of...
The role of model dynamics in ensemble Kalman filter performance for chaotic systems
G.-H.C. Ng, D. McLaughlin, D. Entekhabi, A. Ahanin
2011, Tellus, Series A: Dynamic Meteorology and Oceanography (63) 958-977
The ensemble Kalman filter (EnKF) is susceptible to losing track of observations, or ‘diverging’, when applied to large chaotic systems such as atmospheric and ocean models. Past studies have demonstrated the adverse impact of sampling error during the filter’s update step. We examine how system dynamics affect EnKF performance, and...
The bioinvasion of Guam: inferring geographic origin, pace, pattern and process of an invasive lizard (Carlia) in the Pacific using multi-locus genomic data
C.C. Austin, E.N. Rittmeyer, L.A. Oliver, J.O. Andermann, G.R. Zug, G.H. Rodda, N.D. Jackson
2011, Biological Invasions (13) 1951-1967
Invasive species often have dramatic negative effects that lead to the deterioration and loss of biodiversity frequently coupled with the burden of expensive biocontrol programs and subversion of socioeconomic stability. The fauna and flora of oceanic islands are particularly susceptible to invasive species and the increase of global movements of...
Geochemistry of environmentally sensitive trace elements in Permian coals from the Huainan coalfield, Anhui, China
J. Chen, Gaisheng Liu, M. Jiang, C. L. Chou, H. Li, B. Wu, Lingyun Zheng, D. Jiang
2011, International Journal of Coal Geology (88) 41-54
To study the geochemical characteristics of 11 environmentally sensitive trace elements in the coals of the Permian Period from the Huainan coalfield, Anhui province, China, borehole samples of 336 coals, two partings, and four roof and floor mudstones were collected from mineable coal seams. Major elements and selected trace elements were determined by inductively coupled plasma optical emission spectrometry (ICP-OES), inductively coupled...