Intraperitoneal injections as a possible means of generating varied levels of methylmercury in the eggs of birds in field studies
Gary Heinz, David J. Hoffman, Jon D. Klimstra, Katherine R. Stebbins
2010, Environmental Toxicology and Chemistry (29) 1079-1083
The ideal study of the effects of methylmercury on the reproductive success of a species of bird would be one in which eggs contained mercury concentrations ranging from controls to very heavily contaminated, all at the same site. Such a study cannot be realized at a mercury contaminated area or...
Preliminary Assessment of the Hydrogeology and Groundwater Availability in the Metamorphic and Siliciclastic Fractured-Rock Aquifer Systems of Warren County, Virginia
David L. Nelms, Roger M. Moberg
2010, Scientific Investigations Report 2010-5190
Expanding development and the prolonged drought from 1999 to 2002 drew attention to the quantity and sustainability of the groundwater resources in Warren County, Virginia. The groundwater flow systems of the county are complex and are controlled by the extremely folded and faulted geology that underlies the county. A study...
Local sensitivity analysis for inverse problems solved by singular value decomposition
M. C. Hill, B. T. Nolan
2010, Book, American Geophysical Union, Fall Meeting 2010
Local sensitivity analysis provides computationally frugal ways to evaluate models commonly used for resource management, risk assessment, and so on. This includes diagnosing inverse model convergence problems caused by parameter insensitivity and(or) parameter interdependence (correlation), understanding what aspects of the model and data contribute to measures of uncertainty, and identifying...
Sediment transport on Cape Sable, Everglades National Park, Florida
Mark Zucker, Carrie Boudreau
2010, Conference Paper, Proceedings of the Joint Federal Interagency Conference 2010: Hydrology and Sedimentation for a Changing Future: Existing and Emerging Issues: Las Vegas, NV, June 27-July 1, 2010
The Cape Sable peninsula is located on the southwestern tip of the Florida peninsula within Everglades National Park (ENP). Lake Ingraham, the largest lake within Cape Sable, is now connected to the Gulf of Mexico and western Florida Bay by canals built in the early 1920's. Some of these canals...
Epizootic of beak deformities among wild birds in Alaska: An emerging disease in North America?
Colleen M. Handel, Lisa M. Pajot, Steven M. Matsuoka, Caroline R. Van Hemert, John Terenzi, Sandra L. Talbot, Daniel M. Mulcahy, Carol U. Meteyer, Kimberly A. Trust
2010, The Auk (127) 882-898
The sudden appearance of a large cluster of animals with gross abnormalities may signal a significant change in an ecosystem. We describe an unusual concentration of beak deformities that appear to have arisen rapidly within Alaska and now extend southward along the Pacific Coast. In Alaska we have documented 2,160...
Groundwater sampling
Qingren Wang, Rafael Munoz-Carpena, Adam Foster, Kati W. Migliaccio
Yuncong Li, Kati Migliaccio, editor(s)
2010, Book chapter, Water quality concepts, sampling, and analyses
Groundwater is protected in most areas as it is a primary source of drinking water. In the United States, 50% of the population relies on groundwater supplies (Reilly et al., 2008). Groundwater sampling in the United States became commonplace in the 20th century as contaminated water resources became apparent and...
Evaluating ecological equivalence of created marshes: comparing structural indicators with stable isotope indicators of blue crab trophic support
Chris Llewellyn, Megan K. LaPeyre
2010, Estuaries and Coasts (34) 172-184
This study sought to examine ecological equivalence of created marshes of different ages using traditional structural measures of equivalence, and tested a relatively novel approach using stable isotopes as a measure of functional equivalence. We compared soil properties, vegetation, nekton communities, and δ13C and δ15N isotope values of blue crab...
Current distribution of North American river otters in central and eastern Oklahoma, with seven new county records
Dominic A. Barrett, David M. Leslie Jr.
2010, Occasional Papers of the Museum at Texas Tech University (294) 1-13
In 1984 and 1985, the Oklahoma Department of Wildlife Conservation reintroduced North American river otters (Lontra canadensis) from coastal Louisiana into eastern Oklahoma. Those reintroductions and immigration from Arkansas and possibly northeastern Texas allowed river otters to become reestablished in eastern Oklahoma. Our goals were to determine the contemporary distribution...
A comparison between SWI and SEAWAT: the importance of dispersion, inversion and vertical anisotropy
Alyssa M. Dausman, Christian D. Langevin, Mark Bakker, Frans Schaars
2010, Conference Paper, Proceedings of the 21st Salt Water Intrusion Meeting, Azores, Portugal, 2010
SWI and SEAWAT are both computer codes designed to model variable-density systems. One of the options in SWI is to model Dupuit interface flow, where freshwater and seawater are separated by an interface. In this paper we compare seawater intrusion model results of SWI to model results of SEAWAT, which...
Gas storage in the Upper Devonian-Lower Mississippian Woodford Shale, Arbuckle Mountains, Oklahoma: how much of a role do the cherts play?
Neil S. Fishman, Geoffrey S. Ellis, Stanley T. Paxton, Marvin M. Abbott, Adam Boehlke
2010, Conference Paper, AAPG Hedberg Conference
How gas is stored in shale-gas systems is a critical element in characterizing these potentially prolific, low-porosity/permeability reservoirs. An integrated mineralogic, geochemical, and porosity/permeability study is of the Upper Devonian-Lower Mississippian Woodford Shale, Arbuckle Mountains, southern Oklahoma, at locations previously described through detailed stratigraphic and spectral gamma surveys, was undertaken...
Surface water discharge and salinity monitoring of coastal estuaries in Everglades National Park, USA, in support of the Comprehensive Everglades Restoration Plan
Jeff Woods
2010, Book, Proceedings of the 3rd International Perspective on Current & Future State of Water Resources & the Environment
Discharge and salinity were measured along the southwest and the southeast coast of Florida in Everglades National Park (ENP) within several rivers and creeks from 1996 through 2008. Data were collected using hydro-acoustic instruments and continuous water-quality monitors at fixed monitoring stations. Water flowed through ENP within two distinct drainage...
Effect of sea-level rise on future coastal groundwater resources in southern Florida, USA
Christian D. Langevin, Michael R. Zygnerski, Jeremy T. White, Joseph D. Hughes
2010, Conference Paper, Proceedings of the 21st Salt Water Intrusion Meeting, Azores, Portugal, 2010
An existing variable‐density groundwater flow and solute transport model, developed for the northern part of Broward County, Florida, was used to predict the effect of sealevel rise on future coastal groundwater resources. Using average annual conditions from 2005, simulations were performed for 100 years into the future using four different...
Using a cloud to replenish parched groundwater modeling efforts
Randall J. Hunt, Joseph Luchette, Willem A. Schreuder, James O. Rumbaugh, John Doherty, Matthew J. Tonkin, Douglas B. Rumbaugh
2010, Ground Water (48) 360-365
Groundwater models can be improved by introduction of additional parameter flexibility and simultaneous use of soft-knowledge. However, these sophisticated approaches have high computational requirements. Cloud computing provides unprecedented access to computing power via the Internet to facilitate the use of these techniques. A modeler can create, launch, and terminate “virtual”...
Effect of historic land cover change on runoff curve number estimation in Iowa
Loren L. Wehmeyer, Frank H. Weirich
2010, Journal of Hydrologic Engineering (15) 692-695
Within three decades of European-descended settlers arriving in Iowa, much of the land cover across the state was transformed from prairie and forest to farmland, patches of forest, and urbanized areas. Between 1832 and 1859, the General Land Office surveyed the state of Iowa to aid in the disbursement of...
Anomalously low strength of serpentinite sheared against granite and implications for creep on the Hayward and Calaveras Faults
Diane E. Moore, David A. Lockner, David A. Ponce
2010, Conference Paper, Proceedings of the Third Conference on Earthquake Hazards in the Eastern San Francisco Bay Area : science, hazard, engineering and risk: California Geological Survey Special Publicatoin 219
Serpentinized ophiolitic rocks are juxtaposed against quartzofeldspathic rocks at depth across considerable portions of the Hayward and Calaveras Faults. The marked compositional contrast between these rock types may contribute to fault creep that has been observed along these faults. To investigate this possibility, we are conducting hydrothermal shearing experiments to...
Continental margins and the U.S. extended continental shelf project
Deborah R. Hutchinson, Ginger A. Barth
2010, MARGINS/GeoPRISMS Newsletter (25) 5-11
Reproductive ecology and habitat use of pacific Black Scoters (Melanitta nigra americana) nesting on the Yukon-Kuskokwim Delta, Alaska
Jason L. Schamber, Fred J. Broerman, Paul L. Flint
2010, Waterbirds (33) 129-139
Abundance indices of Black Scoters (Melanitta nigra. americana) breeding in Alaska indicate a long-term population decline without obvious cause (s). However, few life history data are available for the species in North America. In 2001–2004, information was collected on nesting habitat and reproductive parameters (i.e. components of productivity) from a...
Kinetics of viral shedding provide insights into the epidemiology of viral hemorrhagic septicemia in Pacific herring
Paul K. Hershberger, Jacob L. Gregg, James R. Winton, Courtney Grady, Rachael Collins
2010, Marine Ecology Progress Series (400) 187-193
Losses from infectious diseases are an important component of natural mortality among marine fish species, but factors controlling the ecology of these diseases and their potential responses to anthropogenic changes are poorly understood. We used viral hemorrhagic septicemia virus (VHSV) and a laboratory stock of Pacific herring Clupea pallasii to...
Imaging hydraulic fractures in a geothermal reservoir
Bruce R. Julian, Gillian R. Foulger
2010, Geophysical Research Letters (37)
Heat Flow and Hydrologic Characteristics at the AND-1B borehole, ANDRILL McMurdo Ice Shelf Project, Antarctica
Roger H. Morin, Trevor Williams, Stuart Henry, Diana Magens and Frank Niessen, Dhiresh Hansaraj
2010, Geosphere (6) 370-378
The Antarctic Drilling Program (ANDRILL) successfully drilled and cored a borehole, AND-1B, beneath the McMurdo Ice Shelf and into a flexural moat basin that surrounds Ross Island. Total drilling depth reached 1285 m below seafloor (mbsf) with 98 percent core recovery for the detailed study of glacier dynamics. With the...
Release of infectious cells from epidermal ulcers in Ichthyophonus sp.–infected Pacific Herring (Clupea pallasii): Evidence for multiple mechanisms of transmission
Paul K. Hershberger, Jacob L. Gregg, R. M. Kocan
2010, Journal of Parasitology (96) 348-352
A common clinical sign of ichthyophoniasis in herring and trout is “sandpaper” skin, a roughening of the epidermis characterized by the appearance of small papules, followed by ulceration and sloughing of the epithelium; early investigators hypothesized that these ulcers might be a means of transmitting the parasite, Ichthyophonus sp., without...
Feasibility of Surgically Implanting Acoustic Tags into Pacific Herring
Paul K. Hershberger, Jacob L. Gregg, A.C. Seitz, Brenda L. Norcross, J.C. Payne, A.N. Kagley, B Meloy
2010, Transactions of the American Fisheries Society (139) 1288-1291
Internally implanted acoustic tags represent a potentially valuable approach to assessing the seasonal migration and distribution patterns of Pacific herring Clupea palasii. We examined the feasibility of implanting two sizes of dummy acoustic tags (9 mm in diameter × 21 mm long, 1.6 g; and 7 mm in diameter ×...
Long-term variability in Northern Hemisphere snow cover and associations with warmer winters
Gregory J. McCabe, David M. Wolock
2010, Climatic Change (99) 141-153
A monthly snow accumulation and melt model is used with gridded monthly temperature and precipitation data for the Northern Hemisphere to generate time series of March snow-covered area (SCA) for the period 1905 through 2002. The time series of estimated SCA for March is verified by comparison with previously published...
Differential growth of U and M type infectious haematopoietic necrosis virus in a rainbow trout–derived cell line, RTG-2
Jeong Woo Park, Chang Hoon Moon, Andrew Wargo, Maureen K. Purcell, Gael Kurath
2010, Journal of Fish Diseases (33) 583-591
Infectious haematopoietic necrosis virus (IHNV) is one of the most important viral pathogens of salmonids. In rainbow trout, IHNV isolates in the M genogroup are highly pathogenic, while U genogroup isolates are significantly less pathogenic. We show here that, at a multiplicity of infection (MOI) of 1, a representative U...
Chronic and persistent viral hemorrhagic septicemia virus infections in Pacific herring
Paul K. Hershberger, Jacob L. Gregg, James R. Winton, Cortney A. Grady, L. Taylor
2010, Diseases of Aquatic Organisms (93) 43-49
Chronic viral hemorrhagic septicemia virus (VHSV) infections were established in a laboratory stock of Pacific herring Clupea pallasii held in a large-volume tank supplied with pathogen-free seawater at temperatures ranging from 6.8 to 11.6°C. The infections were characterized by viral persistence for extended periods and near-background levels of host mortality....