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Publication Extents

Not all publications have extents, not all extents are completely accurate
Comparison of two detection methods of a declining rodent, the Allegheny woodrat, in Virginia
Emily D. Thorne, Karen E. Powers, Richard J. Reynolds, Makayla E. Beckner, Karissa A. Ellis, W. Mark Ford
2022, Journal of Fish and Wildlife Management (13) 396-406
Allegheny woodrats Neotoma magister are an imperiled small mammal species most associated with emergent rock habitats in the central Appalachian Mountains and the Ohio River Valley. The monitoring of populations and their spatiotemporal distributions typically has relied on labor-intensive livetrapping. The use of remote-detecting cameras holds promise for being an equally or...
The economic costs of chronic wasting disease in the United States
Scott J. Chiavacci
2022, PLoS ONE (17)
Cervids are economically important to a wide range of stakeholders and rights holders in the United States. The continued expansion of chronic wasting disease (CWD), a fatal neurodegenerative disease affecting wild and farmed cervids, poses a direct and indirect threat to state and federal government agency operations and cervid related...
Assessment of vulnerabilities and opportunities to restore marsh sediment supply at Nisqually River Delta, west-central Washington
Eric E. Grossman, Sean C. Crosby, Andrew W. Stevens, Daniel J. Nowacki, Nathan R. vanArendonk, Christopher A. Curran
2022, Open-File Report 2022-1088
A cascading set of hazards to coastal environments is intimately tied to sediment transport and includes the flooding and erosion of shorelines and habitats that support communities, industry, infrastructure, and ecosystem functions (for example, habitats critical to fisheries). This report summarizes modeling and measurement data used to evaluate...
Assessing the seasonal evolution of snow depth spatial variability and scaling in complex mountain terrain
Zachary Miller, Erich Peitzsch, Eric A. Sproles, Karl W. Birkeland, Ross T. Palomaki
2022, The Cryosphere (16) 4907-4930
Dynamic natural processes govern snow distribution in mountainous environments throughout the world. Interactions between these different processes create spatially variable patterns of snow depth across a landscape. Variations in accumulation and redistribution occur at a variety of spatial scales, which are well established for moderate mountain terrain. However, spatial patterns...
Quantifying permanent uplift due to lithosphere-hotspot interaction
Guy Lang, Uri S. ten Brink
2022, Tectonics (41)
Vertical motions that accompany the passage of the lithosphere over a mantle hotspot can shed light on the nature of the hotspot and its effect on the lithosphere. However, quantifying the temporal vertical and spatial extent, is challenging due to the paucity of evidence in the geological...
Working toward a National Coordinated Soil Moisture Monitoring Network: Vision, progress, and future directions
C. Bruce Baker, Michael H. Cosh, John Bolten, Mark Brusberg, Todd Caldwell, Stephanie Connolly, Iliyana Dobreva, Nathan Edwards, Peter E. Goble, Tyson E. Ochsner, Steven M. Quiring, Michael Robotham, Marina Skumanich, Mark Svoboda, W. Alex White, Molly Woloszyn
2022, Bulletin of the American Meteorological Society (103) E2719-E2732
Soil moisture is a critical land surface variable, impacting the water, energy, and carbon cycles. While in situ soil moisture monitoring networks are still developing, there is no cohesive strategy or framework to coordinate, integrate,...
Adult Atlantic salmon (Salmo salar) delayed below dams rapidly deplete energy stores
Sarah R. Rubenstein, Erin Peterson, Paul Christman, Joseph D. Zydlewski
2022, Canadian Journal of Fisheries and Aquatic Sciences (80) 170-182
Atlantic salmon (Salmo salar) return to rivers in spring for an energetically costly upstream migration for spawning. These fish are often delayed in the lower river below dams, subjecting them to warmer waters than occur in upstream sections of river, that may increase metabolic costs. We sought to quantify the...
Water quality of sand and gravel aquifers in McHenry County, Illinois, 2020 and comparisons to conditions in 2010
Amy M. Gahala, Lance R. Gruhn, Jennifer C. Murphy, Lisa A. Matson
2022, Scientific Investigations Report 2022-5110
McHenry County, Illinois, obtains most of its drinking water from shallow sand and gravel aquifers (groundwater). To evaluate this groundwater resource, the U.S. Geological Survey, in cooperation with McHenry County, Illinois, collected water-quality samples from 41 of 42 monitoring wells in the McHenry County Groundwater Monitoring Network and 4 monitoring...
Abundance and distribution of large thecosome pteropods in the northern Gulf of Mexico
Sarah Shedler, Brad Seibel, Michael Vecchione, Dale W. Griffin, Heather Judkins
2022, American Malacological Bulletin (39) 1-11
The ecological role of large thecosome pteropods in the pelagic ecosystem of the northern Gulf of Mexico (GoM) may be substantial, both in the food web and biogeochemical cycling. We analyzed species abundances, vertical and horizontal distributions of large species with calcareous shells (those collected in 3-mm mesh nets). Pteropod...
Physical controls on the hydrology of perennially ice-covered lakes, Taylor Valley, Antarctica (1996-2013)
Julian Cross, Andrew Fountain, Matthew Hoffman, Maciej Obryk
2022, JGR Earth Surface (127)
The McMurdo Dry Valleys, Antarctica, are a polar desert populated with numerous closed-watershed, perennially ice-covered lakes primarily fed by glacial melt. Lake levels have varied by as much as 8 m since 1972 and are currently rising after a decade of decreasing. Precipitation falls as snow, so...
The Pondosa fault zone: A distributed dextral-normal-oblique fault system in northeastern California, USA
Jessica Ann Thompson Jobe, Richard W. Briggs, Ryan D. Gold, Stephen B. DeLong, Madeline Hille, Jaime Delano, Samuel Johnstone, Alexandra Pickering, Rachel Phillips, Andrew T. Calvert
2022, Geosphere (19) 179-205
The tectonic domains of Basin and Range extension, Cascadia subduction zone contraction, and Walker Lane dextral transtension converge in the Mushroom Rock region of northeastern California, USA. We combined analysis of high-resolution topographic data, bedrock mapping, 40Ar/39Ar geochronology, low-temperature thermochronology, and existing geologic and fault mapping to characterize an extensive dextral-normal-oblique...
Divergent Serpentoviruses in free-ranging invasive pythons and native colubrids in southern Florida, United States
Steven B Tillis, Jillian M. Josimovich, Melissa A. Miller, Hoon-Hanks Laura L., Arik M. Hartmann, Natalie M. Claunch, Marley E. Iredale, Tracey D. Logan, Amy A. Yackel Adams, Ian A. Bartoszek, John S. Humphrey, Bryan M. Kluever, Mark D. Stenglein, Robert Reed, Christina M. Romagosa, James FX. Wellehan, Robert J. Ossiboff
2022, Viruses (14)
Burmese python (Python bivittatus) is an invasive snake that has significantly affected ecosystems in southern Florida, United States. Aside from direct predation and competition, invasive species can also introduce nonnative pathogens that can adversely affect native species. The subfamily Serpentovirinae (order Nidovirales) is composed of positive-sense RNA viruses primarily...
Climate-modulated range expansion of reef-building coral communities off southeast Florida during the late Holocene
Alex B. Modys, Anton E. Olenik, Richard A. Mortlock, Lauren Toth, William F. Precht
2022, Frontiers in Marine Science (9)
The Holocene reefs off southeast Florida provide unique insights into the biogeographical and ecological response of western Atlantic coral reefs to past climate change that can be used to evaluate future climate impacts. However, previous studies have focused on millennial-scale change during the stable mid-Holocene, making it difficult to...
Defining the Hoek-Brown constant mi for volcanic lithologies
Marlène C. Villeneuve, Michael J. Heap, Lauren N. Schaefer
2022, Conference Paper, Rock mechanics and engineering geology in volcanic fields
The empirical Hoek-Brown failure criterion is a well-known and commonly used failure criterion for both intact rocks and rock masses, especially in geological engineering. The intact criterion is calculated using experimental triaxial compression test results on intact samples while the rock mass criterion modifies the intact strength using quantified measures...
Assigning causality to events in the Holocene record of coral reefs
Victor Rodriguez-Ruano, Lauren Toth, Richard B. Aronson
2022, Journal of the Geological Society of London (529) 281-292
The uncemented reef-frameworks of Pacific Panamá, which have been dominated throughout the Holocene by branching corals of the genus Pocillopora, experienced a hiatus in vertical accretion lasting c. 2300 years, beginning c. 4100 years ago. The hiatus has been attributed to an increase in variability of the El Niño–Southern Oscillation (ENSO). We...
Nonlethal tools to identify mass ovarian follicular atresia in Burbot
Lauren M. McGarvey, Jason E. Ilgen, Christopher S. Guy, Jason G. McLellan, Molly A. H. Webb
2022, Journal of Fish and Wildlife Management (13) 552-561
Skipped spawning, or variation in spawning periodicity, occurs in many annual spawning fish species and is an important consideration for population management. We assessed plasma sex steroid concentrations and measured gonad size and ovarian follicle diameter as metrics to nonlethally identify mass ovarian...
Drivers of habitat quality for a reintroduced elk herd
Braiden A. Quinlan, Jacalyn P. Rosenberger, David M. Kalb, Heather N. Abernathy, Emily D. Thorne, W. Mark Ford, Michael J. Cherry
2022, Scientific Reports (12)
Understanding spatiotemporal variation in habitat quality is essential for guiding wildlife reintroduction and restoration programs. The habitat productivity hypothesis posits that home range size is inversely related to habitat quality. Thus, home range size may be used as a proxy for habitat quality and can identify important land cover features...
Maladaptive nest-site selection and reduced nest survival in female sage-grouse following wildfire
Ian F. Dudley, Peter S. Coates, Brian G. Prochazka, Dawn M. Davis, Scott C. Gardner, David J. Delehanty
2022, Ecosphere (13)
Increased wildfire frequency and associated replacement of sagebrush (Artemisia spp.) with invasive annual grasses contribute to declines of greater sage-grouse (Centrocercus urophasianus; hereafter, sage-grouse) populations across the Great Basin. However, little is known about wildfire effects on sage-grouse nest-site selection and nest survival, which can influence population persistence. The primary objective...
Divergent responses of butterflies and bees to burning and grazing management in tallgrass prairies
Julia B. Leone, Nora P. Pennarola, Jennifer Larson, Karen Oberhauser, Diane L. Larson
2022, Ecology and Evolution (12)
Butterflies and bees contribute significantly to grassland biodiversity and play important roles as pollinators and herbivores. Grassland conservation and management must be seen through the lens of insect conservation and management if these species are to thrive. In North America, grasslands are a product...
As the goose flies: Migration routes and timing influence patterns of genetic diversity in a circumpolar migratory herbivore
Robert E. Wilson, Sarah A. Sonsthagen, Jeffrey M. DaCost, Michael D. Sorenson, Anthony D. Fox, Melanie Weaver, Dan Skalos, Alexander V. Kondratyev, Kim T. Scribner, Alyn Walsh, Craig R. Ely, Sandra L. Talbot
2022, Diversity (14)
Migration schedules and the timing of other annual events (e.g., pair formation and molt) can affect the distribution of genetic diversity as much as where these events occur. The greater white-fronted goose (Anser albifrons) is a circumpolar goose species, exhibiting temporal and spatial variation of events among populations during...
Optimizing Landsat Next shortwave infrared bands for crop residue characterization
Brian T. Lamb, Phillip Dennison, W. Dean Hively, Raymond F. Kokaly, Guy Serbin, Zhuoting Wu, Philip W. Dabney, Jeffery G. Masek, Michael Campbell, Craig S. T. Daughtry
2022, Remote Sensing (14)
This study focused on optimizing the placement of shortwave infrared (SWIR) bands for pixel-level estimation of fractional crop residue cover (fR) for the upcoming Landsat Next mission. We applied an iterative wavelength shift approach to a database of crop residue field spectra collected in Beltsville, Maryland, USA (n =...
Zinc on the edge—Isotopic and geophysical evidence that cratonic edges control world-class shale-hosted zinc-lead deposits
David L. Huston, David C. Champion, Karol Czarnota, Jingming Duan, Matthew Hutchens, Suzanne Paradis, Mark Hoggard, Bryant Ware, George M. Gibson, Michael P. Doublier, Karen D. Kelley, Anne E. McCafferty, Nathan Hayward, Fred Richards, Svetlana Tessalina, Graham Carr
2022, Mineralium Deposita (58) 707-729
The North Australian Zinc Belt is the largest zinc-lead province in the world, containing three of the ten largest known individual deposits (HYC, Hilton-George Fisher, and Mount Isa). The Northern Cordillera in North America is the second largest zinc-lead province, containing a further two of the world’s top ten deposits...
Verification of multiple phosphorus analyzers for use in surface-water applications
Colin S. Peake
2022, Open-File Report 2022-1100
The U.S. Geological Survey (USGS) completed a verification study of selected commercially available phosphorus analyzers for their applicability to scientific surface-water applications. In this study, the analyzers were the Hach EZ7800 TOPHO, Hach Phosphax sc, Sea-Bird Scientific HydroCycle-PO4, and the YSI Inc. Alyza IQ PO4. Verification tests included laboratory trials...
Summary of extreme water-quality conditions in Upper Klamath Lake, Oregon, 2005–19
Susan A. Wherry
2022, Open-File Report 2022-1080
This study used the complete set of continuous water-quality (WQ) data and discrete measurements of total ammonia collected by the U.S. Geological Survey from 2005 to 2019 at the four core sites in Upper Klamath Lake, Oregon, to examine relations between variables and extreme conditions that may be harmful...
BIA branch of tribal climate resilience regional assessment report
Coral Avery, Corwin Carroll, Lannette Marie Rangel
2022, Report
The Bureau of Indian Affairs (BIA) Branch of Tribal Climate Resilience (TCR) was established in 2011 to enable Tribal and BIA Office of Trust Services Programs to incorporate climate considerations into their programs' planning and decision-making. The TCR’s purpose is to fulfill trust responsibility to Federally recognized Tribal Nations by...