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Page 919, results 22951 - 22975

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Not all publications have extents, not all extents are completely accurate
Fraction of young water as an indicator of aquifer vulnerability along two regional flow paths in the Mississippi embayment aquifer system, southeastern USA
James A. Kingsbury, Jeannie R. B. Barlow, Bryant C. Jurgens, Peter B. McMahon, John K. Carmichael
2017, Hydrogeology Journal (25) 1661-1678
Wells along two regional flow paths were sampled to characterize changes in water quality and the vulnerability to contamination of the Memphis aquifer across a range of hydrologic and land-use conditions in the southeastern United States. The flow paths begin in the aquifer outcrop area and end at public supply...
Comparing automated classification and digitization approaches to detect change in eelgrass bed extent during restoration of a large river delta
Anna Elizabeth Davenport, Jerry D. Davis, Isa Woo, Eric E. Grossman, Jesse B. Barham, Christopher S. Ellings, John Y. Takekawa
2017, Northwest Science (91) 272-282
Native eelgrass (Zostera marina) is an important contributor to ecosystem services that supplies cover for juvenile fish, supports a variety of invertebrate prey resources for fish and waterbirds, provides substrate for herring roe consumed by numerous fish and birds, helps stabilize sediment, and sequesters organic carbon. Seagrasses are in decline...
Evidence of coupled carbon and iron cycling at a hydrocarbon-contaminated site from time lapse magnetic susceptibility
Anders L. Lund, Lee D. Slater, Estella A. Atekwana, Dimitrios Ntarlagiannis, Isabelle M. Cozzarelli, Barbara A. Bekins
2017, Environmental Science & Technology (51) 11244-11249
Conventional characterization and monitoring of hydrocarbon (HC) pollution is often expensive and time-consuming. Magnetic susceptibility (MS) has been proposed as an inexpensive, long-term monitoring proxy of the degradation of HC. We acquired repeated down hole MS logging data in boreholes at a HC-contaminated field research site in Bemidji, MN, USA....
Climate change-driven cliff and beach evolution at decadal to centennial time scales
Li H. Erikson, Andrea C. O'Neill, Patrick L. Barnard, Sean Vitousek, Patrick W. Limber
2017, Conference Paper, Proceedings Coastal Dynamics 2017
Here we develop a computationally efficient method that evolves cross-shore profiles of sand beaches with or without cliffs along natural and urban coastal environments and across expansive geographic areas at decadal to centennial time-scales driven by 21st century climate change projections. The model requires projected sea level rise rates, extrema...
Abundant carbon in the mantle beneath Hawai`i
Kyle R. Anderson, Michael P. Poland
2017, Nature Geoscience (10) 704-708
Estimates of carbon concentrations in Earth’s mantle vary over more than an order of magnitude, hindering our ability to understand mantle structure and mineralogy, partial melting, and the carbon cycle. CO2 concentrations in mantle-derived magmas supplying hotspot ocean island volcanoes yield our most direct constraints on mantle carbon, but are...
The planetary data system
Charles Acton, Susan Slavney, Raymond E. Arvidson, Lisa R. Gaddis, Mitchell Gordon, Susan Lavoie
2017, Lunar and Planetary Information Bulletin 2-11
In the early 1980s, the Space Science Board (SSB) of the National Research Council was concerned about the poor and inconsistent treatment of scientific information returned from NASA’s space science missions. The SSB formed a panel [The Committee on Data Management and Computation (CODMAC)] to assess the situation and make...
Mathematical models for plant-herbivore interactions
Zhilan Feng, Donald L. DeAngelis
2017, Book
Mathematical Models of Plant-Herbivore Interactions addresses mathematical models in the study of practical questions in ecology, particularly factors that affect herbivory, including plant defense, herbivore natural enemies, and adaptive herbivory, as well as the effects of these on plant community dynamics. The result of extensive research on the use of mathematical modeling...
Contact and contagion: Probability of transmission given contact varies with demographic state in bighorn sheep
Kezia R. Manlove, E. Frances Cassirer, Raina K. Plowright, Paul C. Cross, Peter J. Hudson
2017, Journal of Animal Ecology (86) 908-920
Understanding both contact and probability of transmission given contact are key to managing wildlife disease. However, wildlife disease research tends to focus on contact heterogeneity, in part because the probability of transmission given contact is notoriously difficult to measure. Here, we present a first step towards empirically...
Survival of the endangered Pima pineapple cactus: Does clearing before prescribed fire alter survival postfire?
Kathryn A. Thomas, Christopher Jarchow, Julie A. Crawford
2017, Southwestern Naturalist (62) 200-206
Federal land managers and ranchers often use prescribed fire as a tool to reduce invading woody plants within desert grasslands of the arid southwestern United States. Managers must evaluate the threat of the burn toward the health and survival of plants of concern including how preemptive clearing before prescribed fire...
Rock friction under variable normal stress
Brian D. Kilgore, Nicholas M. Beeler, Julian C. Lozos, David Oglesby
2017, Journal of Geophysical Research B: Solid Earth (122) 7042-7075
This study is to determine the detailed response of shear strength and other fault properties to changes in normal stress at room temperature using dry initially bare rock surfaces of granite at normal stresses between 5 and 7 MPa. Rapid normal stress changes result in gradual, approximately exponential changes in shear...
The geologic, geomorphic, and hydrologic context underlying options for long-term management of the Spirit Lake outlet near Mount St. Helens, Washington
Gordon E. Grant, Jon J. Major, Sarah L. Lewis
2017, General Technical Report PNW-GTR-954
The 1980 eruption of Mount St. Helens produced a massive landslide and consequent pyroclastic currents, deposits of which blocked the outlet to Spirit Lake. Without an outlet, the lake began to rise, threatening a breaching of the blockage and release of a massive volume of water. To mitigate the hazard...
A framework for modeling connections between hydraulics, water surface roughness, and surface reflectance in open channel flows
Carl J. Legleiter, Curtis D. Mobley, Brandon Overstreet
2017, Journal of Geophysical Research F: Earth Surface (122) 1715-1741
This paper introduces a framework for examining connections between the flow field, the texture of the air-water interface, and the reflectance of the water surface and thus evaluating the potential to infer hydraulic information from remotely sensed observations of surface reflectance. We used a spatial correlation model describing water surface...
Climate-driven variability in the occurrence of major floods across North America and Europe
Glenn A. Hodgkins, Paul H. Whitfield, Donald H. Burn, Jamie Hannaford, Benjamin Renard, Kerstin Stahl, Anne K. Fleig, Henrik Madsen, Luis Mediero, Johanna Korhonen, Conor Murphy, Donna Wilson
2017, Journal of Hydrology (552) 704-717
Concern over the potential impact of anthropogenic climate change on flooding has led to a proliferation of studies examining past flood trends. Many studies have analysed annual-maximum flow trends but few have quantified changes in major (25–100 year return period) floods, i.e. those that have the greatest societal impacts. Existing major-flood...
Incorporating evolutionary insights to improve ecotoxicology for freshwater species
Steven P. Brady, Jonathan L. Richardson, Bethany K. Kunz
2017, Evolutionary Applications (10) 829-838
Ecotoxicological studies have provided extensive insights into the lethal and sublethal effects of environmental contaminants. These insights are critical for environmental regulatory frameworks, which rely on knowledge of toxicity for developing policies to manage contaminants. While varied approaches have been applied to ecotoxicological questions, perspectives related to the evolutionary history...
Conservation endocrinology
Stephen D. McCormick, L. Michael Romero
2017, BioScience (67) 429-442
Endocrinologists can make significant contributions to conservation biology by helping to understand the mechanisms by which organisms cope with changing environments. Field endocrine techniques have advanced rapidly in recent years and can provide substantial information on the growth, stress, and reproductive status of individual animals, thereby providing insight into current...
Crossing boundaries in a collaborative modeling workspace
Jeffrey T. Morisette, Amanda E. Cravens, Brian W. Miller, Marian Talbert, Colin Talbert, Catherine S. Jarnevich, Michelle Fink, Karin Decker, Eric Odell
2017, Society and Natural Resources (30) 1158-1167
There is substantial literature on the importance of bridging across disciplinary and science–management boundaries. One of the ways commonly suggested to cross boundaries is for participants from both sides of the boundary to jointly produce information (i.e., knowledge co-production). But simply providing tools or bringing people together in the same...
Visitor spending effects: assessing and showcasing America's investment in national parks
Lynne Koontz, Catherine Cullinane Thomas, Pamela Ziesler, Jeffrey Olson, Bret Meldrum
2017, Journal of Sustainable Tourism (25) 1865-1876
This paper provides an overview of the evolution, future, and global applicability of the U.S. National Park Service's (NPS) visitor spending effects framework and discusses the methods used to effectively communicate the economic return on investment in America's national parks. The 417 parks represent many of America's most iconic destinations:...
New zircon (U-Th)/He and U/Pb eruption age for the Rockland tephra, western USA
Matthew A. Coble, Seth D. Burgess, Erik W. Klemetti
2017, Quaternary Science Reviews (172) 109-117
Eruption ages of a number of prominent Quaternary volcanic deposits remain inaccurately and/or imprecisely constrained, despite their importance as regional stratigraphic markers in paleo-environment reconstruction and as evidence of climate-altering eruptions. Accurately dating volcanic deposits presents challenging analytical considerations, including poor radiogenic yield, scarcity of datable minerals, and contamination of...
Structural overshoot of tree growth with climate variability and the global spectrum of drought-induced forest dieback
Alistair S. Jump, Paloma Ruiz-Benito, Sarah Greenwood, Craig D. Allen, Thomas Kitzberger, Rod Fensham, Jordi Martinez-Vilalta, Francisco Lloret
2017, Global Change Biology (23) 3742-3757
Ongoing climate change poses significant threats to plant function and distribution. Increased temperatures and altered precipitation regimes amplify drought frequency and intensity, elevating plant stress and mortality. Large-scale forest mortality events will have far-reaching impacts on carbon and hydrological cycling, biodiversity, and ecosystem services. However, biogeographical theory and global vegetation...
A comment on “temporal variation in survival and recovery rates of lesser scaup”
Mark S. Lindberg, G. Scott Boomer, Joel A. Schmutz, Johann A. Walker
2017, Journal of Wildlife Management (81) 1138-1141
Concerns about declines in the abundance of lesser scaup (Aythya affinis) have promoted a number of analyses to understand reasons for this decline. Unfortunately, most of these analyses, including that of Arnold et al. (2016 Journal of Wildlife Management 80: 850–861), are based on observational studies leading to weak inference....
Evolution of strain localization in variable-width three-dimensional unsaturated laboratory-scale cut slopes
Michael S. Morse, Ning Lu, Alexandra Wayllace, Jonathan W. Godt
2017, Journal of Engineering Mechanics (143)
To experimentally validate a recently developed theory for predicting the stability of cut slopes under unsaturated conditions, the authors measured increasing strain localization in unsaturated slope cuts prior to abrupt failure. Cut slope width and moisture content were controlled and varied in a laboratory, and a sliding door that extended...
Play-fairway analysis for geothermal resources and exploration risk in the Modoc Plateau region
Drew Siler, Yingqi Zhang, Nicolas F. Spycher, Patrick Dobson, James S. McClain, Erika Gasperikova, Robert A. Zierenberg, Peter Schiffman, Colin Ferguson, Andrew Fowler, Carolyn Cantwell
2017, Geothermics (69) 15-33
The region surrounding the Modoc Plateau, encompassing parts of northeastern California, southern Oregon, and northwestern Nevada, lies at an intersection between two tectonic provinces; the Basin and Range province and the Cascade volcanic arc. Both of these provinces have substantial geothermal resource base and resource potential. Geothermal systems with evidence...
Luminescence dating of paleolake deltas and glacial deposits in Garwood Valley, Antarctica: Implications for climate, Ross ice sheet dynamics, and paleolake duration
Joseph S. Levy, Tammy M. Rittenour, Andrew G. Fountain, Jim E. O'Connor
2017, GSA Bulletin (129) 1071-1084
The formation of perched deltas and other lacustrine deposits in the McMurdo Dry Valleys of Antarctica is widely considered to be evidence of valley-filling lakes dammed by the grounded Ross Sea ice sheet during the local Last Glacial Maximum, with lake drainage interpreted as a record...
Soil microbial community composition is correlated to soil carbon processing along a boreal wetland formation gradient
Eric Chapman, Hinsby Cadillo-Quiroz, Daniel L. Childers, Merritt R. Turetsky, Mark P. Waldrop
2017, European Journal of Soil Biology (82) 17-26
Climate change is modifying global biogeochemical cycles. Microbial communities play an integral role in soil biogeochemical cycles; knowledge about microbial composition helps provide a mechanistic understanding of these ecosystem-level phenomena. Next generation sequencing approaches were used to investigate changes in microbial functional groups during ecosystem development, in response to climate...
Volcano Geodesy: Recent developments and future challenges
Jose F. Fernandez, Antonio Pepe, Michael P. Poland, Freysteinn Sigmundsson
2017, Journal of Volcanology and Geothermal Research (344) 1-12
Ascent of magma through Earth's crust is normally associated with, among other effects, ground deformation and gravity changes. Geodesy is thus a valuable tool for monitoring and hazards assessment during volcanic unrest, and it provides valuable data for exploring the geometry and volume of magma plumbing systems. Recent decades have...