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Publication Extents

Not all publications have extents, not all extents are completely accurate
Thermal regimes of Rocky Mountain lakes warm with climate change
James Roberts, Kurt D. Fausch, Travis S. Schmidt, David M. Walters
2017, PLoS ONE (12) 1-17
Anthropogenic climate change is causing a wide range of stresses in aquatic ecosystems, primarily through warming thermal conditions. Lakes, in response to these changes, are experiencing increases in both summer temperatures and ice-free days. We used continuous records of lake surface temperature and air temperature to create statistical models of...
The application of microtextural and heavy mineral analysis to discriminate between storm and tsunami deposits
Pedro J.M. Costa, Guy R. Gelfenbaum, Sue Dawson, SeanPaul La Selle, F Milne, J. Cascalho, C. Ponte Lira, C. Andrade, M. C. Freitas, Bruce E. Jaffe
2017, Geological Society, London, Special Publications (456) 167-190
Recent work has applied microtextural and heavy mineral analyses to sandy storm and tsunami deposits from Portugal, Scotland, Indonesia and the USA. We looked at the interpretation of microtextural imagery (scanning electron microscopy) of quartz grains and heavy mineral compositions. We consider inundation events of different chronologies and sources...
Increased Arctic sea ice drift alters adult female polar bear movements and energetics
George M. Durner, David C. Douglas, Shannon Albeke, John P. Whiteman, Steven C. Amstrup, Evan Richardson, Ryan H. Wilson, Merav Ben-David
2017, Global Change Biology (23) 3460-3473
Recent reductions in thickness and extent have increased drift rates of Arctic sea ice. Increased ice drift could significantly affect the movements and the energy balance of polar bears (Ursus maritimus) which forage, nearly exclusively, on this substrate. We used radio-tracking and ice drift data to quantify the influence of...
Coastal habitat and biological community response to dam removal on the Elwha River
Melissa M. Foley, Jonathan A. Warrick, Andrew C. Ritchie, Andrew W. Stevens, Patrick B. Shafroth, Jeffrey J. Duda, Matthew M. Beirne, Rebecca Paradis, Guy R. Gelfenbaum, Randall McCoy, Erin S. Cubley
2017, Ecological Monographs (87) 552-577
Habitat diversity and heterogeneity play a fundamental role in structuring ecological communities. Dam emplacement and removal can fundamentally alter habitat characteristics, which in turn can affect associated biological communities. Beginning in the early 1900s, the Elwha and Glines Canyon dams in Washington, USA, withheld an estimated 30 million tonnes of...
Examples of storm impacts on barrier islands
Nathaniel G. Plant, Kara S. Doran, Hilary F. Stockdon
2017, Book chapter, Coastal storms: Processes and impacts
This chapter focuses on the morphologic variability of barrier islands and on the differences in storm response. It describes different types of barrier island response to individual storms, as well as the integrated response of barrier islands to many storms. The chapter considers case study on the Chandeleur Island chain,...
Spatio-temporal evolution of the 2011 Prague, Oklahoma aftershock sequence revealed using subspace detection and relocation
Nicole D McMahon, Richard C. Aster, William L. Yeck, Daniel E. McNamara, Harley M. Benz
2017, Geophysical Research Letters (44) 7149-7158
The 6 November 2011 Mw 5.7 earthquake near Prague, Oklahoma is the second largest earthquake ever recorded in the state. A Mw 4.8 foreshock and the Mw 5.7 mainshock triggered a prolific aftershock sequence. Utilizing a subspace detection method, we increase by fivefold the number of precisely located events between 4 November and 5 December 2011....
Fluid-driven uplift at Long Valley Caldera, California: Geologic perspectives
Edward Hildreth
2017, Journal of Volcanology and Geothermal Research (341) 269-286
Since persistent seismicity began in the Sierra Nevada adjacent to Long Valley caldera in 1978–1980, intracaldera unrest has been marked by (1) episodes of uplift totaling ~ 83 cm, centered on the middle Pleistocene resurgent dome, and (2) recurrent earthquake swarms along a 12-km-long segment...
Building a state-space life cycle model for naturally produced Snake River fall Chinook salmon
Russell Perry, John Plumb, Kenneth Tiffan, William P. Connor, Thomas D. Cooney, William Young
2017, Report
In 1992, Snake River basin fall Chinook salmon (Oncorhynchus tshawytscha) were listed for protection under the U.S. Endangered Species Act (NMFS 1992) and the population remained below 1000 individuals until 2000. Since then, returns from natural production has rebounded to over 20,000 spawners owing to a host of factors including...
Factors affecting marsh vegetation at the Liberty Island Conservation Bank in the Cache Slough region of the Sacramento–San Joaquin Delta, California
James L. Orlando, Judith Z. Drexler
2017, Open-File Report 2017-1077
The Liberty Island Conservation Bank (LICB) is a tidal freshwater marsh restored for the purpose of mitigating adverse effects on sensitive fish populations elsewhere in the region. The LICB was completed in 2012 and is in the northern Cache Slough region of the Sacramento–San Joaquin Delta. The wetland vegetation at...
Human interactions with sirenians (manatees and dugongs)
Robert K. Bonde, Mark Flint
2017, Book chapter, Marine mammal welfare
There are three extant sirenian species of the Trichechidae family and one living Dugongidae family member. Given their close ties to coastal and often urbanized habitats, sirenians are exposed to many types of anthropogenic activities that result in challenges to their well-being, poor health, and even death. In the wild,...
Assessing welfare of individual sirenians in the wild and in captivity
Mark Flint, Robert K. Bonde
2017, Book chapter, Marine mammal welfare
Assessing the welfare of wild populations of sirenians has required a “generalist” approach. The outcome has been a subjective decision as to whether what the observers are witnessing in an individual or group of animals is normal and whether that has positive or negative consequences. The understanding of sirenian welfare...
Reassessing rainfall in the Luquillo Mountains, Puerto Rico: Local and global ecohydrological implications
Sheila F. Murphy, Robert F. Stallard, Martha A. Scholl, Grizelle Gonzalez, Angel J. Torres-Sanchez
2017, PLoS ONE (12) 1-26
Mountains receive a greater proportion of precipitation than other environments, and thus make a disproportionate contribution to the world’s water supply. The Luquillo Mountains receive the highest rainfall on the island of Puerto Rico and serve as a critical source of water to surrounding communities. The area’s role as a...
Long-term video surveillance and automated analyses reveal arousal patterns in groups of hibernating bats
David T. S. Hayman, Paul M. Cryan, Paul D. Fricker, Nicholas G. Dannemiller
2017, Methods in Ecology and Evolution (8) 1813-1821
Understanding natural behaviours is essential to determining how animals deal with new threats (e.g. emerging diseases). However, natural behaviours of animals with cryptic lifestyles, like hibernating bats, are often poorly characterized. White-nose syndrome (WNS) is an unprecedented disease threatening multiple species of hibernating bats, and pathogen-induced changes...
Mapping burned areas using dense time-series of Landsat data
Todd Hawbaker, Melanie K. Vanderhoof, Yen-Ju G. Beal, Joshua Takacs, Gail L. Schmidt, Jeff T. Falgout, Brad Williams, Nicole M. Brunner, Megan K. Caldwell, Joshua J. Picotte, Stephen M. Howard, Susan Stitt, John L. Dwyer
2017, Remote Sensing of Environment (198) 504-522
Complete and accurate burned area data are needed to document patterns of fires, to quantify relationships between the patterns and drivers of fire occurrence, and to assess the impacts of fires on human and natural systems. Unfortunately, in many areas existing fire occurrence datasets are known to be incomplete. Consequently,...
The Valmy thrust sheet: A regional structure formed during the protracted assembly of the Roberts Mountains allochthon, Nevada, USA
Christopher S. Holm-Denoma, Albert H. Hofstra, Barnaby W. Rockwell, Paula J. Noble
2017, GSA Bulletin (129) 1521-1536
A synthesis of field, biostratigraphic, detrital zircon geochronologic, and remote sensing data across north-central Nevada, United States, defines a thick, regionally extensive sheet of Middle–Upper Ordovician Valmy Formation quartzite that structurally overlies deformed early Paleozoic units of the Roberts Mountains allochthon. Late Paleozoic regional unconformities that record tectonic disruptions have...
Evidence of absence (v2.0) software user guide
Daniel Dalthorp, Manuela M. Huso, David Dail
2017, Data Series 1055
Evidence of Absence software (EoA) is a user-friendly software application for estimating bird and bat fatalities at wind farms and for designing search protocols. The software is particularly useful in addressing whether the number of fatalities is below a given threshold and what search parameters are needed to give...
Sparrow nest survival in relation to prescribed fire and woody plant invasion in a northern mixed-grass prairie
Robert K. Murphy, Terry L. Shaffer, Todd A. Grant, James L. Derrig, Cory S. Rubin, Courtney K. Kerns
2017, Wildlife Society Bulletin (41) 442-452
Prescribed fire is used to reverse invasion by woody vegetation on grasslands, but managers often are uncertain whether influences of shrub and tree reduction outweigh potential effects of fire on nest survival of grassland birds. During the 2001–2003 breeding seasons, we examined relationships of prescribed fire and woody vegetation to...
Using mineral geochemistry to decipher slab, mantle, and crustal input in the generation of high-Mg andesites and basaltic andesites from the northern Cascade Arc
May Sas, Susan DeBari, Michael A. Clynne, Brian G. Rusk
2017, American Mineralogist (102) 948-965
To better understand the role of slab melt in the petrogenesis of North Cascades magmas, this study focuses on petrogenesis of high-Mg lavas from the two northernmost active volcanoes in Washington. High-Mg andesites (HMA) and basaltic andesites (HMBA) in the Cascade Arc have high Mg# [molar Mg/(Mg+Fe2+)] relative to their...
Trimming a hazard logic tree with a new model-order-reduction technique
Keith Porter, Edward H. Field, Kevin R. Milner
2017, Earthquake Spectra (33) 857-874
The size of the logic tree within the Uniform California Earthquake Rupture Forecast Version 3, Time-Dependent (UCERF3-TD) model can challenge risk analyses of large portfolios. An insurer or catastrophe risk modeler concerned with losses to a California portfolio might have to evaluate a portfolio 57,600 times to estimate risk in...
Middle and Late Pleistocene glaciations in the southwestern Pamir and their effects on topography
Konstanze Stubner, Elena Grin, Alan J. Hidy, Mirjam Schaller, Ryan D. Gold, Lothar Ratschbacher, Todd Ehlers
2017, Earth and Planetary Science Letters (466) 181-194
Glacial chronologies provide insight into the evolution of paleo-landscapes, paleoclimate, topography, and the erosion processes that shape mountain ranges. In the Pamir of Central Asia, glacial morphologies and deposits indicate extensive past glaciations, whose timing and extent remain poorly constrained. Geomorphic data and 15 new 10Be...
A 184-year record of river meander migration from tree rings, aerial imagery, and cross sections
Derek M. Schook, Sara L. Rathburn, Jonathan M. Friedman, J. Marshall Wolf
2017, Geomorphology (293) 227-239
Channel migration is the primary mechanism of floodplain turnover in meandering rivers and is essential to the persistence of riparian ecosystems. Channel migration is driven by river flows, but short-term records cannot disentangle the effects of land use, flow diversion, past floods, and climate change. We used three data sets...
Methods for measuring bird-mediated seed rain: Insights from a Hawaiian mesic forest
Eli Rose, Meredith Stewart, Andrew Brinkman, Eben H. Paxton, Stephanie G. Yelenik
2017, Pacific Science (71) 287-302
Amount and diversity of bird-dispersed seed rain play important roles in determining forest composition, yet neither is easy to quantify. The complex ecological processes that influence seed movement make the best approach highly context specific. Although recent advances in seed rain theory emphasize quantifying source-specific seed shadows, many ecological questions...
Sediment gravity flows triggered by remotely generated earthquake waves
H. Paul Johnson, Joan S. Gomberg, Susan Hautala, Marie Salmi
2017, Journal of Geophysical Research B: Solid Earth (122) 4584-4600
Recent great earthquakes and tsunamis around the world have heightened awareness of the inevitability of similar events occurring within the Cascadia Subduction Zone of the Pacific Northwest. We analyzed seafloor temperature, pressure, and seismic signals, and video stills of sediment-enveloped instruments recorded during the 2011–2015 Cascadia Initiative experiment, and seafloor...
Quantifying the heterogeneity of the tectonic stress field using borehole data
Martin Schoenball, Nicholas C. Davatzes
2017, Journal of Geophysical Research B: Solid Earth (122) 6737-6756
The heterogeneity of the tectonic stress field is a fundamental property which influences earthquake dynamics and subsurface engineering. Self-similar scaling of stress heterogeneities is frequently assumed to explain characteristics of earthquakes such as the magnitude-frequency relation. However, observational evidence for such scaling of the stress field heterogeneity is scarce.We analyze...
Historical changes in organic matter input to the muddy sediments along the Zhejiang-Fujian Coast, China over the past 160 years
Li-lei Chen, Jian Liu, Lei Xing, Ken W. Krauss, Jia-sheng Wang, Gang Xu, Li Li
2017, Organic Geochemistry (111) 13-25
The burial of sedimentary organic matter (SOM) in the large river-influenced estuarine-coastal regions is affected by hydrodynamic sorting, diagenesis and human activities. Typically, the inner shelf region of the East China Sea is a major carbon sink of the Yangtze River-derived fine-grained sediments. Most of the previous work concentrated on...