Intra-community implications of implementing multiple tsunami-evacuation zones in Alameda, California
Jeff Peters, Nathan J. Wood, Rick Wilson, Kevin Miller
2016, Natural Hazards (84) 975-995
Tsunami-evacuation planning in coastal communities is typically based on maximum evacuation zones for a single scenario or a composite of sources; however, this approach may over-evacuate a community and overly disrupt the local economy and strain emergency-service resources. To minimize the potential for future over-evacuations, multiple evacuation zones...
A new species of Myotis (Chiroptera: Vespertilionidae) from Suriname
Ricardo Moratelli, Don E. Wilson, Alfred Gardner, Robert D. Fisher, Eliecer E. Gutierrez
2016, Special Publications (65) 49-66
We describe a new species of bat in the genus Myotis (Vespertilionidae: Myotinae) from the district of Sipaliwini, Suriname. The new species (Myotis clydejonesi sp. nov.), known from a single specimen, is sister to a clade of M. nigricans (Schinz) from southern South America, but differs from all Neotropical species...
Pseudotachylyte increases the post-slip strength of faults
Brooks P. Proctor, David A. Lockner
2016, Geology (44) 1003-1006
Solidified frictional melts, or pseudotachylytes, are observed in exhumed faults from across the seismogenic zone. These unique fault rocks, and many experimental studies, suggest that frictional melting can be an important process during earthquakes. However, it remains unknown how melting affects the post-slip strength of the fault and why many...
Oak mistletoe (Phoradendron villosum) is linked to microhabitat availability and avian diversity in Oregon white oak (Quercus garryana) woodlands
Kyle R. Pritchard, Joan Hagar, David C. Shaw
2016, Botany (95) 283-294
Mistletoes are parasitic or hemi-parasitic flowering plants that parasitize woody plants around the globe. Important food and cover resources provided by mistletoes have been related to strong patterns of positive association between wildlife diversity and mistletoe density. Mistletoes also create microhabitat features known to be important to wildlife by causing...
Juvenile magma recognition and eruptive dynamics inferred from the analysis of ash time series: The 2015 reawakening of Cotopaxi volcano
H. Elizabeth Gaunt, Benjamin Bernard, Silvana Hidalgo, Antonio Proano, Heather M. Wright, Patricia Mothes, Evelyn Criollo, Ulrich Kueppers
2016, Journal of Volcanology and Geothermal Research (328) 134-148
Forecasting future activity and performing hazard assessments during the reactivation of volcanoes remain great challenges for the volcanological community. On August 14, 2015 Cotopaxi volcano erupted for the first time in 73 years after approximately four months of precursory activity, which included an increase in seismicity, gas emissions, and minor ground...
Widespread episodic thiamine deficiency in Northern Hemisphere wildlife
Lennart Balk, Per-Ake Hagerroth, Hanna Gustavsson, Lisa Sigg, Gun Akerman, Yolanda Ruiz Munoz, Dale C. Honeyfield, Ulla Tjarnlund, Kenneth Oliveira, Karin Strom, Stephen D. McCormick, Simon Karlsson, Marika Strom, Mathijs van Manen, Anna-Lena Berg, Halldór P. Halldórsson, Jennie Stromquist, Tracy K. Collier, Hans Borjeson, Torsten Morner, Tomas Hansson
2016, Scientific Reports (6) 1-13
Many wildlife populations are declining at rates higher than can be explained by known threats to biodiversity. Recently, thiamine (vitamin B1) deficiency has emerged as a possible contributing cause. Here, thiamine status was systematically investigated in three animal classes: bivalves, ray-finned fishes, and birds. Thiamine diphosphate is required as a...
Reconstructing surface ocean circulation with 129I time series records from corals
Ching-Chih Chang, George S. Burr, A. J. Timothy Jull, Joellen L. Russell, Dana Biddulph, Lara White, Nancy G. Prouty, Yue-Gau Chen, Chuan-Chou Shen, Weijian Zhou, Doan Dinh Lam
2016, Journal of Environmental Radioactivity (165) 144-150
The long-lived radionuclide 129I (half-life: 15.7 × 106 yr) is well-known as a useful environmental tracer. At present, the global 129I in surface water is about 1–2 orders of magnitude higher than pre-1960 levels. Since the 1990s, anthropogenic 129I produced from industrial nuclear fuels reprocessing plants has been the primary source of 129I...
Groundwater quality in the Valley and Ridge and Piedmont and Blue Ridge carbonate-rock aquifers, eastern United States
Bruce D. Lindsey, Kenneth Belitz
2016, Fact Sheet 2016-3079
Groundwater provides nearly 50 percent of the Nation’s drinking water. To help protect this vital resource, the U.S. Geological Survey (USGS) National Water-Quality Assessment (NAWQA) Project assesses groundwater quality in aquifers that are important sources of drinking water. The Valley and Ridge and Piedmont and Blue Ridge carbonate-rock aquifers constitute two of the...
Groundwater quality in the Coastal Lowlands aquifer system, south-central United States
Jeannie R.B. Barlow, Kenneth Belitz
2016, Fact Sheet 2016-3077
Groundwater provides nearly 50 percent of the Nation’s drinking water. To help protect this vital resource, the U.S. Geological Survey (USGS) National Water-Quality Assessment (NAWQA) Project assesses groundwater quality in aquifers that are important sources of drinking water. The Coastal Lowlands aquifer system constitutes one of the important areas being...
Groundwater quality in the Northern Atlantic Coastal Plain aquifer system, eastern United States
Bruce D. Lindsey, Kenneth Belitz
2016, Fact Sheet 2016-3078
Groundwater provides nearly 50 percent of the Nation’s drinking water. To help protect this vital resource, the U.S. Geological Survey (USGS) National Water-Quality Assessment (NAWQA) Project assesses groundwater quality in aquifers that are important sources of drinking water. The Northern Atlantic Coastal Plain aquifer system constitutes one of the important...
Groundwater quality in the Southeastern Coastal Plain aquifer system, southeastern United States
Jeannie Barlow, Bruce D. Lindsey, Kenneth Belitz
2016, Fact Sheet 2016-3076
Groundwater provides nearly 50 percent of the Nation’s drinking water. To help protect this vital resource, the U.S. Geological Survey (USGS) National Water-Quality Assessment (NAWQA) Project assesses groundwater quality in aquifers that are important sources of drinking water. The Southeastern Coastal Plain aquifer system constitutes one of the important areas being evaluated. One or...
Groundwater quality in the Basin and Range Basin-Fill Aquifers, southwestern United States
MaryLynn Musgrove, Kenneth Belitz
2016, Fact Sheet 2016-3080
Groundwater provides nearly 50 percent of the Nation’s drinking water. To help protect this vital resource, the U.S. Geological Survey (USGS) National Water-Quality Assessment (NAWQA) Project assesses groundwater quality in aquifers that are important sources of drinking water. The Basin and Range basin-fill aquifers constitute one of the important areas...
The history of Patuxent: America’s wildlife research story
Matthew C. Perry, editor(s)
2016, Circular 1422
This report, based on a symposium held on October 13, 2011, at the National Wildlife Visitor Center at the Patuxent Research Refuge in Laurel, MD, documents the history of the Patuxent Research Refuge and the Patuxent Wildlife Research Center, collectively known as Patuxent. The symposium was one of the many...
Effects of wind energy generation and white-nose syndrome on the viability of the Indiana bat
Richard A. Erickson, Wayne E. Thogmartin, James E. Diffendorfer, Robin E. Russell, Jennifer A. Szymanski
2016, PeerJ 1-19
Wind energy generation holds the potential to adversely affect wildlife populations. Species-wide effects are difficult to study and few, if any, studies examine effects of wind energy generation on any species across its entire range. One species that may be affected by wind energy generation is the endangered Indiana bat...
Recent advances in understanding flow dynamics and transport of water-quality constituents in the Sacramento–San Joaquin River Delta
David H. Schoellhamer, Scott Wright, Stephen G. Monismith, Brian A. Bergamaschi
2016, San Francisco Estuary and Watershed Science (14)
This paper, part of the collection of research comprising the State of Bay–Delta Science 2016, describes advances during the past decade in understanding flow dynamics and how water-quality constituents move within California’s Sacramento– San Joaquin River Delta (Delta). Water-quality constituents include salinity, heat, oxygen, nutrients, contaminants, organic particles, and inorganic particles. These constituents are affected by water diversions and...
Investigating dynamic sources of pharmaceuticals: Demographic and seasonal use are more important than down-the-drain disposal in wastewater effluent in a University City setting
Christine Vatovec, Patrick J. Phillips, Emily Van Wagoner, Tia-Marie Scott, Edward T. Furlong
2016, Science of the Total Environment (572) 906-914
Pharmaceutical pollution in surface waters poses risks to human and ecosystem health. Wastewater treatment facilities are primary sources of pharmaceutical pollutants, but little is known about the factors that affect drugs entering the wastewater stream. This paper investigates the effects of student pharmaceutical use and disposal behaviors and an...
Using spatial capture–recapture to elucidate population processes and space-use in herpetological studies
David J. Munoz, David A.W. Miller, Chris Sutherland, Evan H. Campbell Grant
2016, Journal of Herpetology (50) 570-581
The cryptic behavior and ecology of herpetofauna make estimating the impacts of environmental change on demography difficult; yet, the ability to measure demographic relationships is essential for elucidating mechanisms leading to the population declines reported for herpetofauna worldwide. Recently developed spatial capture–recapture (SCR) methods are well suited to standard herpetofauna...
Evaluating within-population variability in behavior and demography for the adaptive potential of a dispersal-limited species to climate change
David J. Munoz, Kyle Miller Hesed, Evan H. Campbell Grant, David A.W. Miller
2016, Ecology and Evolution (6) 8740-8755
Multiple pathways exist for species to respond to changing climates. However, responses of dispersal-limited species will be more strongly tied to ability to adapt within existing populations as rates of environmental change will likely exceed movement rates. Here, we assess adaptive capacity in Plethodon cinereus, a dispersal-limited woodland salamander. We...
Methods of soil resampling to monitor changes in the chemical concentrations of forest soils
Gregory B. Lawrence, Ivan J. Fernandez, Paul W. Hazlett, Scott W. Bailey, Donald S. Ross, Thomas R. Villars, Angelica Quintana, Ouimet, Michael McHale, Chris E. Johnson, Russell D. Briggs, Robert A. Colter, Jason Siemion, Olivia L. Bartlett, Olga Vargas, Michael R. Antidormi, Mary Margaret Koppers
2016, Journal of Visualized Experiments (117)
Recent soils research has shown that important chemical soil characteristics can change in less than a decade, often the result of broad environmental changes. Repeated sampling to monitor these changes in forest soils is a relatively new practice that is not well documented in the literature and has only recently...
Climatic drivers for multidecadal shifts in solute transport and methane production zones within a large peat basin
Paul H. Glaser, Donald I. Siegel, Jeffrey P. Chanton, Andrew S. Reeve, Donald O. Rosenberry, J. Elizabeth Corbett, Soumitri Dasgupta, Zeno Levy
2016, Global Biogeochemical Cycles (30) 1578-1598
Northern peatlands are an important source for greenhouse gases, but their capacity to produce methane remains uncertain under changing climatic conditions. We therefore analyzed a 43 year time series of the pore-water chemistry to determine if long-term shifts in precipitation altered the vertical transport of solutes within a large peat basin...
Saltwater intrusion monitoring in Florida
Scott T. Prinos
2016, Florida Scientist (79) 269-278
Florida's communities are largely dependent on freshwater from groundwater aquifers. Existing saltwater in the aquifers, or seawater that intrudes parts of the aquifers that were fresh, can make the water unusable without additional processing. The quality of Florida's saltwater intrusion monitoring networks varies. In Miami-Dade and Broward Counties, for example,...
Sharing our data—An overview of current (2016) USGS policies and practices for publishing data on ScienceBase and an example interactive mapping application
Katherine J. Chase, Andrew R. Bock, Roy Sando
2016, Open-File Report 2016-1202
This report provides an overview of current (2016) U.S. Geological Survey policies and practices related to publishing data on ScienceBase, and an example interactive mapping application to display those data. ScienceBase is an integrated data sharing platform managed by the U.S. Geological Survey. This report describes resources that U.S. Geological...
Bald Eagle nestling mortality associated with Argas radiatus and Argas ricei tick infestation and successful management with nest removal in Arizona, USA
Anne Justice-Allen, Kathy Orr, Krysten L. Schuler, Kyle McCarty, Kenneth Jacobson, Carol U. Meteyer
2016, Journal of Wildlife Diseases (52) 940-944
Eight Bald Eagle (Haliaeetus leucocephalus) nestlings heavily infested with larval ticks were found in or under a nest near the confluence of the Verde and Salt rivers in Arizona in 2009-11. The 8-12-wk-old nestlings were slow to respond to stimuli and exhibited generalized muscle weakness or paresis of the pelvic...
Implementation and evaluation of a monthly water balance model over the US on an 800 m grid
Steven W. Hostetler, Jay R. Alder
2016, Water Resources Research (52) 9600-9620
We simulate the 1950–2010 water balance for the conterminous U.S. (CONUS) with a monthly water balance model (MWBM) using the 800 m Parameter-elevation Regression on Independent Slopes Model (PRISM) data set as model input. We employed observed snow and streamflow data sets to guide modification of the snow and potential...
Final Laurentide ice-sheet deglaciation and Holocene climate-sea level change
David J. Ullman, Anders E. Carlson, Steven W. Hostetler, Peter U. Clark, Joshua Cuzzone, Glenn A. Milne, Kelsey Winsor, Marc A. Caffee
2016, Quaternary Science Reviews (152) 49-59
Despite elevated summer insolation forcing during the early Holocene, global ice sheets retained nearly half of their volume from the Last Glacial Maximum, as indicated by deglacial records of global mean sea level (GMSL). Partitioning the GMSL rise among potential sources requires accurate dating of ice-sheet extent to estimate ice-sheet...