CO32- concentration and pCO2 thresholds for calcification and dissolution on the Molokai reef flat, Hawaii
K. K. Yates, R. B. Halley
2006, Biogeosciences (3) 357-369
The severity of the impact of elevated atmospheric pCO2 to coral reef ecosystems depends, in part, on how sea-water pCO2 affects the balance between calcification and dissolution of carbonate sediments. Presently, there are insufficient published data that relate concentrations of pCO 2 and CO32- to in situ rates of reef...
Use of Picard and Newton iteration for solving nonlinear ground water flow equations
S. Mehl
2006, Ground Water (44) 583-594
This study examines the use of Picard and Newton iteration to solve the nonlinear, saturated ground water flow equation. Here, a simple three-node problem is used to demonstrate the convergence difficulties that can arise when solving the nonlinear, saturated ground water flow equation in both homogeneous and heterogeneous systems with...
Comparing mean high water and high water line shorelines: Should prosy-datum offsets be incorporated into shoreline change analysis?
L. J. Moore, P. Ruggiero, J. H. List
2006, Journal of Coastal Research (22) 894-905
More than one type of shoreline indicator can be used in shoreline change analyses, and quantifying the effects of this practice on the resulting shoreline change rates is important. Comparison of three high water line (proxy-based) shorelines and a mean high water intercept (datum-based) shoreline collected from simultaneous aerial photographic...
Shallow stratigraphy and sedimentation history during high-frequency sea-level changes on the central California shelf
E. E. Grossman, S.L. Eittreim, M.E. Field, F. L. Wong
2006, Continental Shelf Research (26) 1217-1239
Analyses of high-resolution seismic-reflection data and sediment cores indicate that an extensive sediment deposit on the central California continental shelf is comprised of several late-Pleistocene to Holocene age facies. Offshore of the littoral zone, in water depths of 30-90 m, a 3-6 m thick veneer of fine sediment referred to...
A search for scale in sea-level studies
C.E. Larsen, I. Clark
2006, Journal of Coastal Research (22) 788-800
Many researchers assume a proportional relationship among the atmospheric CO2 concentration, temperature, and sea level. Thus, the rate of sea-level rise should increase in concert with the documented exponential increase in CO2. Although sea surface temperature has increased in places over the past century and short-term sea level rose abruptly...
Hurricanes, submarine groundwater discharge, and Florida's red tides
C. Hu, F. E. Muller-Karger, P.W. Swarzenski
2006, Geophysical Research Letters (33)
A Karenia brevis Harmful Algal Bloom affected coastal waters shallower than 50 m off west-central Florida from January 2005 through January 2006, showing a sustained anomaly of ???1 mg chlorophyll m-3 over an area of up to 67,500 km2. Red tides occur in the same area (approximately 26-29??N, 82-83??W) almost...
Clonal variation in response to salinity and flooding stress in four marsh macrophytes of the northern gulf of Mexico, USA
R.J. Howard, P.S. Rafferty
2006, Environmental and Experimental Botany (56) 301-313
Intraspecific variation in stress tolerance can be an important factor influencing plant population structure in coastal wetland habitats. We studied clones of four species of emergent marsh macrophytes native to the northern coast of the Gulf of Mexico in Louisiana, USA, to examine variation in response to salinity and flooding...
Landscape conditions predisposing grizzly bears to conflicts on private agricultural lands in the western USA
S.M. Wilson, M.J. Madel, D.J. Mattson, J.M. Graham, T. Merrill
2006, Biological Conservation (130) 47-59
We used multiple logistic regression to model how different landscape conditions contributed to the probability of human-grizzly bear conflicts on private agricultural ranch lands. We used locations of livestock pastures, traditional livestock carcass disposal areas (boneyards), beehives, and wetland-riparian associated vegetation to model the locations of 178 reported human-grizzly bear...
The contribution of leaching to the rapid release of nutrients and carbon in the early decay of wetland vegetation
S. E. Davis III, D.L. Childers, G.B. Noe
2006, Hydrobiologia (569) 87-97
Our goal was to quantify the coupled process of litter turnover and leaching as a source of nutrients and fixed carbon in oligotrophic, nutrient-limited wetlands. We conducted poisoned and non-poisoned incubations of leaf material from four different perennial wetland plants (Eleocharis spp., Cladium jamaicense, Rhizophora mangle and Spartina alterniflora) collected...
On the formation of the tunnel valleys of the southern Laurentide ice sheet
R. LeB Hooke, C.E. Jennings
2006, Quaternary Science Reviews (25) 1364-1372
Catastrophic releases of meltwater, produced by basal melting and stored for decades in subglacial reservoirs at high pressure, may have been responsible for eroding the broad, deep tunnel valleys that are common along the margins of some lobes of the southern Laurentide ice sheet. We surmise that these releases began...
Multiple baseline radar interferometry applied to coastal land cover classification and change analyses
Elijah W. Ramsey III, Z. Lu, A. Rangoonwala, Russ Rykhus
2006, GIScience and Remote Sensing (43) 283-309
ERS-1 and ERS-2 SAR data were collected in tandem over a four-month period and used to generate interferometric coherence, phase, and intensity products that we compared to a classified land cover coastal map of Big Bend, Florida. Forests displayed the highest intensity, and marshes the lowest. The intensity for fresh...
Instantaneous unit hydrograph evaluation for rainfall-runoff modeling of small watersheds in North and South Central Texas
T.G. Cleveland, X. He, W.H. Asquith, X. Fang, D.B. Thompson
2006, Journal of Irrigation and Drainage Engineering (132) 479-485
Data from over 1,600 storms at 91 stations in Texas are analyzed to evaluate an instantaneous unit hydrograph (IUH) model for rainfall-runoff models. The model is fit to observed data using two different merit functions: a sum of squared errors function, and an absolute error at the peak discharge time...
Chesapeake Bay impact structure: Morphology, crater fill, and relevance for impact structures on Mars
J. Wright Horton Jr., J. Ormo, D.S. Powars, G. S. Gohn
2006, Meteoritics and Planetary Science (41) 1613-1624
The late Eocene Chesapeake Bay impact structure (CBIS) on the Atlantic margin of Virginia is one of the largest and best-preserved "wet-target" craters on Earth. It provides an accessible analog for studying impact processes in layered and wet targets on volatile-rich planets. The CBIS formed in a layered target of...
Health-based screening levels to evaluate U.S. Geological Survey ground water quality data
Patricia L. Toccalino, Julia E. Norman
2006, Risk Analysis (26) 1339-1348
Federal and state drinking‐water standards and guidelines do not exist for many contaminants analyzed by the U.S. Geological Survey's National Water‐Quality Assessment Program, limiting the ability to evaluate the potential human‐health relevance of water‐quality findings. Health‐based screening levels (HBSLs) were developed collaboratively to supplement existing drinking‐water standards and guidelines as...
An analysis of urban thermal characteristics and associated land cover in Tampa Bay and Las Vegas using Landsat satellite data
George Xian, Mike Crane
2006, Remote Sensing of Environment (104) 147-156
Remote sensing data from both Landsat 5 and Landsat 7 systems were utilized to assess urban area thermal characteristics in Tampa Bay watershed of west-central Florida, and the Las Vegas valley of southern Nevada. To quantitatively determine urban land use extents and development densities, sub-pixel impervious surface areas were mapped...
Headward growth of chasmata by volatile outbursts, collapse, and drainage: Evidence from ganges chaos, Mars
J.A.P. Rodriguez, J. Kargel, D.A. Crown, L. F. Bleamaster III, K. L. Tanaka, V. Baker, H. Miyamoto, J. M. Dohm, S. Sasaki, G. Komatsu
2006, Geophysical Research Letters (33)
The nature and significance of collapse processes in Capri, Eos, and Ganges Chasmata remain poorly understood. Using Ganges Chasma as a type locality, these chasmata are interpreted to be the result of clustering and assimilation of multiple chaotic terrains, which primarily formed by localized depressurization-induced or thermally-triggered dissociation of buried...
Larval exposure to environmentally relevant mixtures of alkylphenolethoxylates reduces reproductive competence in male fathead minnows
T.J. Bistodeau, L. B. Barber, S.E. Bartell, R.A. Cediel, K.J. Grove, J. Klaustermeier, J.C. Woodard, K. E. Lee, H.L. Schoenfuss
2006, Aquatic Toxicology (79) 268-277
The ubiquitous presence of nonylphenolethoxylate/octylphenolethoxylate (NPE/OPE) compounds in aquatic environments adjacent to wastewater treatment plants (WWTP) warrants an assessment of the endocrine disrupting potential of these complex mixtures on aquatic vertebrates. In this study, fathead minnow larvae were exposed for 64 days to a...
Potential inhibitors to recovery of Acropora palmata populations in St. John, US Virgin Islands
R. Grober-Dunsmore, V. Bonito, T.K. Frazer
2006, Marine Ecology Progress Series (321) 123-132
Populations of Acropora palmata in the Caribbean were decimated in the 1970s and 1980s, with little apparent signs of recovery until the late 1990s. Here, we document an increase in A. palmata colonies between 2001 and 2003 at 8 of 11 monitoring sites in waters adjacent to the island of...
Diurnal time-activity budgets of redheads (Aythya americana) wintering in seagrass beds and coastal ponds in Louisiana and Texas
T.C. Michot, M.C. Woodin, S.E. Adair, E.B. Moser
2006, Hydrobiologia (567) 113-128
Diurnal time-activity budgets were determined for wintering redheads (Aythya americana) from estuarine seagrass beds in Louisiana (Chandeleur Sound) and Texas (Laguna Madre) and from ponds adjacent to the Laguna Madre. Activities differed (p<0.0001) by location, month, and diurnal time period. Resting and feeding were the most...
Analysis of a mesoscale infiltration and water seepage test in unsaturated fractured rock: Spatial variabilities and discrete fracture patterns
Q. Zhou, R. Salve, H.-H. Liu, J.S.Y. Wang, D. Hudson
2006, Journal of Contaminant Hydrology (87) 96-122
A mesoscale (21??m in flow distance) infiltration and seepage test was recently conducted in a deep, unsaturated fractured rock system at the crossover point of two underground tunnels. Water was released from a 3??m ?? 4??m infiltration plot on the floor of an alcove in the upper tunnel, and seepage...
Time series and recurrence interval models to predict the vulnerability of streams to episodic acidification in Shenandoah National Park, Virginia
Frank A. Deviney, Karen C. Rice, George M. Hornberger
2006, Water Resources Research (42)
Acid rain affects headwater streams by temporarily reducing the acid‐neutralizing capacity (ANC) of the water, a process termed episodic acidification. The increase in acidic components in stream water can have deleterious effects on the aquatic biota. Although acidic deposition is uniform across Shenandoah National Park (SNP) in north central Virginia,...
Near real-time monitoring and mapping of specific conductivity levels across Lake Texoma, USA
S.F. Atkinson, J.A. Mabe
2006, Environmental Monitoring and Assessment (120) 449-460
A submersible sonde equipped with a specific conductivity probe, linked with a global positioning satellite receiver was developed, deployed on a small boat, and used to map spatial and temporal variations in specific conductivity in a large reservoir. 7,695 sample points were recorded during 8 sampling trips. Specific conductivity ranged...
Modeling effects of multinode wells on solute transport
Leonard F. Konikow, G.Z. Hornberger
2006, Ground Water (44) 648-660
Long-screen wells or long open boreholes with intraborehole flow potentially provide pathways for contaminants to move from one location to another in a ground water flow system. Such wells also can perturb a flow field so that the well will not provide water samples that are representative of ground water...
Macroinvertebrate abundance, water chemistry, and wetland characteristics affect use of wetlands by avian species in Maine
J. R. Longcore, D.G. McAuley, G.W. Pendelton, C. R. Bennatti, T.M. Mingo, K. L. Stromborg
2006, Hydrobiologia (567) 143-167
Our objective was to determine use by avian species (e.g., piscivores, marsh birds, waterfowl, selected passerines) of 29 wetlands in areas with low (<200 μeq l−1) acid-neutralizing capacity (ANC) in southeastern Maine. We documented bird, pair, and brood use during 1982–1984 and in 1982 we sampled 10 wetlands with a sweep net...
Seasonal persistence and population characteristics of Escherichia coli and entercocci in deep backshore sand of two freshwater beaches
M.N. Byappanahalli, R.L. Whitman, D.A. Shively, W.T.E. Ting, C.C. Tseng, M.B. Nevers
2006, Journal of Water and Health (4) 313-320
We studied the shoreward and seasonal distribution of E. coli and enterococci in sand (at the water table) at two southern Lake Michigan beaches—Dunbar and West Beach (in Indiana). Deep, backshore sand (∼20 m inland) was regularly sampled for 15 months during 2002–2003. E. coli counts were not significantly different in samples taken at 5-m...