An individual-based modeling approach to spawning-potential per-recruit models: An application to blue crab (Callinectes sapidus) in Chesapeake Bay
D.B. Bunnell, T.J. Miller
2005, Canadian Journal of Fisheries and Aquatic Sciences (62) 2560-2572
An individual-based modeling approach to estimate biological reference points for blue crabs (Callinectes sapidus) in Chesapeake Bay offered several advantages over conventional models: (i) known individual variation in size and growth rate could be incorporated, (ii) the underlying discontinuous growth pattern could be simulated, and (iii) the complexity of the...
A comparison of hydrographically and optically derived mixed layer depths
D.G. Zawada, J.R.V. Zaneveld, E. Boss, W.D. Gardner, M.J. Richardson, A.V. Mishonov
2005, Journal of Geophysical Research C: Oceans (110) 1-13
Efforts to understand and model the dynamics of the upper ocean would be significantly advanced given the ability to rapidly determine mixed layer depths (MLDs) over large regions. Remote sensing technologies are an ideal choice for achieving this goal. This study addresses the feasibility of estimating MLDs from optical properties....
Role of organic acids in promoting colloidal transport of mercury from mine tailings
A.J. Slowey, S.B. Johnson, J. J. Rytuba, Gordon E. Brown Jr.
2005, Environmental Science & Technology (39) 7869-7874
A number of factors affect the transport of dissolved and paniculate mercury (Hg) from inoperative Hg mines, including the presence of organic acids in the rooting zone of vegetated mine waste. We examined the role of the two most common organic acids in soils (oxalic and citric acid) on Hg...
Fish assemblages in oxbow lakes relative to connectivity with the Mississippi River
L.E. Miranda
2005, Transactions of the American Fisheries Society (134) 1480-1489
The alluvial valley of the lower Mississippi River contains hundreds of fluvial lakes that are periodically connected to the river during high water, although the frequency, duration, and timing of the connections vary. To help design plans to restore and preserve fish assemblages in these alluvial lakes, this investigation tested...
Young (late Amazonian), near-surface, ground ice features near the equator, Athabasca Valles, Mars
D.M. Burr, R.J. Soare, Bun Tseung J.-M. Wan, J.P. Emery
2005, Icarus (178) 56-73
A suite of four feature types in a ???20 km2 area near 10?? N, 204?? W in Athabasca Valles is interpreted to have resulted from near-surface ground ice. These features include mounds, conical forms with rimmed summit depressions, flatter irregularly-shaped forms with raised rims, and polygonal terrain. Based on morphology,...
Thermal regulation of methane hydrate dissociation: Implications for gas production models
S. Circone, Stephen H. Kirby, Laura A. Stern
2005, Energy and Fuels (19) 2357-2363
Thermal self-regulation of methane hydrate dissociation at pressure, temperature conditions along phase boundaries, illustrated by experiment in this report, is a significant effect with potential relevance to gas production from gas hydrate. In surroundings maintained at temperatures above the ice melting...
Seasonal seismicity at western United States volcanic centers
L.B. Christiansen, S. Hurwitz, M.O. Saar, S. E. Ingebritsen, P. A. Hsieh
2005, Earth and Planetary Science Letters (240) 307-321
We examine 20-yr data sets of seismic activity from 10 volcanic areas in the western United States for annual periodic signals (seasonality), focusing on large calderas (Long Valley caldera and Yellowstone) and stratovolcanoes (Cascade Range). We apply several statistical methods to test for seasonality in the seismic catalogs. In 4...
Relationships of field habitat measurements, visual habitat indices, and land cover to benthic macroinvertebrates in urbanized streams of the Santa Clara Valley, California
S.V. Fend, J.L. Carter, F.R. Kearns
2005, American Fisheries Society Symposium (2005) 193-212
We evaluated several approaches for measuring natural and anthropogenic habitat characteristics to predict benthic macroinvertebrate assemblages over a range of urban intensity at 85 stream sites in the Santa Clara Valley, California. Land cover was summarized as percentage urban land cover and impervious area within upstream buffers and the upstream...
Effects of coal-bed methane discharge waters on the vegetation and soil ecosystem in Powder River Basin, Wyoming
M. Stearns, J.A. Tindall, G. Cronin, M.J. Friedel, E. Bergquist
2005, Water, Air, & Soil Pollution (168) 33-57
Coal-bed methane (CBM) co-produced discharge waters in the Powder River Basin of Wyoming, resulting from extraction of methane from coal seams, have become a priority for chemical, hydrological and biological research during the last few years. Soil and vegetation samples were taken from affected and reference sites (upland elevations...
A multivariate study of mangrove morphology (Rhizophora mangle) using both above and below-water plant architecture
R. A. Brooks, S.S. Bell
2005, Estuarine, Coastal and Shelf Science (65) 440-448
A descriptive study of the architecture of the red mangrove, Rhizophora mangle L., habitat of Tampa Bay, FL, was conducted to assess if plant architecture could be used to discriminate overwash from fringing forest type. Seven above-water (e.g., tree height, diameter at breast height, and leaf area) and 10 below-water...
Comparison of constitutive flow resistance equations based on the Manning and Chezy equations applied to natural rivers
David M. Bjerklie, S. Lawrence Dingman, Carl H. Bolster
2005, Water Resources Research (41)
A set of conceptually derived in‐bank river discharge–estimating equations (models), based on the Manning and Chezy equations, are calibrated and validated using a database of 1037 discharge measurements in 103 rivers in the United States and New Zealand. The models are compared to a multiple regression model...
Incorporating uncertainty in watershed management decision-making: A mercury TMDL case study
W. Labiosa, J. Leckie, R. Shachter, D. Freyberg, J. Rytuba
Moglen G.E., editor(s)
2005, Conference Paper, Proceedings of the 2005 Watershed Management Conference - Managing Watersheds for Human and Natural Impacts: Engineering, Ecological, and Economic Challenges
Water quality impairment due to high mercury fish tissue concentrations and high mercury aqueous concentrations is a widespread problem in several sub-watersheds that are major sources of mercury to the San Francisco Bay. Several mercury Total Maximum Daily Load regulations are currently being developed to address this problem. Decisions about...
Multivariate analysis of scale-dependent associations between bats and landscape structure
P. M. Gorresen, M. R. Willig, R. E. Strauss
2005, Ecological Applications (15) 2126-2136
The assessment of biotic responses to habitat disturbance and fragmentation generally has been limited to analyses at a single spatial scale. Furthermore, methods to compare responses between scales have lacked the ability to discriminate among patterns related to the identity, strength, or direction of associations of biotic variables with landscape...
Viscoelasticity, postseismic slip, fault interactions, and the recurrence of large earthquakes
A.J. Michael
2005, Bulletin of the Seismological Society of America (95) 1594-1603
The Brownian Passage Time (BPT) model for earthquake recurrence is modified to include transient deformation due to either viscoelasticity or deep post seismic slip. Both of these processes act to increase the rate of loading on the seismogenic fault for some time after a large event. To approximate these effects,...
Bulk sediment Qp and Qs in the Mississippi embayment, central United States
C.A. Langston, P. Bodin, C. Powell, M. Withers, S. Horton, Walter D. Mooney
2005, Bulletin of the Seismological Society of America (95) 2162-2179
We have estimated P-wave and S-wave anelastic attenuation coefficients for the thick, unconsolidated sediments of the Mississippi embayment, central United States, using the spectral distance decay of explosion P and Rayleigh waves. The sediment-trapped P wave, Psed, is observed to ranges of 80 km at 10 Hz, and 1-Hz Rayleigh waves are observed out to 130 km...
Topography and vegetation as predictors of snow water equivalent across the alpine treeline ecotone at Lee Ridge, Glacier National Park, Montana, U.S.A.
C. A. Geddes, Daniel G. Brown, Daniel B. Fagre
2005, Arctic, Antarctic, and Alpine Research (37) 197-205
We derived and implemented two spatial models of May snow water equivalent (SWE) at Lee Ridge in Glacier National Park, Montana. We used the models to test the hypothesis that vegetation structure is a control on snow redistribution at the alpine treeline ecotone (ATE). The statistical models were derived using...
Small-scale, hydrogen-oxidizing-denitrifying bioreactor for treatment of nitrate-contaminated drinking water
R. L. Smith, S.P. Buckwalter, D.A. Repert, D.N. Miller
2005, Water Research (39) 2014-2023
Nitrate removal by hydrogen-coupled denitrification was examined using flow-through, packed-bed bioreactors to develop a small-scale, cost effective system for treating nitrate-contaminated drinking-water supplies. Nitrate removal was accomplished using a Rhodocyclus sp., strain HOD 5, isolated from a sole-source drinking-water aquifer. The autotrophic capacity of the purple non-sulfur photosynthetic bacterium made...
Seismic precursory patterns before a cliff collapse and critical point phenomena
D. Amitrano, J.-R. Grasso, G. Senfaute
2005, Geophysical Research Letters (32) 1-5
We analyse the statistical pattern of seismicity before a 1-2 103 m3 chalk cliff collapse on the Normandie ocean shore, Western France. We show that a power law acceleration of seismicity rate and energy in both 40 Hz-1.5 kHz and 2 Hz-10kHz frequency range, is defined on 3 orders of...
Experimental and geochemical evidence for derivation of the El Capitan Granite, California, by partial melting of hydrous gabbroic lower crust
K. Ratajeski, T. W. Sisson, A. F. Glazner
2005, Contributions to Mineralogy and Petrology (149) 713-734
Partial melting of mafic intrusions recently emplaced into the lower crust can produce voluminous silicic magmas with isotopic ratios similar to their mafic sources. Low-temperature (825 and 850°C) partial melts synthesized at 700 MPa in biotite-hornblende gabbros from the central Sierra Nevada batholith (Sisson et al. in Contrib Mineral Petrol 148:635–661,...
Preliminary characterisation of new glass reference materials (GSA-1G, GSC-1G, GSD-1G and GSE-1G) by laser ablation-inductively coupled plasma-mass spectrometry using 193 nm, 213 nm and 266 nm wavelengths
M. Guillong, K. Hametner, E. Reusser, Stephen A. Wilson, D. Gunther
2005, Geostandards and Geoanalytical Research (29) 315-331
New glass reference materials GSA-1G, GSC-1G, GSD-1G and GSE-1G have been characterised using a prototype solid state laser ablation system capable of producing wavelengths of 193 nm, 213 nm and 266 nm. This system allowed comparison of the effects of different laser wavelengths under nearly identical ablation and ICP operating...
Modeling downstream fining in sand-bed rivers. II: Application
S. Wright, G. Parker
2005, Journal of Hydraulic Research (43) 621-631
In this paper the model presented in the companion paper, Wright and Parker (2005) is applied to a generic river reach typical of a large, sand-bed river flowing into the ocean in order to investigate the mechanisms controlling longitudinal profile development and downstream fining. Three mechanisms which drive downstream fining...
Rapid tsunami models and earthquake source parameters: Far-field and local applications
E.L. Geist
2005, ISET Journal of Earthquake Technology (42) 127-136
Rapid tsunami models have recently been developed to forecast far-field tsunami amplitudes from initial earthquake information (magnitude and hypocenter). Earthquake source parameters that directly affect tsunami generation as used in rapid tsunami models are examined, with particular attention to local versus far-field application of those models. First, validity of the...
Model uncertainties of the 2002 update of California seismic hazard maps
T. Cao, M.D. Petersen, A.D. Frankel
2005, Bulletin of the Seismological Society of America (95) 2040-2057
In this article we present and explore the source and ground-motion model uncertainty and parametric sensitivity for the 2002 update of the California probabilistic seismic hazard maps. Our approach is to implement a Monte Carlo simulation that allows for independent sampling from fault to fault in each simulation. The source-distance...
Build-and-fill sequences: How subtle paleotopography affects 3-D heterogeneity of potential reservoir facies
J.R. McKirahan, R.H. Goldstein, E. K. Franseen
2005, AAPG Memoir (79) 97-116
This study analyzes the three-dimensional variability of a 20-meter-thick section of Pennsylvanian (Missourian) strata over a 600 km2 area of northeastern Kansas, USA. It hypothesizes that sea-level changes interact with subtle variations in paleotopography to influence the heterogeneity of potential reservoir systems in mixed carbonate-silidclastic systems, commonly produdng build-and-fill sequences....
Factors affecting settling, survival, and viability of black bears reintroduced to Felsenthal National Wildlife Refuge, Arkansas
B.J. Wear, R. Eastridge, J. D. Clark
2005, Wildlife Society Bulletin (33) 1363-1374
We used radiotelemetry and population modeling techniques to examine factors related to population establishment of black bears (Ursus americanus) reintroduced to Felsenthal National Wildlife Refuge (NWR), Arkansas. Our objectives were to determine whether settling (i.e., establishment of a home range at or near the release site), survival, recruitment, and population...