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Page 1032, results 25776 - 25800

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Publication Extents

Not all publications have extents, not all extents are completely accurate
Validation of abundance estimates from mark–recapture and removal techniques for rainbow trout captured by electrofishing in small streams
Amanda E. Rosenberger, Jason B. Dunham
2005, North American Journal of Fisheries Management (25) 1395-1410
Estimation of fish abundance in streams using the removal model or the Lincoln - Peterson mark - recapture model is a common practice in fisheries. These models produce misleading results if their assumptions are violated. We evaluated the assumptions of these two models via electrofishing of rainbow trout Oncorhynchus mykiss...
Controlling for anthropogenically induced atmospheric variation in stable carbon isotope studies
E.S. Long, R.A. Sweitzer, Duane R. Diefenbach, M. Ben-David
2005, Oecologia (146) 148-156
Increased use of stable isotope analysis to examine food-web dynamics, migration, transfer of nutrients, and behavior will likely result in expansion of stable isotope studies investigating human-induced global changes. Recent elevation of atmospheric CO2 concentration, related primarily to fossil fuel combustion, has reduced atmospheric CO2 ??13C (13C/12C), and this change...
Degassing Lakes Nyos and Monoun: Defusing certain disaster
G.W. Kling, William C. Evans, G. Tanyileke, M. Kusakabe, T. Ohba, Y. Yoshida, J.V. Hell
2005, Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences of the United States of America (102) 14185-14190
Since the catastrophic releases of CO2 in the 1980s, Lakes Nyos and Monoun in Cameroon experienced CO2 recharge at alarming rates of up to 80 mol/m2 per yr. Total gas pressures reached 8.3 and 15.6 bar in Monoun (2003) and Nyos (2001), respectively, resulting in gas saturation levels up to 97%. These natural...
Northwest Basin and Range tectonic deformation observed with the Global Positioning System, 1999-2003
W.C. Hammond, W. Thatcher
2005, Journal of Geophysical Research B: Solid Earth (110) 1-12
We use geodetic velocities obtained with the Global Positioning System (GPS) to quantify tectonic deformation of the northwest Basin and Range province of the western United States. The results are based on GPS data collected in 1999 and 2003 across five new quasi-linear networks in northern Nevada, northeast California, and...
Climate science and famine early warning
James P. Verdin, Chris Funk, Gabriel B. Senay, R. Choularton
2005, Philosophical Transactions of the Royal Society B: Biological Sciences (360) 2155-2168
Food security assessment in sub-Saharan Africa requires simultaneous consideration of multiple socio-economic and environmental variables. Early identification of populations at risk enables timely and appropriate action. Since large and widely dispersed populations depend on rainfed agriculture and pastoralism, climate monitoring and forecasting are important inputs to food security analysis. Satellite...
Phosphorus component in AnnAGNPS
Y. Yuan, R.L. Bingner, F.D. Theurer, R.A. Rebich, P.A. Moore
2005, Transactions of the American Society of Agricultural Engineers (48) 2145-2154
The USDA Annualized Agricultural Non-Point Source Pollution model (AnnAGNPS) has been developed to aid in evaluation of watershed response to agricultural management practices. Previous studies have demonstrated the capability of the model to simulate runoff and sediment, but not phosphorus (P). The main purpose of this article is to evaluate...
A new method to compute standard-weight equations that reduces length-related bias
K.G. Gerow, R. C. Anderson-Sprecher, W.A. Hubert
2005, North American Journal of Fisheries Management (25) 1288-1300
We propose a new method for developing standard-weight (Ws) equations for use in the computation of relative weight (Wr) because the regression line-percentile (RLP) method often leads to length-related biases in Ws equations. We studied the structural properties of W s equations developed by the RLP method through simulations, identified...
Volcán Popocatépetl, Mexico. Petrology, magma mixing, and immediate sources of volatiles for the 1994- Present eruption
J.B. Witter, V.C. Kress, C. G. Newhall
2005, Journal of Petrology (46) 2337-2366
Volcán Popocatépetl has been the site of voluminous degassing accompanied by minor eruptive activity from late 1994 until the time of writing (August 2002). This contribution presents petrological investigations of magma erupted in 1997 and 1998, including major-element and volatile (S, Cl, F, and H2O) data from glass inclusions and...
Models of lithosphere and asthenosphere anisotropic structure of the Yellowstone hot spot from shear wave splitting
Gregory P. Waite, D.L. Schutt, Robert B. Smith
2005, Journal of Geophysical Research B: Solid Earth (110) 1-19
Teleseismic shear wave splitting measured at 56 continuous and temporary seismographs deployed in a 500 km by 600 km area around the Yellowstone hot spot indicates that fast anisotropy in the mantle is parallel to the direction of plate motion under most of the array. The average split time from...
Decadal-scale change of infiltration characteristics of a tephra-mantled hillslope at Mount St Helens, Washington
J. J. Major, T. Yamakoshi
2005, Hydrological Processes (19) 3621-3630
The cataclysmic 1980 eruption of Mount St Helens radically reduced the infiltration characteristics of ∼60 000 ha of rugged terrain and dramatically altered landscape hydrology. Two decades of erosional, biogenic, cryogenic, and anthropogenic activity have modified the infiltration characteristics of much of that devastated landscape and modulated the hydrological impact...
Multi-platform comparisons of MODIS and AVHRR normalized difference vegetation index data
Kevin P. Gallo, Lei Ji, Bradley C. Reed, Jeffery C. Eidenshink, John L. Dwyer
2005, Remote Sensing of Environment (99) 221-231
The relationship between AVHRR-derived normalized difference vegetation index (NDVI) values and those of future sensors is critical to continued long-term monitoring of land surface properties. The follow-on operational sensor to the AVHRR, the Visible/Infrared Imager/Radiometer Suite (VIIRS), will be very similar to the NASA Earth Observing System's Moderate Resolution Imaging...
Coupled inverse modeling of vadose zone water, heat, and solute transport: Calibration constraints, parameter nonuniqueness, and predictive uncertainty
M.J. Friedel
2005, Journal of Hydrology (312) 148-175
In this study, an inverse methodology is presented and used to evaluate the effect that calibration of a synthetic artificial recharge model, constrained by different combinations of measurements (pressure head, temperature, and concentration), has on estimated vadose zone model parameter-value nonuniqueness and predictive water, heat, and solute transport uncertainty. Several...
Effects of physical processes on structure and transport of thin zooplankton layers in the coastal ocean
Christina M. Aiello, O.M. Cheriton, Patrick T. Drake, D. V. Holliday, Curt D. Storlazzi, P. L. Donaghay, C. F. Greenlaw
2005, Marine Ecology Progress Series (301) 199-215
Thin layers of plankton are recurrent features in a variety of coastal systems. These layers range in thickness from a few centimeters to a few meters. They can extend horizontally for kilometers and have been observed to persist for days. Densities of organisms found within thin layers are far greater...
Geology and tsunamigenic potential of submarine landslides in Santa Barbara Channel, Southern California
M. A. Fisher, W. R. Normark, H. Gary Greene, H.J. Lee, R. W. Sliter
2005, Marine Geology (224) 1-22
A large submarine landslide complex and four small landslides developed under the Santa Barbara Channel, suggesting a potential hazard from landslide-generated tsunamis. We integrate offshore stratigraphy and geologic structure, multibeam bathymetric information, and several kinds of seismic-reflection data to understand how and when the submarine landslides formed. Seismic-reflection data show...
Environment of ore deposition in the Creede mining district, San Juan Mountains, Colorado: Part VI. Maximum duration for mineralization of the OH vein
W. R. Campbell, P.B. Barton
2005, Economic Geology (100) 1313-1324
The rate at which ore deposits form is one of the least well established parameters in all of economic geology. However, increased detail in sampling, improved technology of dating, and sophistication in modeling are reducing the uncertainties and establishing that ore formation, at least for the porphyry copper-skarn-epithermal base and...
Effective discharge analysis of ecological processes in streams
Martin W. Doyle, Emily H. Stanley, David L. Strayer, Robert B. Jacobson, John C. Schmidt
2005, Water Resources Research (41)
Discharge is a master variable that controls many processes in stream ecosystems. However, there is uncertainty of which discharges are most important for driving particular ecological processes and thus how flow regime may influence entire stream ecosystems. Here the analytical method of effective discharge from fluvial geomorphology is used to...
Geology and insolation-driven climatic history of Amazonian north polar materials on Mars
K. L. Tanaka
2005, Nature (437) 991-994
Mariner 9 and Viking spacecraft images revealed that the polar regions of Mars, like those of Earth, record the planet's climate history. However, fundamental uncertainties regarding the materials, features, ages and processes constituting the geologic record remained. Recently acquired Mars Orbiter Laser Altimeter data and Mars Orbiter Camera high-resolution images...
Possible modes of coral-reef development at Molokai, Hawaii, inferred from seismic-reflection profiling
W. A. Barnhardt, B. M. Richmond, E. E. Grossman, P. Hart
2005, Geo-Marine Letters (25) 315-323
High-resolution, seismic-reflection data elucidate the late Quaternary development of the largest coral-reef complex in the main Hawaiian Islands. Six acoustic facies were identified from reflection characteristics and lithosome geometry. An extensive, buried platform with uniformly low relief was traced beneath fore-reef and marginal shelf environments. This highly reflective surface dips...
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...