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Publication Extents

Not all publications have extents, not all extents are completely accurate
Simulating future water temperatures in the North Santiam River, Oregon
Norman L. Buccola, John C. Risley, Stewart A. Rounds
2016, Journal of Hydrology (535) 318-330
A previously calibrated two-dimensional hydrodynamic and water-quality model (CE-QUAL-W2) of Detroit Lake in western Oregon was used in conjunction with inflows derived from Precipitation-Runoff Modeling System (PRMS) hydrologic models to examine in-lake and downstream water temperature effects under future climate conditions. Current and hypothetical operations and structures at Detroit Dam...
Testing the suitability of geologic frameworks for extrapolating hydraulic properties across regional scales
Benjamin B. Mirus, Keith J. Halford, Donald S. Sweetkind, Joseph M. Fenelon
2016, Hydrogeology Journal (24) 1133-1146
The suitability of geologic frameworks for extrapolating hydraulic conductivity (K) to length scales commensurate with hydraulic data is difficult to assess. A novel method is presented for evaluating assumed relations between K and geologic interpretations for regional-scale groundwater modeling. The approach relies on simultaneous interpretation of...
Fishing diseased abalone to promote yield and conservation
Tal Ben-Horin, Kevin D. Lafferty, Gorka Bidegain, Hunter S. Lenihan
2016, Philosophical Transactions of the Royal Society B: Biological Sciences (371)
Past theoretical models suggest fishing disease-impacted stocks can reduce parasite transmission, but this is a good management strategy only when the exploitation required to reduce transmission does not overfish the stock. We applied this concept to a red abalone fishery so impacted by an infectious disease (withering syndrome) that stock...
Highly pathogenic avian influenza viruses and generation of novel reassortants,United States, 2014–2015
Dong-Hun Lee, Justin Bahl, Mia Kim Torchetti, Mary Lea Killian, S. Ip, David E Swayne
2016, Emerging Infectious Diseases (22) 1283-1285
Asian highly pathogenic avian influenza A(H5N8) viruses spread into North America in 2014 during autumn bird migration. Complete genome sequencing and phylogenetic analysis of 32 H5 viruses identified novel H5N1, H5N2, and H5N8 viruses that emerged in late 2014 through reassortment with North American low-pathogenicity avian influenza viruses....
Cumulative drought and land-use impacts on perennial vegetation across a North American dryland region
Seth M. Munson, A. Lexine Long, Cynthia Wallace, Robert H. Webb
2016, Applied Vegetation Science (19) 430-441
Question The decline and loss of perennial vegetation in dryland ecosystems due to global change pressures can alter ecosystem properties and initiate land degradation processes. We tracked changes of perennial vegetation using remote sensing to address the question of how prolonged drought and land-use intensification have affected perennial...
Spatial variation in risk and consequence of Batrachochytrium salamandrivorans introduction in the USA
Katherine L. D. Richgels, Robin E. Russell, M. J. Adams, C. LeAnn White, Evan H. Campbell Grant
2016, Royal Society Open Science (3)
A newly identified fungal pathogen, Batrachochytrium salamandrivorans (Bsal), is responsible for mass mortality events and severe population declines in European salamanders. The eastern USA has the highest diversity of salamanders in the world and the introduction of this pathogen is likely to be devastating. Although data are inevitably limited for new pathogens,...
Post-Hurricane Irene coastal oblique aerial photographs collected from Ocracoke Inlet, North Carolina, to Virginia Beach, Virginia, August 30-31, 2011
Karen L. M. Morgan, M. Dennis Krohn
2016, Data Series 979
The U.S. Geological Survey (USGS), as part of the National Assessment of Coastal Change Hazards project, conducts baseline and storm-response photography missions to document and understand the changes in vulnerability of the Nation's coasts to extreme storms (Morgan, 2009). On August 30-31, 2011, the USGS conducted an oblique aerial...
Developing integrated methods to address complex resource and environmental issues
Kathleen S. Smith, Jeffrey D. Phillips, Anne E. McCafferty, Roger N. Clark, editor(s)
2016, Circular 1413
IntroductionThis circular provides an overview of selected activities that were conducted within the U.S. Geological Survey (USGS) Integrated Methods Development Project, an interdisciplinary project designed to develop new tools and conduct innovative research requiring integration of geologic, geophysical, geochemical, and remote-sensing expertise. The project was supported by the USGS Mineral...
Reconstruction of late Holocene climate based on tree growth and mechanistic hierarchical models
John Tipton, Mevin Hooten, Neil Pederson, Martin Tingley, Daniel Bishop
2016, Environmetrics (27) 42-54
Reconstruction of pre-instrumental, late Holocene climate is important for understanding how climate has changed in the past and how climate might change in the future. Statistical prediction of paleoclimate from tree ring widths is challenging because tree ring widths are a one-dimensional summary of annual growth that represents a multi-dimensional...
High-resolution seismic reflection imaging of growth folding and shallow faults beneath the Southern Puget Lowland, Washington State
Jackson K. Odum, William J. Stephenson, Thomas L. Pratt, Richard J. Blakely
2016, Bulletin of the Seismological Society of America (100) 1710-1723
Marine seismic reflection data from southern Puget Sound, Washington, were collected to investigate the nature of shallow structures associated with the Tacoma fault zone and the Olympia structure. Growth folding and probable Holocene surface deformation were imaged within the Tacoma fault zone beneath Case and Carr Inlets. Shallow faults near...
Optimizing available network resources to address questions in environmental biogeochemistry
Eve-Lyn Hinckley, Suzanne Andersen, Jill Baron, Peter Blanken, Gordon Bonan, William Bowman, Sarah Elmendorf, Noah Fierer, Andrew Fox, Keli Goodman, Katherine Jones, Danica Lombardozzi, Claire Lunch, Jason Neff, Michael SanClements, Katherine Suding, Will Wieder
2016, BioScience (66) 317-326
An increasing number of network observatories have been established globally to collect long-term biogeochemical data at multiple spatial and temporal scales. Although many outstanding questions in biogeochemistry would benefit from network science, the ability of the earth- and environmental-sciences community to conduct synthesis studies within and across networks...
Demographic response of northern spotted owls to barred owl removal
V. Lowell Diller, Keith A. Hamm, Desiree A Early, David W Lamphear, Katie M. Dugger, Charles B. Yackulic, Carl J. Schwarz, Peter C. Carlson, Trent L. McDonald
2016, Journal of Wildlife Management (80) 691-707
Federally listed as threatened in 1990 primarily because of habitat loss, the northern spotted owl (Strix occidentalis caurina) has continued to decline despite conservation efforts resulting in forested habitat being reserved throughout its range. Recently, there is growing evidence the congeneric invasive barred owl (Strix varia) may be...
Ecology and conservation of Lesser Prairie-Chickens in sand shinnery oak prairies
Blake A. Grisham, Jennifer C. Zavaleta, Adam C. Behney, Philip K. Borsdorf, Duane R. Lucia, Clint W. Boal, David A. Haukos
2016, Book chapter, Ecology and conservation of Lesser Prairie-Chickens
Sand shinnery oak (Quercus havardii) prairies are unique ecosystems endemic to sandy soils of eastern New Mexico, northwestern Texas, and western Oklahoma; the historic and current distribution of the Lesser Prairie-Chicken (Tympanuchus pallidicinctus) overlaps these prairie systems. Lesser Prairie-Chicken populations in sand shinnery oak prairies of the Southern Great Plains...
Wetting and drying of soil in response to precipitation: Data analysis, modeling, and forecasting
Aniruddha Basak, Chinmay Kulkarni, Kevin M. Schmidt, Ole Mengshoel
2016, Conference Paper
This paper investigates methods to analyze and forecast soil moisture time series. We extend an existing Antecedent Water Index (AWI) model, which expresses soil moisture as a function of time and rainfall. Unfortunately, the existing AWI model does not forecast effectively for time periods beyond a few hours. To overcome...
Baseline glucocorticoids are drivers of body mass gain in a diving seabird
Holly Hennin, Alicia Berlin, Oliver P. Love
2016, Ecology and Evolution (6) 1702-1711
Life-history trade-offs are influenced by variation in individual state, with individuals in better condition often completing life-history stages with greater success. Although resource accrual significantly impacts key life-history decisions such as the timing of reproduction, little is known about the underlying mechanisms driving resource accumulation. Baseline corticosterone (CORT, the primary...
Development of a bioenergetics model for the threespine stickleback Gasterosteus aculeatus
Rachel A. Hovel, David A. Beauchamp, Adam G. Hansen, Mark H. Sorel
2016, Transactions of the American Fisheries Society (144) 1311-1321
The Threespine Stickleback Gasterosteus aculeatus is widely distributed across northern hemisphere ecosystems, has ecological influence as an abundant planktivore, and is commonly used as a model organism, but the species lacks a comprehensive model to describe bioenergetic performance in response to varying environmental or ecological conditions. This study parameterized a bioenergetics model...
Population connectivity and genetic structure of burbot (Lota lota) populations in the Wind River Basin, Wyoming
Zachary E. Underwood, Elizabeth G. Mandeville, Annika W. Walters
2016, Hydrobiologia (765) 329-342
Burbot (Lota lota) occur in the Wind River Basin in central Wyoming, USA, at the southwestern extreme of the species’ native range in North America. The most stable and successful of these populations occur in six glacially carved mountain lakes on three different tributary streams and one large...
Spatial and temporal trends of drought effects in a heterogeneous semi-arid forest ecosystem
Timothy J. Assal, Patrick J. Anderson, Jason Sibold
2016, Forest Ecology and Management (365) 137-151
Drought has long been recognized as a driving mechanism in the forests of western North America and drought-induced mortality has been documented across genera in recent years. Given the frequency of these events are expected to increase in the future, understanding patterns of mortality and plant response to severe drought...
Normalized burn ratios link fire severity with patterns of avian occurrence
Eli T. Rose, Theodore R. Simons, Rob Klein, Alexa McKerrow
2016, Landscape Ecology (31) 1537-1550
ContextRemotely sensed differenced normalized burn ratios (DNBR) provide an index of fire severity across the footprint of a fire. We asked whether this index was useful for explaining patterns of bird occurrence within fire adapted xeric pine-oak forests of the southern Appalachian Mountains.<h5...
Stable isotope evaluation of population- and individual-level diet variability in a large, oligotrophic lake with non-native lake trout
Elizabeth L. Ng, Jim P. Fredericks, Michael C. Quist
2016, Ecology of Freshwater Fish (26) 271-279
Non-native piscivores can alter food web dynamics; therefore, evaluating interspecific relationships is vital for conservation and management of ecosystems with introduced fishes. Priest Lake, Idaho, supports a number of introduced species, including lake troutSalvelinus namaycush, brook trout S. fontinalis and opossum shrimp Mysis diluviana. In this study, we used stable isotopes (δ13C and δ15N)...
Body size and condition influence migration timing of juvenile Arctic grayling
Kurt C. Heim, Mark S. Wipfli, Matthew S. Whitman, Andrew C. Seitz
2016, Ecology of Freshwater Fish (25) 156-166
Freshwater fishes utilising seasonally available habitats within annual migratory circuits time movements out of such habitats with changing hydrology, although individual attributes of fish may also mediate the behavioural response to environmental conditions. We tagged juvenile Arctic grayling in a seasonally flowing stream on the Arctic Coastal Plain in Alaska...
Disentangling vegetation diversity from climate–energy and habitat heterogeneity for explaining animal geographic patterns
Borja Jimenez-Alfaro, Milan Chytry, Ladislav Mucina, James B. Grace, Marcel Rejmanek
2016, Ecology and Evolution (6) 1515-1526
Broad-scale animal diversity patterns have been traditionally explained by hypotheses focused on climate–energy and habitat heterogeneity, without considering the direct influence of vegetation structure and composition. However, integrating these factors when considering plant–animal correlates still poses a major challenge because plant communities are controlled by abiotic factors that may, at...
Mercury remediation in wetland sediment using zero-valent iron and granular activated carbon
Ariel S. Lewis, Thomas G. Huntington, Mark C. Marvin-DiPasquale, Aria Amirbahman
2016, Environmental Pollution (212) 366-373
Wetlands are hotspots for production of toxic methylmercury (MeHg) that can bioaccumulate in the food web. The objective of this study was to determine whether the application of zero-valent iron (ZVI) or granular activated carbon (GAC) to wetland sediment could reduce MeHg production and bioavailability to benthic organisms. Field mesocosms...
Potential improvements in horizontal very broadband seismic data in the IRIS/USGS component of the Global Seismic Network
Adam T. Ringler, J.M. Steim, T Zandt, Charles R. Hutt, David C. Wilson, Tyler Storm
2016, Seismological Research Letters (87) 81-89
The Streckeisen STS‐1 has been the primary vault‐type seismometer used in the over‐150‐station Global Seismographic Network (GSN). This sensor has long been known for its outstanding vertical, very long‐period (e.g., >100  s period), and low‐noise performance, although the horizontal long‐period noise performance is less well known. The STS‐1 is a limited,...