Alpha1-antitrypsin polymorphism and systematics of eastern North American wolves
L. David Mech, Nicholas E. Federoff
2002, Canadian Journal of Zoology (80) 961-963
We used data on the polymorphic status of α1-antitrypsin (α1AT) to study the relationship of Minnesota wolves to the gray wolf (Canis lupus), which was thought to have evolved in Eurasia, and to red wolves (Canis rufus) and coyotes (Canis latrans), which putatively evolved in North America. Recent evidence had...
A source-depth separation filter: Using the Euler method on the derivatives of total intensity magnetic anomaly data
D. Ravat, K. Kirkham, T.G. Hildenbrand
2002, Leading Edge (Tulsa, OK) (21) 360-365
Derivatives of potential-field anomalies (or the anomaly gradients) enhance the field associated with shallow features and de-emphasize the field from deeper sources. The derivative approach of separating anomalies of shallow, intermediate, and deep sourves is, however, qualitative.Semiautomatic source...
How often do fishes "run on empty"?
D.A. Arrington, K.O. Winemiller, W.F. Loftus, S. Akin
2002, Ecology (83) 2145-2151
We used a large data set of African, Neotropical, and North American fishes to examine the frequency with which fishes have empty stomachs (nspecies = 254; nindividuals = 36 875). Mean percentage of empty stomachs was low across all fishes (16.2 ± 1.2%) but varied from 0% to 79.4% among individual species. Nocturnal fishes...
Evaluation of fish sampling using rotenone in a navigation lock
F.J. Margraf, C.T. Knight
2002, Fisheries Research (55) 297-305
Annual sampling in locks with rotenone has been a principal means of assessing fish populations in the commercially navigable portions of the Ohio River. Despite extensive use, sampling in locks with rotenone and interpretation of the data obtained have not been adequately evaluated. The purpose of our study was to...
Spatial and statistical differences between 1:250,000- and 1:24,000-scale digital soil databases
K. E. Juracek, D.M. Wolock
2002, Journal of Soil and Water Conservation (57) 89-94
In this study, 1:250,000- and 1:24,000-scale digital soil databases for Kansas were compared statistically and spatially. The soil attributes used in this comparison were soil permeability, percent clay, and hydrologic group. Results indicate that, although the two databases were correlated, the potential exists for substantial site-specific variability between them. The...
Microbial ecology of a crude oil contaminated aquifer
B.A. Bekins, I.M. Cozzarelli, E. Warren, E.M. Godsy
2002, IAHS-AISH Publication 57-64
Detailed microbial analyses of a glacial outwash aquifer contaminated by crude oil provide insights into the pattern of microbial succession from iron reducing to methanogenic in the anaerobic portion of the contaminant plume. We analysed sediments from this area for populations of aerobes, iron reducers, fermenters and methanogens, using the...
Evaluation of some random effects methodology applicable to bird ringing data
K.P. Burnham, Gary C. White
2002, Journal of Applied Statistics (29) 245-264
Existing models for ring recovery and recapture data analysis treat temporal variations in annual survival probability (S) as fixed effects. Often there is no explainable structure to the temporal variation in S1,..., Sk; random effects can then be a useful model: Si = E(S) + ??i. Here, the temporal variation...
Advanced spectral methods for climatic time series
M. Ghil, M. R. Allen, M. D. Dettinger, K. Ide, D. Kondrashov, M. E. Mann, A. W. Robertson, A. Saunders, Y. Tian, F. Varadi, P. Yiou
2002, Reviews of Geophysics (40) 3-1-3-41
The analysis of univariate or multivariate time series provides crucial information to describe, understand, and predict climatic variability. The discovery and implementation of a number of novel methods for extracting useful information from time series has recently revitalized this classical field of study. Considerable progress has also been made in...
Baseline assessment of instream and riparian-zone biological resources on the Rio Grande in and near Big Bend National Park, Texas
James Bruce Moring
2002, Water-Resources Investigations Report 2002-4106
Five study sites, and a sampling reach within each site, were established on the Rio Grande in and near Big Bend National Park in 1999 to provide the National Park Service with data and information on the status of stream habitat, fish communities, and benthic macroinvertebrates. Differences in stream-habitat conditions...
Historical patterns of river stage and fish communities as criteria for operations of dams on the Illinois river
Todd M. Koel, Richard E. Sparks
2002, River Research and Applications (18) 3-19
The hydrologic regime of the Illinois River has been altered over the past 100 years. Locks and dams regulate water surface elevations and flow, enabling commercial navigation to continue year round. This study relates changes in water surface elevation to fish abundance in the river, and establishes target criteria for...
Empirical evidence for acceleration-dependent amplification factors
R. D. Borcherdt
2002, Bulletin of the Seismological Society of America (92) 761-782
Site-specific amplification factors, Fa and Fv, used in current U.S. building codes decrease with increasing base acceleration level as implied by the Loma Prieta earthquake at 0.1g and extrapolated using numerical models and laboratory results. The Northridge earthquake recordings of 17 January 1994 and subsequent geotechnical data permit empirical estimates...
Nitrate in aquifers beneath agricultural systems
M. R. Burkart, J.D. Stoner
2002, Conference Paper, Water Science and Technology
Research from several regions of the world provides spatially anecdotal evidence to hypothesize which hydrologic and agricultural factors contribute to groundwater vulnerability to nitrate contamination. Analysis of nationally consistent measurements from the U.S. Geological Survey's NAWOA program confirms these hypotheses for a substantial range of agricultural systems. Shallow unconfined aquifers...
Real-time water quality monitoring and regression analysis to estimate nutrient and bacteria concentrations in Kansas streams
V.G. Christensen, P.P. Rasmussen, A.C. Ziegler
2002, Conference Paper, Water Science and Technology
An innovative approach currently is underway in Kansas to estimate and monitoring constituent concentrations in streams. Continuous in-stream water-quality monitors are installed at selected U.S. Geological Survey stream-gaging stations to provide real-time measurement of specific conductance, pH, water temperature, dissolved oxygen, turbidity, and total chlorophyll. In addition, periodic water samples...
Global modeling of land water and energy balances. Part III: Interannual variability
A.B. Shmakin, P. C. D. Milly, K.A. Dunne
2002, Journal of Hydrometeorology (3) 311-321
The Land Dynamics (LaD) model is tested by comparison with observations of interannual variations in discharge from 44 large river basins for which relatively accurate time series of monthly precipitation (a primary model input) have recently been computed. When results are pooled across all basins, the model explains 67% of...
Estimation of shoreline position and change using airborne topographic lidar data
H.F. Stockdon, A. H. Sallenger Jr., J. H. List, R.A. Holman
2002, Journal of Coastal Research (18) 502-513
A method has been developed for estimating shoreline position from airborne scanning laser data. This technique allows rapid estimation of objective, GPS-based shoreline positions over hundreds of kilometers of coast, essential for the assessment of large-scale coastal behavior. Shoreline position, defined as the cross-shore position of a vertical shoreline datum,...
Movement of water through the thick unsaturated zone underlying Oro Grande and Sheep Creek Washes in the western Mojave Desert, USA
J. A. Izbicki, J. Radyk, R. L. Michel
2002, Hydrogeology Journal (10) 409-427
Previous studies indicate that a small quantity of recharge occurs from infiltration of streamflow in intermittent streams in the upper Mojave River basin, in the western Mojave Desert, near Victorville, California. Chloride, tritium, and stable isotope data collected in the unsaturated zone between 1994 and 1998 from boreholes drilled in...
Approaches for the direct estimation of lambda, and demographic contributions to lambda, using capture-recapture data
James D. Nichols, James E. Hines
2002, Journal of Applied Statistics (29) 539-568
We first consider the estimation of the finite rate of population increase or population growth rate, u i , using capture-recapture data from open populations. We review estimation and modelling of u i under three main approaches to modelling openpopulation data: the classic approach of Jolly (1965) and Seber (1965),...
Comparing shear-wave velocity profiles inverted from multichannel surface wave with borehole measurements
J. Xia, R. D. Miller, C.B. Park, J. A. Hunter, J. B. Harris, J. Ivanov
2002, Soil Dynamics and Earthquake Engineering (22) 181-190
Recent field tests illustrate the accuracy and consistency of calculating near-surface shear (S)-wave velocities using multichannel analysis of surface waves (MASW). S-wave velocity profiles (S-wave velocity vs. depth) derived from MASW compared favorably to direct borehole measurements at sites in Kansas, British Columbia, and Wyoming. Effects of changing the total...
Grid-cell-based crop water accounting for the famine early warning system
J. Verdin, R. Klaver
2002, Hydrological Processes (16) 1617-1630
Rainfall monitoring is a regular activity of food security analysts for sub-Saharan Africa due to the potentially disastrous impact of drought. Crop water accounting schemes are used to track rainfall timing and amounts relative to phenological requirements, to infer water limitation impacts on yield. Unfortunately, many rain gauge reports are...
Topography and geologic characteristics of aeolian grooves in the south polar layered deposits of Mars
N.T. Bridges, Kenneth E. Herkenhoff
2002, Icarus (156) 387-398
The topographic and geologic characteristics of grooves and groove-like features in the south polar layered deposits near the Mars Polar Lander/Deep Space 2 landing sites are evaluated using Mariner 9 images and their derived photoclinometry, normalized using Mars Orbiter Laser Altimeter data. Although both Mariner 9 and Viking images of...
System analysis to estimate subsurface flow: From global level to the State of Minnesota
B.A. Shmagin, R. Kanivetsky
2002, Environmental Geology (42) 259-269
Stream runoff data globally and in the state of Minnesota were used to estimate subsurface water flow. This system approach is based, in principal, on unity of groundwater and surface water systems, and it is in stark contrast to the traditional deterministic approach based on modeling. In coordination with methodology...
Estimating recharge at Yucca Mountain, Nevada, USA: Comparison of methods
A. L. Flint, L. E. Flint, E. M. Kwicklis, J. T. Fabryka-Martin, G.S. Bodvarsson
2002, Hydrogeology Journal (10) 180-204
Obtaining values of net infiltration, groundwater travel time, and recharge is necessary at the Yucca Mountain site, Nevada, USA, in order to evaluate the expected performance of a potential repository as a containment system for high-level radioactive waste. However, the geologic complexities of this site, its low precipitation and net...
Pathways of nutrient loading and impacts on plant diversity in a New York peatland
Judith Z. Drexler, B. L. Bedford
2002, Wetlands (22) 263-281
Nutrient loading is a subtle, yet serious threat to the preservation of high diversity wetlands such as peatlands. Pathways of nutrient loading and impacts on plant diversity in a small peatland in New York State, USA were determined by collecting and analyzing a suite of hydrogeological, hydro-chemical, soil, and vegetation...
Subsurface geometry and evolution of the Seattle fault zone and the Seattle Basin, Washington
Uri S. ten Brink, P.C. Molzer, M. A. Fisher, R.J. Blakely, R.C. Bucknam, T. Parsons, R. S. Crosson, K. C. Creager
2002, Bulletin of the Seismological Society of America (92) 1737-1753
The Seattle fault, a large, seismically active, east-west-striking fault zone under Seattle, is the best-studied fault within the tectonically active Puget Lowland in western Washington, yet its subsurface geometry and evolution are not well constrained. We combine several analysis and modeling approaches to study the fault geometry and evolution, including...
Early to Middle Proterozoic construction of the Mojave province, southwestern United States
D.S. Coleman, A. P. Barth, J. L. Wooden
2002, Gondwana Research (5) 75-78
Zircon and monazite U-Pb geochronology of rocks in the western Mojave province of the southwest US reveals that the Proterozoic arc exposed there shares an intrusive and deformational history with rocks exposed further east in the Yavapai and Mazatzal belts after approximately 1780 Ma. Consequently, it seems likely that the...