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Page 109, results 2701 - 2725

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Not all publications have extents, not all extents are completely accurate
Modeling interpopulation dispersal by banner-tailed kangaroo rats
J.L. Skvarla, J.D. Nichols, J.E. Hines, P.M. Waser
2004, Ecology (85) 2737-2746
Many metapopulation models assume rules of population connectivity that are implicitly based on what we know about within-population dispersal, but especially for vertebrates, few data exist to assess whether interpopulation dispersal is just within-population dispersal "scaled up." We extended existing multi-stratum mark-release-recapture models to incorporate the robust design, allowing us...
Airflows and turbulent flux measurements in mountainous terrain: Part 2: Mesoscale effects
A.A. Turnipseed, D.E. Anderson, S. Burns, P.D. Blanken, Russell K. Monson
2004, Agricultural and Forest Meteorology (125) 187-205
The location of the Niwot Ridge Ameriflux site within the rocky mountains subjects it to airflows which are common in mountainous terrain. In this study, we examine the effects of some of these mesoscale features on local turbulent flux measurements; most notably, the formation of valley/mountain flows and mountain lee-side...
Bioinvasive species and the preservation of cutthroat trout in the western United States: Ecological, social, and economic issues
M.C. Quist, W.A. Hubert
2004, Environmental Science and Policy (7) 303-313
The cutthroat trout (Oncorhynchus clarki) was the only endemic salmonid species across most of the western United States, and it has severely declined largely due to introduction and bioinvasion by non-native salmonid species. However, the ecological, social, and economic consequences of cutthroat trout declines and replacement by non-native salmonid species...
Tree-ring-based reconstruction of precipitation in the Bighorn Basin, Wyoming, since 1260 A.D
S.T. Gray, C.L. Fastie, S.T. Jackson, J.L. Betancourt
2004, Journal of Climate (17) 3855-3865
Cores and cross sections from 79 Douglas fir (Pseudotsuga menziesii) and limber pine (Pinus flexilis) trees at four sites in the Bighorn Basin of north-central Wyoming and south-central Montana were used to develop a proxy for annual (June-June) precipitation spanning 1260-1998 A.D. The reconstruction exhibits considerable nonstationarity, and the instrumental...
Multistage hydrothermal silicification and Fe-Tl-As-Sb-Ge-REE enrichment in the Red Dog Zn-Pb-Ag district, northern Alaska: Geochemistry, origin, and exploration applications
J. F. Slack, K.D. Kelley, V.M. Anderson, J.L. Clark, R. A. Ayuso
2004, Economic Geology (99) 1481-1508
Geochemical analyses of major, trace, and rare earth elements (REE) in more than 200 samples of variably silicified and altered wall rocks, massive and banded sulfide, silica rock, and sulfide-rich and unmineralized barite were obtained from the Main, Aqqaluk, and Anarraaq deposits in the Red Dog Zn-Pb-Ag district of northern...
Baseflow contribution to nitrate-nitrogen export from a large, agricultural watershed, USA
K. Schilling, Y.-K. Zhang
2004, Journal of Hydrology (295) 305-316
Nitrate-nitrogen export from the Raccoon River watershed in west-central Iowa is among the highest in the United State and contributes to impairment of downstream water quality. We examined a rare long-term record of streamflow and nitrate concentration data (1972-2000) to evaluate annual and seasonal patterns of nitrate losses in streamflow...
Considerations for monitoring a rare anuran (Eleutherodactylus augusti)
C.S. Goldberg, C.R. Schwalbe
2004, Southwestern Naturalist (49) 442-448
Monitoring wildlife populations is a challenging task for scientists and resource managers. We assessed 4 methods for monitoring population size of barking frogs (Eleutherodactylus augusti) in southern Arizona: mark-recapture, distance sampling, call counts, and visual encounter surveys. Because of the ecology and behavior of this species, all methods produced data...
Natural hybrids of the madtoms, Noturus flavus and Noturus insignis, from the Monongahela River drainage, West Virginia
S.A. Welsh, Dan A. Cincotta
2004, Northeastern Naturalist (11) 399-406
Natural hybridization is rare in the family Ictaluridae. Putative hybrids of the madtoms Noturus flavus and N. insignis were collected from Blackwater River, Monongahela River drainage, WV. Noturus flavus is native to the Monongahela River drainage, whereas N. insignis is nonnative. We quantified morphological differences among N. flavus, N. insignis,...
Comparison of electrofishing and trammel netting variability for sampling native fishes
C.P. Paukert
2004, Journal of Fish Biology (65) 1643-1652
The variability in size structure and relative abundance (CPUE; number of fish ≥200 mm total length, LT, collected per hour of electrofishing or trammel netting) of three native Colorado River fishes, the endangered humpback chub Gila cypha, flannelmouth sucker Catostomus latipinnus and bluehead sucker Catostomus discobolus, collected from electrofishing and trammel nets was assessed...
The Homestead kimberlite, central Montana, USA: Mineralogy, xenocrysts, and upper-mantle xenoliths
Hearn B. Carter Jr.
2004, LITHOS (77) 473-491
The Homestead kimberlite was emplaced in lower Cretaceous marine shale and siltstone in the Grassrange area of central Montana. The Grassrange area includes aillikite, alnoite, carbonatite, kimberlite, and monchiquite and is situated within the Archean Wyoming craton. The kimberlite contains 25-30 modal% olivine as xenocrysts and phenocrysts in a matrix...
Food web pathway determines how selenium affects aquatic ecosystems: A San francisco Bay case study
A.R. Stewart, S. N. Luoma, C.E. Schlekat, M.A. Doblin, K.A. Hieb
2004, Environmental Science & Technology (38) 4519-4526
Chemical contaminants disrupt ecosystems, but specific effects may be under-appreciated when poorly known processes such as uptake mechanisms, uptake via diet, food preferences, and food web dynamics are influential. Here we show that a combination of food web structure and the physiology of trace element accumulation explain why some species...
Rare earth element partitioning between hydrous ferric oxides and acid mine water during iron oxidation
P. L. Verplanck, D. Kirk Nordstrom, Howard E. Taylor, B. A. Kimball
2004, Applied Geochemistry (19) 1339-1354
Ferrous iron rapidly oxidizes to Fe (III) and precipitates as hydrous Fe (III) oxides in acid mine waters. This study examines the effect of Fe precipitation on the rare earth element(REE) geochemistry of acid mine waters to determine the pH range over which REEs behave conservatively and the range...
Ultramafic xenoliths from the Bearpaw Mountains, Montana, USA: Evidence for multiple metasomatic events in the lithospheric mantle beneath the Wyoming craton
H. Downes, R. Macdonald, B.G.J. Upton, K.G. Cox, J.-L. Bodinier, P.R.D. Mason, D. James, P.G. Hill, B. C. Hearn Jr.
2004, Journal of Petrology (45) 1631-1662
Ultramafic xenoliths in Eocene minettes of the Bearpaw Mountains volcanic field (Montana, USA), derived from the lower lithosphere of the Wyoming craton, can be divided based on textural criteria into tectonite and cumulate groups. The tectonites consist of strongly depleted spinel lherzolites, harzbugites and dunites. Although their mineralogical compositions are...
Community structure of fishes inhabiting aquatic refuges in a threatened Karst wetland and its implications for ecosystem management
Robert M. Kobza, J.C. Trexler, W.F. Loftus, S.A. Perry
2004, Biological Conservation (116) 153-165
We illustrate the importance of subsurface refuges for conservation of aquatic fauna with our studies of karstic wetlands in Everglades National Park, Florida, USA. Managers have proposed that water levels there should not fall more than 46 cm below ground level for more than 90 days annually. In four areas,...
Multi-stage origin of the Coast Range ophiolite, California: Implications for the life cycle of supra-subduction zone ophiolites
J.W. Shervais, D.L. Kimbrough, P. Renne, B.B. Hanan, B. Murchey, C.A. Snow, Schuman Zoglman, J. Beaman
2004, International Geology Review (46) 289-315
The Coast Range ophiolite of California is one of the most extensive ophiolite terranes in North America, extending over 700 km from the northernmost Sacramento Valley to the southern Transverse Ranges in central California. This ophiolite, and other ophiolite remnants with similar mid-Jurassic ages, represent a major but short-lived episode...
Direct-push geochemical profiling for assessment of inorganic chemical heterogeneity in aquifers
M.K. Schulmeister, J.M. Healey, J.J. Butler Jr., G.W. McCall
2004, Journal of Contaminant Hydrology (69) 215-232
Discrete-depth sampling of inorganic groundwater chemistry is essential for a variety of site characterization activities. Although the mobility and rapid sampling capabilities of direct-push techniques have led to their widespread use for evaluating the distribution of organic contaminants, complementary methods for the characterization of spatial variations in geochemical conditions have...
Commentary: A cautionary tale regarding use of the National Land Cover Dataset 1992
Wayne E. Thogmartin, Alisa L. Gallant, Melinda G. Knutson, Timothy J. Fox, Manuel J. Suarez
2004, Wildlife Society Bulletin (32) 970-978
Digital land-cover data are among the most popular data sources used in ecological research and natural resource management. However, processes for accurate land-cover classification over large regions are still evolving. We identified inconsistencies in the National Land Cover Dataset 1992, the most current and available representation of land cover for...
High latitude meteoric δ18O compositions: Paleosol siderite in the Middle Cretaceous Nanushuk Formation, North Slope, Alaska
David F. Ufnar, Greg A. Ludvigson, Luis A. Gonzalez, Richard L. Brenner, Brian J. Witzke
2004, Geological Society of America Bulletin (116) 463-473
Siderite-bearing pedogenic horizons of the Nanushuk Formation of the North Slope, Alaska, provide a critical high paleolatitude oxygen isotopic proxy record of paleoprecipitation, supplying important empirical data needed for paleoclimatic reconstructions and models of "greenhouse-world" precipitation rates. Siderite ??18O values were determined from four paleosol horizons in the National Petroleum...
The threat of silent earthquakes
Peter Cervelli
2004, Scientific American (290) 86-91
Not all earthquakes shake the ground. The so-called silent types are forcing scientists to rethink their understanding of the way quake-prone faults behave. In rare instances, silent earthquakes that occur along the flakes of seaside volcanoes may cascade into monstrous landslides that crash into the sea and trigger towering tsunamis....
Constraining the inferred paleohydrologic evolution of a deep unsaturated zone in the Amargosa Desert
Michelle Ann Walvoord, David A. Stonestrom, Brian J. Andraski, Robert G. Striegl
2004, Vadose Zone Journal (3) 502-512
Natural flow regimes in deep unsaturated zones of arid interfluvial environments are rarely in hydraulic equilibrium with near-surface boundary conditions imposed by present-day plant–soil–atmosphere dynamics. Nevertheless, assessments of water resources and contaminant transport require realistic estimates of gas, water, and solute fluxes under past, present, and projected conditions. Multimillennial transients...
Chapter 8 Petrogenesis and mineralogic residence of selected elements in the meade peak phosphatic shale member of the permian phosphoria formation, Southeast Idaho
Richard I. Grauch, George A. Desborough, Gregory P. Meeker, A. L. Foster, Russell G. Tysdal, J. R. Herring, Heather A. Lowers, B. A. Ball, Robert A. Zielinski, E. A. Johnson
2004, Book chapter, Handbook of exploration and environmental geochemistry, Vol. 8
The Meade Peak Phosphatic Shale Member of the Permian Phosphoria Formation hosts the ore mined by the phosphate industry of southeast Idaho. It also hosts environmentally sensitive elements (ESE) such as Se, As, Hg, Ni, Cd, Zn, and Cr. Primary chemistry, elemental distribution patterns, and mineralogy within the Meade...
Studying sea otter foraging ecology: A review of some methodological approaches
M. T. Tinker, J. A. Estes, James L. Bodkin, M. M. Staedler, Daniel H. Monson
Daniela Maldini, Donald Calkins, Shannon Atkinson, Rosa Meehan, editor(s)
2004, Conference Paper, Alaska Sea Otter Research Workshop: Addressing the Decline of the Southwestern Alaska Sea Otter Population
The study of foraging ecology plays a central role in our understanding of animal populations and natural communities, and can also provide information necessary for the effective conservation of rare or endangered species. Sea otter researchers are interested in foraging ecology for many different reasons, but for heuristic purposes we...
Water year 2004: Western water managers feel the heat
Thomas Pagano, Phil Pasteris, Michael D. Dettinger, Daniel Cayan, Kelly Redmond
2004, Eos, Earth and Space Science News (85) 385-393
This spring, a rare combination of exceptionally warm temperatures and near-record lack of precipitation in the western United States caused a rapid change in hydrologic conditions and an unexpectedly early onset of spring conditions. With much of the western U.S. already in its fifth year of drought, an above-average western snowpack...
Colorado bat conservation plan
Laura E. Ellison, Michael B. Wunder, Cheri A. Jones, Cyndi J. Mosch, Kirk W. Navo, Kathy Peckham, John E. Burghardt, Julie Annear, Ron West, Jeremy Siemers, Rick A. Adams, Erik Brekke
2004, Report
Eighteen of the 124 species of mammals inhabiting Colorado are bats. The unique life history characteristics of bats prevent many people from realizing that they comprise 15 percent of our native mammal fauna. Being fast fliers that are active at night, bats are mostly elusive to human senses except in...