Optimization and resilience in natural resources management
Byron K. Williams, Fred A. Johnson
Craig Allen, Ahjond S. Garmestani, editor(s)
2015, Book chapter, Adaptive management of social-ecological systems
We consider the putative tradeoff between optimization and resilience in the management of natural resources, using a framework that incorporates different sources of uncertainty that are common in natural resources management. We address one-time decisions, and then expand the decision context to the more complex problem of iterative decision making....
Application-ready expedited MODIS data for operational land surface monitoring of vegetation condition
Jesslyn F. Brown, Daniel M. Howard, Bruce K. Wylie, Aaron M. Friesz, Lei Ji, Carolyn Gacke
2015, Remote Sensing (7) 16226-16240
Monitoring systems benefit from high temporal frequency image data collected from the Moderate Resolution Imaging Spectroradiometer (MODIS) system. Because of near-daily global coverage, MODIS data are beneficial to applications that require timely information about vegetation condition related to drought, flooding, or fire danger. Rapid satellite data streams in operational applications...
Seasonal foraging responses of beavers to sodium-enhanced foods: An experimental assessment with field feeding trials
Jennifer Strules, Stephen DeStefano
2015, Journal of Mammalogy (97) 89-101
Salt drive is a seasonal phenomenon common to several classes of wild herbivores. Coincident with shifts of nutrient quality when plants resume growth in the spring, sodium is secondarily lost as surplus potassium is excreted. The beaver (Castor canadensis) is an herbivore whose dietary niche closely follows that of other...
Building sandbars in Grand Canyon
Paul E. Grams, John C. Schmidt, Scott Wright, David J. Topping, Theodore S. Melis, David M. Rubin
2015, Newsletter
Now, by implementing a new strategy that calls for repeated releases of large volumes of water from the dam, the U.S. Department of the Interior seeks to increase the size and number of these sandbars. Three years into the “High Flow Experiment” protocol, the releases appear to be achieving the...
Assessing shoreline exposure and oyster habitat suitability maximizes potential success for sustainable shoreline protection using restored oyster reefs
Megan K. LaPeyre, Kayla Serra, T. Andrew Joyner, Austin T. Humphries
2015, PeerJ (3)
Oyster reefs provide valuable ecosystem services that contribute to coastal resilience. Unfortunately, many reefs have been degraded or removed completely, and there are increased efforts to restore oysters in many coastal areas. In particular, much attention has recently been given to the restoration of shellfish reefs along eroding shorelines to...
Sediment and discharge yields within a minimally disturbed, headwater watershed in North Central Pennsylvania, USA, with an emphasis on Superstorm Sandy
Kelly O. Maloney, Dustin R. Shull
2015, Water and Environment Journal (29) 402-411
We estimated discharge and suspended sediment (SS) yield in a minimally disturbed watershed in North Central Pennsylvania, USA, and compared a typical storm (September storm, 4.80 cm) to a large storm (Superstorm Sandy, 7.47 cm rainfall). Depending on branch, Sandy contributed 9.7–19.9 times more discharge and 11.5–37.4 times more SS...
The influence of food abundance, food dispersion and habitat structure on territory selection and size of an Afrotropical terrestrial insectivore
Thomas R. Stanley, William D. Newmark
2015, Ostrich (87) 199-207
Most tropical insectivorous birds, unlike their temperate counterparts, hold and defend a feeding and breeding territory year-around. However, our understanding of ecological factors influencing territory selection and size in tropical insectivores is limited. Here we examine three prominent hypotheses relating food abundance, food dispersion (spatial arrangement of food items), and...
Remote Sensing of Actual Evapotranspiration from Cropland: Chapter 3
Trent Biggs, George P. Petropoulos, Naga Manohar Velpuri, Michael Marshall, Edward P. Glenn, Pamela L. Nagler, Alex Messina
Prasad S. Thenkabail, editor(s)
2015, Book chapter, Remote sensing handbook, Vol. III: Remote sensing of water resources, disasters, and urban studies
No abstract available....
Estimation of historic flows and sediment loads to San Francisco Bay,1849–2011
H.R. Moftakhari, D.A. Jay, S.A. Talke, David H. Schoellhamer
2015, Journal of Hydrology (529) 1247-1261
River flow and sediment transport in estuaries influence morphological development over decadal and century time scales, but hydrological and sedimentological records are typically too short to adequately characterize long-term trends. In this study, we recover archival records and apply a rating curve approach to develop the first instrumental estimates of...
Resolving bathymetry from airborne gravity along Greenland fjords
Alexandra Boghosian, Kirsty Tinto, James R. Cochran, David Porter, Stefan Elieff, Bethany L. Burton, Robin E. Bell
2015, Journal of Geophysical Research B: Solid Earth (120) 8516-8533
Recent glacier mass loss in Greenland has been attributed to encroaching warming waters, but knowledge of fjord bathymetry is required to investigate this mechanism. The bathymetry in many Greenland fjords is unmapped and difficult to measure. From 2010 to 2012, National Aeronautics and Space Administration's Operation IceBridge collected a unique...
A geochemical and geophysical assessment of coastal groundwater discharge at select sites in Maui and O’ahu, Hawai’i
Peter W. Swarzenski, H. Dulaiova, M.L. Dalier, C.R. Glenn, C.G. Smith, Curt D. Storlazzi
2015, Book chapter, Coastal research library: Groundwater in the coastal zones of Asia-Pacific
This chapter summarizes fieldwork conducted to derive new estimates of coastal groundwater discharge and associated nutrient loadings at select coastal sites in Hawai’i, USA. Locations for this work were typically identified based on pronounced, recent ecosystem degradation that may at least partially be attributable to sustained coastal groundwater discharge. Our...
Export of fine particulate organic carbon from redwood-dominated catchments
Mary Ann Madej
2015, Earth Surface Processes and Landforms (40) 1533-1541
Recently, researchers have recognized the significant role of small mountainous river systems in the transport of carbon from terrestrial environments to the ocean, and the scale of such studies have ranged from channel bed units to continents. In temperate zones, these mountain river systems commonly drain catchments that are largely...
Internships, employment opportunities, and research grants
Water Resources Division, U.S. Geological Survey
2015, General Information Product 114
As an unbiased, multidisciplinary science organization, the U.S. Geological Survey (USGS) is dedicated to the timely, relevant, and impartial study of the health of our ecosystems and environment, our natural resources, the impacts of climate and land-use change, and the natural hazards that threaten us. Opportunities for undergraduate and graduate...
Effects of groundwater pumping on agricultural drains in the Tule Lake subbasin, Oregon and California
Esther M. Pischel, Marshall W. Gannett
2015, Scientific Investigations Report 2015-5087
Since 2001, irrigators in the upper Klamath Basin have increasingly turned to groundwater to compensate for reductions in surface-water allocation caused by shifts from irrigation use to instream flows for Endangered Species Act listed fishes. The largest increase in groundwater pumping has been in and around the Bureau of...
The Gulf Coast Vulnerability Assessment: Mangrove, Tidal Emergent Marsh, Barrier Islands, and Oyster Reef
Amanda Watson, Joshua S. Reece, Blair Tirpak, Cynthia Kallio Edwards, Laura Geselbracht, Mark Woodrey, Megan K. LaPeyre, P. Soupy Dalyander
2015, Report
Climate, sea level rise, and urbanization are undergoing unprecedented levels of combined change and are expected to have large effects on natural resources—particularly along the Gulf of Mexico coastline (Gulf Coast). Management decisions to address these effects (i.e., adaptation) require an understanding of the relative vulnerability of various resources to...
Dynamic reserve design in the face of climate change and urbanization
Stephanie S. Romanach, Fred A. Johnson, Bradley Stith, Mathieu Bonneau
2015, Report
Reserve design is a process that must address many ecological, social, and political factors to successfully identify parcels of land in need of protection to sustain wildlife populations and other natural resources. Making land acquisition choices for a large, terrestrial protected area is difficult because it occurs over a long...
Feather isotope analysis reveals differential patterns of habitat and resource use in populations of white-winged doves
Scott A. Carleton, Carlos Martinez Del Rio, Timothy J. Robinson
2015, Journal of Wildlife Management (79) 948-956
The white-winged dove (Zenaida asiatica) serves an important ecological role as a diurnal pollinator of the saguaro cactus in the Sonoran desert and an economic role as a highly sought after game bird in North America. White-winged doves are intimately linked to anthropogenic changes on the landscape and because of...
Factors influencing recruitment of walleye and white bass to three distinct early ontogenetic stages
Jason A. DeBoer, Kevin L. Pope
2015, Ecology of Freshwater Fish (25) 504-517
Determining the factors that influence recruitment to sequential ontogenetic stages is critical for understanding recruitment dynamics of fish and for effective management of sportfish, particularly in dynamic and unpredictable environments. We sampled walleye (Sander vitreus) and white bass (Morone chrysops) at 3 ontogenetic stages (age 0 during spring: ‘age-0 larval’;...
Range-wide wetland associations of the King Rail: A multi-scale approach
Wesley J. Glisson, Courtney J. Conway, Christopher P. Nadeau, Kathi L. Borgmann, Thomas A. Laxson
2015, Wetlands (35) 557-587
King Rail populations have declined and identifying wetland features that influence King Rail occupancy can help prevent further population declines. We integrated continent-wide marsh bird survey data with spatial wetland data from the National Wetland Inventory (NWI) to examine wetland features that influenced King Rail occupancy throughout the species’ range....
Interactions of water quality and integrated groundwater management: Examples from the United States and Europe
Kelly L. Warner, Fabienne Barataud, Randall J. Hunt, Marc Benoit, Juliette Anglade, Mark A. Borchardt
2015, Book chapter, Integrated groundwater management: Concepts, approaches and challenges
Groundwater is available in many parts of the world, but the quality of the water may limit its use. Contaminants can limit the use of groundwater through concerns associated with human health, aquatic health, economic costs, or even societal perception. Given this broad range of concerns, this chapter focuses on...
Final project memorandum: sea-level rise modeling handbook: resource guide for resource managers, engineers, and scientists
Thomas W. Doyle
2015, Conference Paper
Coastal wetlands of the Southeastern United States are undergoing retreat and migration from increasing tidal inundation and saltwater intrusion attributed to climate variability and sea-level rise. Much of the literature describing potential sea-level rise projections and modeling predictions are found in peer-reviewed academic journals or government technical reports largely suited...
Late Jurassic – early Cretaceous inversion of rift structures, and linkage of petroleum system elements across post-rift unconformity, U.S. Chukchi Shelf, arctic Alaska
David W. Houseknecht, Christopher D. Connors
2015, Conference Paper, Petroleum Systems in "Rift" Basins
Basin evolution of the U.S. Chukchi shelf involved multiple phases, including Late Devonian–Permian rifting, Permian–Early Jurassic sagging, Late Jurassic–Neocomian inversion, and Cretaceous–Cenozoic foreland-basin development. The focus of ongoing exploration is a petroleum system that includes sag-phase source rocks; inversion-phase reservoir rocks; structure spanning the rift, sag, and inversion phases;...
Local climate and cultivation, but not ploidy, predict functional trait variation in Bouteloua gracilis (Poaceae)
Bradley J. Butterfield, Troy E. Wood
2015, Plant Ecology (216) 1341-1349
Efforts to improve the diversity of seed 18 resources for important restoration species has become a high priority for land managers in many parts of the world. Relationships between functional trait values and the environment from which seed sources are collected can provide important insights into patterns of local adaptation...
Nest-site characteristics of Glyptemys muhlenbergii (Bog Turtle) in New Jersey and Pennsylvania
Robert T. Zappalorti, Jeffrey E. Lovich, Ray F. Farrell, Michael E. Torocco
2015, Northeastern Naturalist (22) 573-584
Nest-site selection can affect both the survival and fitness of female turtles and their offspring. In many turtle species, the nest environment determines the thermal regime during incubation, length of incubation period, sex ratio of the hatchlings, and exposure to predators and other forms of mortality for both mothers and...
Modeling the present and future geographic distribution of the Lone star tick, Amblyomma americanum (Ixodida: Ixodidae), in the continental United States
Yuri P. Springer, Catherine S. Jarnevich, David T. Barnett, Andrew J. Monaghan, Rebecca J. Eisen
2015, American Journal of Tropical Medicine and Hygiene (93) 875-890
The Lone star tick (Amblyomma americanum L.) is the primary vector for pathogens of significant public health importance in North America, yet relatively little is known about its current and potential future distribution. Building on a published summary of tick collection records, we used an ensemble modeling approach to predict the...