Effects of lampricide exposure on the survival, growth, and behavior of the unionid mussels Elliptio complanata and Pyganadon cataracta
D. L. Waller, T.D. Bills, M.A. Boogaard, D.A. Johnson, T.C.J. Doolittle
2003, Conference Paper, Journal of Great Lakes Research
The effects of a 12-h exposure to the lampricide 3-trifluoromethyl-4- nitrophenol (TFM) and a combination of TFM and 1% niclosamide (active ingredient in Bayluscide 70% wettable powder) on the short and long-term (10 mo post exposure) survival and behavior of two unionid freshwater mussel species Elliptio complanata and Pyganadon cataracta...
The impact of a prominent rain shadow on flooding in California's Santa Cruz Mountains: A CALJET case study and sensitivity to the ENSO cycle
F.M. Ralph, P.J. Neiman, D.E. Kingsmill, P.O.G. Persson, A.B. White, E.T. Strem, E.D. Andrews, Ronald C. Antweiler
2003, Journal of Hydrometeorology (4) 1243-1264
Data from the California Land-Falling Jets Experiment (CALJET) are used to explore the causes of variations in flood severity in adjacent coastal watersheds within the Santa Cruz Mountains on 2-3 February 1998. While Pescadero Creek (rural) experienced its flood of record, the adjacent San Lorenzo Creek (heavily populated), attained only...
Effects of ammonia on juvenile unionid mussels (Lampsilis cardium) in laboratory sediment toxicity tests
Teresa J. Newton, John W. Allran, Jonathan A. O’Donnell, Michelle Bartsch, William B. Richardson
2003, Environmental Toxicology and Chemistry (22) 2554-2560
Ammonia is a relatively toxic compound generated in water and sediments by heterotrophic bacteria and accumulates in sediments and pore water. Recent data suggest that unionid mussels are sensitive to un-ionized ammonia (NH3) relative to other organisms. Existing sediment exposure systems are not suitable for ammonia toxicity studies with juvenile...
Conceptual model for transferring information between small watersheds
E.T. Cleaves
2003, Environmental Geology (45) 190-197
Stream and watershed management and restoration can be greatly facilitated through use of physiographic landform classification to organize and communicate natural resource, hazard, and environmental information at a broad scale (1:250,000) as illustrated by the Piedmont and Coastal Plain Provinces in Maryland, or at a small scale (1:24,000) as illustrated...
Toxicity of o,p′-DDE to medaka d-rR strain after a one-time embryonic exposure by in ovo nanoinjection: An early through juvenile life cycle assessment
Sergio A. Villalobos, Diana M. Papoulias, Stephanie D. Pastva, Alan L. Blankenship, John C. Meadows, Donald E. Tillitt, John P. Giesy
2003, Chemosphere (53) 819-826
The toxicity of o,p′-DDE (1,1-dichloro-2-(p-chlorophenyl)-2-(o-chlorophenyl) ethylene) was evaluated in embryos of medaka (Oryzias latipes) following a one time exposure via nanoinjection. Medaka eggs (early gastrula) were injected with 0.5 nl of triolein (vehicle control) or 0.5 nl of 4 graded doses (0.0005-0.5 ng/egg) of o,p′-DDE in triolein. Embryos were allowed...
Determination of layer-charge characteristics of smectites
G.E. Christidis, D. D. Eberl
2003, Clays and Clay Minerals (51) 644-655
A new method for calculation of layer charge and charge distribution of smectites is proposed. The method is based on comparisons between X-ray diffraction (XRD) patterns of K-saturated, ethylene glycol-solvated, oriented samples and calculated XRD patterns for three-component, mixed-layer systems. For the calculated patterns it is assumed that the measured...
Modeling aqueous ferrous iron chemistry at low temperatures with application to Mars
G.M. Marion, D.C. Catling, J.S. Kargel
2003, Geochimica et Cosmochimica Acta (67) 4251-4266
Major uncertainties exist with respect to the aqueous geochemical evolution of the Martian surface. Considering the prevailing cryogenic climates and the abundance of salts and iron minerals on Mars, any attempt at comprehensive modeling of Martian aqueous chemistry should include iron chemistry and be valid at low temperatures and high...
Effect of isolated fractures on accelerated flow in unsaturated porous rock
Grace W. Su, John R. Nimmo, Maria I. Dragila
2003, Water Resources Research (39) 1-1-1-5
Fractures that begin and end in the unsaturated zone, or isolated fractures, have been ignored in previous studies because they were generally assumed to behave as capillary barriers and remain nonconductive. We conducted a series of experiments using Berea sandstone samples to examine the physical mechanisms controlling flow in a...
Polybaric evolution of phonolite, trachyte, and rhyolite volcanoes in eastern Marie Byrd Land, Antarctica: Controls on peralkalinity and silica saturation
W.E. LeMasurier, K. Futa, M. Hole, Y. Kawachi
2003, International Geology Review (45) 1055-1099
In the Marie Byrd Land volcanic province, peralkaline and metaluminous trachytes, phonolites, and rhyolites occur in 18 large shield volcanoes that are closely associated in time and space. They are arrayed radially across an 800 km wide structural dome, with the oldest at the crest and the youngest around the flanks. Several lines of evidence suggest that these rocks evolved via...
Salton Trough regional deformation estimated from combined trilateration and survey-mode GPS data
G. Anderson, D.C. Agnew, H.O. Johnson
2003, Bulletin of the Seismological Society of America (93) 2402-2414
The Salton Trough in southeastern California, United States, has one of the highest seismicity and deformation rates in southern California, including 20 earthquakes M 6 or larger since 1892. From 1972 through 1987, the U.S. Geological Survey (USGS) measured a 41-station trilateration network in this region. We remeasured 37 of the USGS baselines using survey-mode Global Positioning System methods from 1995...
US National Large-scale City Orthoimage Standard Initiative
G. Zhou, C. Song, S. Benjamin, W. Schickler
2003, Conference Paper, International Geoscience and Remote Sensing Symposium (IGARSS)
The early procedures and algorithms for National digital orthophoto generation in National Digital Orthophoto Program (NDOP) were based on earlier USGS mapping operations, such as field control, aerotriangulation (derived in the early 1920's), the quarter-quadrangle-centered (3.75 minutes of longitude and latitude in geographic extent), 1:40,000 aerial photographs, and 2.5 D...
Searching for a life history approach to salmon escapement management
E.E. Knudsen, E.W. Symmes, F.J. Margraf
2003, American Fisheries Society Symposium (2003) 261-276
A number of Pacific salmon populations have already been lost and many others throughout the range are in various states of decline. Recent research has documented that Pacific salmon carcasses serve as a key delivery vector of marine-derived nutrients into the freshwater portions of their ecosystems. This nutrient supply plays...
Mechanism for generating the anomalous uplift of oceanic core complexes: Atlantis Bank, southwest Indian Ridge
A.G. Baines, Michael J. Cheadle, H.J.B. Dick, A.H. Scheirer, Barbara E. John, N.J. Kusznir, T. Matsumoto
2003, Geology (31) 1105-1108
Atlantis Bank is an anomalously uplifted oceanic core complex adjacent to the Atlantis II transform, on the southwest Indian Ridge, that rises >3 km above normal seafloor of the same age. Models of flexural uplift due to detachment faulting can account for ???1 km of this uplift. Postdetachment normal faults...
Assessing recovery feasibility for piping plovers using optimization and simulation
M.A. Larson, M.R. Ryan, R.K. Murphy
2003, Wildlife Society Bulletin (31) 1105-1116
Optimization and simulation modeling can be used to account for demographic and economic factors simultaneously in a comprehensive analysis of endangered-species population recovery. This is a powerful approach that is broadly applicable but underutilized in conservation biology. We applied the approach to a population recovery analysis of threatened and endangered...
Predicting changes in hydrologic retention in an evolving semi-arid alluvial stream
J. W. Harvey, M.H. Conklin, R.S. Koelsch
2003, Advances in Water Resources (26) 939-950
Hydrologic retention of solutes in hyporheic zones or other slowly moving waters of natural channels is thought to be a significant control on biogeochemical cycling and ecology of streams. To learn more about factors affecting hydrologic retention, we repeated stream-tracer injections for 5 years...
Effect of different sampling schemes on the spatial placement of conservation reserves in Utah, USA
S.D. Bassett, T.C. Edwards Jr.
2003, Biological Conservation (113) 141-151
We evaluated the effect of three different sampling schemes used to organize spatially explicit biological information had on the spatial placement of conservation reserves in Utah, USA. The three sampling schemes consisted of a hexagon representation developed by the EPA/EMAP program (statistical basis), watershed boundaries (ecological), and the current county...
Late Holocene estuarine-inner shelf interactions; is there evidence of an estuarine retreat path for Tampa Bay, Florida?
B.T. Donahue, A. C. Hine, S. Tebbens, S. D. Locker, D.C. Twichell
2003, Marine Geology (200) 219-241
The purpose of this study was to determine if and how a large, modern estuarine system, situated in the middle of an ancient carbonate platform, has affected its adjacent inner shelf both in the past during the last, post-glacial sea-level rise and during the present. An additional purpose was to...
Rheology of the lithosphere inferred from postseismic uplift following the 1959 Hebgen Lake earthquake
T. Nishimura, W. Thatcher
2003, Journal of Geophysical Research B: Solid Earth (108)
We have modeled the broad postseismic uplift measured by geodetic leveling in the epicentral area of the 1959 Mw = 7.3 Hebgen Lake, Montana earthquake, a normal faulting event in the northern Basin and Range province. To fit the observed uplift we calculate synthetic postseismic deformation using the relaxation response...
GCIP water and energy budget synthesis (WEBS)
J. Roads, R. Lawford, E. Bainto, E. Berbery, S. Chen, B. Fekete, K. Gallo, A. Grundstein, W. Higgins, M. Kanamitsu, W. Krajewski, V. Lakshmi, D. Leathers, D. Lettenmaier, L. Luo, E. Maurer, T. Meyers, Dick Miller, Ken Mitchell, T. Mote, R. Pinker, T. Reichler, D. Robinson, A. Robock, J. Smith, G. Srinivasan, K.L. Verdin, K. Vinnikov, Haar T. Vonder, C. Vorosmarty, S. Williams, E. Yarosh
2003, Journal of Geophysical Research D: Atmospheres (108)
As part of the World Climate Research Program's (WCRPs) Global Energy and Water-Cycle Experiment (GEWEX) Continental-scale International Project (GCIP), a preliminary water and energy budget synthesis (WEBS) was developed for the period 1996-1999 fromthe "best available" observations and models. Besides this summary paper, a companion CD-ROM with more extensive discussion,...
Importance of Sediment-Water Interactions in Coeur d'Alene Lake, Idaho, USA: Management Implications
J.S. Kuwabara, J.L. Carter, B.R. Topping, S.V. Fend, P. F. Woods, W.M. Berelson, Laurie S. Balistrieri
2003, Environmental Management (32) 348-359
A field study at Coeur d'Alene Lake, Idaho, USA, was conducted between October 1998 and August 2001 to examine the potential importance of sediment-water interactions on contaminant transport and to provide the first direct measurements of the benthic flux of dissolved solutes of environmental concern in this lake. Because of...
Numerical modeling of coupled nitrification-denitrification in sediment perfusion cores from the hyporheic zone of the Shingobee River, MN
R.W. Sheibley, A. P. Jackman, J.H. Duff, F.J. Triska
2003, Advances in Water Resources (26) 977-987
Nitrification and denitrification kinetics in sediment perfusion cores were numerically modeled and compared to experiments on cores from the Shingobee River MN, USA. The experimental design incorporated mixing groundwater discharge with stream water penetration into the cores, which provided a well-defined, one-dimensional simulation of...
Morphological traits of Pacific Flyway Canada Geese as an aid to subspecies identification and management
John M. Pearce, Karen S. Bollinger
2003, Journal of Field Ornithology (74) 357-369
Subspecies of Canada Geese (Branta canadensis) exhibit wide variation in body size across their range. To monitor harvest levels in the Pacific Flyway, biologists commonly use culmen length and plumage color to differentiate among subspecies on sympatric wintering grounds. Among the four large-bodied Pacific subspecies (B. c. parvipes, B. c....
Analysis of Slug Tests in Formations of High Hydraulic Conductivity
J.J. Butler Jr., E.J. Garnett, J.M. Healey
2003, Ground Water (41) 620-630
A new procedure is presented for the analysis of slug tests performed in partially penetrating wells in formations of high hydraulic conductivity. This approach is a simple, spreadsheet-based implementation of existing models that can be used for analysis of tests from confined or unconfined aquifers. Field examples of tests exhibiting...
Evaluation of an expandable, breakaway radiocollar for white-tailed deer fawns
Duane R. Diefenbach, C.O. Kochanny, J.K. Vreeland, B.D. Wallingford
2003, Wildlife Society Bulletin (31) 756-761
We evaluated an expandable, breakaway VHF radiocollar design for use on white-tailed deer (Odocoileus virginianus) from birth to about 1 year of age. A similar collar design has been used on caribou (Rangifer tarandus), but we found that the collar did not expand quickly enough to accommodate increase in neck...
Lead in the Getchell-Turquoise ridge Carlin-type gold deposits from the perspective of potential igneous and sedimentary rock sources in Northern Nevada: Implications for fluid and metal sources
R. M. Tosdal, J. S. Cline, C.M. Fanning, J. L. Wooden
2003, Economic Geology (98) 1189-1211
Lead isotope compositions of bulk mineral samples (fluorite, orpiment, and realgar) determined using conventional techniques and of ore-stage arsenian pyrite using the Sensitive High Resolution Ion-Microprobe (SHRIMP) in the Getchell and Turquoise Ridge Carlin-type gold deposits (Osgood Mountains) require contribution from two different Pb sources. One Pb source dominates the ore stage. It has a limited Pb isotope range characterized by 208Pb/ 206Pb values of 2.000...