Climate change and Arctic ecosystems: 2. Modeling, paleodata-model comparisons, and future projections
J.O. Kaplan, N.H. Bigelow, I. C. Prentice, S. P. Harrison, P. J. Bartlein, T.R. Christensen, W. Cramer, N.V. Matveyeva, A. D. McGuire, D.F. Murray, V.Y. Razzhivin, B. Smith, D.A. Walker, P. M. Anderson, A.A. Andreev, L.B. Brubaker, M. E. Edwards, A.V. Lozhkin
2003, Journal of Geophysical Research D: Atmospheres (108)
Large variations in the composition, structure, and function of Arctic ecosystems are determined by climatic gradients, especially of growing-season warmth, soil moisture, and snow cover. A unified circumpolar classification recognizing five types of tundra was developed. The geographic distributions of vegetation types north of 55°N, including the position of the...
An analytical formulation of two‐dimensional groundwater dispersion induced by surficial recharge variability
Eric D. Swain, David A. Chin
2003, Water Resources Research (39) 17-1-17-8
A predominant cause of dispersion in groundwater is advective mixing due to variability in seepage rates. Hydraulic conductivity variations have been extensively researched as a cause of this seepage variability. In this paper the effect of variations in surface recharge to a shallow surficial aquifer is investigated as an important...
Volcanic debris flows in developing countries - The extreme need for public education and awareness of debris-flow hazards
J. J. Major, S. P. Schilling, C.R. Pullinger
Rickenmann D.Chen C.L., editor(s)
2003, Conference Paper, International Conference on Debris-Flow Hazards Mitigation: Mechanics, Prediction, and Assessment, Proceedings
In many developing countries, volcanic debris flows pose a significant societal risk owing to the distribution of dense populations that commonly live on or near a volcano. At many volcanoes, modest volume (up to 500,000 m 3) debris flows are relatively common (multiple times per century) and typically flow at...
Entropy and generalized least square methods in assessment of the regional value of streamgages
M. Markus, Knapp H. Vernon, Gary D. Tasker
2003, Journal of Hydrology (283) 107-121
The Illinois State Water Survey performed a study to assess the streamgaging network in the State of Illinois. One of the important aspects of the study was to assess the regional value of each station through an assessment of the information transfer among gaging records for low, average, and high...
Quaternary low-angle slip on detachment faults in Death Valley, California
N.W. Hayman, J.R. Knott, D.S. Cowan, E. Nemser, A.M. Sarna-Wojcicki
2003, Geology (31) 343-346
Detachment faults on the west flank of the Black Mountains (Nevada and California) dip 29??-36?? and cut subhorizontal layers of the 0.77 Ma Bishop ash. Steeply dipping normal faults confined to the hanging walls of the detachments offset layers of the 0.64 Ma Lava Creek B tephra and the base...
Characterization and statistical modeling of bacterial (Escherichia coli) outflows from watersheds that discharge into Southern Lake Michigan
G.A. Olyphant, Joan Thomas, R.L. Whitman, D. Harper
2003, Environmental Monitoring and Assessment (81) 289-300
Two watersheds in northwestern Indiana were selected for detailed monitoring of bacterially contaminated discharges (Escherichia coli) into Lake Michigan. A large watershed that drains an urbanized area with treatment plants that release raw sewage during storms discharges into Lake Michigan at the outlet of Burns Ditch. A small watershed drains...
Eruption-induced modifications to volcanic seismicity at Ruapehu, New Zealand, and its implications for eruption forecasting
C.J. Bryan, S. Sherburn
2003, Bulletin of Volcanology (65) 30-42
Broadband seismic data collected on Ruapehu volcano, New Zealand, in 1994 and 1998 show that the 1995-1996 eruptions of Ruapehu resulted in a significant change in the frequency content of tremor and volcanic earthquakes at the volcano. The pre-eruption volcanic seismicity was characterized by several independent dominant frequencies, with a...
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...
Ductile flow of methane hydrate
W.B. Durham, L.A. Stern, S. H. Kirby
2003, Canadian Journal of Physics (81) 373-380
Compressional creep tests (i.e., constant applied stress) conducted on pure, polycrystalline methane hydrate over the temperature range 260-287 K and confining pressures of 50-100 MPa show this material to be extraordinarily strong compared to other icy compounds. The contrast with hexagonal water ice, sometimes used as a proxy for gas...
A proposed coast-wide reference monitoring system for evaluating Wetland restoration trajectories in Louisiana
G.D. Steyer, C.E. Sasser, J.M. Visser, E.M. Swenson, J.A. Nyman, R.C. Raynie
2003, Environmental Monitoring and Assessment (81) 107-117
Wetland restoration efforts conducted in Louisiana under the Coastal Wetlands Planning, Protection and Restoration Act require monitoring the effectiveness of individual projects as well as monitoring the cumulative effects of all projects in restoring, creating, enhancing, and protecting the coastal landscape. The effectiveness of the traditional paired-reference monitoring approach in...
Assessing the efficacy of single-pass backpack electrofishing to characterize fish community structure
M. R. Meador, J.P. McIntyre, K. H. Pollock
2003, Transactions of the American Fisheries Society (132) 39-46
Two-pass backpack electrofishing data collected as part of the U.S. Geological Survey's National Water-Quality Assessment Program were analyzed to assess the efficacy of single-pass backpack electrofishing. A two-capture removal model was used to estimate, within 10 river basins across the United States, proportional fish species richness from one-pass electrofishing and...
Using a 1200 kHz workhorse ADCP with mode 12 to measure near bottom mean currents
M. Martini
Rizoli J.A., editor(s)
2003, Conference Paper, Proceedings of the IEEE Working Conference on Current Measurement
Using high frequency Acoustic Doppler Current (ADCP) profiling technology, it is possible to make high-resolution measurements of mean current profiles within a few meters of the seabed. In coastal applications, mean current speeds may be 10 cm/s or less, and oscillatory wave currents may exceed 100 cm/s during storm events....
Geology of the Ivanhoe Hg-Au district, northern Nevada: Influence of Miocene volcanism, lakes, and active faulting on epithermal mineralization
A. R. Wallace
2003, Economic Geology (98) 409-424
The mercury-gold deposits of the Ivanhoe mining district in northern Nevada formed when middle Miocene rhyolitic volcanism and high-angle faulting disrupted a shallow lacustrine environment. Sinter and replacement mercury deposits formed at and near the paleosurface, and disseminated gold deposits and high-grade gold-silver veins formed beneath the hot spring deposits. The lacustrine environment provided abundant meteoric water; the rhyolites heated the water; and...
Recent ecological and biogeochemical changes in alpine lakes of Rocky Mountain National Park (Colorado, USA): A response to anthropogenic nitrogen deposition
A.P. Wolfe, A.C. Van Gorp, Jill Baron
2003, Geobiology (1) 153-168
Dated sediment cores from five alpine lakes (>3200 m asl) in Rocky Mountain National Park (Colorado Front Range, USA) record near-synchronous stratigraphic changes that are believed to reflect ecological and biogeochemical responses to enhanced nitrogen deposition from anthropogenic sources. Changes in sediment proxies include progressive increases in the frequencies of mesotrophic...
The rich get richer: Patterns of plant invasions in the United States
T.J. Stohlgren, D.T. Barnett, J.T. Kartesz
2003, Frontiers in Ecology and the Environment (1) 11-14
Observations from islands, small-scale experiments, and mathematical models have generally supported the paradigm that habitats of low plant diversity are more vulnerable to plant invasions than areas of high plant diversity. We summarize two independent data sets to show exactly the opposite pattern at multiple spatial scales. More significant, and...
Do ungulates accelerate or decelerate nitrogen cycling?
F. J. Singer, K.A. Schoenecker
2003, Forest Ecology and Management (181) 189-204
Nitrogen (N) is an essential nutrient for plants and animals, and N may be limiting in many western US grassland and shrubland ungulate winter ranges. Ungulates may influence N pools and they may alter N inputs and outputs (losses) to the ecosystem in a number of ways. In this paper...
Quantile regression models of animal habitat relationships
Brian S. Cade
2003, Thesis
Typically, all factors that limit an organism are not measured and included in statistical models used to investigate relationships with their environment. If important unmeasured variables interact multiplicatively with the measured variables, the statistical models often will have heterogeneous response distributions with unequal variances. Quantile regression is an approach for...
Habitat selection of two gobies (Microgobius gulosus, Gobiosoma robustum): influence of structural complexity, competitive interactions and presence of a predator
P. J. Schofield
2003, Journal of Experimental Marine Biology and Ecology (288) 125-137
Herein I compare the relative importance of preference for structurally complex habitat against avoidance of competitors and predators in two benthic fishes common in the Gulf of Mexico. The code goby Gobiosoma robustum Ginsburg and clown goby Microgobius gulosus (Girard) are common, ecologically similar fishes found throughout the Gulf of Mexico and in the...
Introduction to fire danger rating and remote sensing - Will remote sensing enhance wildland fire danger prediction?
Britta Allgower, J.D. Carlson, Jan W. Van Wagtendonk
Emilio Chuvieco, editor(s)
2003, Series in Remote Sensing 4-1
While ‘Fire Danger’ per se cannot be measured, the physical properties of the biotic and abiotic world that relate to fire occurrence and fire behavior can. Today, increasingly sophisticated Remote Sensing methods are being developed to more accurately detect fuel properties such as species composition (fuel...
Geologic map of the Callville Bay Quadrangle, Clark County, Nevada, and Mohave County, Arizona
R. Ernest Anderson
2003, Report
Report: 139 Map Scale: 1:24,000 Map Type: colored geologic map A 1:24,000-scale, full-color geologic map and four cross sections of the Callville Bay 7-minute quadrangle in Clark County, Nevada and Mohave...
Species area relationships in mediterranean-climate plant communities
Jon E. Keeley, C. J. Fotheringham
2003, Journal of Biogeography (30) 1629-1657
Aim To determine the best-fit model of species–area relationships for Mediterranean-type plant communities and evaluate how community structure affects these species–area models.Location Data were collected from California shrublands and woodlands and compared with literature reports for other Mediterranean-climate regions.Methods The number of species was recorded from 1, 100 and 1000 m2...
Clinical disease and laboratory abnormalities in free-ranging desert tortoises in California (1990-1995)
Mary M. Christopher, Kristin H. Berry, Brian T. Henen, Kenneth A. Nagy
2003, Journal of Wildlife Diseases (39) 35-56
Desert tortoise (Gopherus agassizii) populations have experienced precipitous declines resulting from the cumulative impact of habitat loss and human and disease-related mortality. Diagnosis of disease in live, free-ranging tortoises is facilitated by evaluation of clinical signs and laboratory test results but may be complicated by seasonal and environmental effects. The...
Geologic signature of early Tertiary ridge subduction in Alaska
Dwight Bradley, Timothy M. Kusky, Peter J. Haeussler, Richard J. Goldfarb, Marti L. Miller, Julie A. Dumoulin, Steven W. Nelson, Susan M. Karl
2003, Geological Society of America Special Papers (371) 19-49
A mid-Paleocene to early Eocene encounter between an oceanic spreading center and a subduction zone produced a wide range of geologic features in Alaska. The most striking effects are seen in the accretionary prism (Chugach–Prince William terrane), where 61 to 50 Ma near-trench granitic to gabbroic plutons were intruded into...
Seasonal patterns in growth, blood consumption, and effects on hosts by parasitic-phase sea lampreys in the Great Lakes: an individual-based model approach
Charles P. Madenjian, Philip A. Cochran, Roger A. Bergstedt
2003, Journal of Great Lakes Research (29) 332-346
An individual-based model (IBM) was developed for sea lamprey (Petromyzon marinus) populations in the Laurentian Great Lakes. The IBM was then calibrated to observed growth, by season, for sea lampreys in northern Lake Huron under two different water temperature regimes: a regime experienced by Seneca-strain lake trout (Salvelinus namaycush) and...
Impacts of Daily Bag Limit Reductions on Angler Effort in Wisconsin Walleye Lakes
T.D. Beard Jr., S.P. Cox, S.R. Carpenter
2003, North American Journal of Fisheries Management (23) 1283-1293
Angler effort is an important factor affecting recreational fisheries. However, angler responses are rarely incorporated into recreational fisheries regulations or predictions. Few have attempted to examine how daily bag limit regulations affect total angling pressure and subsequent stock densities. Our paper develops a theoretical basis for predicting angler effort and...