Status of pelagic prey fishes in Lake Michigan, 2015
David M. Warner, Randall M. Claramunt, Steven A. Farha, Dale Hanson, Timothy J. Desorcie, Timothy P. O’Brien
2016, Report, Compiled reports to the Great Lake Fishery Commission of the annual bottom trawl and acoustics surveys, 2015
Acoustic surveys were conducted in late summer/early fall during the years 1992-1996 and 2001-2015 to estimate pelagic prey fish biomass in Lake Michigan. Midwater trawling during the surveys as well as target strength provided a measure of species and size composition of the fish community for use in scaling acoustic...
A strategy for low cost development of incremental oil in legacy reservoirs
Emil Attanasi
2016, Conference Paper, Proceedings of the SPE/IAEE hydrocarbon economics and evaluation symposium 2016
The precipitous decline in oil prices during 2015 has forced operators to search for ways to develop low-cost and low-risk oil reserves. This study examines strategies to low cost development of legacy reservoirs, particularly those which have already implemented a carbon dioxide enhanced oil recovery (CO2 EOR) program. Initially the...
Integrated groundwater data management
Peter Fitch, Boyan Brodaric, Matt Stenson, Nathaniel Booth
Anthony J. Jakeman, Olivier Barreteau, Randall J. Hunt, Jean-Daniel Rinaudo, Andrew Ross, editor(s)
2016, Book chapter, Integrated groundwater management
The goal of a data manager is to ensure that data is safely stored, adequately described, discoverable and easily accessible. However, to keep pace with the evolution of groundwater studies in the last decade, the associated data and data management requirements have changed significantly. In particular, there is a growing...
Consequences of seasonal variation in reservoir water level for predatory fishes: linking visual foraging and prey densities
Stephen L. Klobucar, Phaedra E. Budy
2016, Canadian Journal of Fisheries and Aquatic Sciences (73) 53-64
In reservoirs, seasonal drawdown can alter the physical environment and may influence predatory fish performance. We investigated the performance of lake trout (Salvelinus namaycush) in a western reservoir by coupling field measurements with visual foraging and bioenergetic models at four distinct states (early summer, mid-summer, late summer, and fall). The...
Status and trends of land change in selected U.S. ecoregions - 2000 to 2011
Kristi L. Sayler, William Acevedo, Janis Taylor
2016, Photogrammetric Engineering and Remote Sensing (82) 687-697
U.S. Geological Survey scientists developed a dataset of 2006 and 2011 land-use and land-cover (LULC) information for selected 100-km2 sample blocks within 29 U.S. Environmental Protection Agency (EPA) Level III ecoregions across the conterminous United States. The data can be used with the previously published Land Cover Trends Dataset: 1973...
Earthquake probabilities for the Wasatch front region in Utah, Idaho, and Wyoming
Ivan G. Wong, William R. Lund, Christopher B. DuRoss, Patricia Thomas, Walter Arabasz, Anthony J. Crone, Michael D. Hylland, Nico Luco, Susan S. Olig, James C. Pechmann, Stephen Personius, Mark D. Petersen, David P. Schwartz, Robert B. Smith, Steve Rowman
2016, Report
In a letter to The Salt Lake Daily Tribune in September 1883, U.S. Geological Survey (USGS) geologist G.K. Gilbert warned local residents about the implications of observable fault scarps along the western base of the Wasatch Range. The scarps were evidence that large surface-rupturing earthquakes had occurred in the past...
Modeling abundance using hierarchical distance sampling
J. Andrew Royle, Marc Kery
2016, Book chapter
In this chapter, we provide an introduction to classical distance sampling ideas for point and line transect data, and for continuous and binned distance data. We introduce the conditional and the full likelihood, and we discuss Bayesian analysis of these models in BUGS using the idea of data augmentation, which...
Potentiometric surface and water-level difference maps of selected confined aquifers in Southern Maryland and Maryland’s Eastern Shore, 1975-2015
Stephen E. Curtin, Andrew W. Staley, David C. Andreasen
2016, Report
Key Results This report presents potentiometric-surface maps of the Aquia and Magothy aquifers and the Upper Patapsco, Lower Patapsco, and Patuxent aquifer systems using water levels measured during September 2015. Water-level difference maps are also presented for these aquifers. The water-level differences in the Aquia aquifer are shown using groundwater-level data...
Targets set to reduce Lake Erie algae
Mary Anne Evans
2016, Report, Michigan State of the Great Lakes
In February 2016, the Great Lakes Executive Committee, which oversees the implementation of the Great Lakes Water Quality Agreement (GLWQA) between the U.S. and Canada, approved phosphorus loading targets for Lake Erie to reduce the size of harmful algal blooms (HABs), reduce the presence of the low oxygen zone in...
Influence of land-atmosphere feedbacks on temperature and precipitation extremes in the GLACE-CMIP5 ensemble
Ruth Lorenz, Daniel Argueso, Markus G. Donat, Andrew J. Pitman, Bart van den Hurk, Alexis Berg, David M. Lawrence, Frederique Cheruy, Agnes Ducharne, Stefan Hagemann, Arndt Meier, Paul C.D. Milly, Sonia I Seneviratne
2016, Journal of Geophysical Research D: Atmospheres (121) 607-623
We examine how soil moisture variability and trends affect the simulation of temperature and precipitation extremes in six global climate models using the experimental protocol of the Global Land-Atmosphere Coupling Experiment of the Coupled Model Intercomparison Project, Phase 5 (GLACE-CMIP5). This protocol enables separate examinations of the influences of soil moisture...
Getting quantitative about consequences of cross-ecosystem resource subsidies on recipient consumers
John S. Richardson, Mark S. Wipfli
2016, Canadian Journal of Fisheries and Aquatic Sciences (73) 1609-1615
Most studies of cross-ecosystem resource subsidies have demonstrated positive effects on recipient consumer populations, often with very large effect sizes. However, it is important to move beyond these initial addition–exclusion experiments to consider the quantitative consequences for populations across gradients in the rates and quality of resource inputs. In our...
Stronger or longer: Discriminating between Hawaiian and Strombolian eruption styles
Bruce F. Houghton, Jacopo Taddeucci, D. Andronico, H Gonnerman, M Pistolesi, Matthew R. Patrick, Tim R. Orr, Don Swanson, M Edmonds, Rebecca J. Carey, P. Scarlato
2016, Geology (44) 163-166
The weakest explosive volcanic eruptions globally, Strombolian explosions and Hawaiian fountaining, are also the most common. Yet, despite over a hundred years of observations, no classifications have offered a convincing, quantitative way of demarcating these two styles. New observations show that the two styles are distinct in their eruptive timescale,...
Geologic context of large karst springs and caves in the Ozark National Scenic Riverways, Missouri
David J. Weary, Randall C. Orndorff
2016, Conference Paper
The ONSR is a karst park, containing many springs and caves. The “jewels” of the park are large springs, several of first magnitude, that contribute significantly to the flow and water quality of the Current River and its tributaries. Completion of 1:24,000-scale geologic mapping of the park and surrounding river...
Conservation planning for the Colorado River in Utah
Christine Rasmussen, Patrick B. Shafroth
2016, Report
Strategic planning is increasingly recognized as necessary for providing the greatest possible conservation benefits for restoration efforts. Rigorous, science-based resource assessment, combined with acknowledgement of broader basin trends, provides a solid foundation for determining effective projects. It is equally important that methods used to prioritize conservation investments are simple and...
Estimating abundance
Chris Sutherland, J. Andrew Royle
2016, Book chapter, Reptile ecology and conservation: A handbook of techniques
This chapter provides a non-technical overview of ‘closed population capture–recapture’ models, a class of well-established models that are widely applied in ecology, such as removal sampling, covariate models, and distance sampling. These methods are regularly adopted for studies of reptiles, in order to estimate abundance from counts of marked individuals...
Watershed-scale changes in terrestrial nitrogen cycling during a period of decreased atmospheric nitrate and sulfur deposition
Robert D. Sabo, Sara E. Scanga, Gregory B. Lawrence, David M. Nelson, Keith N. Eshleman, Gabriel A. Zabala, Alexandria A. Alinea, Charles D. Schirmer
2016, Atmospheric Environment (146) 271-279
Recent reports suggest that decreases in atmospheric nitrogen (N) deposition throughout Europe and North America may have resulted in declining nitrate export in surface waters in recent decades, yet it is unknown if and how terrestrial N cycling was affected. During a period of decreased atmospheric N deposition, we assessed...
An overview of environmental impacts and reclamation efforts at the Iron Mountain mine, Shasta County, California
James A Jacobs, Stephen M. Testa, Charles N. Alpers, D. Kirk Nordstrom
2016, Book chapter, Applied geology in California
No abstract available ...
Physiological basis of climate change impacts on North American inland fishes
James E. Whitney, Robert K. Al-Chokhachy, David B. Bunnell, Colleen A. Caldwell, Steven J. Cooke, Erika J. Eliason, Mark W. Rogers, Abigail J. Lynch, Craig P. Paukert
2016, Fisheries (41) 332-345
Global climate change is altering freshwater ecosystems and affecting fish populations and communities. Underpinning changes in fish distribution and assemblage-level responses to climate change are individual-level physiological constraints. In this review, we synthesize the mechanistic effects of climate change on neuroendocrine, cardiorespiratory, immune, osmoregulatory, and reproductive systems of freshwater and...
Non-linear responses of glaciated prairie wetlands to climate warming
W. Carter Johnson, Brett Werner, Glenn R. Guntenspergen
2016, Climatic Change (134) 209-223
The response of ecosystems to climate warming is likely to include threshold events when small changes in key environmental drivers produce large changes in an ecosystem. Wetlands of the Prairie Pothole Region (PPR) are especially sensitive to climate variability, yet the possibility that functional changes may occur more rapidly with...
The international scale of the groundwater issue
Michael Fienen, Muhammad Arshad
2016, Book chapter, Integrated groundwater management
Throughout history, and throughout the world, groundwater has been a major source of water for sustaining human life. Use of this resource has increased dramatically over the last century. In many areas of the world, the balance between human and ecosystem needs is difficult to maintain. Understanding the international scale...
Seasonal electrical resistivity surveys of a coastal bluff, Barter Island, North Slope Alaska
Peter W. Swarzenski, Cordell Johnson, Thomas Lorenson, Christopher H. Conaway, Ann E. Gibbs, Li H. Erikson, Bruce M. Richmond, Mark P. Waldrop
2016, Journal of Environmental & Engineering Geophysics (21) 37-42
Select coastal regions of the North Slope of Alaska are experiencing high erosion rates that can be attributed in part to recent warming trends and associated increased storm intensity and frequency. The upper sediment column of the coastal North Slope of Alaska can be described as continuous permafrost underlying a...
A linear relationship between wave power and erosion determines salt-marsh resilience to violent storms and hurricanes
Nicoletta Leonardi, Neil K. Ganju, Sergio Fagherazzi
2016, Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences of the United States of America (113) 64-68
Salt marsh losses have been documented worldwide because of land use change, wave erosion, and sea-level rise. It is still unclear how resistant salt marshes are to extreme storms and whether they can survive multiple events without collapsing. Based on a large dataset of salt marsh lateral erosion rates collected...
Origin and identity of Fejervarya (Anura: Dicroglossidae) on Guam
Elijah Wostl, Eric N. Smith, Robert Reed
2016, Pacific Science (70) 233-241
We used morphological and molecular data to infer the identity and origin of frogs in the genus Fejervarya that have been introduced to the island of Guam. Mensural and meristic data were collected from 96 specimens from throughout their range on the island and a principal component analysis was used...
Exploration and geology of the Karangahake and Rahu epithermal Au-Ag deposits, Hauraki Goldfield
Mark P. Simpson, Murray R Stevens, Jeffrey L. Mauk, Matthew C Harris, Alistair G J Stuart
2016, Book chapter, AusIMM Monograph 31: Mineral deposits of New Zealand—Exploration and research
Karangahake was the third largest gold producer in the Hauraki goldfield. In 2009, New Talisman Gold mines was granted a mining permit, and plans are underway to commence underground mine development of the Maria vein, which has a maiden Ore Reserve (consistent with the 2012 JORC Code) of 28 800...
Ore mineralogy and textural zonation in the world-class epithermal Waihi Vein System, Hauraki Goldfield
Jeffrey L. Mauk, Erin G Skinner, Sarah J Fyfe, Andrew H Menzies, Heather A. Lowers, Alan E. Koenig
2016, Book chapter, AusIMM Monograph 31: Mineral deposits of New Zealand—Exploration and research
The Waihi district in the Hauraki Goldfield of New Zealand contains adularia-sericite epithermal gold-silver veins that have produced more than 7.7 Moz gold. The outermost veins of the district (Martha, Favona, Moonlight, and Cowshed) contain abundant colloform, cherty, and black quartz fill textures, with minor crustiform and massive quartz. The...