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Page 1122, results 28026 - 28050

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Not all publications have extents, not all extents are completely accurate
Mid-Wisconsin to Holocene permafrost and landscape dynamics based on a drained lake basin core from the northern Seward Peninsula, northwest Alaska
Josefine Lenz, Guido Grosse, Benjamin M. Jones, Katey M. Walter Anthony, Anatoly Bobrov, Sabine Wulf, Sebastian Wetterich
2016, Permafrost and Periglacial Processes (27) 56-75
Permafrost-related processes drive regional landscape dynamics in the Arctic terrestrial system. A better understanding of past periods indicative of permafrost degradation and aggradation is important for predicting the future response of Arctic landscapes to climate change. Here, we used a multi-proxy approach to analyse a ~ 4 m long sediment core from a...
Effects of age, colony, and sex on mercury concentrations in California sea lions
Elizibeth A McHuron, Sarah H. Peterson, Joshua T. Ackerman, Sharon R. Melin, Jeffrey D. Harris, Daniel P. Costa
2016, Archives of Environmental Contamination and Toxicology (70) 46-55
We measured total mercury (THg) concentrations in California sea lions (Zalophus californianus) and examined how concentrations varied with age class, colony, and sex. Because Hg exposure is primarily via diet, we used nitrogen (δ 15N) and carbon (δ 13C) stable isotopes to determine if intraspecific differences...
Mangrove sedimentation and response to relative sea-level rise
CD Woodroffe, K. Rogers, Karen L. McKee, CE Lovelock, IA Mendelssohn, N. Saintilan
2016, Annual Review of Marine Science (8) 243-266
Mangroves occur on upper intertidal shorelines in the tropics and subtropics. Complex hydrodynamic and salinity conditions influence mangrove distributions, primarily related to elevation and hydroperiod; this review considers how these adjust through time. Accumulation rates of allochthonous and autochthonous sediment, both inorganic and organic, vary between and within different settings....
Compact development and VMT: environmental determinism, self-selection, or some of both?
Reid Ewing, Shima Hamidi, James B. Grace
2016, Environment and Planning B: Planning and Design (43) 737-755
There is a long-running debate in the planning literature about the effects of the built environment on travel behavior and the degree to which apparent effects are due to the tendency of households to self-select into neighborhoods that reinforce their travel preferences. Those who want to walk will choose walkable...
Using satellite vegetation and compound topographic indices to map highly erodible cropland buffers for cellulosic biofuel crop developments in eastern Nebraska, USA
Yingxin Gu, Bruce K. Wylie
2016, Ecological Indicators (60) 64-70
Cultivating annual row crops in high topographic relief waterway buffers has negative environmental effects and can be environmentally unsustainable. Growing perennial grasses such as switchgrass (Panicum virgatum L.) for biomass (e.g., cellulosic biofuel feedstocks) instead of annual row crops in these high relief waterway buffers can improve local environmental conditions (e.g.,...
Corn stover harvest increases herbicide movement to subsurface drains: RZWQM simulations
Martin J. Shipitalo, Robert W. Malone, Liwang Ma, Bernard T. Nolan, Rameshwar S. Kanwar, Dale L. Shaner, Carl H. Pederson
2016, Pest Management Science (72) 1124-1132
BACKGROUND Crop residue removal for bioenergy production can alter soil hydrologic properties and the movement of agrochemicals to subsurface drains. The Root Zone Water Quality Model (RZWQM), previously calibrated using measured flow and atrazine concentrations in drainage from a 0.4 ha chisel-tilled plot, was used to investigate...
Anticipating environmental and environmental-health implications of extreme storms: ARkStorm scenario
Geoffrey S. Plumlee, Charles N. Alpers, Suzette A. Morman, Carma A. San Juan
2016, Natural Hazards Review (17)
The ARkStorm Scenario predicts that a prolonged winter storm event across California would cause extreme precipitation, flooding, winds, physical damages, and economic impacts. This study uses a literature review and geographic information system-based analysis of national and state databases to infer how and where ARkStorm could cause environmental damages, release...
Imaging pathways in fractured rock using three-dimensional electrical resistivity tomography
Judith Robinson, Lee Slater, Timothy B. Johnson, Allen M. Shapiro, Claire R. Tiedeman, Dimitrios Ntlargiannis, Carole D. Johnson, Frederick D. Day-Lewis, Pierre Lacombe, Thomas E. Imbrigiotta, John W. Lane Jr.
2016, Groundwater (54) 186-201
Major challenges exist in delineating bedrock fracture zones because these cause abrupt changes in geological and hydrogeological properties over small distances. Borehole observations cannot sufficiently capture heterogeneity in these systems. Geophysical techniques offer the potential to image properties and processes in between boreholes. We used three-dimensional cross borehole electrical resistivity...
Movement analysis of free-grazing domestic ducks in Poyang Lake, China: A disease connection
Diann J. Prosser, Eric C. Palm, John Y. Takekawa, Delong Zhao, Xiangming Xiao, Peng Li, Ying Liu, Scott H. Newman
2016, International Journal of Geographical Information Science (30) 869-880
Previous work suggests domestic poultry are important contributors to the emergence and transmission of highly pathogenic avian influenza throughout Asia. In Poyang Lake, China, domestic duck production cycles are synchronized with arrival and departure of thousands of migratory wild birds in the area. During these periods, high densities of juvenile...
Evaluating hair as a predictor of blood mercury: the influence of ontogenetic phase and life history in pinnipeds
Sarah H. Peterson, Elizabeth A. McHuron, Stephanie N. Kennedy, Joshua T. Ackerman, Lorrie D. Rea, J. Margaret Castellini, Todd M. O'Hara, Daniel P. Costa
2016, Archives of Environmental Contamination and Toxicology (70) 28-45
Mercury (Hg) biomonitoring of pinnipeds increasingly utilizes nonlethally collected tissues such as hair and blood. The relationship between total Hg concentrations ([THg]) in these tissues is not well understood for marine mammals, but it can be important for interpretation of tissue concentrations with respect to ecotoxicology and biomonitoring. We examined...
Geostatistical borehole image-based mapping of karst-carbonate aquifer pores
Michael Sukop, Kevin J. Cunningham
2016, Groundwater (54) 202-213
Quantification of the character and spatial distribution of porosity in carbonate aquifers is important as input into computer models used in the calculation of intrinsic permeability and for next-generation, high-resolution groundwater flow simulations. Digital, optical, borehole-wall image data from three closely spaced boreholes in the karst-carbonate Biscayne aquifer in southeastern...
Marine geophysical data collected in a shallow back-barrier estuary, Barnegat Bay, New Jersey
Brian D. Andrews, Jennifer L. Miselis, William W. Danforth, Barry J. Irwin, Charles R. Worley, Emile M. Bergeron, Dann S. Blackwood
2016, Data Series 937
In 2011, the U.S. Geological Survey, in cooperation with the New Jersey Department of Environmental Protection, began a multidisciplinary research project to better understand the water quality in Barnegat Bay, New Jersey. This back-barrier estuary is experiencing degraded water quality, algal blooms, loss of seagrass, and increases in oxygen stress,...
The influence of a severe reservoir drawdown on springtime zooplankton and larval fish assemblages in Red Willow Reservoir, Nebraska
Jason A. DeBoer, Christa M. Webber, Taylor A. Dixon, Kevin L. Pope
2016, Journal of Freshwater Ecology (31) 131-146
Reservoirs can be dynamic systems, often prone to unpredictable and extreme water-level fluctuations, and can be environments where survival is difficult for zooplankton and larval fish. Although numerous studies have examined the effects of extreme reservoir drawdown on water quality, few have examined extreme drawdown on both abiotic and biotic...
Geologic history of the Black Hills caves, South Dakota
Arthur N. Palmer, Margaret Palmer, James B. Paces
2016, GSA Special Papers (516) 87-101
Cave development in the Madison aquifer of the Black Hills has taken place in several stages. Mississippian carbonates first underwent eogenetic (early diagenetic) reactions with interbedded sulfates to form breccias and solution voids. Later subaerial exposure allowed oxygenated meteoric water to replace sulfates with calcite and to form karst...
Morphological identification and COI barcodes of adult flies help determine species identities of chironomid larvae (Diptera, Chironomidae)
Andrew Joseph Failla, Adrian Amelio Vasquez, Patrick L. Hudson, Masanori Fujimoto, Jeffrey L. Ram
2016, Bulletin of Entomological Research (106) 34-46
Establishing reliable methods for the identification of benthic chironomid communities is important due to their significant contribution to biomass, ecology and the aquatic food web. Immature larval specimens are more difficult to identify to species level by traditional morphological methods than their fully developed adult counterparts, and few keys are...
Modeling habitat connectivity to inform reintroductions: a case study with the Chiricahua Leopard Frog
Christopher J. Jarchow, Blake R. Hossack, Brent H. Sigafus, Cecil R. Schwalbe, Erin L. Muths
2016, Journal of Herpetology (50) 63-69
Managing species with intensive tools such as reintroduction may focus on single sites or entire landscapes. For vagile species, long-term persistence will require colonization and establishment in neighboring habitats. Therefore, both suitable colonization sites and suitable dispersal corridors between sites are required. Assessment of landscapes for both requirements can contribute...
Variability of the carbonate chemistry in a shallow, seagrass-dominated ecosystem: implications for ocean acidification experiments
Roberta Challener, Lisa L. Robbins, James B. Mcclintock
2016, Marine and Freshwater Research (67) 163-172
Open ocean observations have shown that increasing levels of anthropogenically derived atmospheric CO2 are causing acidification of the world's oceans. Yet little is known about coastal acidification and studies are just beginning to characterise the carbonate chemistry of shallow, nearshore zones where many ecologically and economically important organisms occur. We...
Defining the next generation modeling of coastal ecotone dynamics in response to global change
Jiang Jiang, Donald L. DeAngelis, Su-Y Teh, Ken W. Krauss, Hongqing Wang, Li Haidong, Thomas J. Smith, Hock L. Koh
2016, Ecological Modelling (326) 168-176
Coastal ecosystems are especially vulnerable to global change; e.g., sea level rise (SLR) and extreme events. Over the past century, global change has resulted in salt-tolerant (halophytic) plant species migrating into upland salt-intolerant (glycophytic) dominated habitats along major rivers and large wetland expanses along the coast. While habitat transitions can...
Hurricane Sandy beach response and recovery at Fire Island, New York: Shoreline and beach profile data, October 2012 to October 2014
Rachel E. Hehre Henderson, Cheryl J. Hapke, Owen T. Brenner, Billy J. Reynolds
2016, Data Series 931
In response to the forecasted impact of Hurricane Sandy, which made landfall on October 29, 2012, the U.S. Geological Survey (USGS) began a substantial data-collection effort to assess the morphological impacts to the beach and dune system at Fire Island, New York. Global positioning system (GPS) field surveys of the...
Variations in water temperature and implications for trout populations in the Upper Schoharie Creek and West Kill, New York, USA
Scott D. George, Barry P. Baldigo, Martyn J. Smith, Donald M Mckeown, Jason Faulringer
2016, Journal of Freshwater Ecology (31) 93-108
Water temperature is a key component of aquatic ecosystems because it plays a pivotal role in determining the suitability of stream and river habitat to most freshwater fish species. Continuous temperature loggers and airborne thermal infrared (TIR) remote sensing were used to assess temporal and spatial temperature patterns on the...
Persistence of external signs in Pacific herring Clupea pallasii Valenciennes with ichthyophoniasis
Lucas M. Hart, Carla M. Conway, Diane G. Elliott, Paul K. Hershberger
2016, Journal of Fish Diseases (39) 429-440
The progression of external signs of Ichthyophonus infection in Pacific herring Clupea pallasii Valenciennes was highly variable and asynchronous after intraperitoneal injection with pure parasite preparations; however, external signs generally persisted through the end of the study (429 days post-exposure). Observed signs included papules, erosions and ulcers. The prevalence of...
Habitat suitability criteria via parametric distributions: estimation, model selection and uncertainty
Nicholas A. Som, Damon H. Goodman, Russell W. Perry, Thomas B. Hardy
2016, River Research and Applications (32) 1128-1137
Previous methods for constructing univariate habitat suitability criteria (HSC) curves have ranged from professional judgement to kernel-smoothed density functions or combinations thereof. We present a new method of generating HSC curves that applies probability density functions as the mathematical representation of the curves. Compared with previous approaches, benefits of our...
The parasite Ichthyophonus sp. in Pacific herring from the coastal NE Pacific
Paul K. Hershberger, Jacob L. Gregg, Lucas M. Hart, Steve Moffitt, Richard L. Brenner, K. Stick, Eric Coonradt, E. O. Otis, Johanna J. Vollenweider, Kyle A. Garver, Jan Lovy, T.R. Meyers
2016, Journal of Fish Diseases (39) 395-410
The protistan parasite Ichthyophonus occurred in populations of Pacific herring Clupea pallasii Valenciennes throughout coastal areas of the NE Pacific, ranging from Puget Sound, WA north to the Gulf of Alaska, AK. Infection prevalence in local Pacific herring stocks varied seasonally and annually, and a general pattern of increasing prevalence...
Hydrologic response of streams restored with check dams in the Chiricahua Mountains, Arizona
Laura M. Norman, Fletcher C. Brinkerhoff, Evan Gwilliam, D. Phillip Guertin, James B. Callegary, David C. Goodrich, Pamela L. Nagler, Floyd Gray
2016, River Research and Applications (32) 519-527
In this study, hydrological processes are evaluated to determine impacts of stream restoration in the West Turkey Creek, Chiricahua Mountains, southeast Arizona, during a summer-monsoon season (June–October of 2013). A paired-watershed approach was used to analyze the effectiveness of check dams to mitigate high flows and impact long-term maintenance of...
Sediment budgets, transport, and depositional trends in a large tidal delta
Tara Morgan, Scott Wright
2016, Conference Paper, Proceedings of the Joint Federal Interagency Conference
The Sacramento-San Joaquin Delta is the largest delta on the west coast of the United States. It is formed where the confluence of California’s two largest rivers (the Sacramento and San Joaquin) meet the ocean tides and has a significant physical gradient from fluvial to tidal. It is a semidiurnal...