No enhancement in bioconcentration of organic contaminants by low levels of DOM
M. Haitzer, J. Akkanen, C. Steinberg, J.V.K. Kukkonen
2001, Chemosphere (44) 165-171
The aim of the present work was to systematically study the effect of low concentrations of dissolved organic matter (DOM) on the bioconcentration of organic contaminants, in order to show whether the phenomenon of enhanced bioconcentration factors (BCFs), that has been reported in the literature, is generally found at low...
The national stream quality accounting network: A flux-basedapproach to monitoring the water quality of large rivers
R. P. Hooper, Brent T. Aulenbach, V.J. Kelly
2001, Hydrological Processes (15) 1089-1106
Estimating the annual mass flux at a network of fixed stations is one approach to characterizing water quality of large rivers. The interpretive context provided by annual flux includes identifying source and sink areas for constituents and estimating the loadings to receiving waters, such as reservoirs or the ocean. Since...
Long-term changes in consentrations and flux fo nitrogen in the Mississippi River Basin, USA
D. A. Goolsby, W.A. Battaglin
2001, Hydrological Processes (15) 1209-1226
Current and historical data show that nitrogen concentrations and flux in the Mississippi River Basin have increased significantly during the past 100 years. Most of the increase observed in the lower Mississippi River has occurred since the early 1970s and is due almost entirely to an increase in nitrate. The...
Trends in evaporation and surface cooling in the Mississippi River basin
P. C. D. Milly, K.A. Dunne
2001, Geophysical Research Letters (28) 1219-1222
A synthesis of available data for the Mississippi River basin (area 3 ?? 106 km2) reveals an upward trend in evaporation during recent decades, driven primarily by increases in precipitation and secondarily by human water use. A cloud-related decrease in surface net radiation appears to have accompanied the precipitation trend....
Combined use of remote sensing and continuous monitoring to analyse the variability of suspended-sediment concentrations in San Francisco Bay, California
C.A. Ruhl, D. H. Schoellhamer, R. P. Stumpf, C.L. Lindsay
2001, Estuarine, Coastal and Shelf Science (53) 801-812
Analysis of suspended-sediment concentration data in San Francisco Bay is complicated by spatial and temporal variability. In situ optical backscatterance sensors provide continuous suspended-sediment concentration data, but inaccessibility, vandalism, and cost limit the number of potential monitoring stations. Satellite imagery reveals the spatial distribution of surficial-suspended sediment concentrations in the...
Identifying variably saturated water-flow patterns in a steep hillslope under intermittent heavy rainfall
A. I. El-Kadi, J.D. Torikai
2001, Hydrogeology Journal (9) 231-242
The objective of this paper is to identify water-flow patterns in part of an active landslide, through the use of numerical simulations and data obtained during a field study. The approaches adopted include measuring rainfall events and pore-pressure responses in both saturated and unsaturated soils at the site. To account...
Mitochondrial phylogeography, subspecific taxonomy, and conservation genetics of sandhill cranes (Grus canadensis; Aves: Gruidae)
J.M. Rhymer, M.G. Fain, J. E. Austin, Douglas H. Johnson, C. Krajewski
2001, Conservation Genetics (2) 203-218
Six subspecies of sandhill cranes (Grus canadensis) have been denoted based on perceived morphological and/or breeding locality differences among them. Three subspecies are migratory, breeding from the high arctic in North America and Siberia (lesser sandhill, G. c. canadensis),south through central Canada (Canadian sandhill, G. c. rowani) and into the northern United...
A new tracer‐density criterion for heterogeneous porous media
Gilbert R. Barth, Tissa H. Illangasekare, Mary C. Hill, Harihar Rajaram
2001, Water Resources Research (37) 21-31
Tracer experiments provide information about aquifer material properties vital for accurate site characterization. Unfortunately, density‐induced sinking can distort tracer movement, leading to an inaccurate assessment of material properties. Yet existing criteria for selecting appropriate tracer concentrations are based on analysis of homogeneous media instead of media with heterogeneities typical of...
Olivine-liquid relations of lava erupted by Kilauea volcano from 1994 to 1998: Implications for shallow magmatic processes associated with the ongoing east-rift-zone eruption
Carl R. Thornber
2001, Canadian Mineralogist (39) 239-266
From 1994 through 1998, the eruption of Kîlauea, in Hawai’i, was dominated by steady-state effusion at Pu‘u ‘Ô‘ô that was briefly disrupted by an eruption 4 km uprift at Nāpau Crater on January 30, 1997. In this paper, I describe the systematic relations of whole-rock, glass, olivine, and olivine-inclusion compositions...
Aerogeophysical measurements of collapse-prone hydrothermally altered zones at Mount Rainier volcano
C. A. Finn, T. W. Sisson, M. Deszcz-Pan
2001, Nature (409) 600-603
Hydrothermally altered rocks can weaken volcanoes, increasing the potential for catastrophic sector collapses that can lead to destructive debris flows1. Evaluating the hazards associated with such alteration is difficult because alteration has been mapped on few active volcanoes1-4 and the distribution and severity of subsurface alteration is largely unknown on...
Estimating suspended sediment and trace element fluxes in large river basins: Methodological considerations as applied to the NASQAN programme
A. J. Horowitz, K. A. Elrick, J.J. Smith
2001, Hydrological Processes (15) 1107-1132
In 1994, the NASQAN (National Stream Quality Accounting Network) programme was redesigned as a flux-based water-quality monitoring network for the Mississippi, Columbia, Colorado, and Rio Grande Basins. As the new programme represented a departure from the original, new sampling, processing, analytical, and data handling procedures had to be selected/developed to...
Myrmecophagy by Yellowstone grizzly bears
David J. Mattson
2001, Canadian Journal of Zoology (79) 779-793
I used data collected during a study of radio-marked grizzly bears (Ursus arctos horribilis) in the Yellowstone region from 1977 to 1992 to investigate myrmecophagy by this population. Although generally not an important source of energy for the bears (averaging <5% of fecal volume at peak consumption), ants may have...
Petrographic and geochemical evidence for the formation of primary, bacterially induced lacustrine dolomite: La Roda 'white earth' (Pliocene, Central Spain)
Del Garcia, M.A. Cura, J. P. Calvo, S. Ordonez, B.F. Jones, J.C. Canaveras
2001, Sedimentology (48) 897-915
Upper Pliocene dolomites ('white earth') from La Roda, Spain, offer a good opportunity to evaluate the process of dolomite formation in lakes. The relatively young nature of the deposits could allow a link between dolomites precipitated in modern lake systems and those present in older lacustrine formations. The La Roda...
Unsuccessful initial search for a midmantle chemical boundary with seismic arrays
J.E. Vidale, G. Schubert, P.S. Earle
2001, Geophysical Research Letters (28) 859-862
Compositional layering of the midmantle has been proposed to account for seismic and geochemical patterns [van der Hilst and Karason, 1999], and inferred radiogenic heat source concentrations [Kellogg et al., 1999]. Compositional layering would require thermal boundary layers both above and below an interface. We construct a minimal 1-D model...
Production of stream habitat gradients by montane watersheds: Hypothesis tests based on spatially explicit path analyses
D.J. Isaak, W.A. Hubert
2001, Canadian Journal of Fisheries and Aquatic Sciences (58) 1089-1103
We studied how the features of mountain watersheds interact to cause gradients in three stream attributes: baseflow stream widths, total alkalinity, and stream slope. A priori hypotheses were developed before being tested in a series of path analyses using data from 90 stream reaches on 24 second- to fourth-order streams...
Integrating SAS and GIS software to improve habitat-use estimates from radiotelemetry data
K.P. Kenow, R.G. Wright, M.D. Samuel, P.W. Rasmussen
2001, Wildlife Society Bulletin (29) 1006-1009
Radiotelemetry has been used commonly to remotely determine habitat use by a variety of wildlife species. However, habitat misclassification can occur because the true location of a radiomarked animal can only be estimated. Analytical methods that provide improved estimates of habitat use from radiotelemetry location data using a subsampling approach...
Buoyancy compensation of juvenile chinook salmon implanted with two different size dummy transmitters
R.W. Perry, N.S. Adams, D.W. Rondorf
2001, Transactions of the American Fisheries Society (130) 46-52
We investigated the effect of two different sizes of surgically implanted transmitters on the buoyancy compensation of juvenile chinook salmon Oncorhynchus tshawytscha. We determined buoyancy by measuring the density of fish with a filled air bladder in graded salinity baths. In addition, we examined the effect of pressure changes on...
Linking hyporheic flow and nitrogen cycling near the Willamette River: A large river in Oregon, USA
S.R. Hinkle, J.H. Duff, F.J. Triska, A. Laenen, E.B. Gates, K.E. Bencala, D.A. Wentz, S. R. Silva
2001, Journal of Hydrology (244) 157-180
Several approaches were used to characterize ground water/surface water interactions near the Willamette River - A large (ninth order) river in Oregon, USA. A series of potentiometric surface maps demonstrated the presence of highly dynamic hydraulic gradients between rivers and the adjacent aquifer. Hyporheic zone gradients extended on the order...
Uncertainty and spatial linear models for ecological data
Jay M Ver Hoef, Noel Cressie, Robert N. Fisher, Ted J. Case
C. Hunsaker, M. Goodchild, Mark A. Friedl, Ted J. Case, editor(s)
2001, Book chapter, Spatial uncertainty in ecology
Models are not perfect; they do not fit the data exactly and they do not allow exact prediction. Given that models are imperfect, we need to assess the uncertainties in the fits of the models and their ability to predict new outcomes. The goals of building models for scientific problems...
Using GIS to analyze animal movements in the marine environment
Philip N. Hooge, William M. Eichenlaub, Elizabeth K. Solomon
Gordon H. Kruse, Nicolas Bez, Anthony Booth, Martin W. Dorn, Susan Hills, Romuald N. Lipcius, Dominique Pelletier, Claude Roy, Stephen J. Smith, David B. Witherell, editor(s)
2001, Conference Paper, Spatial processes and management of marine populations
Advanced methods for analyzing animal movements have been little used in the aquatic research environment compared to the terrestrial. In addition, despite obvious advantages of integrating geographic information systems (GIS) with spatial studies of animal movement behavior, movement analysis tools have not been integrated into GIS for either aquatic or...
Early life history attributes and run composition of PIT-tagged wild subyearling Chinook salmon recaptured after migrating downstream past Lower Granite Dam
W.P. Connor, T.C. Bjornn, H.L. Burge, A.R. Marshall, H.L. Blankenship, R.K. Steinhorst, K.F. Tiffan
2001, Northwest Science (75) 254-261
Seaward migration timing of Snake River fall chinook salmon (Oncorhynchus tshawytscha) smolts is indexed using subyearling chinook salmon passage data collected at Lower Granite Dam. However, not all of the subyearlings are fall chinook salmon. For six years, we recaptured wild subyearling chinook salmon smolts, which had been previously PIT...
Population trends of the common murre (Uria aalge californica)
Harry R. Carter, Ulrich W. Wilson, Roy W. Lowe, M.S. Rodway, David Allen Manuwal, Jean E. Takekawa, Julie L. Yee
David Allen Manuwal, Harry R. Carter, Tara S. Zimmerman, Dennis L. Orthmeyer, editor(s)
2001, Information and Technology Report 2000-0012-2
Population trends for the common murre (Uria aalge californica) were determined from available whole-colony counts of murres in California, Oregon, Washington, and British Columbia from 1800 to 1995.From 1800 to 1978, historical counts were sporadic and not standardized. From 1979 to 1995, standardized whole-colony counts from aerial photographs were conducted...
A comprehensive review of observational and site evaluation data of migrant whooping cranes in the United States, 1943-1999
Jane E. Austin, Amy L. Richert
2001, Report
This report is a comprehensive analysis of existing observational data (1943–99) and site evaluation data (1977–99) for locations used by whooping cranes (Grus americana) during migration through the United States portion of the Wood Buffalo–Aransas flyway. The apparent migration path, as outlined by the distribution of whooping crane observations, is...
Simplified conversions between specific conductance and salinity units for use with data from monitoring stations
Laurence E. Schemel
2001, Interagency Ecological Program Newsletter (14) 17-18
The U.S. Geological Survey, Bureau of Reclamation, and the California Department of Water Resources maintain a large number of monitoring stations that record specific conductance, often referred to as “electrical conductivity,” in San Francisco Bay Estuary and the Sacramento-San Joaquin Delta. Specific conductance units that have been normalized to a...
Impact of the Conservation Reserve Program on duck recruitment in the U.S. Prairie Pothole Region
Ronald E. Reynolds, Terry L. Shaffer, Randy W. Renner, Wesley E. Newton, Bruce D.J. Batt
2001, Journal of Wildlife Management (65) 765-780
The U.S. Department of Agriculture (USDA)'s Conservation Reserve Program (CRP) resulted in the conversion of about 1.9 million ha of cropland to perennial grass cover in the Prairie Pothole Region of North Dakota, South Dakota, and northeastern Montana by 1992. Many wildlife managers believed this cover would provide benefits to...