Skip to main content
U.S. flag

An official website of the United States government

Dot gov

Official websites use .gov
A .gov website belongs to an official government organization in the United States.

Https

Secure .gov websites use HTTPS
A lock ( ) or https:// means you’ve safely connected to the .gov website. Share sensitive information only on official, secure websites.

Search Results

40871 results.

Alternate formats: RIS file of the first 3000 search results  |  Download all results as CSV | TSV | Excel  |  RSS feed based on this search  |  JSON version of this page of results

Page 1126, results 28126 - 28150

Show results on a map

Publication Extents

Not all publications have extents, not all extents are completely accurate
Inverse modeling of interbed storage parameters using land subsidence observations, Antelope Valley, California
J. Hoffmann, D. L. Galloway, H. A. Zebker
2003, Water Resources Research (39) 5-1-5-10
We use land-subsidence observations from repeatedly surveyed benchmarks and interferometric synthetic aperture radar (InSAR) in Antelope Valley, California, to estimate spatially varying compaction time constants, ??, and inelastic specific skeletal storage coefficients, Skv*, in a previously calibrated regional groundwater flow and subsidence model. The observed subsidence patterns reflect both the...
Inventory and review of aquifer storage and recovery in southern Florida
Ronald S. Reese
2002, Water-Resources Investigations Report 2002-4036
Aquifer storage and recovery in southern Florida has been proposed on an unprecedented scale as part of the Comprehensive Everglades Restoration Plan. Aquifer storage and recovery wells were constructed or are under construction at 27 sites in southern Florida, mostly by local municipalities or counties located in coastal areas. The...
Interactions between surface water and ground water and effects on mercury transport in the north-central Everglades
Judson W. Harvey, Steven L. Krupa, Cynthia Gefvert, Robert H. Mooney, Jungyill Choi, Susan A. King, Jefferson B. Giddings
2002, Water-Resources Investigations Report 2002-4050
The hydrology of the north-central Everglades was altered substantially in the past century by canal dredging, land subsidence, ground-water pumping, and levee construction. Vast areas of seasonal and perennial wetlands were converted to uses for agriculture, light industry, and suburban development. As the catchment area for the Everglades decreased, so...
Habitat assessment, Missouri River at Hermann, Missouri
Robert B. Jacobson, Mark S. Laustrup, Joanna M. Reuter
2002, Open-File Report 2002-32
This report documents methods and results of aquatic habitat assessment in the Missouri River near Hermann, Missouri. The assessment is intended to improve understanding of spatial and temporal variability of aquatic habitat, including habitats thought to be critical for the endangered pallid sturgeon (Scaphirhynchus albus). Physical aquatic habitat – depth,...
Estimation of nitrogen yields and loads from basins draining to Long Island Sound, 1988–98
John R. Mullaney, Gregory E. Schwarz, Elaine C. Todd Trench
2002, Water-Resources Investigations Report 2002-4044
Monitoring data on total nitrogen concentrations and streamflow were used to estimate annual nonpoint nitrogen loads for 1988?98 at 28 monitoring sites and 26 unmonitored basins that drain to Long Island Sound. The estimated total nitrogen yields at monitoring sites were used with basin characteristics and ancillary data to develop a multiple-linear regression equation to estimate nonpoint nitrogen...
Natural and management influences on freshwater inflows and salinity in the San Francisco Estuary at monthly to interannual scales
Noah Knowles
2002, Water Resources Research (38) 25-1-25-11
Understanding the processes controlling the physics, chemistry, and biology of the San Francisco Estuary and their relation to climate variability is complicated by the combined influence on freshwater inflows of natural variability and upstream management. To distinguish these influences, alterations of estuarine inflow due to major reservoirs and freshwater pumping...
Potential effects of global warming on the Sacramento/San Joaquin watershed and the San Francisco estuary
Noah Knowles, Daniel R. Cayan
2002, Geophysical Research Letters (29) 38-1-38-4
California's primary hydrologic system, the San Francisco estuary and its upstream watershed, is vulnerable to the regional hydrologic consequences of projected global climate change. Projected temperature anomalies from a global climate model are used to drive a combined model of watershed hydrology and estuarine dynamics. By 2090, a projected temperature...
Modeling and measuring snow for assessing climate change impacts in Glacier National Park, Montana
Daniel B. Fagre, David J. Selkowitz, Blase Reardon, Karen Holzer, Lisa McKeon
2002, Conference Paper, Proceedings of International Snow Science Workshop
A 12-year program of global change research at Glacier National Park by the U.S. Geological Survey and numerous collaborators has made progress in quantifying the role of snow as a driver of mountain ecosystem processes. Spatially extensive snow surveys during the annual accumulation/ablation cycle covered two mountain watersheds and approximately...
Grizzly bear denning and potential conflict areas in the Greater Yellowstone Ecosystem
Shannon Podruzny, Steve Cherry, Charles C. Schwartz, Lisa Landenburger
2002, Ursus (13) 19-28
Increasing winter use of steep, high-elevation terrain by backcountry recreationists has elevated concern about disturbance of denning grizzly bears (Ursus arctos) in the Greater Yellowstone Ecosystem (GYE). To help identify areas where such conflicts might occur, we developed a spatially explicit model to predict potential denning areas in the GYE....
Physiography of the Monterey Bay National Marine Sanctuary and implications about continental margin development
H.D. Greene, N.M. Maher, C. K. Paull
2002, Marine Geology (181) 55-82
Combined EM-300 multibeam bathymetric data and satellite photography reveal the physiography of the continental margin between 35°50′ and 37°03′N and from the shoreline west of 122°40′ and 122°37′W, which includes Monterey Bay, in a previously unprecedented detail. Patterns in these images clearly reveal the processes that are actively influencing the...
Improving a regional model using reduced complexity and parameter estimation
Victor A. Kelson, Randall J. Hunt, Henk M. Haitjema
2002, Groundwater (40) 132-143
The availability of powerful desktop computers and graphical user interfaces for ground water flow models makes possible the construction of ever more complex models. A proposed copper-zinc sulfide mine in northern Wisconsin offers a unique case in which the same hydrologic system has been modeled using a variety of...
Lichens from Simeonof Wilderness, Shumagin Island, Southwestern Alaska
Stephen S. Talbot, Sandra L. Talbot, J.W. Thomson, F.J.A. Daniels, W.B. Schofield
2002, Bryologist (105) 111-121
One hundred eighty-eight taxa of lichens are reported from Simeonof Island in the Shumagin Islands of southwestern Alaska. Wide-ranging arctic-alpine and boreal species dominate the lichens; a coastal element is moderately represented, while amphi-Beringian species form a minor element. The lichen component of Empetrum nigrum dwarf shrub heath, the dominant...
Sources of variation in breeding-ground fidelity of mallards (Anas platyrhynchos)
P.F. Doherty Jr., J.D. Nichols, J. Tautin, J.E. Voelzer, G.W. Smith, D.S. Benning, V.R. Bentley, J.K. Bidwell, K.S. Bollinger, A.R. Brazda, E.K. Buelna, J.R. Goldsberry, R.J. King, F.H. Roetker, J.W. Solberg, P.P. Thorpe, J.S. Wortham
2002, Behavioral Ecology (13) 543-550
Generalizations used to support hypotheses about the evolution of fidelity to breeding areas in birds include the tendency for fidelity to be greater in adult birds than in yearlings. In ducks, in contrast to most bird species, fidelity is thought to be greater among females than males. Researchers...
Metal concentrations in zebra mussels and sediments from embayments and riverine environments of eastern Lake Erie, southern Lake Ontario, and the Niagara River
T. P. Lowe, D. D. Day
2002, Archives of Environmental Contamination and Toxicology (43) 301-308
Concentrations of 14 metals were studied in the soft tissues of zebra mussels (Dreissena polymorpha) and sediments from 16 Great Lakes embayments and riverine environments. Samples were collected in 1993 and 1994 during the early and late autumn period when the body mass of mussels is least affected by reproductive...
How should detection probability be incorporated into estimates of relative abundance?
D.I. MacKenzie, W. L. Kendall
2002, Ecology (83) 2387-2393
Determination of the relative abundance of two populations, separated by time or space, is of interest in many ecological situations. We focus on two estimators of relative abundance, which assume that the probability that an individual is detected at least once in the survey is either equal or unequal for...
Estimating site occupancy rates when detection probabilities are less than one
D.I. MacKenzie, J.D. Nichols, G.B. Lachman, Sam Droege, J. Andrew Royle, C.A. Langtimm
2002, Ecology (83) 2248-2255
Nondetection of a species at a site does not imply that the species is absent unless the probability of detection is 1. We propose a model and likelihood-based method for estimating site occupancy rates when detection probabilities are < 1. The model provides a flexible framework enabling covariate information to...
Sources of variation in survival and breeding site fidelity in three species of European ducks
Peter Blums, J.D. Nichols, J.E. Hines
2002, Journal of Animal Ecology (71) 438-450
1. We used long-term capture-recapture-recovery data and a modelling approach developed by Burnham (1993) to test a priori predictions about sources of variation in annual survival rates and fidelity within a population of individually marked females in three species of European ducks from a breeding ground study site in Latvia....
Hierarchical modeling of population stability and species group attributes from survey data
J.R. Sauer, W.A. Link
2002, Ecology (83) 1743-1751
Many ecological studies require analysis of collections of estimates. For example, population change is routinely estimated for many species from surveys such as the North American Breeding Bird Survey (BBS), and the species are grouped and used in comparative analyses. We developed a hierarchical model for estimation...
Inferring the absence of a species: A case study of snakes
M. Kery
2002, Journal of Wildlife Management (66) 330-338
Though the presence of a species can be unequivocally confirmed, its absence can only be inferred with a degree of probability. I used a model to calculate the minimum number of unsuccessful visits to a site that are necessary to assume that a species is absent. The model requires the...
Of bugs and birds: Markov Chain Monte Carlo for hierarchical modeling in wildlife research
William A. Link, Emmanuelle Cam, James D. Nichols, Evan G. Cooch
2002, Journal of Wildlife Management (66) 277-291
Markov chain Monte Carlo (MCMC) is a statistical innovation that allows researchers to fit far more complex models to data than is feasible using conventional methods. Despite its widespread use in a variety of scientific fields, MCMC appears to be underutilized in wildlife applications. This may be due to a...
On the estimation of species richness based on the accumulation of previously unrecorded species
E. Cam, J.D. Nichols, J.R. Sauer, J.E. Hines
2002, Ecography (25) 102-108
Estimation of species richness of local communities has become an important topic in community ecology and monitoring. Investigators can seldom enumerate all the species present in the area of interest during sampling sessions. If the location of interest is sampled repeatedly within a short time period, the number...
Disentangling sampling and ecological explanations underlying species-area relationships
E. Cam, J.D. Nichols, J.E. Hines, J.R. Sauer, R. Alpizar-Jara, C.H. Flather
2002, Ecology (83) 1118-1130
We used a probabilistic approach to address the influence of sampling artifacts on the form of species-area relationships (SARs). We developed a model in which the increase in observed species richness is a function of sampling effort exclusively. We assumed that effort depends on area sampled, and we...