Runoff, erosion, and restoration studies in piñon-juniper woodlands of the Pajarito Plateau
Craig D. Allen
Peggy S. Johnson, editor(s)
2001, New Mexico Decision-Makers Field Guide 1
Piñon-juniper woodlands are one of the most extensive vegetation types in New Mexico, including large portions of the Pajarito Plateau. The woodland soils on local mesas largely formed under different vegetation during cooler, moister conditions of the late Pleistocene; in other words, they are over 10,000 years old, and many...
Landsat 7 thermal-IR image sharpening using an artificial neural network and sensor model
G.P. Lemeshewsky, R.A. Schowengerdt
Park S.K.Rahman Z.Schowengerdt R.A., editor(s)
2001, Conference Paper, Proceedings of SPIE - The International Society for Optical Engineering
The enhanced thematic mapper (plus) (ETM+) instrument on Landsat 7 shares the same basic design as the TM sensors on Landsats 4 and 5, with some significant improvements. In common are six multispectral bands with a 30-m ground-projected instantaneous field of view (GIFOV). However, the thermaL-IR (TIR) band now has...
Does clutch size evolve in response to parasites and immunocompetence?
T. E. Martin, A.P. Moller, S. Merino, J. Clobert
2001, Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences of the United States of America (98) 2071-2076
Parasites have been argued to influence clutch size evolution, but past work and theory has largely focused on within-species optimization solutions rather than clearly addressing among-species variation. The effects of parasites on clutch size variation among species can be complex, however, because different parasites can induce age-specific differences in mortality...
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...
Historical trace metal accumulation in the sediments of an urbanized region of the Lake Champlain watershed, Burlington, Vermont
E.L. Mecray, J.W. King, P.G. Appleby, A.S. Hunt
2001, Water, Air, & Soil Pollution (125) 201-230
This study documents the history of pollution inputs in the Burlington region of Lake Champlain, Vermont using measurements of anthropogenic metals (Cu, Zn, Cr, Pb, Cd, and Ag) in four age-dated sediment cores. Sediments record a history of contamination in a region and can be used to assess the changing...
Regression models for estimating herbicide concentrations in U.S. streams from watershed characteristics
S.J. Larson, R. J. Gilliom
2001, Journal of the American Water Resources Association (37) 1349-1367
Regression models were developed for estimating stream concentrations of the herbicides alachlor, atrazine, cyanazine, metolachlor, and trifluralin from use-intensity data and watershed characteristics. Concentrations were determined from samples collected from 45 streams throughout the United States during 1993 to 1995 as part of the U.S. Geological Survey's National Water-Quality Assessment...
Thermal maturity patterns in New York State using CAI and %Ro
D. J. Weary, R. T. Ryder, R.E. Nyahay
2001, Northeastern Geology and Environmental Sciences (23) 356-376
New conodont alteration index (CAI) and vitrinite reflectance (%Ro) data collected from drill holes in the Appalachian basin of New York State allow refinement of thermal maturity maps for Ordovician and Devonian rocks. CAI isotherms on the new maps show a pattern that approximates that published by Harris et al....
User interface for ground-water modeling: Arcview extension
Ming-shu Tsou, Donald O. Whittemore
2001, Journal of Hydrologic Engineering (6) 251-257
Numerical simulation for ground-water modeling often involves handling large input and output data sets. A geographic information system (GIS) provides an integrated platform to manage, analyze, and display disparate data and can greatly facilitate modeling efforts in data compilation, model calibration, and display of model parameters and results. Furthermore, GIS...
Nonlinear inversion of borehole-radar tomography data to reconstruct velocity and attenuation distribution in earth materials
C. Zhou, L. Liu, J.W. Lane Jr.
2001, Journal of Applied Geophysics (47) 271-284
A nonlinear tomographic inversion method that uses first-arrival travel-time and amplitude-spectra information from cross-hole radar measurements was developed to simultaneously reconstruct electromagnetic velocity and attenuation distribution in earth materials. Inversion methods were developed to analyze single cross-hole tomography surveys and differential tomography surveys. Assuming the earth behaves as a linear...
Major herbicides in ground water: Results from the National Water-Quality Assessment
J.E. Barbash, G.P. Thelin, D.W. Kolpin, R. J. Gilliom
2001, Journal of Environmental Quality (30) 831-845
To improve understanding of the factors affecting pesticide occurrence in ground water, patterns of detection were examined for selected herbicides, based primarily on results from the National Water-Quality Assessment (NAWQA) program. The NAWQA data were derived from 2227 sites (wells and springs) sampled in 20 major hydrologic...
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...
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...
Soil N and 15N variation with time in a California annual grassland ecosystem
D.L. Brenner, Ronald Amundson, W. Troy Baisden, C. Kendall, J. Harden
2001, Geochimica et Cosmochimica Acta (65) 4171-4186
The %N and ??15N values of soils and plants were measured along a chronosequence spanning 3 to 3000 Ky in a California annual grassland. Total soil N decreased with increasing soil age (1.1 to 0.4 kg N m-2) while the mean ?? 15N values of the soil N increased by...
Hellas as a possible site of ancient ice-covered lakes on Mars
Johnnie N. Moore, D.E. Wilhelms
2001, Icarus (154) 258-276
Based on topographic, morphologic, and stratigraphic evidence, we propose that ancient water-laid sediment is the dominant component of deposits within Hellas Planitia, Mars. Multiple-layered sediment is manifested by alternating benches and scarps visible in Mars orbiting camera narrow-angle (MOC NA) images. Viking Orbiter camera and MOC NA images were used...
Identifying unprotected and potentially at risk plant communities in the western USA
R.G. Wright, J. M. Scott, S. Mann, M. Murray
2001, Biological Conservation (98) 97-106
We analyzed the conservation status of 73 vegetation cover types distributed across a 1.76 million km2 region in 10 states of the western USA. We found that 25 vegetation cover types had at least 10% of their area in nature reserves. These were generally plant communities located at higher elevations...
Nitric acid dry deposition to conifer forests: Niwot Ridge spruce-fir-pine study
H. Sievering, T. Kelly, G. McConville, C. Seibold, A. Turnipseed
2001, Atmospheric Environment (35) 3851-3859
The dry deposition velocity of nitric acid, Vd(HNO3), over a 12-m (mean height) spruce-fir forest at Niwot Ridge, Colorado was estimated during 13 daytime periods using the flux-gradient approach. Turbulence intensity at this site is high (mean u* of 0.65ms-1 with u of 2.9ms-1) and contributed to the large observed...
Seasonal subsidence and rebound in Las Vegas Valley, Nevada, observed by Synthetic Aperture Radar Interferometry
Jorn Hoffmann, Howard A. Zebker, Devin L. Galloway, Falk Amelung
2001, Water Resources Research (37) 1551-1566
Analyses of areal variations in the subsidence and rebound occurring over stressed aquifer systems, in conjunction with measurements of the hydraulic head fluctuations causing these displacements, can yield valuable information about the compressibility and storage properties of the aquifer system. Historically, stress‐strain relationships have been derived from paired extensometer/piezometer installations,...
Performance of a proposed determinative method for p-TSA in rainbow trout fillet tissue and bridging the proposed method with a method for total chloramine-T residues in rainbow trout fillet tissue
J.R. Meinertz, G. R. Stehly, W.H. Gingerich, Shari L. Greseth
2001, Journal of AOAC International (84) 1332-1336
Chloramine-T is an effective drug for controlling fish mortality caused by bacterial gill disease. As part of the data required for approval of chloramine-T use in aquaculture, depletion of the chloramine-T marker residue (para-toluenesulfonamide; p-TSA) from edible fillet tissue of fish must be characterized. Declaration of p-TSA as the marker...
An inexpensive method for quantifying incubation patterns of open-cup nesting birds, with data for black-throated Blue warblers
Elizabeth M. Joyce, T. Scott Sillett, Richard T. Holmes
2001, Journal of Field Ornithology (72) 369-379
Quantifying incubation patterns has often involved long observation periods in the field, video cameras, or the use of other electronic devices that sometimes require the partial destruction of clutches and insertion of artificial eggs. In this study, we used an inexpensive, nondestructive method involving temperature probes combined with data loggers...
Water Resources Data, Alaska, Water Year 2000
D. F. Meyer, D.L. Hess, M.F. Schellekens, C. W. Smith, E.F. Snyder, G. L. Solin
2001, Water Data Report AK-00-1
Water-resources data for the 2000 water year for Alaska consists of records of stage, discharge, and water quality of streams; stages of lakes; and water levels and water quality of ground-water wells. This volume contains records for water discharge at 106 gaging stations; stage or contents only at 4 gaging...
Design and performance of a rugged standard operative temperature thermometer for avian studies
G.S. Bakken, A.F. Boysen, C. E. Korschgen, K.P. Kenow, S.L. Lima
2001, Journal of Thermal Biology (26) 595-604
The lack of a truly satisfactory sensor which can characterize the thermal environment at the spatial scale experienced by small endotherms has hindered study of their thermoregulatory behavior. We describe a general design for a rugged, easily constructed sensor to measure standard operative temperature, Tes. We present specific designs for...
Statistics for wildlifers: how much and what kind?
Douglas H. Johnson, T.L. Shaffer, W.E. Newton
2001, Wildlife Society Bulletin (29) 1055-1060
Quantitative methods are playing increasingly important roles in wildlife ecology and, ultimately, management. This change poses a challenge for wildlife practitioners and students who are not well-educated in mathematics and statistics. Here we give our opinions on what wildlife biologists should know about statistics, while recognizing that not everyone is...
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...
Effect of canopy removal on snowpack quantity and quality, fraser experimental forest, Colorado
R. Stottlemyer, C.A. Troendle
2001, Journal of Hydrology (245) 165-176
Snowpack peak water equivalent (PWE), ion concentration, content, and spatial distribution of ion load data from spring 1987-1996 in a 1 ha clearcut and adjacent forested plots vegetated by mature Picea engelmannii and Abies lasiocarpa in the Fraser experimental forest (FEF), Colorado are presented. Our objectives were: (1) to see...