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Page 1165, results 29101 - 29125

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Publication Extents

Not all publications have extents, not all extents are completely accurate
Small mammal communities in eastern redcedar forest
Christopher J. Reddin, David G. Krementz
2016, American Midland Naturalist (175) 113-119
Eastern redcedar (Juniperus virginiana) is a fire-intolerant tree species that has encroached into grassland ecosystems throughout central and eastern North America. Many land managers are interested in removing eastern redcedar to restore native grasslands. We surveyed small mammals using mark-recapture methods in eastern redcedar forest, warm-season grassland, and oldfield habitats...
Upper bound of abutment scour in laboratory and field data
Stephen Benedict
2016, Transportation Research Record (2588) 154-162
The U.S. Geological Survey, in cooperation with the South Carolina Department of Transportation, conducted a field investigation of abutment scour in South Carolina and used those data to develop envelope curves that define the upper bound of abutment scour. To expand on this previous work, an additional cooperative investigation was...
Influence of Didymosphenia geminata blooms on prey composition and associated diet and growth of Brown Trout
Daniel A. James, Steven R. Chipps
2016, Transactions of the American Fisheries Society (145) 195-205
We compared diet, stomach fullness, condition, and growth of Brown Trout Salmo trutta among streams with or without blooms of the benthic diatom Didymosphenia geminata in the Black Hills, South Dakota. In Rapid Creek, where D. geminata blooms covered ∼30% of the stream bottom, Brown Trout consumed fewer ephemeropterans (6–8%...
Fire in the Earth System: Bridging data and modeling research
Srijn Hantson, Silvia Kloster, Michael Coughlan, Anne-Laure Daniau, Boris Vanniere, Tim Bruecher, Natalie M. Kehrwald, Brian I. Magi
2016, Bulletin of the American Meteorological Society (97) 1069-1072
Significant changes in wildfire occurrence, extent, and severity in areas such as western North America and Indonesia in 2015 have made the issue of fire increasingly salient in both the public and scientific spheres. Biomass combustion rapidly transforms land cover, smoke pours into the atmosphere, radiative heat from fires initiates...
Succession in wetlands
Beth A. Middleton
C. Max Finlayson, Mark Everard, Kenneth Irvine, Robert J. McInnes, Beth A. Middleton, Anne A. Van Dam, Nick C. Davidson, editor(s)
2016, Book chapter, The Wetland Book
Succession refers to the change in vegetation over time driven by disturbances and the maturation of plant species. In wetlands, these disturbances include water and salinity level changes along other factors that can alter vegetation. The historical view of succession (Clementsian) was that vegetation change represented the linear progression of...
Cattle grazing in wetlands
Beth A. Middleton
C. Max Finlayson, Mark Everard, Kenneth Irvine, Robert J. McInnes, Beth A. Middleton, Anne A. Van Dam, Nick C. Davidson, editor(s)
2016, Book chapter, The Wetland Book
Cattle grazing drives successional change in wetland vegetation by removing tall grasses and other vegetation. As a disturbance, cattle grazing in some ways resembles natural disturbances such as native mammal grazing and lightning-strike fire, which can support higher biodiversity in wetlands. To encourage rare and Red-Listed species, natural land managers...
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...
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...
A centroid model of species distribution with applications to the Carolina wren Thryothorus ludovicianus and house finch Haemorhous mexicanus in the United States
Qiongyu Huang, John R. Sauer, Anu Swatantran, Ralph Dubayah
2016, Ecography (39) 54-66
Drastic shifts in species distributions are a cause of concern for ecologists. Such shifts pose great threat to biodiversity especially under unprecedented anthropogenic and natural disturbances. Many studies have documented recent shifts in species distributions. However, most of these studies are limited to regional scales, and do not consider the...
Forest structure of oak plantations after silvicultural treatment to enhance habitat for wildlife
Daniel J. Twedt, Cherrie-Lee P. Phillip, Michael P. Guilfoyle, R. Randy Wilson
Callie Jo Schweitzer, Wayne K. Clatterbuck, Christopher M. Oswalt, editor(s)
2016, Conference Paper, Proceedings of the 18th Biennial Southern Silvicultural Research Conference
During the past 30 years, thousands of hectares of oak-dominated bottomland hardwood plantations have been planted on agricultural fields in the Mississippi Alluvial Valley. Many of these plantations now have closed canopies and sparse understories. Silvicultural treatments could create a more heterogeneous forest structure, with canopy gaps and...
Fisheries research and monitoring activities of the Lake Erie Biological Station, 2015
Betsy L. Bodamer Scarbro, W.H. Edwards, Patrick M. Kocovsky, Richard T. Kraus, M. R. Rogers, A. L. Schoonyan, T. R. Stewart
2016, Report
In 2015, the U.S. Geological Survey’s (USGS) Lake Erie Biological Station (LEBS) successfully completed large vessel surveys in all three of Lake Erie’s basins. Lake Erie Biological Station’s primary vessel surveys included the Western Basin Forage Fish Assessment and East Harbor Fish Community Assessment as well as contributing to the...
A review of single-sample-based models and other approaches for radiocarbon dating of dissolved inorganic carbon in groundwater
L. F Han, Niel Plummer
2016, Earth-Science Reviews (152) 119-142
Numerous methods have been proposed to estimate the pre-nuclear-detonation 14C content of dissolved inorganic carbon (DIC) recharged to groundwater that has been corrected/adjusted for geochemical processes in the absence of radioactive decay (14C0) - a quantity that is essential for estimation of radiocarbon age of DIC in groundwater. The models/approaches most...
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,...
Synthesis of juvenile lamprey migration and passage research and monitoring at Columbia and Snake River Dams
Matthew G. Mesa, Lisa K. Weiland, Helena E. Christiansen
2016, Report
We compiled and summarized previous sources of data and research results related to the presence, numbers, and migration timing characteristics of juvenile (eyed macropthalmia) and larval (ammocoetes) Pacific lamprey Entosphenus tridentatus, in the Columbia River basin (CRB). Included were data from various screw trap collections, data from historic fyke net...
Decision analysis for habitat conservation of an endangered, range-limited salamander
Orin J. Robinson, Conor P. McGowan, J.J. Apodaca
2016, Animal Conservation (19) 561-569
Many species of conservation concern are habitat limited and often a major focus of management for these species is habitat acquisition and/or restoration. Deciding the location of habitat restoration or acquisition to best benefit a protected species can be a complicated subject with competing management objectives, ecological uncertainties and stochasticity....
Cobalt-rich manganese crusts
James R. Hein
Jan Harff, Martin Meschede, Sven Petersen, Jorn Thiede, editor(s)
2016, Book chapter, Encyclopedia of marine geosciences
No abstract available....
The value of closed-circuit rebreathers for biological research
Richrad L. Pyle, Phillip S. Lobel, Joseph A. Tomoleoni
2016, Conference Paper, Rebreathers and Scientific Diving. Proceedings of NPS/NOAA/DAN/AAUS
Closed-circuit rebreathers have been used for underwater biological research since the late 1960s, but have only started to gain broader application within scientific diving organizations within the past two decades. Rebreathers offer certain specific advantages for such research, especially for research involving behavior and surveys that depend on unobtrusive observers...
Estimating abundance: Chapter 27
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...
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...
Deathcore, creativity, and scientific thinking
David G. Angeler, Shana M. Sundstrom, Craig R. Allen
2016, Research Ideas and Outcomes (2) 1-6
BackgroundMajor scientific breakthroughs are generally the result of materializing creative ideas, the result of an inductive process that sometimes spontaneously and unexpectedly generates a link between thoughts and/or objects that did not exist before. Creativity is the cornerstone of scientific thinking, but scientists in academia are...
Animated tectonic reconstruction of the Lower Colorado River region: Implications for Late Miocene to Present deformation
Scott E.K. Bennett, Michael H. Darin, Rebecca J. Dorsey, Lisa A. Skinner, Paul J. Umhoefer, Michael E. Oskin
2016, Conference Paper, Going LOCO Investigations along the Lower Colorado River - 2016 Desert Symposium Field Guide and Proceedings
Although the majority of late Miocene to present Pacific-North America plate boundary strain has been accommodated by faults of the San Andreas and Gulf of California systems, growing evidence of dextral shear east of the San Andreas Fault indicates that a component of plate boundary deformation occurred in the lower...
Identification of Neosho Smallmouth Bass (Micropterus dolomieu velox) stocks for possible introduction into Grand Lake, Oklahoma
Andrew T. Taylor, James M. Long, Michael R. Schwemm, Michael D. Tringali, Shannon K. Brewer
2016, Cooperator Science Series FWS/CSS-121-2016
Stocking black basses (Micropterus spp.) is a common practice used to increase angling opportunities in impoundments; however, when non-native black basses are introduced they often invade riverine habitats where they threaten the persistence of other fishes, including native black basses. Neosho Smallmouth Bass (M. dolomieu velox) is endemic to portions...
Prioritizing landscapes for longleaf pine conservation
J. Barry Grand, Kevin J. Kleiner
2016, Cooperator Science Series FWS/CSS-119-2016
We developed a spatially explicit model and map, as a decision support tool (DST), to aid conservation agencies creating or maintaining open pine ecosystems. The tool identified areas that are likely to provide the greatest benefit to focal bird populations based on a comprehensive landscape analysis. We used NLCD 2011,...
Displaced phylogeographic signals from Gyrodactylus arcuatus, a parasite of the three-spined stickleback Gasterosteus aculeatus, suggest freshwater glacial refugia in Europe
Jaakko Lumme, Hannu Makinen, Alexey V. Ermolenko, Jacob L. Gregg, Marek S. Zietara
2016, International Journal for Parasitology (46) 545-554
We examined the global mitochondrial phylogeography of Gyrodactylus arcuatus, a flatworm ectoparasite of three-spined stickleback Gasterosteus aculeatus. In accordance with the suggested high divergence rate of 13%/million years, the genetic variation of the parasite was high: haplotype diversity h = 0.985 and nucleotide diversity π = 0.0161. The differentiation among the parasite populations was substantial (Φst = 0.759), with two...
Natural graphite demand and supply - Implications for electric vehicle battery requirements
Donald W. Olson, Robert L. Virta, Mahbood Mahdavi, Elizabeth S. Sangine, Steven M. Fortier
2016, GSA Special Papers (520) 67-77
Electric vehicles have been promoted to reduce greenhouse gas emissions and lessen U.S. dependence on petroleum for transportation. Growth in U.S. sales of electric vehicles has been hindered by technical difficulties and the high cost of the lithium-ion batteries used to power many electric vehicles (more than 50% of the...