Hail formation triggers rapid ash aggregation in volcanic plumes
Alexa R. Van Eaton, Larry G. Mastin, M. Herzog, Hans F. Schwaiger, David J. Schneider, Kristi L. Wallace, Amanda B Clarke
2015, Nature Communications (6)
During explosive eruptions, airborne particles collide and stick together, accelerating the fallout of volcanic ash and climate-forcing aerosols. This aggregation process remains a major source of uncertainty both in ash dispersal forecasting and interpretation of eruptions from the geological record. Here we illuminate the mechanisms and timescales of particle aggregation...
Landscape and local effects on occupancy and densities of an endangered wood-warbler in an urbanizing landscape
Jennifer Reidy, Frank R. Thompson III, Courtney L. Amundson, Lisa O’Donnell
2015, Landscape Ecology (31) 365-382
Context Golden-cheeked warblers (Setophaga chrysoparia), an endangered wood-warbler, breed exclusively in woodlands co-dominated by Ashe juniper (Juniperus ashei) in central Texas. Their breeding range is becoming increasingly urbanized and habitat loss and fragmentation are a main threat to the species’ viability. Objectives We investigated the...
Tree mortality in mature riparian forest: Implications for Fremont cottonwood conservation in the American southwest
Douglas Andersen
2015, Western North American Naturalist (75) 157-169
Mature tree mortality rates are poorly documented in desert riparian woodlands. I monitored deaths and calculated annual survivorship probability (Ps) in 2 groups of large (27–114 cm DBH), old (≥40 years old) Fremont cottonwood (Populus fremontii Wats.) in a stand along the free-flowing Yampa River in semiarid northwestern Colorado. Ps...
Spatially explicit modeling of blackbird abundance in the Prairie Pothole Region
Greg M. Forcey, Wayne E. Thogmartin, George M. Linz, Patrick C. McKann, Shawn M. Crimmins
2015, Journal of Wildlife Management (79) 1022-1033
Knowledge of factors influencing animal abundance is important to wildlife biologists developing management plans. This is especially true for economically important species such as blackbirds (Icteridae), which cause more than $100 million in crop damages annually in the United States. Using data from the North American Breeding Bird Survey, the...
Increasing elevation of fire in the Sierra Nevada and implications for forest change
Mark W. Schwartz, Nathalie Butt, Christopher R. Dolanc, Andrew Holguin, Max A. Moritz, Malcolm P. North, Hugh D. Safford, Nathan L. Stephenson, James H. Thorne, Phillip J. van Mantgem
2015, Ecosphere (6)
Fire in high-elevation forest ecosystems can have severe impacts on forest structure, function and biodiversity. Using a 105-year data set, we found increasing elevation extent of fires in the Sierra Nevada, and pose five hypotheses to explain this pattern. Beyond the recognized pattern of increasing fire frequency in the Sierra...
Measurement of slow-moving along-track displacement from an efficient multiple-aperture SAR interferometry (MAI) stacking
Min-Jeong Jo, Hyung-Sup Jung, Joong-Sun Won, Michael P. Poland, Asta Miklius, Zhong Lu
2015, Journal of Geodesy (89) 411-425
Multiple-aperture SAR interferometry (MAI) has demonstrated outstanding measurement accuracy of along-track displacement when compared to pixel-offset-tracking methods; however, measuring slow-moving (cm/year) surface displacement remains a challenge. Stacking of multi-temporal observations is a potential approach to reducing noise and increasing measurement accuracy, but it is difficult to achieve a significant improvement...
Optimizing fish sampling for fish - mercury bioaccumulation factors
Barbara C. Scudder Eikenberry, Karen Riva-Murray, Christopher D. Knightes, Celeste A. Journey, Lia C. Chasar, Mark E. Brigham, Paul M. Bradley
2015, Chemosphere (135) 467-473
Fish Bioaccumulation Factors (BAFs; ratios of mercury (Hg) in fish (Hgfish) and water (Hgwater)) are used to develop Total Maximum Daily Load and water quality criteria for Hg-impaired waters. Both applications require representative Hgfish estimates and, thus, are sensitive to sampling and data-treatment methods. Data collected by fixed protocol from...
Influences of supplemental feeding on winter elk calf:cow ratios in the southern Greater Yellowstone Ecosystem
Aaron M. Foley, Paul C. Cross, David A Christianson, Brandon M. Scurlock, Scott Creely
2015, Journal of Wildlife Management (79) 887-897
Several elk herds in the Greater Yellowstone Ecosystem are fed during winter to alleviate interactions with livestock, reduce damage to stored crops, and to manage for high elk numbers. The effects of supplemental feeding on ungulate population dynamics has rarely been examined, despite the fact that supplemental feeding is partially...
Bidirectional recovery patterns of Mojave Desert vegetation in an aqueduct pipeline corridor after 36 years: II. Annual plants
Kristin H. Berry, Jeremy S. Mack, James F. Weigand, Timothy A. Gowan, Denise LaBerteaux
2015, Journal of Arid Environments (122) 141-153
We studied recovery of winter annual plants in a 97-m wide disturbed aqueduct corridor in the Mojave Desert 36 years after construction. We established plots at 0, 20, and 40 m from the road verge at the corridor center and at 100 m in undisturbed vegetation. We recorded 47 annual species, of...
Mapping the 3-D extent of the Northern Lobe of the Bushveld layered mafic intrusion from geophysical data
Carol A. Finn, Paul A. Bedrosian, Janine Cole, Tshepo David Khoza, Susan J. Webb
2015, Precambrian Research (268) 279-294
Geophysical models image the 3D geometry of the mafic portion of the Bushveld Complex north of the Thabazimbi-Murchison Lineament (TML), critical for understanding the origin of the world's largest layered mafic intrusion and platinum group element deposits. The combination of the gravity and magnetic data with recent seismic, MT, borehole...
Community clusters of tsunami vulnerability in the US Pacific Northwest
Nathan J. Wood, Jeanne M. Jones, Seth Spielman, Mathew C. Schmidtlein
2015, Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences (112) 5354-5359
Many coastal communities throughout the world are threatened by local (or near-field) tsunamis that could inundate low-lying areas in a matter of minutes after generation. Although the hazard and sustainability literature often frames vulnerability conceptually as a multidimensional issue involving exposure, sensitivity, and resilience to a hazard, assessments often focus...
On underestimation of global vulnerability to tree mortality and forest die-off from hotter drought in the Anthropocene
Craig D. Allen, David D. Breshears, Nathan G. McDowell
2015, Ecosphere (6) 1-55
Patterns, mechanisms, projections, and consequences of tree mortality and associated broad-scale forest die-off due to drought accompanied by warmer temperatures—“hotter drought”, an emerging characteristic of the Anthropocene—are the focus of rapidly expanding literature. Despite recent observational, experimental, and modeling studies suggesting increased vulnerability of trees to hotter drought and associated...
A general consumer-resource population model
Kevin D. Lafferty, Giulio DeLeo, Cheryl J. Briggs, Andrew P. Dobson, Thilo Gross, Armand M. Kuris
2015, Science (349) 854-857
Food-web dynamics arise from predator-prey, parasite-host, and herbivore-plant interactions. Models for such interactions include up to three consumer activity states (questing, attacking, consuming) and up to four resource response states (susceptible, exposed, ingested, resistant). Articulating these states into a general model allows for dissecting, comparing, and deriving consumer-resource models. We...
A comparison of auditory brainstem responses across diving bird species
Sara E. Crowell, Alicia Berlin, Catherine E. Carr, Glenn H. Olsen, Ronald E. Therrien, Sally E. Yannuzzi, Darlene R. Ketten
2015, Journal of Comparative Physiology A (201) 803-815
There is little biological data available for diving birds because many live in hard-to-study, remote habitats. Only one species of diving bird, the black-footed penguin (Spheniscus demersus), has been studied in respect to auditory capabilities (Wever et al., Proc Natl Acad Sci USA 63:676–680, 1969). We, therefore, measured in-air auditory...
Response of plant productivity to experimental flooding in a stable and a submerging marsh
Matthew L. Kirwan, Glenn R. Guntenspergen
2015, Ecosystems (18) 903-913
Recent models of tidal marsh evolution rely largely on the premise that plants are most productive at an optimal flooding regime that occurs when soil elevations are somewhere between mean sea level and mean high tide. Here, we use 4 years of manipulative “marsh organ” flooding experiments to test the generality...
Crustal deformation in the New Madrid seismic zone and the role of postseismic processes
Oliver S. Boyd, Jr Robert Smalley, Yuehua Zeng
2015, Journal of Geophysical Research B: Solid Earth (120) 5782-5803
Global Navigation Satellite System data across the New Madrid seismic zone (NMSZ) in the central United States over the period from 2000 through 2014 are analyzed and modeled with several deformation mechanisms including the following: (1) creep on subsurface dislocations, (2) postseismic frictional afterslip and viscoelastic relaxation from the 1811–1812...
Holocene geologic slip rate for the Banning strand of the southern San Andreas Fault, southern California
Peter O. Gold, Whitney M. Behr, Dylan Rood, Warren D. Sharp, Thomas Rockwell, Katherine J. Kendrick, Aaron Salin
2015, Journal of Geophysical Research B: Solid Earth (120) 5639-5663
Northwest directed slip from the southern San Andreas Fault is transferred to the Mission Creek, Banning, and Garnet Hill fault strands in the northwestern Coachella Valley. How slip is partitioned between these three faults is critical to southern California seismic hazard estimates but is poorly understood. In this paper, we...
Sediment and nutrient trapping as a result of a temporary Mississippi River floodplain restoration: The Morganza Spillway during the 2011 Mississippi River Flood
Daniel Kroes, Edward R. Schenk, Gregory E. Noe, Adam J. Benthem
2015, Ecological Engineering (82) 91-102
The 2011 Mississippi River Flood resulted in the opening of the Morganza Spillway for the second time since its construction in 1954 releasing 7.6 km3 of water through agricultural and forested lands in the Morganza Floodway and into the Atchafalaya River Basin. This volume, released over 54 days, represented 5.5% of the...
Spatial sorting promotes the spread of maladaptive hybridization
Winsor H. Lowe, Clint C. Muhlfeld, Fred W. Allendorf
2015, Trends in Ecology and Evolution (30) 456-462
Invasive hybridization is causing loss of biodiversity worldwide. The spread of such introgression can occur even when hybrids have reduced Darwinian fitness, which decreases the frequency of hybrids due to low survival or reproduction through time. This paradox can be partially explained by spatial sorting, where genotypes associated with dispersal...
Screening tool to evaluate the vulnerability of down-gradient receptors to groundwater contaminants from uncapped landfills
Ronald J. Baker, Timothy J. Reilly, Anthony R. Lopez, Kristin M. Romanok, Edward W Wengrowski
2015, Waste Management (43) 363-375
A screening tool for quantifying levels of concern for contaminants detected in monitoring wells on or near landfills to down-gradient receptors (streams, wetlands and residential lots) was developed and evaluated. The tool uses Quick Domenico Multi-scenario (QDM), a spreadsheet implementation of Domenico-based solute transport, to estimate concentrations of contaminants...
Sources of high-chloride water and managed aquifer recharge in an alluvial aquifer in California, USA
David O’Leary, John A. Izbicki, Loren F. Metzger
2015, Hydrogeology Journal (23) 1515-1533
As a result of pumping in excess of recharge, water levels in alluvial aquifers within the Eastern San Joaquin Groundwater Subbasin, 130 km east of San Francisco (California, USA), declined below sea level in the early 1950s and have remained so to the present. Chloride concentrations in some wells increased...
Combining waterfowl and breeding bird survey data to estimate wood duck breeding population size in the Atlantic Flyway
Guthrie S. Zimmerman, John R. Sauer, Kathy Fleming, William A. Link, Pamela R. Garrettson
2015, Journal of Wildlife Management (79) 1051-1061
We combined data from the Atlantic Flyway Breeding Waterfowl Survey (AFBWS) and the North American Breeding Bird Survey (BBS) to estimate the number of wood ducks (Aix sponsa) in the United States portion of the Atlantic Flyway from 1993 to 2013. The AFBWS is a plot-based survey that covers most...
Measuring floodplain spatial patterns using continuous surface metrics at multiple scales
Murray W. Scown, Martin C. Thoms, Nathan R. De Jager
2015, Geomorphology (245) 87-101
Interactions between fluvial processes and floodplain ecosystems occur upon a floodplain surface that is often physically complex. Spatial patterns in floodplain topography have only recently been quantified over multiple scales, and discrepancies exist in how floodplain surfaces are perceived to be spatially organised. We measured spatial patterns in floodplain topography...
Preliminary geophysical interpretations of regional subsurface geology near the Questa Mine Tailing Facility and Guadalupe Mountain, Taos County, New Mexico
V. J. S. Grauch, Benjamin J. Drenth, Ren A. Thompson, Paul W. Bauer
2015, Open-File Report 2015-1129
This report presents geophysical interpretations of regional subsurface geology in the vicinity of the Tailing Facility of the Questa Mine near Guadalupe Mountain, Taos County, New Mexico, in cooperation with the New Mexico Environment Department. The interpretations were developed from aeromagnetic data, regional gravity data, data from four ground magnetic...
Ground-truthing electrical resistivity methods in support of submarine groundwater discharge studies: Examples from Hawaii, Washington, and California
Cordell Johnson, Peter W. Swarzenski, Christina M. Richardson, Christopher G. Smith, Kevin D. Kroeger, Priya M. Ganguli
2015, Journal of Environmental & Engineering Geophysics (20) 81-87
Submarine groundwater discharge (SGD) is an important conduit that links terrestrial and marine environments. SGD conveys both water and water-borne constituents into coastal waters, where these inflows may impact near-shore ecosystem health and sustainability. Multichannel electrical resistivity techniques have proven to be a powerful tool to examine scales and...