Hydrothermal element fluxes from Copahue, Argentina: A "beehive" volcano in turmoil
J.C. Varekamp, A.P. Ouimette, S.W. Herman, A. Bermudez, D. Delpino
2001, Geology (29) 1059-1062
Copahue volcano erupted altered rock debris, siliceous dust, pyroclastic sulfur, and rare juvenile fragments between 1992 and 1995, and magmatic eruptions occurred in July– October 2000. Prior to 2000, the Copahue crater lake, acid hot springs, and rivers carried acid brines with compositions that reflected close to congruent rock dissolution....
Rhenium-osmium systematics of calcium-aluminium-rich inclusions in carbonaceous chondrites
H. Becker, J. W. Morgan, R.J. Walker, G.J. MacPherson, J. N. Grossman
2001, Geochimica et Cosmochimica Acta (65) 3379-3390
The Re-Os isotopic systematics of calcium-aluminium-rich inclusions (CAIs) in chondrites were investigated in order to shed light on the behavior of the Re-Os system in bulk chondrites, and to constrain the timing of chemical fractionation in primitive chondrites. CAIs with relatively unfractionated rare earth element (REE) patterns (groups I, III,...
Macroinvertebrate instream flow studies after 20 years: A role in stream management and restoration
James A. Gore, James B. Layzer, Jim Mead
2001, Regulated Rivers: Research & Management (17) 527-542
Over the past two decades of refinement and application of instream flow evaluations, we have examined the hydraulic habitat of aquatic macroinvertebrates in a variety of conditions, along with the role of these macroinvertebrates in sustaining ecosystem integrity. Instream flow analyses assume that predictable changes in channel flow characteristics can,...
Analysis of streambed temperatures in ephemeral channels to determine streamflow frequency and duration
James E. Constantz, David A. Stonestrom, Amy E. Stewart, Richard G. Niswonger, Tyson R. Smith
2001, Water Resources Research (37) 317-328
Spatial and temporal patterns in streamflow are rarely monitored for ephemeral streams. Flashy, erosive streamflows common in ephemeral channels create a series of operational and maintenance problems, which makes it impractical to deploy a series of gaging stations along ephemeral channels. Streambed temperature is a robust and inexpensive parameter to...
The Hawai'i rare bird search 1994-1996
Michelle H. Reynolds, Thomas J. Snetsinger
2001, Studies in Avian Biology (22) 133-143
We compiled the recent history of sightings and searched for 13 rare and missing Hawaiian forest birds to update status and distribution information. We made 23 expeditions between August 1994 and April 1996 on the islands of Hawai‘i, Maui, Moloka‘i, and Kaua‘i totaling 1,685 search hours, 146 field days, and...
Morphometrics, sexual dimorphism, and growth in the Angonoka tortoise (Geochelone yniphora) of western Madagascar
Lora L. Smith, Miguel Pedrono, Robert M. Dorazio, Jack Bishko
2001, African Journal of Herpetology (50) 9-18
The most recent description of the morphology of the rare endemic Madagascar tortoise,Geochelone yniphora was based on fewer than 20 specimens. We collected morphological data for 200 free‐ranging tortoises from five populations over a four‐year period. Tortoises ranged in size from 43.5 mm carapace length at hatching to a maximum of...
The role of hybridization in the distribution, conservation and management of aquatic species: Symposium review
John Epifanio, Jennifer L. Nielsen
2001, Reviews in Fish Biology and Fisheries (10) 245-251
This issue of Reviews in Fish Biology and Fisheries contains six papers addressing several critical aspects of hybridization in fishes and aquatic organisms. Hybridization is a phenomenon long recognized in fishes (Hubbs, 1920, 1955; Schwarz, 1981), as well as in other plant and vertebrate taxa, despite some rather dogmatic proclamations...
Conservation status and recovery strategies for endemic Hawaiian birds
Paul C. Banko, Reginald E. David, James D. Jacobi, Winston E. Banko
2001, Studies in Avian Biology (22) 359-376
Populations of endemic Hawaiian birds declined catastrophically following the colonization of the islands by Polynesians and later cultures. Extinction is still occurring, and recovery programs are urgently needed to prevent the disappearance of many other species. Programs to recover the endemic avifauna incorporate a variety of conceptual and practical approaches...
Hawaii Beach Monitoring Program: Profile locations
Ann E. Gibbs, Bruce M. Richmond, Charles H. Fletcher, Kindra P. Hillman
2001, Open-File Report 01-308
Coastal erosion is widespread and locally severe in Hawaii and other low-latitude areas. Typical erosion rates in Hawaii are in the range of 15 to 30 cm/yr (0.5 to 1 ft/yr; Hwang, 1981; Sea Engineering, Inc., 1988; Makai Ocean Engineering, Inc. and Sea Engineering, Inc.,1991). Recent studies on Oahu (Fletcher...
Accuracy assessment for the U.S. Geological Survey Regional Land-Cover Mapping Program: New York and New Jersey Region
Zhi-Liang Zhu, Limin Yang, Stephen V. Stehman, Raymond L. Czaplewski
2000, Photogrammetric Engineering and Remote Sensing (66) 1425-1438
The U.S. Geological Survey, in cooperation with other government and private organizations, is producing a conterminous U.S. land-cover map using Landsat Thematic Mapper 30-meter data for the Federal regions designated by the U.S. Environmental Protection Agency. Accuracy assessment is to be conducted for each Federal region to estimate overall and...
Consideraciones para la estimacion de abundancia de poblaciones de mamiferos. [Considerations for the estimation of abundance of mammal populations.]
R.S. Walker, A.J. Novare, J.D. Nichols
2000, Mastozoologia Neotropical / Journal of Neotropical Mammalogy (7) 73-80
Estimation of abundance of mammal populations is essential for monitoring programs and for many ecological investigations. The first step for any study of variation in mammal abundance over space or time is to define the objectives of the study and how and why abundance data are to be used....
Contaminant effect endpoints in terrestrial vertebrates at and above the individual level
Barnett A. Rattner, J.B. Cohen, N. H. Golden
P.H. Albers, G. H. Heinz, H. M. Ohlendorf, editor(s)
2000, Book chapter, Environmental contaminants and terrestrial vertebrates: effects on populations, communities, and ecosystems
Use of biochemical, physiological, anatomical, reproductive and behavioral characteristics of wild terrestrial vertebrates to assess contaminant exposure and effects has become commonplace over the past 3 decades. At the level of the individual organism, response patterns have been associated with and sometimes causally linked to contaminant exposure. However,...
Titanium mineral resources of the western U.S.: An update
Eric R. Force, Scott Creely
2000, Open-File Report 2000-442
Thirteen deposits or districts in the western U.S. have been examined in which titanium mineral resources have been reported or implied. These deposits are of the following general types (in probable order of importance): 1) Cretaceous shoreline placer deposits, 2) silica-sand deposits of California, 3) fluvial monazite placers of Idaho,...
Mapping Typha Domingensis in the Cienega de Santa Clara Using Satellite Images, Global Positioning System, and Spectrometry
Richard D. Sanchez, Earl E. Burnett, Fred Croxen
2000, Open-File Report 2000-314
The Cienega de Santa Clara, Sonora, Mexico, a brackish wetland area created near the delta of the Colorado River from drainage effluent flowing from the United States since 1977, may undergo changes owing to the operation of the Yuma Desalting Plant in the United States. This has become the largest...
Methods of analysis by the U.S. Geological Survey National Water Quality Laboratory-Processing, taxonomy, and quality control of benthic macroinvertebrate samples
Stephen R. Moulton II, James L. Carter, Scott A. Grotheer, Thomas F. Cuffney, Terry M. Short
2000, Open-File Report 2000-212
Qualitative and quantitative methods to process benthic macroinvertebrate (BMI) samples have been developed and tested by the U.S. Geological Survey?s National Water Quality Laboratory Biological Group. The qualitative processing method is based on visually sorting a sample for up to 2 hours. Sorting focuses on attaining organisms that are likely to result in taxonomic identifications to lower taxonomic levels...
Proposal and work plan to calibrate and verify a water-quality model to simulate effects of wastewater discharges to the Red River of the North at drought streamflow near Fargo, North Dakota, and Moorhead, Minnesota
Edwin A. Wesolowski
2000, Open-File Report 2000-190
This report presents a proposal for conducting a water-quality modeling study at drought streamflow, a detailed comprehensive plan for collecting the data, and an annual drought-formation monitoring plan. A 30.8 mile reach of the Red River of the North receives treated wastewater from plants at Fargo, North Dakota, and Moorhead,...
High flow and riparian vegetation along the San Miguel River, Colorado
Jonathan M. Friedman, G.T. Auble
2000, Report
Riparian ecosystems are characterized by abundance of water and frequent flow related disturbance. River regulation typically decreases peak flows, reducing the amount of disturbance and altering the vegetation. The San Miguel River is one of the last relatively unregulated rivers remaining in the Colorado River Watershed. One goal of major...
Self-ordering and complexity in epizonal mineral deposits
Richard W. Henley, Byron R. Berger
2000, Annual Review of Earth and Planetary Sciences (28) 669-719
Epizonal base and precious metal deposits makeup a range of familiar deposit styles including porphyry copper-gold, epithermal veins and stockworks, carbonate-replacement deposits, and polymetallic volcanic rock-hosted (VHMS) deposits. They occur along convergent plate margins and are invariably associated directly with active faults and volcanism. They are complex in form, variable...
Correlates to colonizations of new patches by translocated populations of bighorn sheep
F. J. Singer, M.E. Moses, S. Bellew, W. Sloan
2000, Restoration Ecology (8) 66-74
By 1950, bighorn sheep were extirpated from large areas of their range. Most extant populations of bighorn sheep (Ovis canadensis) in the Intermountain West consist of <100 individuals occurring in a fragmented distribution across the landscape. Dispersal and successful colonizations of unoccupied habitat patches has been rarely reported, and, in...
Using new video mapping technology in landscape ecology
T.J. Stohlgren, Margot W. Kaye, A.D. McCrumb, Yuka Otsuki, B. Pfister, C.A. Villa
2000, BioScience (50) 529-536
Biological and ecological monitoring continues to play an important role in the conservation of species, natural communities, and landscapes (Spellerberg 1991). Although resource-monitoring programs have advanced knowledge about natural ecosystems, weaknesses persist in our ability to rapidly transfer landscape-scale information to the public. Ecologists continue...
Plant-herbivore-hydroperiod interactions: effects of native mammals on floodplain tree recruitment
D.C. Andersen, D.J. Cooper
2000, Ecological Applications (10) 1384-1399
Floodplain plant–herbivore–hydroperiod interactions have received little attention despite their potential as determinants of floodplain structure and functioning. We used five types of exclosures to differentially exclude small-, medium-, and large-sized mammals from accessing Fremont cottonwood (Populus deltoides Marshall subsp. wizlizenii (Watson) Eckenwalder) seedlings and saplings growing naturally on four landform...
Ecology and conservation of a rare, old-growth-associated canopy lichen in a silvicultural landscape
A.L. Rosso, B. McCune, T. Rambo
2000, Bryologist (103) 117-127
Nephroma occultum Wetm. is a rare, epiphytic lichen associated with old-growth forests of northwestern North America. We describe its distribution, abundance, and habitat within the managed landscape of a southwestern Oregon watershed. Because this species is found mainly in the canopy, we used direct canopy access (tree climbing) in combination...
Carbon distribution in subalpine forests and meadows of the Olympic Mountains, Washington
S.J. Prichard, D. L. Peterson, R.D. Hammer
2000, Soil Science Society of America Journal (64) 1834-1845
stimates of C storage in mountainous regions are rare. Forest–meadow ecotones in subalpine ecosystems, which contain a mosaic of forests and meadows, may be particularly sensitive to future changes in climate and are therefore important to include in estimates of terrestrial C storage. In this study, we quantified soil C...
Cadmium toxicity among wildlife in the Colorado Rocky Mountains
J.R. Larison, G.E. Likens, J.W. Fitzpatrick, J.G. Crock
2000, Nature (406) 181-183
Cadmium is known to be both extremely toxic and ubiquitous in natural environments. It occurs in almost all soils, surface waters and plants, and it is readily mobilized by human activities such as mining. As a result, cadmium has been named as a potential health threat to wildlife species; however,...
Inter-decadal change in diet and population of sea otters at Amchitka Island, Alaska
J. Watt, D.B. Siniff, J. A. Estes
2000, Oecologia (124) 289-298
After having been hunted to near-extinction in the Pacific maritime fur trade, the sea otter population at Amchitka Island, Alaska increased from very low numbers in the early 1900s to near equilibrium density by the 1940s. The population persisted at or near equilibrium through the 1980s, but declined sharply in...