Using sutures to attach miniature tracking tags to small bats for multimonth movement and behavioral studies
Kevin T. Castle, Theodore J. Weller, Paul M. Cryan, Cris D. Hein, Michael R. Schirmacher
2015, Ecology and Evolution (5) 2980-2989
1. Determining the detailed movements of individual animals often requires them to carry tracking devices, but tracking broad-scale movement of small bats (< 30g) has been limited by transmitter technology and long-term attachment methods. This limitation inhibits our understanding of bat dispersal and migration, particularly in the context of emerging...
Not to put too fine a point on it - does increasing precision of geographic referencing improve species distribution models for a wide-ranging migratory bat?
Mark A. Hayes, Katharine Ozenberger, Paul M. Cryan, Michael B. Wunder
2015, Acta Chiropterologica (17) 159-169
Bat specimens held in natural history museum collections can provide insights into the distribution of species. However, there are several important sources of spatial error associated with natural history specimens that may influence the analysis and mapping of bat species distributions. We analyzed the importance of geographic referencing and error...
Ecosystem metabolism and nutrient dynamics in the main channel and backwaters of the Upper Mississippi River
Jeffrey N. Houser, Lynn Bartsch, William B. Richardson, James T. Rogala, John F. Sullivan
2015, Freshwater Science (60) 1863-1879
Photosynthesis and respiration are primary drivers of dissolved oxygen dynamics in rivers. We measured dissolved oxygen dynamics, aquatic ecosystem metabolism, algal abundance and nutrient concentrations at main channel and backwater sites on a reach of the Upper Mississippi River that borders the states of Wisconsin and Minnesota (U.S.A.)....
The Snowmastodon Project: cutting-edge science on the blade of a bulldozer
Jeffery S. Pigati, Ian M. Miller, Kirk R. Johnson
2015, GSA Today (25) 58-59
Cutting-edge science happens at a variety of scales, from the individual and intimate to the large-scale and collaborative. The publication of a special issue of Quaternary Research in Nov. 2014 dedicated to the scientific findings of the “Snowmastodon Project” highlights what can be done when natural history museums, governmental agencies,...
Status and trends of land change in the Great Plains of the United States--1973 to 2000
Janis Taylor, William Acevedo, Roger F. Auch, Mark A. Drummond, editor(s)
2015, Professional Paper 1794-B
Preface U.S. Geological Survey (USGS) Professional Paper 1794–B is the second in a four-volume series on the status and trends of the Nation’s land use and land cover, providing an assessment of the rates and causes of land-use and land-cover change in the Great Plains of the United States between 1973...
Habitat, not resource availability, limits consumer production in lake ecosystems
Nicola Craig, Stuart E. Jones, Brian Weidel, Christopher T. Solomon
2015, Limnology and Oceanography (60) 2079-2089
Food web productivity in lakes can be limited by dissolved organic carbon (DOC), which reduces fish production by limiting the abundance of their zoobenthic prey. We demonstrate that in a set of 10 small, north temperate lakes spanning a wide DOC gradient, these negative effects of high DOC concentrations on...
Estimation of river and stream temperature trends under haphazard sampling
Brian R. Gray, Vyacheslav Lyubchich, Yulia R. Gel, James T. Rogala, Dale M. Robertson, Xiaoqiao Wei
2015, Statistical Methods & Applications (25) 89-105
Long-term temporal trends in water temperature in rivers and streams are typically estimated under the assumption of evenly-spaced space-time measurements. However, sampling times and dates associated with historical water temperature datasets and some sampling designs may be haphazard. As a result, trends in temperature may be confounded with trends in...
Flood-inundation Maps for the Deerfield River, Franklin County, Massachusetts, from the Confluence with the Cold River Tributary to the Connecticut River
Pamela J. Lombard, Gardner C. Bent
2015, Scientific Investigations Report 2015-5104
The U.S. Geological Survey developed flood elevations in cooperation with the Federal Emergency Management Agency for a 30-mile reach of the Deerfield River from the confluence of the Cold River tributary to the Connecticut River in the towns of Charlemont, Buckland, Shelburne, Conway, Deerfield, and Greenfield in Franklin County, Massachusetts...
Mercury, monomethyl mercury, and dissolved organic carbon concentrations in surface water entering and exiting constructed wetlands treated with metal-based coagulants, Twitchell Island, California
Elizabeth B. Stumpner, Tamara E.C. Kraus, Jacob A. Fleck, Angela M. Hansen, Sandra M. Bachand, William R. Horwath, John F. DeWild, David P. Krabbenhoft, Philip Bachand
2015, Data Series 950
Coagulation with metal-based salts is a practice commonly employed by drinking-water utilities to decrease particle and dissolved organic carbon concentrations in water. In addition to decreasing dissolved organic carbon concentrations, the effectiveness of iron- and aluminum-based coagulants for decreasing dissolved concentrations both of inorganic and monomethyl mercury in water...
Investigating the temporal effects of metal-based coagulants to remove mercury from solution in the presence of dissolved organic matter
Yumiko K. Henneberry, Tamara E. C. Kraus, David P. Krabbenhoft, William R. Horwath
2015, Environmental Management (57) 220-228
The presence of mercury (Hg), particularly methylmercury (MeHg), is a concern for both human and ecological health as MeHg is a neurotoxin and can bioaccumulate to lethal levels in upper trophic level organisms. Recent research has demonstrated that coagulation with metal-based salts can effectively remove both inorganic mercury (IHg) and...
Effects of urbanization and stormwater control measures on streamflows in the vicinity of Clarksburg, Maryland, USA
Lee Rhea, Taylor Jarnagin, Dianna M. Hogan, J. V. Loperfido, William Shuster
2015, Hydrological Processes (29) 4413-4426
Understanding the efficacy of revised watershed management methods is important to mitigating the impacts of urbanization on streamflow. We evaluated the influence of land use change, primarily as urbanization, and stormwater control measures on the relationship between precipitation and stream discharge over an 8-year period for five catchments near Clarksburg,...
Phylogenetic and pathogenic characterization of novel adenoviruses from long-tailed ducks (Clangula hyemalis)
Katrina Counihan, Lee Skerratt, J. Christian Franson, Tuula E. Hollmen
2015, Virology (485) 393-401
Novel adenoviruses were isolated from a long-tailed duck (Clangula hyemalis) mortality event near Prudhoe Bay, Alaska in 2000. The long-tailed duck adenovirus genome was approximately 27 kb. A 907 bp hexon gene segment was used to design primers specific for the long-tailed duck adenovirus. Nineteen isolates were phylogenetically characterized based...
Predicting the resilience and recovery of aquatic systems: a framework for model evolution within environmental observatories
Matthew R. Hipsey, David P. Hamilton, Paul C. Hanson, Cayelan C. Carey, Janaine Z Coletti, Jordan S. Read, Bas W Ibelings, Fiona J Valensini, Justin D Brookes
2015, Water Resources Research (51) 7023-7043
Maintaining the health of aquatic systems is an essential component of sustainable catchmentmanagement, however, degradation of water quality and aquatic habitat continues to challenge scientistsand policy-makers. To support management and restoration efforts aquatic system models are requiredthat are able to capture the often complex trajectories that these systems display in...
Trimming the FAT for seafloor research in China—Constructing a tripod to monitor deep-sea sediment movement
Amy West
2015, Sea Technology (56) 38-40
Summarizes technical aspects of the Free Ascending Tripod for very deep water, designed by George Tate for joint US-China research lead by Jingping Xu in South China Sea....
Assessment of undiscovered oil and gas resources in the Cherokee Platform Province area of Kansas, Oklahoma, and Missouri, 2015
Ronald M. Drake II, Joseph R. Hatch, Christopher J. Schenk, Ronald R. Charpentier, Timothy R. Klett, Phuong A. Le, Heidi M. Leathers, Michael E. Brownfield, Stephanie B. Gaswirth, Kristen R. Marra, Janet K. Pitman, Christopher J. Potter, Marilyn E. Tennyson
2015, Fact Sheet 2015-3054
Using a geology-based assessment methodology, the U.S. Geological Survey estimated mean volumes of undiscovered, technically recoverable resources of 463 million barrels of oil, 11.2 trillion cubic feet of gas, and 35 million barrels of natural gas liquids in the Cherokee Platform Province area of Kansas, Oklahoma, and Missouri....
Does natural variation in diversity affect biotic resistance?
Susan Harrison, Howard Cornell, James B. Grace
2015, Journal of Ecology (103) 1099-1106
NoticeThis publication has been retracted. See the retraction notice....
Avoidance of unconventional oil wells and roads exacerbates habitat loss for grassland birds in the North American great plains
Sarah J. Thompson, Douglas H. Johnson, Neal Nieumuth, Christine Ribic
2015, Biological Conservation (192) 82-90
Oil development in the Bakken shale region has increased rapidly as a result of new technologies and strong demand for fossil fuel. This region also supports a particularly high density and diversity of grassland bird species, which are declining across North America. We examined grassland bird response to unconventional oil...
Effects of flooding on ion exchange rates in an Upper Mississippi River floodplain forest impacted by herbivory, invasion, and restoration
Rebecca Kreiling, Nathan R. De Jager, Whitney Swanson, Eric A. Strauss, Meredith Thomsen
2015, Wetlands (35) 1005-1012
We examined effects of flooding on supply rates of 14 nutrients in floodplain areas invaded by Phalaris arundinacea (reed canarygrass), areas restored to young successional forests (browsed by white-tailed deer and unbrowsed), and remnant mature forests in the Upper Mississippi River floodplain. Plant Root Simulator ion-exchange probes were deployed for...
Climate change and physical disturbance cause similar community shifts in biological soil crusts
Scott Ferrenberg, Sasha C. Reed, Jayne Belnap
2015, PNAS (112) 12116-12121
Biological soil crusts (biocrusts)—communities of mosses, lichens, cyanobacteria, and heterotrophs living at the soil surface—are fundamental components of drylands worldwide, and destruction of biocrusts dramatically alters biogeochemical processes, hydrology, surface energy balance, and vegetation cover. While there has been long-standing concern over impacts of 5 physical disturbances on biocrusts (e.g.,...
Successful mitigation of viral disease based on a delayed exposure rearing strategy at a large-scale steelhead trout conservation hatchery
R. Breyta, Corie Samson, Marilyn Blair, Allison Black, Gael Kurath
2015, Aquaculture (450) 213-224
In 2009, the largest steelhead trout conservation hatchery in the state of Idaho, Dworshak National Fish Hatchery (NFH), lost over 50% of the juvenile steelhead trout (Oncorhynchus mykiss) population being reared for release. The causative agent of this high mortality was the viral pathogen infectious hematopoietic necrosis virus (IHNV). This was neither the first...
Landscape-scale distribution and density of raptor populations wintering in anthropogenic-dominated desert landscapes
Adam E. Duerr, Tricia A. Miller, Kerri L Cornell Duerr, Michael J. Lanzone, Amy Fesnock-Parker, Todd E. Katzner
2015, Biodiversity and Conservation (24) 2365-2381
Anthropogenic development has great potential to affect fragile desert environments. Large-scale development of renewable energy infrastructure is planned for many desert ecosystems. Development plans should account for anthropogenic effects to distributions and abundance of rare or sensitive wildlife; however, baseline data on abundance and distribution of such wildlife are often...
Trends in pesticide concentrations and use for major rivers of the United States
Karen R. Ryberg, Robert J. Gilliom
2015, Science of the Total Environment (538) 431-444
Trends in pesticide concentrations in 38 major rivers of the United States were evaluated in relation to use trends for 11 commonly occurring pesticide compounds. Pesticides monitored in water were analyzed for trends in concentration in three overlapping periods, 1992–2001, 1997–2006, and 2001–2010 to facilitate comparisons among sites with...
Stock-specific advection of larval walleye (Sander vitreus) in western Lake Erie: Implications for larval growth, mixing, and stock discrimination
Michael E. Fraker, Eric J. Anderson, Cassandra J. May, Kuan-Yu Chen, Jeremiah J. Davis, Kristen M. DeVanna, Mark R. DuFour, Elizabeth A. Marschall, Christine M. Mayer, Jeffery G. Miner, Kevin L. Pangle, Jeremy J. Pritt, Edward F. Roseman, Jeffrey T. Tyson, Yingming Zhao, Stuart A Ludsin
2015, Journal of Great Lakes Research (41) 830-845
Physical processes can generate spatiotemporal heterogeneity in habitat quality for fish and also influence the overlap of pre-recruit individuals (e.g., larvae) with high-quality habitat through hydrodynamic advection. In turn, individuals from different stocks that are produced in different spawning locations or at different times may experience dissimilar habitat conditions, which...
Estimating the short-term recovery potential of little brown bats in the eastern United States in the face of White-nose syndrome
Robin E. Russell, Wayne E. Thogmartin, Richard A. Erickson, Jennifer A. Szymanski, Karl Tinsley
2015, Ecological Modelling (314) 111-117
White-nose syndrome (WNS) was first detected in North American bats in New York in 2006. Since that time WNS has spread throughout the northeastern United States, southeastern Canada, and southwest across Pennsylvania and as far west as Missouri. Suspect WNS cases have been identified in Minnesota and Iowa, and the...
Water withdrawals in Florida, 2012
Richard L. Marella
2015, Open-File Report 2015-1156
In 2012, the total amount of water withdrawn in Florida was estimated to be 14,237 million gallons per day (Mgal/d). Saline water accounted for 7,855 Mgal/d (55 percent), and freshwater accounted for 6,383 Mgal/d (45 percent). Groundwater accounted for 4,167 Mgal/d (65 percent) of freshwater withdrawals, and surface water accounted...