Environmental assessment of water, sediment, and biota collected from the Bear Creek watershed, Colusa County, California
James J. Rytuba, Roger L. Hothem, Brianne E. Brussee, Daniel Goldstein, Jason T. May
2015, Open-File Report 2013-1070
The Cache Creek watershed lies within California's North Coast Range, an area with abundant geologic sources of mercury (Hg) and a long history of Hg contamination (Rytuba, 2000). Bear Creek, Cache Creek, and the North Fork of Cache Creek are the major streams of the Cache Creek watershed, encompassing 2978...
Yellowstone plume trigger for Basin and Range extension, and coeval emplacement of the Nevada–Columbia Basin magmatic belt
Victor E Camp, Kenneth L. Pierce, Lisa Ann Morgan Morzel
2015, Geosphere (11) 203-225
Widespread extension began across the northern and central Basin and Range Province at 17–16 Ma, contemporaneous with magmatism along the Nevada–Columbia Basin magmatic belt, a linear zone of dikes and volcanic centers that extends for >1000 km, from southern Nevada to the Columbia Basin of eastern Washington. This belt was...
The dominance of introduced plant species in the diets of migratory Galapagos tortoises increases with elevation on a human-occupied island
Stephen Blake, Anne Guezou, Sharon L. Deem, Charles B. Yackulic, Fredy Cabrera
2015, Biotropica (47) 246-258
The distribution of resources and food selection are fundamental to the ecology, life history, physiology, population dynamics, and conservation of animals. Introduced plants are changing foraging dynamics of herbivores in many ecosystems often with unknown consequences. Galapagos tortoises, like many herbivores, undertake migrations along elevation gradients driven by variability in...
Using motion-sensor camera technology to infer seasonal activity and thermal niche of the desert tortoise (Gopherus agassizii)
Mickey Agha, Benjamin Augustine, Jeffrey E. Lovich, David F. Delaney, Barry Sinervo, Mason O. Murphy, Joshua R. Ennen, Jessica R. Briggs, Robert J. Cooper, Steven J. Price
2015, Journal of Thermal Biology (49-50) 119-126
Understanding the relationships between environmental variables and wildlife activity is an important part of effective management. The desert tortoise (Gopherus agassizii), an imperiled species of arid environments in the southwest US, may have increasingly restricted windows for activity due to current warming trends. In summer 2013, we deployed 48 motion...
Estuarine bed-sediment-quality data collected in New Jersey and New York after Hurricane Sandy, 2013
Jeffrey M. Fischer, Patrick J. Phillips, Timothy J. Reilly, Michael J. Focazio, Keith A. Loftin, William Benzel, Daniel K. Jones, Kelly L. Smalling, Shawn C. Fisher, Irene J. Fisher, Luke R. Iwanowicz, Kristin M. Romanok, Darkus E. Jenkins, Luke Bowers, Adam Boehlke, William T. Foreman, Anna C. Deetz, Lisa G. Carper, Thomas E. Imbrigiotta, Justin E. Birdwell
2015, Data Series 905
This report describes a reconnaissance study of estuarine bed-sediment quality conducted June–October 2013 in New Jersey and New York after Hurricane Sandy in October 2012 to assess the extent of contamination and the potential long-term human and ecological impacts of the storm. The study, funded through the Disaster Relief Appropriations...
PRMS-IV, the precipitation-runoff modeling system, version 4
Steven L. Markstrom, R. Steve Regan, Lauren E. Hay, Roland J. Viger, Richard M. Webb, Robert A. Payn, Jacob H. LaFontaine
2015, Techniques and Methods 6-B7
Computer models that simulate the hydrologic cycle at a watershed scale facilitate assessment of variability in climate, biota, geology, and human activities on water availability and flow. This report describes an updated version of the Precipitation-Runoff Modeling System. The Precipitation-Runoff Modeling System is a deterministic, distributed-parameter, physical-process-based modeling system developed...
Quantification of colloidal and aqueous element transfer in soils: The dual-phase mass balance model
Carleton R. Bern, Aaron Thompson, Oliver A. Chadwick
2015, Geochimica et Cosmochimica Acta (151) 1-18
Mass balance models have become standard tools for characterizing element gains and losses and volumetric change during weathering and soil development. However, they rely on the assumption of complete immobility for an index element such as Ti or Zr. Here we describe a dual-phase mass balance model that eliminates the...
Anticoagulant rodenticides in urban bobcats: exposure, risk factors and potential effects based on a 16-year study
Laurel E.K. Serieys, Tiffany C. Armenta, Joanne G. Moriarty, Erin E. Boydston, Lisa M. Lyren, Robert H. Poppenga, Kevin R. Crooks, Robert K. Wayne, Seth P. D. Riley
2015, Ecotoxicology (24) 844-862
Anticoagulant rodenticides (ARs) are increasingly recognized as a threat to nontarget wildlife. High exposure to ARs has been documented globally in nontarget predatory species and linked to the high prevalence of an ectoparasitic disease, notoedric mange. In southern California, mange associated with AR exposure has been the proximate cause of...
Re–Os age for the Lower–Middle Pennsylvanian Boundary and comparison with associated palynoflora
Nicholas J. Geboy, G.R Tripathy, Leslie F. Ruppert, C.F. Eble, B.M. Blake, J. L. Hannah, H. J. Stein
2015, International Journal of Coal Geology (140) 23-30
The Betsie Shale Member is a relatively thick and continuous unit that serves as a marker bed across the central Appalachian basin, in part because it includes an organic-rich shale unit at its base that is observable in drill logs. Deposited during a marine transgression,...
Evaluating coastal landscape response to sea-level rise in the northeastern United States: approach and methods
Erika E. Lentz, Sawyer R. Stippa, E. Robert Thieler, Nathaniel G. Plant, Dean B. Gesch, Radley M. Horton
2015, Open-File Report 2014-1252
The U.S. Geological Survey is examining effects of future sea-level rise on the coastal landscape from Maine to Virginia by producing spatially explicit, probabilistic predictions using sea-level projections, vertical land movement rates (due to isostacy), elevation data, and land-cover data. Sea-level-rise scenarios used as model inputs are generated by using...
Changes in the saltwater interface corresponding to the installation of a seepage barrier near Lake Okeechobee, Florida
Scott T. Prinos, Robert Valderrama
2015, Open-File Report 2014-1256
In 2011, the U.S. Geological Survey and the U.S. Army Corps of Engineers began monitoring the saltwater interface near Lake Okeechobee to evaluate changes in interface depth that could possibly be related to the repair of the Herbert Hoover Dike. A seepage barrier (or cut-off wall), installed by the U.S....
Water-level and wave measurements in the Chandeleur Islands, Louisiana, 2012 and 2013
Patrick J. Dickhudt, Christopher R. Sherwood, Nancy T. DeWitt
2015, Open-File Report 2014-1246
This report documents measurements of atmospheric pressure, water levels, and waves made by the U.S. Geological Survey in the Chandeleur Islands, Louisiana, during 2012 and 2013 as part of the Barrier Island Evolution Research project. Simple, inexpensive pressure sensors mounted in shallow wells were buried in the beach and left...
Water-level measurements in Dauphin Island, Alabama, from the 2013 Hurricane Season
Patrick J. Dickhudt, Christopher R. Sherwood, Nancy T. DeWitt
2015, Open-File Report 2014-1245
This report describes the instrumentation, field measurements, and processing methods used by the U.S. Geological Survey to measure atmospheric pressure, water levels, and waves on Dauphin Island, Alabama, in 2013 at part of the Barrier Island Evolution Research project. Simple, inexpensive pressure sensors mounted in shallow wells were buried in...
Population genetic structure and disease in montane boreal toads: More heterozygous individuals are more likely to be infected with amphibian chytrid
Brett Addis, Winsor Lowe, Blake R. Hossack, Fred Allendorf
2015, Conservation Genetics (16) 833-844
Amphibians are more threatened than any other vertebrate group, with 41 % of species classified as threatened. The causes of most declines are not well understood, though many declines have been linked to disease. Additionally, amphibians are physiologically constrained to moist habitats and considered poor dispersers; thus, they may suffer genetic...
U.S. Geological Survey activities related to American Indians and Alaska Natives: Fiscal years 2009 and 2010
Monique Fordham, Maria R. Montour
2015, Circular 1403
The U.S. Geological Survey is the earth and natural science bureau within the U.S. Department of the Interior. The U.S. Geological Survey provides impartial information on the health of our ecosystems and environment, the natural hazards that threaten us, the natural resources we rely on, the negative effects of climate...
Global land cover mapping using Earth observation satellite data: Recent progresses and challenges
Yifang Ban, Peng Gong, Chandra Giri
2015, ISPRS Journal of Photogrammetry and Remote Sensing (103) 1-6
Land cover is an important variable for many studies involving the Earth surface, such as climate, food security, hydrology, soil erosion, atmospheric quality, conservation biology, and plant functioning. Land cover not only changes with human caused land use changes, but also changes with nature. Therefore, the state of land...
Evaluation of aquifer interconnection from aquifer characteristics computed by using specific capacity data within the vicinity of the Tremont Barrel Fill site, Clark County, Ohio
Amy M. Gahala
2015, Open-File Report 2015-1026
The Tremont Barrel Fill site is immediately north of the Tremont City Landfill near Tremont City, Clark County, Ohio. The site was an unlined pit used as a repository for disposing industrial liquid wastes and sludge from 1976 through 1979. Previous investigations led the U.S. Environmental Protection Agency (USEPA) to...
Water-level conditions in the confined aquifers of the New Jersey Coastal Plain, 2008
Vincent T. DePaul, Robert Rosman
2015, Scientific Investigations Report 2013-5232
Groundwater-level altitudes in 10 confined aquifers of the New Jersey Coastal Plain were measured and evaluated to provide an overview of regional groundwater conditions during fall 2008. Water levels were measured in more than 900 wells in New Jersey, eastern Pennsylvania, and northern Delaware and potentiometric surface maps prepared for...
Predicting locations of post-fire debris-flow erosionin the San Gabriel Mountains of southern California
Joseph E. Gartner, P.M Santi, Susan H. Cannon
2015, Natural Hazards (77) 1305-1321
Timely hazard assessments are needed to assess post-fire debris flows that may impact communities located within and adjacent to recently burned areas. Implementing existing models for debris-flow probability and magnitude can be time-consuming because the geographic extent for applying the models is manually defined. In this study, a model is presented for predicting locations...
Taxonomic revision of deep-sea Ostracoda from the Arctic Ocean
Moriaki Yasuhara, Anna Stepanova, Hisayo Okahashi, Thomas M. Cronin, Elisabeth M. Brouwers
2015, Micropaleontology (60) 399-444
Taxonomic revision of deep-sea Ostracoda from the Arctic Ocean was conducted to reduce taxonomic uncertainty that will improve our understanding of species ecology, biogeography and relationship to faunas from other deep-sea regions. Fifteen genera and 40 species were examined and (re-)illustrated with high-resolution scanning electron microscopy images, covering most of...
Establishing a definition of polar bear (Ursus maritimus) health: A guide to research and management activities
Kelly A. Patyk, Colleen G. Duncan, Pauline Nol, C. Sonne, Kristin L. Laidre, Martyn E. Obbard, Øystein Wiig, Jon Aars, Eric V. Regehr, L. Gustafson, Todd C. Atwood
2015, Science of the Total Environment (514) 371-378
The meaning of health for wildlife and perspectives on how to assess and measure health, are not well characterized. For wildlife at risk, such as some polar bear (Ursus maritimus) subpopulations, establishing comprehensive monitoring programs that include health status is an emerging need. Environmental changes, especially loss of sea ice...
Long-term groundwater depletion in the United States
Leonard F. Konikow
2015, Groundwater (53) 2-9
The volume of groundwater stored in the subsurface in the United States decreased by almost 1000 km3 during 1900–2008. The aquifer systems with the three largest volumes of storage depletion include the High Plains aquifer, the Mississippi Embayment section of the Gulf Coastal Plain aquifer system, and the Central Valley of California....
The integration of geophysical and enhanced Moderate Resolution Imaging Spectroradiometer Normalized Difference Vegetation Index data into a rule-based, piecewise regression-tree model to estimate cheatgrass beginning of spring growth
Stephen P. Boyte, Bruce K. Wylie, Donald J. Major, Jesslyn F. Brown
2015, International Journal of Digital Earth (8) 116-130
Cheatgrass exhibits spatial and temporal phenological variability across the Great Basin as described by ecological models formed using remote sensing and other spatial data-sets. We developed a rule-based, piecewise regression-tree model trained on 99 points that used three data-sets – latitude, elevation, and start of season time based on remote...
Mapping and monitoring cheatgrass dieoff in rangelands of the Northern Great Basin, USA
Stephen P. Boyte, Bruce K. Wylie, Donald J. Major
2015, Rangeland Ecology and Management (68) 18-28
Understanding cheatgrass (Bromus tectorum) dynamics in the Northern Great Basin rangelands, USA, is necessary to effectively manage the region’s lands. This study’s goal was to map and monitor cheatgrass performance to identify where and when cheatgrass dieoff occurred in the Northern Great Basin and to discover how this phenomenon was affected by...
Detrital zircon U-Pb reconnaissance of the Franciscan subduction complex in northwestern California
Trevor Dimitru, W. Gary Ernst, Jeremy K. Hourigan, Robert J. McLaughlin
2015, International Geology Review 1-35
In northwestern California, the Franciscan subduction complex has been subdivided into seven major tectonostratigraphic units. We report U-Pb ages of ≈2400 detrital zircon grains from 26 sandstone samples from 5 of these units. Here, we tabulate each unit's interpreted predominant sediment source areas and depositional age range, ordered from the...