Demography of the Yellowstone grizzly bears
C. M. Pease, David J. Mattson
1999, Ecology (80) 957-975
We undertook a demographic analysis of the Yellowstone grizzly bears (Ursus arctos) to identify critical environmental factors controlling grizzly bear vital rates, and thereby to help evaluate the effectiveness of past management and to identify future conservation issues. We concluded that, within the limits of uncertainty implied by the available...
Integrating surface and borehole geophysics in ground water studies: An example using electromagnetic soundings in south Florida
Frederick Paillet, Laura Hite, Matthew Carlson
1999, Journal of Environmental & Engineering Geophysics (4) 45-55
Time domain surface electromagnetic soundings, borehole induction logs, and other borehole logging techniques are used to construct a realistic model for the shallow subsurface hydraulic properties of unconsolidated sediments in south Florida. Induction logs are used to calibrate surface induction soundings in units of pore water salinity by correlating water...
Seasonal relationships between precipitation, forest floor, and streamwater nitrogen, Isle Royale, Michigan
Robert Stottlemyer, D. Toczydlowski
1999, Soil Science Society of America Journal (63) 389-398
The Upper Great Lakes receive large amounts of precipitation-NH+4 and moderate NO-3 inputs. Increased atmospheric inorganic N input has led to concern about ecosystem capacity to utilize excess N. This paper summarizes a 5-yr study of seasonal N content and flux in precipitation, snowpack, forest floor, and streamwater in order to assess...
The origin and paleoecologic significance of the trace fossil Asteriadtes in the Pennsylvanian of Kansas and Missouri
M. Gabriela Mángano, L.A. Buatois, R.R. West, C.G. Maples
1999, Lethaia (32) 17-30
The trace fossil Asteriacites, recorded in Cambrian to Recent shallow- and deep-marine facies, is traditionally interpreted as the resting trace of asterozoans. Well-preserved specimens of A. lumbricalis are abundant in Pennsylvanian (Upper Carboniferous) shallow- and marginal-marine siliciclastic deposits of eastern Kansas and western Missouri. Detailed morphologic analysis of these specimens suggests that they...
Breeding bird responses to three silvicultural treatments in the Oregon Coast Range
C. L. Chambers, William C. McComb, John C. Tappeiner II
1999, Ecological Applications (9) 171-185
Silvicultural alternatives to clear-cutting have been suggested to promote development, retention, or creation of late-successional features such as large trees, multilayered canopies, snags, and logs. We assessed bird response to three silvicultural alternatives to clear-cutting that retained structural features found in old Douglas-fir (Pseudotsuga menziesii) forests and that imitated natural...
A GIS modeling method applied to predicting forest songbird habitat
Randy Dettmers, Jonathan Bart
1999, Ecological Applications (9) 152-163
We have developed an approach for using “presence” data to construct habitat models. Presence data are those that indicate locations where the target organism is observed to occur, but that cannot be used to define locations where the organism does not occur. Surveys of highly mobile vertebrates often yield these...
New land surface digital elevation model covers the Earth
Dean B. Gesch, Kristine L. Verdin, Susan K. Greenlee
1999, Eos, Earth and Space Science News (80) 69-70
Land surface elevation around the world is reaching new heights—as far as its description and measurement goes. A new global digital elevation model (DEM) is being cited as a significant improvement in the quality of topographic data available for Earth science studies.Land surface elevation is one of the Earth's most...
Vegetative resistance to flow in south Florida: Summary of vegetation sampling at sites NESRS3 and P33, Shark River Slough, November, 1996
Virginia Carter, Justin T. Reel, Nancy B. Rybicki, Henry A. Ruhl, Patricia T. Gammon, Jonathan K. Lee
1999, Open-File Report 99-218
The U.S. Geological Survey is one of many agencies participating in the effort to restore the South Florida Everglades. We are sampling and characterizing the vegetation at selected sites in the Everglades as part of a study to quantify vegetative flow resistance. The objectives of the vegetation sampling are (1)...
Vegetative resistance to flow in South Florida: Summary of vegetation sampling at sites NESRS3 and P33, Shark River Slough, April 1996
Virginia Carter, Henry A. Ruhl, Nancy B. Rybicki, Justin T. Reel, Patricia T. Gammon
1999, Open-File Report 99-187
The U.S. Geological Survey is one of many agencies participating in the effort to restore the south Florida Everglades. We are sampling and characterizing the vegetation at selected sites in the Everglades as part of a study to quantify vegetative flow resistance. The objectives of the vegetative sampling are (1)...
Defining models and measuring aggregate quality for gravel deposits of the Front Range Urban Corridor, Colorado
David A. Lindsey, William H. Langer
1999, Conference Paper, Proceedings of the 34th Forum on the Geology of Industrial Minerals, 1998
No abstract available....
Quantitative models for aggregate: some types and examples from Oklahoma carbonate rocks
James D. Bliss
1999, Book, Proceedings of the 34th Forum on the Geology of Industrial Minerals, 1998
Evaluation of data for three engineering variable--absorption, bulk specific gravity, and freeze-thaw durability (350 cycles)--was made for quarries in carbonate rocks in Oklahoma that supply aggregate. It was found that lower Palrozoic carbonate rocks (Cambrian through Devonian) are likely to make a better quality aggregate than upper Paleozoic (Mississippian to...
Comparative analysis of multisensor satellite monitoring of Arctic sea-ice
G. I. Belchansky, Ilia N. Mordvintsev, David C. Douglas
1999, Book, Remote sensing of the system Earth: a challenge for the 21st century: IGARSS '99 Proceedings
This report represents comparative analysis of nearly coincident Russian OKEAN-01 polar orbiting satellite data, Special Sensor Microwave Imager (SSM/I) and Advanced Very High Resolution Radiometer (AVHRR) imagery. OKEAN-01 ice concentration algorithms utilize active and passive microwave measurements and a linear mixture model for measured values of the brightness temperature and...
Constraints on Quaternary unsaturated- and saturated-zone hydrology from geochronological and isotopic studies of calcite and silica, Yucca Mountain, Nevada
James B. Paces, Zell E. Peterman, Leonid A. Neymark, J. F. Whelan, Brian D. Marshall
1999, Conference Paper, Use of hydrogeochemical information in testing groundwater flow models: Technical summary and proceedings of a workshop
No abstracts available....
Fossils, rocks, and time
Lucy E. Edwards, John Pojeta Jr.
1999, Report
We study our Earth for many reasons: to find water to drink or oil to run our cars or coal to heat our homes, to know where to expect earthquakes or landslides or floods, and to try to understand our natural surroundings. Earth is constantly changing--nothing on its surface is...
Neogene and Quaternary quantitative palynostratigraphy and paleoclimatology from sections in Yukon and adjacent Northwest Territories and Alaska
J. M. White, Thomas A. Ager, David P. Adam, E. B. Leopold, G. Liu, H. Jette, C. E. Schweger
A. R. Sweet, D. H. McNeil, editor(s)
1999, Bulletin 543
quantitative pollen and spore zonation for the Neogene and Quaternary of Yukon, western Northwest Territories and central and northern Alaska has been assembled from seven sections and one borehole. The palynological spectra from 163 samples from these sections were grouped and averaged within the groups to produce twenty-one composite spectra...
200,000 years of climate change recorded in eolian sediments of the High Plains of eastern Colorado and western Nebraska
Daniel R. Muhs, James B. Swinehart, David B. Loope, John N. Aleinikoff, Josh Been
David R. Lageson, Alan Lester, Bruce Trudgill, editor(s)
1999, Book chapter, Colorado and adjacent areas
Loess and eolian sand cover vast areas of the western Great Plains of Nebraska, Kansas and Colorado (Fig. 1). In recent studies of Quaternary climate change, there has been a renewed interest in loess and eolian sand. Much of the attention now given to loess stems from new studies of...
Assessment of landscape correlates of Eastern hemlock decline due to hemlock woolly adelgid
John Young, Craig Snyder, James Akerson, Gary Hunt
K.A. McManus, K.S. Shields, D.R. Souto, editor(s)
1999, Report, Proceedings, Symposium on sustainable management of hemlock ecosystems in Eastern North America
Eastern hemlock (Tsuga canadensis) is in decline throughout its range in the eastern US due to infestation by an exotic insect pest, the hemlock woolly adelgid (Adelges tsugae). In Shenandoah National Park, the hemlock woolly adelgid (HWA) rapidly killed many stands of hemlock after first appearing in the late-1980’s, while having only minor impact in other...
Ground-water flow paths and traveltime to three small embayments within the Peconic Estuary, eastern Suffolk County, New York
Christopher Schubert
1999, Water-Resources Investigations Report 98-4181
The Peconic Estuary, at the eastern end of Long Island, has been plagued by a recurrent algal bloom that has caused the severe decline of local marine resources. Although the onset, duration, and cessation of the bloom remain unpredictable, ground-water discharge has been shown to affect surface-water quality in the...
Fish losses to double-crested cormorant predation in Eastern Lake Ontario, 1992-97
Robert M. Ross, James H. Johnson
1999, USDA APHIS Technical Bulletin 1879
We examined 4,848 regurgitated digestive pellets of double-crested cormorants (Phalacrocorax auritus) over a 6-year period (1992–97) to estimate annual predation on sport and other fishes in the eastern basin of Lake Ontario. We found more than 51,000 fish of 28 species. Using a model that incorporates annual colony nest counts;...
Effects of fire retardant chemical and fire suppressant foam on shrub steppe vegetation in northern Nevada
Diane L. Larson, Wesley E. Newton, Patrick J. Anderson, Steven J. Stein
1999, International Journal of Wildland Fire (9) 115-127
The objectives of this study were to determine the effects of fire retardantchemical (Phos-Chek G75-F*) and fire suppressant foam (Silv-Ex) application,alone and in combination with fire, on Great Basin shrub steppe vegetation. Wemeasured growth, resprouting, flowering, and incidence of galling insects onChrysothamnus viscidiflorusandArtemisia tridentata. These characteristics were notaffected by any...
A blood chemistry profile for lake trout
Carol Cotant Edsall
1999, Journal of Aquatic Animal Health (11) 81-86
A blood chemistry profile for lake trout Salvelinus namaycush was developed by establishing baseline ranges for several clinical chemistry tests (glucose, total protein, amylase, alkaline phosphatase, alanine aminotransferase, aspartate aminotransferase, creatine kinase, calcium, and magnesium). Measurements were made accurately and rapidly with a Kodak Ektachem DT60 Analyzer and the...
Studies of reproductive output of the desert tortoise at Joshua Tree National Park, the Mojave National Preserve, and comparative sites
J.E. Lovich, P. Medica, H. Avery, K. Meyer, G. Bowser, A. Brown
1999, Park Science (19) 22-24
The stability of any population is a function of how many young are produced and how many survive to reproduce. Populations with low reproductive output and high mortality will decline until such time as deaths and births are at least balanced. Monitoring populations of sensitive species is particularly important to...
Creating raptor benefits from powerline problems
Michael N. Kochert, R.R. Olendorff
1999, Journal of Raptor Research (33) 39-42
Powerlines benefit raptors by providing enhanced nesting and roosting sites. However, they also can kill raptors by electrocution and raptors can interfere with power transmission. The electrocution problem has been reduced by correcting existing lethal lines and implementing electrocution safe designs for new lines. Remedial actions include pole modifications, perch management...
Response of high-elevation forests in the Olympic Mountains to climatic change
A.N. Zolbrod, D. L. Peterson
1999, Canadian Journal of Forest Research (29) 1966-1978
The gap model ZELIG was used to examine the effects of increased temperature (2°C) and altered precipitation on high-elevation ecosystems of the Olympic Mountains, Washington, U.S.A. Changes in tree species distribution and abundance, as well as stand biomass, were examined on north and south aspects in the dry northeast (NE)...
Diving and foraging patterns of Marbled Murrelets (Brachyramphus marmoratus): Testing predictions from optimal-breathing models
Patrick G.R. Jodice, Michael W. Collopy
1999, Canadian Journal of Zoology (77) 1409-1418
The diving behavior of Marbled Murrelets (Brachyramphus marmoratus) was studied using telemetry along the Oregon coast during the 1995 and 1996 breeding seasons and examined in relation to predictions from optimal-breathing models. Duration of dives, pauses, dive bouts, time spent under water during dive bouts, and nondiving intervals between successive...