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Page 1238, results 30926 - 30950

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Publication Extents

Not all publications have extents, not all extents are completely accurate
A 21-year study of seasonal and interspecific variation of hatchling emergence in a nearctic freshwater turtle community: to overwinter or not to overwinter?
Jeffrey E. Lovich, Carl H. Ernst, Evelyn M. Ernst, Julia L. Riley
2014, Herpetological Monographs (28) 93-109
Hatchling emergence patterns were studied in a community of six species of freshwater turtles in Lancaster County, Pennsylvania, U.S.A. including: Chelydra serpentina, Chrysemys picta, Clemmys guttata, Glyptemys insculpta, G. muhlenbergii, and Sternotherus odoratus. Data were collected every year from 1965 to 1985 on estimated date of emergence, carapace length, April...
Raptor abundance and northern bobwhite survival and habitat use
J. Turner, F. Hernandez, Clint W. Boal, Bart M. Ballard, Fred C. Bryant, D.B. Wester
2014, Wildlife Society Bulletin (38) 689-696
Predation risk has a profound influence on prey behavior and habitat use. The Rio Grande Plains ecoregion of Texas, USA, provides a unique opportunity to investigate changes in prey behavior because the ecoregion experiences a high influx of raptors every year during autumn migration. We used an 8-year...
Evaluating abiotic influences on soil salinity of inland managed wetlands and agricultural croplands in a semi-arid environment
D. Fowler, Sammy L. King, David C. Weindorf
2014, Wetlands (34) 1229-1239
Agriculture and moist-soil management are important management techniques used on wildlife refuges to provide adequate energy for migrant waterbirds. In semi-arid systems, the accumulation of soluble salts throughout the soil profile can limit total production of wetland plants and agronomic crops and thus jeopardize meeting waterbird energy needs. This study...
Geologic implications of gas hydrates in the offshore of India: Krishna-Godavari Basin, Mahanadi Basin, Andaman Sea, Kerala-Konkan Basin
Pushpendra Kumar, Timothy S. Collett, Ray Boswell, James R. Cochran, Malcolm Lall, Aninda Mazumdar, Mangipudi Venkata Ramana, Tammisetti Ramprasad, Michael Riedel, Kalachand Sain, Arun Vasant Sathe, Krishna Vishwanath, U.S. Yadav
2014, Marine and Petroleum Geology (58) 29-98
Gas hydrate resource assessments that indicate enormous global volumes of gas present within hydrate accumulations have been one of the primary driving forces behind the growing interest in gas hydrates. Gas hydrate volumetric estimates in recent years have focused on documenting the geologic parameters in the “gas hydrate petroleum system”...
Geologic implications of gas hydrates in the offshore of India: results of the National Gas Hydrate Program Expedition 01
Timothy S. Collett, Ray Boswell, J. R. Cochran, Pushpendra Kumar, Malcolm Lall, Aninda Mazumdar, Mangipudi Venkata Ramana, Tammisetti Ramprasad, Michael Riedel, Kalachand Sain, Arun Vasant Sathe, Krishna Vishwanath
2014, Marine and Petroleum Geology (58) 3-28
The Indian National Gas Hydrate Program Expedition 01 (NGHP-01) is designed to study the occurrence of gas hydrate along the passive continental margin of the Indian Peninsula and in the Andaman convergent margin, with special emphasis on understanding the geologic and geochemical controls on the occurrence of gas hydrate in...
Oil source-fingerprinting in support of polarimetric radar mapping of Macondo-252 oil in Gulf Coast marshes
Elijah W. Ramsey III, Buffy M. Meyer, Amina Rangoonwala, Edward Overton, Cathleen E. Jones, Terri Bannister
2014, Marine Pollution Bulletin (89) 85-95
Polarimetric synthetic aperture radar (PolSAR) data exhibited dramatic, spatially extensive changes from June 2009 to June 2010 in Barataria Bay, Louisiana. To determine whether these changes were associated with the Deepwater Horizon (DWH) oil spill, twenty-nine sediment samples were collected in 2011 from shoreline and nearshore–interior coastal marsh locations where oil was...
Disease dynamics during wildlife translocations: disruptions to the host population and potential consequences for transmission in desert tortoise contact networks
Christina M. Aiello, Kenneth E. Nussear, Andrew D. Walde, Todd C. Esque, Patrick G. Emblidge, Pratha Sah, S. Bansal, Peter J. Hudson
2014, Animal Conservation (17) 27-39
Wildlife managers consider animal translocation a means of increasing the viability of a local population. However, augmentation may disrupt existing resident disease dynamics and initiate an outbreak that would effectively offset any advantages the translocation may have achieved. This paper examines fundamental concepts of disease ecology and identifies the conditions...
The fellow speaks: Sometimes you get only one chance
Paul A. Hsieh
2014, AGU Hydrology Section Newsletter 17-19
I am grateful to AGU for selecting me as one of the five recipient of the 2014 Ambassador Award, which also includes election as a Union Fellow. I thank my colleague Steve Ingebritsen for nominating me. As Steve’s citation mentions my work on the Deepwater Horizon oil spill response, I...
Enterococcus phages as potential tool for identifying sewage inputs in the Great Lakes region
K. Vijayavel, Muruleedhara N. Byappanahalli, H. Taylor, Richard L. Whitman, J. Ebdon, D.R. Kashian
2014, Journal of Great Lakes Research (40) 989-993
Bacteriophages are viruses living in bacteria that can be used as a tool to detect fecal contamination in surface waters around the world. However, the lack of a universal host strain makes them unsuitable for tracking fecal sources. We evaluated the suitability of two newly isolated Enterococcus host strains (ENT-49 and ENT-55)...
238U-230Th dating of chevkinite in high-silica rhyolites from La Primavera and Yellowstone calderas
Jorge A. Vazquez, Noel O. Velasco, Axel K. Schmitt, Heather A. Bleick, Mark E. Stelten
2014, Chemical Geology (390) 109-118
Application of 238U-230Th disequilibrium dating of accessory minerals with contrasting stabilities and compositions can provide a unique perspective on magmatic evolution by placing the thermochemical evolution of magma within the framework of absolute time. Chevkinite, a Th-rich accessory mineral that occurs in peralkaline and metaluminous rhyolites, may be particularly useful...
Prey choice and habitat use drive sea otter pathogen exposure in a resource-limited coastal system
Christine K. Johnson, M. Tim Tinker, James A. Estes, Patricia A. Conrad, Michelle M. Staedler, Melissa A. Miller, David A. Jessup, Jonna A.K. Mazet
2014, Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences of the United States of America (106) 2242-2247
The processes promoting disease in wild animal populations are highly complex, yet identifying these processes is critically important for conservation when disease is limiting a population. By combining field studies with epidemiologic tools, we evaluated the relationship between key factors impeding southern sea otter (Enhydra lutris nereis) population growth: disease...
Molecular-level characterization of crude oil compounds combining reversed-phase high-performance liquid chromatography with off-line high-resolution mass spectrometry
Arum Sim, Yunju Cho, Daae Kim, Matthias Witt, Justin E. Birdwell, Byung Ju Kim, Sunghwan Kim
2014, Fuel (140) 717-723
A reversed-phase separation technique was developed in a previous study (Loegel et al., 2012) and successfully applied to the de-asphalted fraction of crude oil. However, to the best of our knowledge, the molecular-level characterization of oil fractions obtained by reversed-phase high-performance liquid chromatography (HPLC) coupled with high-resolution mass spectrometry (MS)...
Simultaneous Gaussian and exponential inversion for improved analysis of shales by NMR relaxometry
Kathryn E. Washburn, Endre Anderssen, Sarah J. Vogt, Joseph D. Seymour, Justin E. Birdwell, Catherine M. Kirkland, Sarah L. Codd
2014, Journal of Magnetic Resonance (250) 7-16
Nuclear magnetic resonance (NMR) relaxometry is commonly used to provide lithology-independent porosity and pore-size estimates for petroleum resource evaluation based on fluid-phase signals. However in shales, substantial hydrogen content is associated with solid and fluid signals and both may be detected. Depending on the motional regime, the signal from the...
Photographic evidence of interspecies mating in geckos of the Lepidodactylus lugubris unisexual-bisexual complex (Squamata: Gekkonidae)
Donald W. Buden, Carlos Cianchini, Danko Taborosi, Robert N. Fisher, Aaron Bauer, Ivan Ineich
2014, Phyllomedusa (13) 133-136
An interspecies mating between unisexual Lepidodactylus lugubris and a male of the bisexual Lepidodactylus moestus was photographed by Carlos Cianchini on Kosrae [Island], FSM, at 18:15 h on 22 August 2013 (Figure 1). The mating pair was on a window frame inside a house at Pukusruk Wan village (05°21'01" N,...
Reconstructing the deadly eruptive events of 1790 CE at Kīlauea Volcano, Hawai‘i
Don Swanson, Samantha J Weaver, Bruce F. Houghton
2014, Geological Society of America Bulletin (127) 503-515
A large number of people died during an explosive eruption of Kīlauea Volcano in 1790 CE. Detailed study of the upper part of the Keanakāko‘i Tephra has identified the deposits that may have been responsible for the deaths. Three successive units record shifts in eruption style that agree well with...
A visualization tool to support decision making in environmental and biological planning
Stephanie S. Romañach, Mark McKelvy, Craig Conzelmann, Kevin J. Suir
2014, Environmental Modelling and Software (62) 221-229
Large-scale ecosystem management involves consideration of many factors for informed decision making. The EverVIEW Data Viewer is a cross-platform desktop decision support tool to help decision makers compare simulation model outputs from competing plans for restoring Florida's Greater Everglades. The integration of NetCDF metadata conventions into EverVIEW allows end-users from...
Site selection and nest survival of the Bar-Headed Goose (Anser indicus) on the Mongolian Plateau
Nyambayar Batbayar, John Y. Takekawa, Tseveenmyadag Natsagdorj, Kyle A. Spragens, Xiamgming Xiao
2014, Waterbirds (37) 381-393
Waterbirds breeding on the Mongolian Plateau in Central Asia must find suitable wetland areas for nesting in a semiarid region characterized by highly variable water conditions. The first systematic nesting study of a waterbird dependent on this region for breeding was conducted on the Bar-headed Goose (Anser indicus). The purpose...
Book review: Implementing the Endangered Species Act on the Platte Basin water commons
Mark H. Sherfy
2014, The Prairie Naturalist (46) 115-116
The Platte River is a unique midcontinent ecosystem that is world-renowned for its natural resources, particularly the spectacular spring concentrations of migratory birds, such as sandhill cranes (Grus canadensis), ducks, and geese. The Platte River basin also provides habitat for four federally listed endangered or threatened species—interior least tern (Sternula...
Monitoring fish distributions along electrofishing segments
Leandro E. Miranda
2014, Environmental Monitoring and Assessment (186) 8899-8905
Electrofishing is widely used to monitor fish species composition and relative abundance in streams and lakes. According to standard protocols, multiple segments are selected in a body of water to monitor population relative abundance as the ratio of total catch to total sampling effort. The standard protocol provides an assessment of...
Coastal tectonics on the eastern margin of the Pacific Rim: Late Quaternary sea-level history and uplift rates, Channel Islands National Park, California, USA
Daniel R. Muhs, Kathleen R. Simmons, R. Randall Schumann, Lindsey T. Groves, Stephen B. DeVogel, Scott A. Minor, Deanna Laurel
2014, Quaternary Science Reviews (105) 209-238
The Pacific Rim is a region where tectonic processes play a significant role in coastal landscape evolution. Coastal California, on the eastern margin of the Pacific Rm, is very active tectonically and geomorphic expressions of this include uplifted marine terraces. There have been, however, conflicting estimates of the rate of...
Effects of a dual-pump crude-oil recovery system, Bemidji, Minnesota, USA
Geoffrey N. Delin, William N. Herkelrath
2014, Groundwater Monitoring & Remediation (34) 57-67
A crude-oil spill occurred in 1979 when a pipeline burst near Bemidji, MN. In 1998, the pipeline company installed a dual-pump recovery system designed to remove crude oil remaining in the subsurface at the site. The remediation from 1999 to 2003 resulted in removal of about 115,000 L of crude...
Predicting occupancy for pygmy rabbits in Wyoming: an independent evaluation of two species distribution models
Steve Germaine, Drew Ignizio, Doug Keinath, Holly Copeland
2014, Journal of Fish and Wildlife Management (5) 298-314
Species distribution models are an important component of natural-resource conservation planning efforts. Independent, external evaluation of their accuracy is important before they are used in management contexts. We evaluated the classification accuracy of two species distribution models designed to predict the distribution of pygmy rabbit Brachylagus idahoensis habitat in southwestern Wyoming, USA....
Layered hydrothermal barite-sulfide mound field, East Diamante Caldera, Mariana volcanic arc
James R. Hein, Cornel E. J. de Ronde, Randolph A. Koski, Robert G. Ditchburn, Kira Mizell, Yoshihiko Tamura, Robert J. Stern, Tracey Conrad, Osamu Ishizuka, Matthew I. Leybourne
2014, Economic Geology (109) 2179-2206
East Diamante is a submarine volcano in the southern Mariana arc that is host to a complex caldera ~5 × 10 km (elongated ENE-WSW) that is breached along its northern and southwestern sectors. A large field of barite-sulfide mounds was discovered in June 2009 and revisited in July 2010 with...
Pollutant sensitivity of the endangered Tar River Spinymussel as assessed by single chemical and effluent toxicity tests
Thomas P. Augspurger, Ning Wang, James L. Kunz, Christopher G. Ingersoll
2014, Report
The federally endangered Tar River spinymussel (Elliptio steinstansana) is endemic to the Tar River and Neuse River systems in North Carolina. The extent to which water quality limits Tar River spinymussels’ recovery is important to establish, and one aspect of that is understanding the species’ pollutant sensitivity. The primary objectives...
Population dynamics modeling of introduced smallmouth bass in the upper Colorado River basin
André R. Breton, Dana L. Winkelman, Kevin R. Bestgen, John A. Hawkins
2014, Report
The purpose of these analyses was to identify an effective control strategy to further reduce smallmouth bass in the upper Colorado River basin from the current level. Our simulation results showed that “the surge”, an early to mid-summer increase in electrofishing effort targeting nest-guarding male smallmouth bass, should be...