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Page 1251, results 31251 - 31275

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Publication Extents

Not all publications have extents, not all extents are completely accurate
Testing hypotheses on distribution shifts and changes in phenology of imperfectly detectable species
Thierry A. Chambert, William L. Kendall, James E. Hines, James D. Nichols, Paolo Pedrini, J. Hardin Waddle, Giacomo Tavecchia, Susan C. Walls, Simone Tenan
2015, Methods in Ecology and Evolution (6) 638-647
With ongoing climate change, many species are expected to shift their spatial and temporal distributions. To document changes in species distribution and phenology, detection/non-detection data have proven very useful. Occupancy models provide a robust way to analyse such data, but inference is usually focused on species spatial...
Suburbanization, estrogen contamination, and sex ratio in wild amphibian populations
Max R. Lambert, Geoffrey S. J. Giller, Larry B. Barber, Kevin C. Fitzgerald, David K. Skelly
2015, Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences of the United States of America (112) 11881-11886
Research on endocrine disruption in frog populations, such as shifts in sex ratios and feminization of males, has predominantly focused on agricultural pesticides. Recent evidence suggests that suburban landscapes harbor amphibian populations exhibiting similar levels of endocrine disruption; however the endocrine disrupting chemical (EDC) sources are unknown. Here, we show...
Aspect-dependent soil saturation and insight into debris-flow initiation during extreme rainfall in the Colorado Front Range
Brian A. Ebel, Francis K. Rengers, Gregory E. Tucker
2015, Geology (43) 659-662
Hydrologic processes during extreme rainfall events are poorly characterized because of the rarity of measurements. Improved understanding of hydrologic controls on natural hazards is needed because of the potential for substantial risk during extreme precipitation events. We present field measurements of the degree of soil saturation and estimates of available...
Plant-plant interactions in a subtropical mangrove-to-marsh transition zone: effects of environmental drivers
Rebecca J. Howard, Ken W. Krauss, Nicole Cormier, Richard H. Day, Janelda M. Biagas, Larry K. Allain
2015, Journal of Vegetation Science (26) 1198-1211
Questions Does the presence of herbaceous vegetation affect the establishment success of mangrove tree species in the transition zone between subtropical coastal mangrove forests and marshes? How do plant–plant interactions in this transition zone respond to variation in two primary coastal environmental drivers? Location Subtropical coastal region...
Efforts to monitor and characterize the recent increasing seismicity in central Oklahoma
Daniel E. McNamara, Justin L. Rubinstein, Emma Myers, Gregory M. Smoczyk, Harley M. Benz, Robert Williams, Gavin P. Hayes, David C. Wilson, Robert B. Herrmann, Nicole D McMahon, R.C. Aster, E. Bergman, Austin Holland, Paul S. Earle
2015, The Leading Edge (34) 628-639
The sharp increase in seismicity over a broad region of central Oklahoma has raised concerns regarding the source of the activity and its potential hazard to local communities and energy-industry infrastructure. Efforts to monitor and characterize the earthquake sequences in central Oklahoma are reviewed. Since early 2010, numerous organizations have...
Applied Geochemistry Special Issue on Environmental geochemistry of modern mining
Robert R. Seal II, D. Kirk Nordstrom
2015, Applied Geochemistry (57) 1-2
Environmental geochemistry is an integral part of the mine-life cycle, particularly for modern mining. The critical importance of environmental geochemistry begins with pre-mining baseline characterization and the assessment of environmental risks related to mining, continues through active mining especially in water and waste management practices, and culminates in mine...
Dynamic hypoxic zones in Lake Erie compress fish habitat, altering vulnerability to fishing gears
Richard T. Kraus, Carey T. Knight, Troy M. Farmer, Ann Marie Gorman, Paris D. Collingsworth, Glenn J. Warren, Patrick M. Kocovsky, Joseph D. Conroy
2015, Canadian Journal of Fisheries and Aquatic Sciences (72) 797-806
Seasonal degradation of aquatic habitats from hypoxia occurs in numerous freshwater and coastal marine systems and can result in direct mortality or displacement of fish. Yet, fishery landings from these systems are frequently unresponsive to changes in the severity and extent of hypoxia, and population-scale effects have been difficult to...
Incidental captures of Eastern Spotted Skunk in a high-elevation Red Spruce forest in Virginia
Corinne A. Diggins, David S. Jachowski, Jay Martin, W. Mark Ford
2015, Northeastern Naturalist (22) N6-N10
Spilogale putorius (Eastern Spotted Skunk) is considered rare in the southern Appalachian Mountains and throughout much of its range. We report incidental captures of 6 Eastern Spotted Skunks in a high-elevation Picea rubens (Red Spruce) forest in southwestern Virginia during late February and March 2014. At 1520 m, these observations...
Group composition effects on aggressive interpack interactions of gray wolves in Yellowstone National Park
Kira A. Cassidy, Daniel R. MacNulty, Daniel R. Stahler, Douglas W. Smith, L. David Mech
2015, Behavioral Ecology (26) 1352-1360
Knowledge of characteristics that promote group success during intraspecific encounters is key to understanding the adaptive advantages of sociality for many group-living species. In addition, some individuals in a group may be more likely than others to influence intergroup conflicts, a relatively neglected idea in research on social animals. Here...
Variability and trends in global drought
Gregory J. McCabe, David M. Wolock
2015, Earth and Space Science (2) 223-228
Monthly precipitation (P) and potential evapotranspiration (PET) from the CRUTS3.1 data set are used to compute monthly P minus PET (PMPE) for the land areas of the globe. The percent of the global land area with annual sums of PMPE less than zero are used as an index of global drought (%drought)...
Trophic ontogeny of fluvial Bull Trout and seasonal predation on Pacific Salmon in a riverine food web
Erin D. Lowery, David A. Beauchamp
2015, Transactions of the American Fisheries Society (144) 724-741
Bull Trout Salvelinus confluentus are typically top predators in their host ecosystems. The Skagit River in northwestern Washington State contains Bull Trout and Chinook Salmon Oncorhynchus tshawytschapopulations that are among the largest in the Puget Sound region and also contains a regionally large population of steelhead O. mykiss (anadromous Rainbow Trout). All three species are...
Application of science-based restoration planning to a desert river system
Brian G. Laub, Justin Jimenez, Phaedra E. Budy
2015, Environmental Management (55) 1246-1261
Persistence of many desert river species is threatened by a suite of impacts linked to water infrastructure projects that provide human water security where water is scarce. Many desert rivers have undergone regime shifts from spatially and temporally dynamic ecosystems to more stable systems dominated by homogenous physical habitat. Restoration...
Biogeochemical aspects of uranium mineralization, mining, milling, and remediation
Kate M. Campbell, Tanya J. Gallegos, Edward R. Landa
2015, Applied Geochemistry (57) 206-235
Natural uranium (U) occurs as a mixture of three radioactive isotopes: 238U, 235U, and 234U. Only 235U is fissionable and makes up about 0.7% of natural U, while 238U is overwhelmingly the most abundant at greater than 99% of the total mass of U. Prior to the 1940s, U...
Spatial and temporal use of a prairie dog colony by coyotes and rabbits: Potential indirect effects on endangered black-footed ferrets
David A. Eads, Dean E. Biggins, Travis M. Livieri
2015, Journal of Zoology (296) 146-152
In western North America, endangered black-footed ferrets Mustela nigripes are conserved via reintroduction to colonies of prairie dogs Cynomys spp., their primary prey. Predation is an important source of mortality; coyotes Canis latrans appear to be the most problematic predator, accounting for 67% of known predation events on radio-tagged ferrets. Little is known about what factors...
Preserving geomorphic data records of flood disturbances
John A. Moody, Deborah A. Martin, Robert H. Meade
2015, GeoResJ (6) 164-174
No central database or repository is currently available in the USA to preserve long-term, spatially extensive records of fluvial geomorphic data or to provide future accessibility. Yet, because of their length and continuity these data are valuable for future research. Therefore, we built a public accessible website to preserve...
A formalized approach to making effective natural resource management decisions for Alaska National Parks
Margaret C. MacCluskie, Angela Romito, James T. Peterson, James P. Lawler
2015, Alaska Park Science (14) 9-13
A fundamental goal of the National Park Service (NPS) is the long-term protection and management of resources in the National Park System. Reaching this goal requires multiple approaches, including the conservation of essential habitats and the identification and elimination of potential threats to biota and habitats. To accomplish these goals,...
Bird species turnover is related to changing predation risk along a vegetation gradient
Joseph A. LaManna, Amy B. Hemenway, Vanna Boccadori, Thomas E. Martin
2015, Ecology (96) 1670-1680
Turnover in animal species along vegetation gradients is often assumed to reflect adaptive habitat preferences that are narrower than the full gradient. Specifically, animals may decline in abundance where their reproductive success is low, and these poor-quality locations differ among species. Yet habitat use does not always appear adaptive. The...
Accounting for multiple climate components when estimating climate change exposure and velocity
Christopher P. Nadeau, Angela K. Fuller
2015, Methods in Ecology and Evolution (6) 697-705
The effect of anthropogenic climate change on organisms will likely be related to climate change exposure and velocity at local and regional scales. However, common methods to estimate climate change exposure and velocity ignore important components of climate that are known to affect the ecology and evolution...
Reach-scale stream restoration in agricultural streams of southern Minnesota alters structural and functional responses of macroinvertebrates
Christine L. Dolph, Susan L. Eggert, Joe Magner, Leonard C. Ferrington Jr., Bruce C. Vondracek
2015, Freshwater Science (34) 535-546
Recent studies suggest that stream restoration at the reach scale may not increase stream biodiversity, raising concerns about the utility of this conservation practice. We examined whether reach-scale restoration in disturbed agricultural streams was associated with changes in macroinvertebrate community structure (total macroinvertebrate taxon richness, total macroinvertebrate density, Ephemeroptera, Plecoptera,...
On a report that the 2012 M 6.0 earthquake in Italy was predicted after seeing an unusual cloud formation
J.N. Thomas, F. Masci, Jeffrey J. Love
2015, Natural Hazards and Earth System Sciences (15) 1061-1068
Several recently published reports have suggested that semi-stationary linear-cloud formations might be causally precursory to earthquakes. We examine the report of Guangmeng and Jie (2013), who claim to have predicted the 2012 M 6.0 earthquake in the Po Valley of northern Italy after seeing a satellite photograph (a digital image) showing a...
Book review: Restoring paradise: Rethinking and rebuilding nature in Hawaii
Steven C. Hess
2015, Pacific Conservation Biology (21) 168-171
The native ecosystems of Hawai‘i have been severely degraded by the introduction of herbivorous mammals and a myriad of invasive plant species. Left unmanaged, most natural areas would continue along a trajectory towards domination by nonnative species; however, several projects have undertaken the daunting task of ecological restoration, four of...
A multi-proxy record of hydroclimate, vegetation, fire, and post-settlement impacts for a subalpine plateau, Central Rocky Mountains U.S.A
Lesleigh Anderson, Andrea Brunelle, Robert S. Thompson
2015, The Holocene (25) 932-943
Apparent changes in vegetation distribution, fire, and other disturbance regimes throughout western North America have prompted investigations of the relative importance of human activities and climate change as potential causal mechanisms. Assessing the effects of Euro-American settlement is difficult because climate changes occur on multi-decadal to centennial time scales and...
Demographic and spatiotemporal patterns of avian influenza infection at the continental scale, and in relation to annual life cycle of a migratory host
Rodolfo Nallar, Zsuzsanna Papp, Tasha Epp, Frederick A. Leighton, Seth R. Swafford, Thomas J. DeLiberto, Robert J. Dusek, S. Ip, Jeffrey S. Hall, Yohannes Berhane, Samantha E.J. Gibbs, Catherine Soos
2015, PLoS ONE (10)
Since the spread of highly pathogenic avian influenza (HPAI) H5N1 in the eastern hemisphere, numerous surveillance programs and studies have been undertaken to detect the occurrence, distribution, or spread of avian influenza viruses (AIV) in wild bird populations worldwide. To identify demographic determinants and spatiotemporal patterns of AIV infection in...
Pressure disequilibria induced by rapid valve closure in noble gas extraction lines
Leah E. Morgan, Brett Davidheiser-Kroll
2015, Geochemistry, Geophysics, Geosystems (16) 1923-1931
Pressure disequilibria during rapid valve closures can affect calculated molar quantities for a range of gas abundance measurements (e.g., K-Ar geochronology, (U-Th)/He geochronology, noble gas cosmogenic chronology). Modeling indicates this effect in a system with a 10 L reservoir reaches a bias of 1% before 1000 pipette aliquants have been...