Reference materials for phase equilibrium studies. 2. Solid–liquid equilibria (IUPAC Technical Report)
Ala Bazyleva, William E Acree, Vladimir Diky, Glenn T Hefter, Johan Jacquemin, M Clara F Magalhaes, Joseph W Magee, D. Kirk Nordstrom, John O’Connell, James D Olson, Ilya Polishuk, Kurt A G Schmidt, John M Shaw, J P Martin Trusler, Ronald D Weir
2023, Pure and Applied Chemistry (94) 1225-1247
This article is the second of three projected IUPAC Technical Reports on reference materials for phase equilibrium studies. The goal of this project was to select reference systems with critically evaluated property values for the verification of instruments and techniques used in phase equilibrium studies of mixtures. This report...
Spatial modeling of two mosquito vectors of West Nile virus using integrated nested Laplace approximations
Kristin J. Bondo, Diego Montecino-Latorre, Lisa Williams, Matt Helwig, Kenneth Duren, Mike Hutchinson, W. David Walter
2023, Ecosphere (14)
The abundance of Culex restuans and Culex pipiens in relation to ecological predictors is poorly understood in regions of the United States where their ranges overlap. It is suspected that these species play different roles in spreading West Nile virus (WNV) in these regions, but few studies have modeled these species separately or accounted...
Influence of camera model and alignment on the performance of paired camera stations
Tim Swearingen, Robert W. Klaver, Charles R. Anderson Jr., Christopher N. Jacques
2023, Wildlife Society Bulletin (47)
The probability of obtaining images of target species may vary across camera models or relative position of cameras at survey locations. Alignment of cameras within paired camera stations (hereafter, stations) could affect species detection due to issues with image exposure. We quantified effects of 3 camera models and alignment (staggered,...
DNA metabarcoding-based evaluation of the diet of Big Brown Bats (Eptesicus fuscus) in the Mid-Atlantic region
Sabrina Deeley, Lin Kang, Pawel Michalak, Eric M. Hallerman, W. Mark Ford
2023, Northeastern Naturalist (29) 454-473
High-throughput DNA sequencing can generate large genetic datasets in a cost-effective manner. Although the diet of Eptesicus fuscus (Big Brown Bat) has been studied widely in natural and rural systems using visual identification of prey items in feces, our aim was to more completely assess diet using a metabarcoding approach across a...
Validating a non-lethal method of aging endangered juvenile Lost River and Shortnose Suckers
Barbara A. Martin, Summer M. Burdick, Rachael Katelyn Paul-Wilson, Ryan J Bart
2023, Journal of Fish and Wildlife Management (14) 121-134
Populations of imperiled Lost River Deltistes luxatus and Shortnose Chasmistes brevirostris suckers in Upper Klamath Lake, Oregon, are experiencing long-term decreases in abundance due to limited recruitment of juvenile suckers into the adult populations. Researchers use estimated ages based on fin rays to study environmental factors affecting...
Connecting habitat to species abundance: The role of light and temperature on the abundance of walleye in lakes
Shad Mahlum, Kelsey Vitense, Hayley R. Corson-Dosch, Lindsay Platt, Jordan Read, Patrick J Schmalz, Melissa Treml, Gretchen J.A. Hansen
2023, Canadian Journal Fisheries and Aquatic Sciences (80) 273-286
Walleye (Sander vitreus) are an ecologically important species managed for recreational, tribal, and commercial harvest. Walleye prefer cool water and low light conditions, and therefore changing water temperature and clarity potentially impacts walleye habitat and populations across the landscape. Using survey data collected from 1993 to 2018 from...
A comprehensive multi-state conditional occupancy model for evaluating interactions of non-native and native species
Patti J. Wohner, Paul D. Scheerer, Michael H. Meeuwig, James T. Peterson
2023, Frontiers in Ecology and Evolution (10)
A major challenge in ecology is disentangling interactions of non-native, potentially invasive species on native species. Conditional two-species occupancy models examine the effects of dominant species (e.g., non-native) on subordinate species (e.g., native) while considering the possibility that occupancy of one species may affect occupancy and/ or detection of...
Ages of the granitic basement of Long Valley Caldera, California, USA, and siting of the Quaternary granite-rhyolite pluton
Edward Hildreth, Judith E. Fierstein, Jorge A. Vazquez
2023, GSA Bulletin (135) 2753-2766
The leucogranitic crystal-mush pluton beneath the iconic Long Valley Caldera, California, USA, released >820 km3 of crystal-poor Pleistocene rhyolite, which was hosted by numerous Mesozoic granitic plutons, only a few of which had been dated until now. Reported here are U-Pb zircon ages, determined...
Multi-scale effects of land cover, weather, and fire on Columbian sharp-tailed grouse
Bryan S. Stevens, Courtney J. Conway, Jeffrey M. Knetter, Shane B. Roberts, Patrick Donnelly
2023, Journal of Wildlife Management (87)
Columbian sharp-tailed grouse (Tympanuchus phasianellus columbianus) are endemic to grassland and shrub-steppe ecosystems of western North America, yet their distribution has contracted to <10% of their historical range. Primary threats to Columbian sharp-tailed grouse include loss of native habitat and conversion to agriculture, reductions in habitat once provided by the...
Round goby detection in Lakes Huron and Michigan— An evaluation of eDNA and fish catches
Katarzyna Przybyla-Kelly, Ashley M. Spoljaric, Meredith B. Nevers
2023, Fishes (8)
Aquatic surveys for fish in large water bodies (e.g., Laurentian Great Lakes of North America) often require a flexible approach using multiple methods, surveying different depths, and sampling across seasons, especially when the target species is elusive in its natural habitat. The round goby (Neogobius melanostomus) is an invasive,...
Intensified warming and aridity accelerate terminal lake desiccation in the Great Basin of the western United States
Dorothy K. Hall, John S. Kimball, Ron Larson, Nicolo E. DiGirolamo, Kimberly Ann Casey, Glynn Hulley
2023, Earth and Space Science (10)
Terminal lakes in the Great Basin (GB) of the western US host critical wildlife habitat and food for migrating birds and can be associated with serious human health and economic consequences when they desiccate. Water levels have declined dramatically in the last 100+ years due to diversion...
Tectonics, geochronology, and petrology of the Walker Top Granite, Appalachian Inner Piedmont, North Carolina (USA): Implications for Acadian and Neoacadian orogenesis
Arthur J. Merschat, Robert D. Hatcher, Scott D. Giorgis, Heather E. Byars, Russell Mapes, Crystal G. Wilson, Matthew P. Gatewood
2023, Geosphere (19) 19-46
The Walker Top Granite (here formally named) is a peraluminous megacrystic granite that occurs in the Cat Square terrane, Inner Piedmont, part of the southern Appalachian Acadian-Neoacadian deformational and metamorphic core. The granite occurs as disconnected concordant to semi-concordant plutons in migmatitic, sillimanite...
Guide for benthic invertebrate studies in support of Natural Resource Damage Assessment and Restoration
David J. Soucek, Aida M. Farag, John M. Besser, Jeffery A. Steevens
2023, Open-File Report 2022-1110
This guide is intended to assist with characterizing injury to freshwater benthic macroinvertebrates (BMIs) in Natural Resource Damage Assessment and Restoration (NRDAR) cases. The contents are narrowly focused on insects, crustaceans, snails, and other invertebrate fauna that are typically considered part of BMI communities and are not intended to address...
The future of ecosystem assessments is automation, collaboration, and artificial intelligence
Carmen Galaz-Garcia, Kenneth J. Bagstad, Julien Brun, Rebecca Chaplin-Kramer, Trevor Dhu, Nicholas J. Murray, Connor J. Nolan, Taylor H. Ricketts, Heidi M. Sosik, Daniel Sousa, Geoff Willard, Benjamin S Halpern
2023, Environmental Research Letters (18)
Robust and routine ecosystem assessments will be fundamental to track progress towards achieving this decade’s global environmental and sustainability goals. Here we examine four needs that address common failure points of ecosystem assessments. These are (1) developing rapid, reproducible, and repeatable ecological data workflows, (2) harmonizing in situ and remotely...
Near real-time detection of winter cover crop termination using harmonized Landsat and Sentinel-2 (HLS) to support ecosystem assessment
Feng Gao, Jyoti Jennewein, W. Dean Hively, Alexander M. Soroka, Alison Thieme, Dawn Bradley, Jason Keppler, Steven Mirsky, Uvirkaa Akumaga
2023, Science of Remote Sensing (7)
Cover crops are planted to reduce soil erosion, increase soil fertility, and improve watershed management. In the Delmarva Peninsula of the eastern United States, winter cover crops are essential for reducing nutrient and sediment losses from farmland. Cost-share programs have been created to incentivize cover crops to achieve conservation objectives....
A pilot biodiversity inventory and monitoring protocol in support of coastal adaptation projects in tidal and nearshore subtidal habitats of Boston Harbor Islands
Michelle Staudinger, Marc Albert
2023, Report
The Boston Harbor Islands National Recreation Area (BOHA) is at high risk to the impacts of sealevel rise (SLR) and erosion from coastal storms. In June 2021, the National Trust for Historic Preservation listed the islands as one of America’s 11 Most Endangered Historic Places due to climate change. BOHA...
What controls suspended-sediment concentration and export in flooded agricultural tracts in the Sacramento-San Joaquin Delta?
Jessica R. Lacy, Evan T. Dailey, Tara L. Morgan-King
2023, San Francisco Estuary and Watershed Science (21)
We investigated wind-wave and suspended-sediment dynamics in Little Holland Tract and Liberty Island, two subsided former agricultural tracts in the Cache Slough complex in the northern Sacramento-San Joaquin Delta which were restored to tidal shallows to improve habitat. Turbidity, and thus suspended-sediment concentration (SSC), is important to habitat quality because...
The future of coastal monitoring through satellite remote sensing
Sean Vitousek, Dan Buscombe, Kilian Vos, Patrick L. Barnard, Andrew C. Ritchie, Jonathan A. Warrick
2023, Cambridge Prisms: Coastal Futures (1)
Satellite remote sensing is transforming coastal science from a “data-poor” field into a “data-rich” field. Sandy beaches are dynamic landscapes that change in response to long-term pressures, short-term pulses, and anthropogenic interventions. Until recently, the rate and breadth of beach change have outpaced our ability to monitor those changes, due...
Improving the operational simplified surface energy balance evapotranspiration model using the forcing and normalizing operation
Gabriel B. Senay, Gabriel Edwin Lee Parrish, Matthew Schauer, MacKenzie Friedrichs, Kul Bikram Khand, Olena Boiko, Stefanie Kagone, Ray Dittmeier, Saeed Arab, Lei Ji
2023, Remote Sensing (15)
Actual evapotranspiration modeling is providing useful information for researchers and resource managers in agriculture and water resources around the world. The performance of models depends on the accuracy of forcing inputs and model parameters. We developed an improved approach to the parameterization of the Operational Simplified Surface Energy Balance...
Characterization of fish assemblages in eleven multi-use reservoirs from North Carolina, USA
Stephen W. Parker, Tyler Steven Coleman, Andrew Kenneth Carlson, Jesse R. Fischer
2023, Journal of Freshwater Ecology (38)
Managing impounded river systems is a recurring challenge for aquatic resource professionals because reservoirs serve multiple functions with different ecological and socioeconomic outcomes. However, research on fishes in reservoirs has disproportionally focused on recreationally and economically important species, with less attention directed toward fish assemblages despite the potential for management...
Latency and geofence testing of wireless emergency alerts intended for the ShakeAlert® earthquake early warning system for the West Coast of the United States of America
Sara K. McBride, Danielle F. Sumy, Andrea L. Llenos, Grace Alexandra Parker, Jeffrey J. McGuire, Jessie Kate Saunders, Men-Andrin Meier, Pascal Schuback, Douglas D. Given, Robert Michael deGroot
2023, Safety Science (157)
ShakeAlert, the earthquake early warning (EEW) system for the West Coast of the United States, attempts to provides crucial warnings before strong shaking occurs. However, because the alerts are triggered only when an earthquake is already in progress, and the alert latencies and delivery times are platform dependent, the time...
Relative-condition parameters for fishes of Montana, USA
Robert W. Eckelbecker, Nathaniel M. Heili, Christopher S. Guy, David A. Schmetterling
2023, Fishes (8)
Body condition indices are commonly used in the management of fish populations and are a surrogate to physiological attributes such as tissue-energy reserves. Relative condition factor (Kn) describes the condition of species relative to populations in a geographic area. We developed models to allow for the calculation of Kn in...
Mapping first to final uses for rare earth elements, globally and in the United States
Elisa Alonso, David G. Pineault, Joseph Gambogi, Nedal T. Nassar
2023, Journal of Industrial Ecology (27) 312-322
Estimating the material flows of rare earth elements (REEs) is essential to understanding which industries are most vulnerable to potential REE supply disruptions which, in turn, may inform policy recommendations aimed at reducing the supply risk. However, the REEs are a group of mineral commodities characterized...
An integral projection model for gizzard shad (Dorosoma cepedianum) utilizing density-dependent age-0 survival
James P Peirce, Gregory Sandland, Barb Bennie, Richard A. Erickson
2023, Ecological Modelling (477)
Gizzard shad (Dorosoma cepedianum) is a common freshwater fish species found throughout the central and eastern portions of North America. Within these regions, gizzard shad play several critical roles in the freshwater community such as serving as prey for other fish species and translocating nutrients from substrates into the water...
Long-term monitoring in transition: Resolving spatial mismatch and integrating multistate occupancy data
Matthew J Weldy, Damon B. Lesmeister, Charles B. Yackulic, Cara L. Appel, Chris E. McCafferty, David Wiens
2023, Ecological Indicators (146)
The success of long-term wildlife monitoring programs can be influenced by many factors and study designs often represent compromises between spatial scales and costs. Adaptive monitoring programs can iteratively manage this tension by adopting new cost-efficient technologies, which can provide projects the...