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Publication Extents

Not all publications have extents, not all extents are completely accurate
Uncertainties in intensity-based earthquake magnitude estimates
Madeleine C. Lucas, Susan E. Hough, Seth Stein, Leah Marschall Salditch, Molly M. Gallahue, James S. Neely, Norman A. Abrahamson
2023, Seismological Research Letters (94) 2202-2214
Estimating the magnitude of historical earthquakes is crucial for assessing seismic hazard. Magnitudes of early‐instrumental earthquakes can be inferred using a combination of instrumental records, field observations, and the observed distribution of shaking intensity determined from macroseismic observations. For earthquakes before 1900, shaking intensity distributions often provide the only information...
Simulation of future streamflow and irrigation demand based on climate and urban growth projections in the Cape Fear and Pee Dee River Basins, North Carolina and South Carolina, 2055–65
Laura N. Gurley, Ana Maria Garcia, Cassandra A. Pfeifle, Georgina M. Sanchez
2023, Scientific Investigations Report 2023-5036
Water resources in the coastal region of North Carolina and South Carolina (Coastal Carolinas) are currently under stress from competing ecological and societal needs. Projected changes in climate and population are expected to place even more stress on water resources in the region. The Coastal Carolinas Focus Area Study...
Dispersive currents explain patterns of population connectivity in an ecologically and economically important fish
Claire Schraidt, Amanda Susanne Ackiss, Wesley Alan Larson, Mark D Rowe, Tomas O Hook, Mark R. Christie
2023, Evolutionary Applications (16) 1284-1301
How to identify the drivers of population connectivity remains a fundamental question in ecology and evolution. Answering this question can be challenging in aquatic environments where dynamic lake and ocean currents coupled with high levels of dispersal and gene flow can decrease the utility...
Linear and landscape disturbances alter Mojave desert tortoise movement behavior
Steven J. Hromada, Todd Esque, Amy G. Vandergast, K. Kristina Drake, Felicia Chen, Benjamin O Gottsacker, Jordan Andrew Swart, Ken E Nussear
2023, Frontiers in Ecology and Evolution (11)
Introduction: Animal movements are influenced by landscape features; disturbances to the landscape can alter movements, dispersal, and ultimately connectivity among populations. Faster or longer movements adjacent to a localized disturbance or within disturbed areas could indicate reduced habitat quality whereas slower or shorter movements and reduced movements may indicate greater...
Putting down roots: Afforestation and bank cohesion of Icelandic Rivers
Sara L. Rathburn, Prostur Eysteinsson, Thorsteinn Saemundsson, John T. Kemper, Celeste D. Wieting, Jonathan M. Friedman
2023, River Research and Applications (39) 1669-1681
Riparian vegetation is widely recognized as a critical component of functioning fluvial systems. Human pressures on woody vegetation including riparian areas have had lasting effects, especially at high latitude. In Iceland, prior to human settlement, native downy birch woodlands covered approximately 15%–40% of the...
Invasive Brook Stickleback Culaea inconstans occurrence, habitat drivers, and spatial overlap with native fishes in Wyoming, USA
Jacob S. Ruthvena, Josh Leonard, Annika W. Walters
2023, Hydrobiologia (859) 3595-3610
A central focus of modern fisheries management is eradicating invaders that threaten imperiled native fishes. However, vast landscapes and limited funding and personnel resources demand a prioritized approach to management. Brook Stickleback Culaea inconstans (Kirtland, 1840) is an aquatic invasive species in Wyoming, USA, that may pose a...
Wetland management practices and secretive marsh bird habitat in the Mississippi Flyway: A review
Kristen M. Malone, Elisabeth B. Webb, Doreen C. Mengel, Laura Kearns, Ann E. McKellar, Sumner W. Matteson, Benjamin R. Williams
2023, The Journal of Wildlife Management (87)
Management regimes on publicly owned freshwater wetlands in the Mississippi Flyway of North America (i.e., Flyway) have historically emphasized waterfowl, but there is limited information on how waterfowl-focused wetland management affects other wetland-dependent wildlife. Secretive marsh birds (SMBs) depend on wetlands with emergent vegetation...
Turkey Vulture survival is reduced in areas of greater road density
Adrian Naveda-Rodriguez, Keith L. Bildstein, David R. Barber, Jean-Francois Therrien, Michael L. Avery, Bryan M. Kluever, Scott A. Rush, Francisco Vilella
2023, Article
The demography of, and factors that influence these metrics, are largely unknown for most vultures in the Americas. Survivorship of Turkey Vultures (Cathartes aura) may be influenced by landscape heterogeneity and human disturbance. We quantified the effects of landscape composition (Shannon’s diversity index) and configuration (contagion, edge density, and largest...
A body composition model with multiple storage compartments for polar bears (Ursus maritimus)
Stephanie R. Penk, Pranav Sadana, Louise C. Archer, Anthony M. Pagano, Marc R. L. Cattet, Nicholas J. Lunn, Gregory W. Thiemann, Peter K. Molnar
2023, Article
Climate warming is rapidly altering Arctic ecosystems. Polar bears (Ursus maritimus) need sea ice as a platform from which to hunt seals, but increased sea-ice loss is lengthening periods when bears are without access to primary hunting habitat. During periods of food scarcity, survival depends on the energy that a...
Ensemble estimation of historical evapotranspiration for the conterminous U.S.
Meredith Reitz, Ward E. Sanford, Samuel Saxe
2023, Water Resources Research (59)
Evapotranspiration (ET) is the largest component of the water budget, accounting for the majority of the water available from precipitation. ET is challenging to quantify because of the uncertainties associated with the many ET equations currently in use, and because observations of ET are uncertain and sparse....
The influence of vegetated marshes on wave transformation in sheltered estuaries
Rae M. Taylor-Burns, Cornelis M. Nederhoff, Jessica R. Lacy, Patrick L. Barnard
2023, Coastal Engineering (184)
Assessing the influence of marshes on mitigating flooding along estuarine shorelines under the pressures of sea level rise requires understanding wave transformation across the marsh. A numerical model was applied to investigate how vegetated marshes influence wave transformation. XBeach non-hydrostatic (XB-NH) was calibrated and validated with...
Lightning rings and gravity waves: Insights into the giant eruption plumefrom Tonga’s Hunga Volcano on 15 January 2022
Alexa R. Van Eaton, Jeff Lapierre, Sonja A. Behnke, Chris Vagasky, Christopher J. Schultz, Michael J. Pavolonis, Kristopher Bedka, Konstantin Khlopenkov
2023, Geophysical Research Letters (50)
On 15 January 2022, Hunga Volcano in Tonga produced the most violent eruption in the modern satellite era, sending a water-rich plume at least 58 km high. Using a combination of satellite- and ground-based sensors, we investigate the astonishing rate of volcanic lightning (>2,600 flashes min−1) and what...
Hydrogeomorphic changes along mid-Atlantic coastal plain rivers transitioning from non-tidal to tidal: Implications for a rising sea level
Daniel Kroes, Gregory E. Noe, Cliff R. Hupp, Thomas Rossiter Doody, P.A. Bukaveckas
2023, Estuaries and Coasts (46) 1438-1458
Sea level rise is affecting reaches of coastal rivers by increasing water levels and propagating tides inland. The transition of river systems into tidal estuaries has been neglected in hydrogeomorphic studies. A better understanding of transitioning reaches is critical to understanding ecosystem dynamics, services, and developing predictive capabilities of change...
High-resolution InSAR reveals localized pre-eruptive deformation inside the crater of Agung Volcano, Indonesia
Mark Bemelmans, Juliet Biggs, Michael P. Poland, James Wookey, Susanna Ebmeier, Angela K. Diefenbach, Devy Damil Syahbana
2023, Journal of Geophysical Research B: Solid Earth (128)
During a volcanic crisis, high-rate, localized deformation can indicate magma close to the surface, with important implications for eruption forecasting. However, only a few such examples have been reported, because frequent, dense monitoring is needed. High-resolution Synthetic Aperture Radar (SAR) is capable of achieving <1 m spatial resolution and sub-weekly revisit...
A new DNA extraction method (HV-CTAB-PCI) for amplification of nuclear markers from open ocean-retrieved faeces of an herbivorous marine mammal, the dugong
Vicky Ooi, Lee McMichael, Margaret Hunter, Aristide Takoukam Kamla, Janet M. Lanyon
2023, PLoS ONE (18)
Non-invasively collected faecal samples are an alternative source of DNA to tissue samples, that may be used in genetic studies of wildlife when direct sampling of animals is difficult. Although several faecal DNA extraction methods exist, their efficacy varies between species. Previous attempts to amplify mitochondrial DNA (mtDNA) markers from...
Identifying hydrologic signatures associated with streamflow depletion caused by groundwater pumping
Dana A. Lapides, Samuel Zipper, John C. Hammond
2023, Hydrological Processes (37)
Groundwater pumping can reduce streamflow in nearby waterways (‘streamflow depletion’), a process which must be accounted for in integrated management of surface and groundwater resources. However, causal identification of streamflow depletion from hydrographs alone is challenging because pumping impacts are masked by other drivers of hydrologic variability. To identify potential...
Evaluating population trends of juvenile Atlantic Sturgeon at low abundance in a dynamic estuarine environment (Hudson River, New York)
Mark Richard Dufour, Song S. Qian
2023, Fisheries Management and Ecology (30) 507-520
Evaluating population trends in dynamic estuarine environments can be challenging, especially when survey data include a high percentage of zero observations. In fishery-independent surveys, zeros that come from reduced susceptibility to sample gears and reduced availability of the population to the survey impact survey catchability and negatively bias relative abundance...
A hierarchical modelling framework for estimating individual- and population-level reproductive success from movement data
Joseph Michael Eisaguirre, Perry J. Williams, Julia C. Brockman, Stephen B. Lewis, Christopher P. Barger, Greg A. Breed, Travis L. Booms
2023, Methods in Ecology and Evolution (14) 2110-2122
Rapidly advancing animal telemetry technologies paired with new statistical models can provide insight into the behaviour of otherwise unobservable free-living animals. Changes in behaviour apparent from pairing telemetry with statistical models often occur as animals undertake key life-history activities, such as reproduction. For many species that are secretive or...
Evaluation of nearshore bathymetric inversion algorithms using camera observations and synthetic numerical input of surface waves during storms
Elora Oades, Ryan Mulligan, Margaret L. Palmsten
2023, Coastal Engineering (184)
Nearshore bathymetry is difficult to measure using survey methods when wave heights approach the breaking limit. Remote sensing using digital cameras offers a way to observe the surf zone and calculate water depths based on phase speed but comes with its challenges of potentially noisy data...
The Colorado River water crisis: Its origin and the future
John C. Schmidt, Charles B. Yackulic, Eric Kuhn
2023, WIREs Water (10)
During much of the 21st century, natural runoff in the Colorado River basin has declined, while consumption has remained relatively constant, leading to historically low reservoir storage. Between January 2000 and April 2023, the amount of water stored in Lake Mead and Lake Powell, the two largest reservoirs in the...
Modeling the effects of large-scale interior headland restoration on tidal hydrodynamics and salinity transport in an open coast, marine-dominant estuary
Davina L. Passeri, Robert L. Jenkins III, Autumn C. Poisson, Matthew V. Bilskie, Peter Bacopoulos
2023, Frontiers in Marine Science (10)
The effects of large-scale interior headland restoration on tidal hydrodynamics and salinity transport in an open coast, marine dominant estuary (Grand Bay, Alabama, U.S.A) are investigated using a two-dimensional model, the Discontinuous-Galerkin Shallow Water Equations Model (DG-SWEM). Three restoration alternatives are simulated for present-day conditions, as well as under...
Northwest Forest Plan — The first 25 years (1994–2018): Watershed condition status and trends
Jason Dunham, Christine Hirsch, Sean Gordon, Rebecca L. Flitcroft, Nathan Chelgren, Marcia N. Snyder, David P Hockman-Wert, Gordon H. Reeves, Heidi V. Andersen, Scott K. Anderson, William A. Battaglin, Tom A. Black, Jason Brown, Shannon Claeson, Lauren Hay, Emily D. Heaston, Charles H. Luce, Nathan Nelson, Colin Penn, Mark Raggon
2023, Technical Report PNW-GTR-1010
This report describes status and trends in watershed condition across the Northwest Forest Plan (NWFP) area over the first 25 years since its inception in 1994. The program charged with this task is the Aquatic and Riparian Effectiveness Monitoring Program (AREMP), which has assembled information from field data collection, spatial...
MLAAPDE: A machine learning dataset for determining global earthquake source parameters
Hank M. Cole, William L. Yeck, Harley M. Benz
2023, Seismological Research Letters (94) 2489-2499
The Machine Learning Asset Aggregation of the Preliminary Determination of Epicenters (MLAAPDE) dataset is a labeled waveform archive designed to enable rapid development of machine learning (ML) models used in seismic monitoring operations. MLAAPDE consists of more than 5.1 million recordings of 120 s long three‐component broadband waveform data (raw counts)...
The unmarked R package: Twelve years of advances in occurrence and abundance modelling in ecology
Kenneth F. Kellner, Adam D. Smith, J. Andrew Royle, Marc Kéry, Jerrold L. Belant, Richard B. Chandler
2023, Methods in Ecology & Evolution (14) 1408-1415
Species distribution models (SDMs) are widely applied to understand the processes governing spatial and temporal variation in species abundance and distribution but often do not account for measurement errors such as false negatives and false positives.We describe unmarked, a package for the freely available and open-source R software that provides...
Prevailing impacts of river management on microplastic transport in contrasting US streams: Rethinking global microplastic flux estimations
Anna Kukkola, Robert L. Runkel, Uwe Schneidewind, Sheila F. Murphy, Liam Kelleher, Greg Sambrook Smith, Holly Astrid Nel, Iseult Lynch, Stefan Krause
2023, Water Research (240)
While microplastic inputs into rivers are assumed to be correlated with anthropogenic activities and to accumulate towards the sea, the impacts of water management on downstream microplastic transport are largely unexplored. A comparative study of microplastic abundance in Boulder Creek (BC), and its less urbanized tributary South Boulder Creek (SBC),...