Mercury bioaccumulation in estuarine wetland fishes: Evaluating habitats and risk to coastal wildlife
Collin A. Eagles-Smith, Joshua T. Ackerman
2014, Environmental Pollution (193) 147-155
Estuaries are globally important areas for methylmercury bioaccumulation because of high methylmercury production rates and use by fish and wildlife. We measured total mercury (THg) concentrations in ten fish species from 32 wetland and open bay sites in San Francisco Bay Estuary (2005–2008). Fish THg concentrations (μg/g dry weight ±...
Hydrologic enforcement of lidar DEMs
Sandra K. Poppenga, Bruce B. Worstell, Jeffrey J. Danielson, John Brock, Gayla A. Evans, H. Karl Heidemann
2014, Fact Sheet 2014-3051
Hydrologic-enforcement (hydro-enforcement) of light detection and ranging (lidar)-derived digital elevation models (DEMs) modifies the elevations of artificial impediments (such as road fills or railroad grades) to simulate how man-made drainage structures such as culverts or bridges allow continuous downslope flow. Lidar-derived DEMs contain an extremely high level of topographic detail;...
High diet overlap between native small-bodied fishes and nonnative fathead minnow in the Colorado River, Grand Canyon, Arizona
Sarah E. Zahn Seegert, Emma J. Rosi-Marshall, Colden V. Baxter, Theodore A. Kennedy, Robert O. Hall Jr., Wyatt F. Cross
2014, Transactions of the American Fisheries Society (143) 1072-1083
River regulation may mediate the interactions among native and nonnative species, potentially favoring nonnative species and contributing to the decline of native populations. We examined food resource use and diet overlap among small-bodied fishes in the Grand Canyon section of the Colorado River as a first step in evaluating potential...
Demographic monitoring and population viability analysis of two rare beardtongues from the Uinta Basin
Rebecca M. McCaffery, Rita Reisor, Kathryn M. Irvine, Jessi Brunson
2014, Western North American Naturalist (74) 257-274
Energy development, in combination with other environmental stressors, poses a persistent threat to rare species endemic to energy-producing regions of the western United States. Demographic analyses of monitored populations can provide key information on the natural dynamics of threatened plant and animal populations and how these dynamics might be affected...
Documentation for the 2014 update of the United States national seismic hazard maps
Mark D. Petersen, Morgan P. Moschetti, Peter M. Powers, Charles S. Mueller, Kathleen M. Haller, Arthur D. Frankel, Yuehua Zeng, Sanaz Rezaeian, Stephen C. Harmsen, Oliver S. Boyd, Edward H. Field, Rui Chen, Kenneth S. Rukstales, Nico Luco, Russell L. Wheeler, Robert A. Williams, Anna H. Olsen
2014, Open-File Report 2014-1091
The national seismic hazard maps for the conterminous United States have been updated to account for new methods, models, and data that have been obtained since the 2008 maps were released (Petersen and others, 2008). The input models are improved from those implemented in 2008 by using new ground motion...
Site-characteristic and hydrologic data for selected wells and springs on Federal land in Clark County, Nevada
Michael T. Pavelko
2014, Data Series 864
Site-characteristic and hydrologic data for selected wells and springs on U.S. Bureau of Land Management, National Park Service, U.S. Fish and Wildlife Service, and U.S. Forest Service land in Clark County, Nevada, were updated in the U.S. Geological Survey’s National Water Information System (NWIS) to facilitate multi-agency research. Data were...
EAARL-B coastal topography: eastern New Jersey, Hurricane Sandy, 2012: first surface
C. Wayne Wright, Xan Fredericks, Rodolfo J. Troche, Emily S. Klipp, Christine J. Kranenburg, David B. Nagle
2014, Data Series 767
These remotely sensed, geographically referenced elevation measurements of lidar-derived first-surface (FS) topography datasets were produced by the U.S. Geological Survey (USGS), St. Petersburg Coastal and Marine Science Center, St. Petersburg, Florida. This project provides highly detailed and accurate datasets for a portion of the New Jersey coastline beachface, acquired pre-Hurricane Sandy...
Effects of 2010 Hurricane Earl amidst geologic evidence for greater overwash at Anegada, British Virgin Islands
Brian F. Atwater, Zamara Fuentes, Robert B. Halley, Uri S. ten Brink, Martitia P. Tuttle
2014, Advances in Geosciences (38) 21-30
A post-hurricane survey of a Caribbean island affords comparisons with geologic evidence for greater overwash at the same place. This comparison, though of limited application to other places, helps calibrate coastal geology for assessment of earthquake and tsunami potential along the Antilles Subduction Zone. The surveyed island, Anegada, is 120 km...
High-frequency imaging of elastic contrast and contact area with implications for naturally observed changes in fault properties
Kohei Nagata, Brian D. Kilgore, Nicholas M. Beeler, Masao Nakatani
2014, Journal of Geophysical Research (119) 5855-5875
During localized slip of a laboratory fault we simultaneously measure the contact area and the dynamic fault normal elastic stiffness. One objective is to determine conditions where stiffness may be used to infer changes in area of contact during sliding on nontransparent fault surfaces. Slip speeds between 0.01 and 10...
Movements and demography of spawning American Shad in the Penobscot River, Maine, prior to dam removal
Ann B. Grote, Michael M. Bailey, Joseph D. Zydlewski
2014, Transactions of the American Fisheries Society (143) 552-563
We conducted a baseline study to better understand the migratory movements and age and spawning histories of American Shad Alosa sapidissima in the Penobscot River, Maine. The Penobscot River is currently undergoing a major dam removal project that is focused on restoring migratory connectivity and recovering diadromous fish populations including American Shad....
Taking the mystery out of mathematical model applications to karst aquifers—A primer
Eve L. Kuniansky
2014, Conference Paper, U.S. Geological Survey Karst Interest Group Proceedings, Carlsbad, New Mexico, April 29–May 2, 2014
Advances in mathematical model applications toward the understanding of the complex flow, characterization, and water-supply management issues for karst aquifers have occurred in recent years. Different types of mathematical models can be applied successfully if appropriate information is available and the problems are adequately identified. The mathematical approaches discussed in...
Interagency partnership to assess and restore a degraded urban riverine wetland: Dyke Marsh Wildlife Preserve, Virginia
Brent W. Steury, Ronald J. Litwin, Erik T. Oberg, Joseph P. Smoot, Milan J. Pavich, Geoffrey Sanders, Vincent L. Santucci
2014, The George Wright Forum (31) 116-128
The narrow-leaved cattail wetland known as Dyke Marsh formally became a land holding of George Washington Memorial Parkway (GWMP, a unit of the national park system) in 1959, along with a congressional directive to honor a newly-let 30-year commercial sand and gravel dredge-mining lease at the site. Dredging continued until...
Mapping forest height in Alaska using GLAS, Landsat composites, and airborne LiDAR
Birgit Peterson, Kurtis Nelson
2014, Remote Sensing (6) 12409-12426
Vegetation structure, including forest canopy height, is an important input variable to fire behavior modeling systems for simulating wildfire behavior. As such, forest canopy height is one of a nationwide suite of products generated by the LANDFIRE program. In the past, LANDFIRE has relied on a combination of field observations...
Linking environmental variability to population and community dynamics
Jelena H. Pantel, Daniel E. Pendleton, Annika W. Walters, Lauren A. Rogers
2014, Book chapter, Eco-DAS IX: Symposium proceedings
Linking population and community responses to environmental variability lies at the heart of ecology, yet methodological approaches vary and existence of broad patterns spanning taxonomic groups remains unclear. We review the characteristics of environmental and biological variability. Classic approaches to link environmental variability to population and community variability are discussed...
Sensitivity of airborne geophysical data to sublacustrine and near-surface permafrost thaw
Burke J. Minsley, Tristan Wellman, Michelle Ann Walvoord, Andre Revil
2014, The Cryosphere (9) 781-794
A coupled hydrogeophysical forward and inverse modeling approach is developed to illustrate the ability of frequency-domain airborne electromagnetic (AEM) data to characterize subsurface physical properties associated with sublacustrine permafrost thaw during lake-talik formation. Numerical modeling scenarios are evaluated that consider non-isothermal hydrologic responses to variable forcing from different lake depths...
Reconstruction of an early Paleozoic continental margin based on the nature of protoliths in the Nome Complex, Seward Peninsula, Alaska
Alison B. Till, Julie A. Dumoulin, Robert A. Ayuso, John N. Aleinikoff, Jeffrey M. Amato, John F. Slack, W.C. Pat Shanks III
2014, GSA Special Papers
The Nome Complex is a large metamorphic unit that sits along the southern boundary of the Arctic Alaska–Chukotka terrane, the largest of several micro continental fragments of uncertain origin located between the Siberian and Laurentian cratons. The Arctic Alaska–Chukotka terrane moved into its present position during the Mesozoic; its Mesozoic...
Simulated and measured water levels and estimated water-level changes in the Albuquerque area, central New Mexico, 1950-2012
Steven E. Rice, Gretchen P. Oelsner, Charles E. Heywood
2014, Scientific Investigations Map 3305
The City of Albuquerque, the major population center in New Mexico, underwent a more than fivefold population increase between 1950 and 2010. Before 2009, groundwater was the primary source of the City of Albuquerque’s municipal water supply, but since that time, the city has diverted water through the San Juan-Chama...
Estimated 2012 groundwater potentiometric surface and drawdown from predevelopment to 2012 in the Santa Fe Group aquifer system in the Albuquerque metropolitan area, central New Mexico
Rachel I. Powell, Sarah E. McKean
2014, Scientific Investigations Map 3301
Historically, the water-supply requirements of the Albuquerque metropolitan area of central New Mexico were met almost exclusively by groundwater withdrawal from the Santa Fe Group aquifer system. In response to water-level declines, the Albuquerque Bernalillo County Water Utility Authority (ABCWUA) began diverting water from the San Juan-Chama Drinking Water Project...
Estimating landscape resistance to dispersal
Tabitha A. Graves, Richard B. Chandler, J. Andrew Royle, Paul Beier, Katherine C. Kendall
2014, Landscape Ecology (29) 1201-1211
Dispersal is an inherently spatial process that can be affected by habitat conditions in sites encountered by dispersers. Understanding landscape resistance to dispersal is important in connectivity studies and reserve design, but most existing methods use resistance functions with cost parameters that are subjectively chosen by the investigator. We...
Paleoearthquakes at Frazier Mountain, California delimit extent and frequency of past San Andreas Fault ruptures along 1857 trace
Katherine M. Scharer, Ray Weldon II, Ashley Streig, Thomas Fumal
2014, Geophysical Research Letters (41) 4527-4534
Large earthquakes are infrequent along a single fault, and therefore historic, well-characterized earthquakes exert a strong influence on fault behavior models. This is true of the 1857 Fort Tejon earthquake (estimated M7.7–7.9) on the southern San Andreas Fault (SSAF), but an outstanding question is whether the 330 km long rupture...
Fish assemblages, connectivity, and habitat rehabilitation in a diked Great Lakes coastal wetland complex
Kurt P. Kowalski, Michael J. Wiley, Douglas A. Wilcox
2014, Transactions of the American Fisheries Society (143) 1130-1142
Fish and plant assemblages in the highly modified Crane Creek coastal wetland complex of Lake Erie were sampled to characterize their spatial and seasonal patterns and to examine the implications of the hydrologic connection of diked wetland units to Lake Erie. Fyke netting captured 52 species and an abundance of...
WaterQualityWatch and water-quality information bookmark
Franceska D. Wilde
2014, General Information Product 157
WaterQualityWatch is an online resource of the U.S. Geological Survey (USGS) that provides access to continuous real-time measurements of water temperature, specific electrical conductance, pH, dissolved oxygen, turbidity, and nitrate at selected data-collection stations throughout the Nation. Additional online resources of the USGS that pertain to various types of water-quality...
Assessment of undiscovered, technically recoverable oil and gas resources of Armenia, 2014
Timothy R. Klett, Christopher J. Schenk, Craig J. Wandrey, Michael E. Brownfield, Ronald R. Charpentier, Marilyn E. Tennyson, Donald L. Gautier
2014, Fact Sheet 2014-3048
Using a geology-based assessment methodology, the U.S. Geological Survey estimated mean volumes of 1 million barrels of undiscovered, technically recoverable conventional oil and 6 billion cubic feet of undiscovered, technically recoverable conventional natural gas in Armenia....
Five centuries of tsunamis and land-level changes in the overlapping rupture area of the 1960 and 2010 Chilean earthquakes
Lisa L. Ely, Marco Cisternas, Robert L. Wesson, Tina Dura
2014, Geology (42) 995-998
A combination of geological and historical records from south-central Chile provides a means to address general questions about the stability of megathrust rupture patches and the range of variation expected among earthquakes and tsunamis along a particular stretch of a subduction zone. The Tirúa River estuary (38.3°S) records four large...
Interpretations of evidence for large Pleistocene paleolakes in the Bonneville basin, western North America: COMMENT on: Bonneville basin shoreline records of large lake intervals during marine isotope stage 3 and the last glacial maximum, by Nishizawa et al. (2013)
Charles G. Oviatt, Margorie A. Chan, Paul W. Jewell, Bruce G. Bills, David B. Madsen, David M. Miller
2014, Palaeogeography, Palaeoclimatology, Palaeoecology (401) 173-176
Nishizawa et al. (2013) argue in support of three large paleolakes in the Bonneville basin during Marine Oxygen Isotope Stage 3 (MIS 3). If true, that would be an important contribution to paleoclimate investigations. However, the key evidence in support of their argument consists of four radiocarbon ages that are...