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Not all publications have extents, not all extents are completely accurate
The source, fate, and transport of arsenic in the Yellowstone hydrothermal system - An overview
R. Blaine McCleskey, D. Kirk Nordstrom, Shaul Hurwitz, Daniel R. Colman, David A. Roth, Madeline Oxner Johnson, Eric S. Boyd
2022, Journal of Volcanology and Geothermal Research (432)
The Yellowstone Plateau Volcanic Field (YPVF) contains >10,000 thermal features including hot springs, pools, geysers, mud pots, and fumaroles with diverse chemical compositions. Arsenic (As) concentrations in YPVF thermal waters typically range from 0.005 to 4 mg/L, but an As concentration of 17 mg/L has been reported. Arsenic data from thermal springs,...
Water and endangered fish in the Klamath River Basin: Do Upper Klamath Lake surface elevation and water quality affect adult Lost River and Shortnose Sucker survival?
Jacob Richard Krause, Eric C. Janney, Summer M. Burdick, Alta C. Harris, Brian S. Hayes
2022, North American Journal of Fisheries Management (42) 1414-1432
In the western United States, water allocation decisions often incorporate the needs of endangered fish. In the Klamath River basin, an understanding of temporal variation in annual survival rates of Shortnose Suckers Chasmistes brevirostris and Lost River Suckers Deltistes luxatus and their relation to environmental drivers is critical to water...
Machine learning for understanding inland water quantity, quality, and ecology
Alison P. Appling, Samantha K. Oliver, Jordan Read, Jeffrey Michael Sadler, Jacob Aaron Zwart
Thomas Mehner, Klement Tockner, editor(s)
2022, Book chapter, Encyclopedia of inland waters
This chapter provides an overview of machine learning models and their applications to the science of inland waters. Such models serve a wide range of purposes for science and management: predicting water quality, quantity, or ecological dynamics across space, time, or hypothetical scenarios; vetting and distilling raw data for further...
Landslides triggered by the 2002 M 7.9 Denali Fault earthquake, Alaska, USA
William H. Schulz
Ikuo Towhata, Gonghui Wang, Qiang Xu, Chris Massey, editor(s)
2022, Book chapter, Coseismic landslides: Phenomena, long-term effects and mitigation
The 2002 M 7.9 Denali earthquake in Alaska, USA, was the largest inland earthquake in North America in nearly 150 years. The earthquake involved oblique thrusting but mostly strike-slip motion, and faults ruptured the ground surface over 330 km. Fault rupture occurred in a rugged, mountainous, subarctic environment with extensive...
Modeling reservoir release using pseudo-prospective learning and physical simulations to predict water temperature
Xiaowei Jia, Shengyu Chen, Yiqun Xie, Haoyu Yang, Alison P. Appling, Samantha K. Oliver, Zhe Jiang
Arindam Banerjee, Zhi-Hua Zhou, Evangelos E. Papalexakis, Matteo Riondato, editor(s)
2022, Conference Paper, Proceedings of the 2022 SIAM International Conference on Data Mining (SDM)
This paper proposes a new data-driven method for predicting water temperature in stream networks with reservoirs. The water flows released from reservoirs greatly affect the water temperature of downstream river segments. However, the information of released water flow is often not available for many reservoirs, which makes it difficult for...
Assessing the efficacy of oblique bubble screens for control of aquatic invasive species
Vindhyawasini Prasad, C. D. Suski, P. Ryan Jackson, Amy E. George, Duane Chapman, Jesse Robert Fischer, Rafael O. Tinoco
2022, Conference Paper, Proceedings of the 39th IAHR World Congress, Granada, Spain
Non-physical barriers, such as bubble screens (or curtains), are promising low-impact strategies to deter the spread of Aquatic Invasive Species (AIS) in streams. Bubble screens have been successfully implemented to redirect and/or deter adult fish and to capture plastics in some rivers, but their efficacy on invasive fish at multiple...
Nuclear magnetic resonance logging of a deep test well for estimation of aquifer and confining-unit hydraulic properties, Long Island, New York
Frederick Stumm, John H. Williams
2022, Conference Paper
A 1,200-foot deep well in southwestern Nassau County, Long Island, N.Y. was selected to evaluate the application of a nuclear magnetic resonance (NMR) logging tool. Technological advances in NMR borehole systems have allowed for reduced probe length and diameter, and focused measurement at specific diameters beyond the disturbed zone surrounding...
Utilization of genetic data to inform native Brook Trout conservation in North Carolina
Jacob Rash, David C. Kazyak, Shannon L. White, Barbara A. Lubinski
2022, Conference Paper, Proceedings of Wild Trout XIII
As North Carolina’s only native salmonid, Brook Trout Salvelinus fontinalis is a fish of considerable ecological and cultural significance in the state, but anthropogenic alterations to the landscape and introductions of nonnative salmonids have fragmented and reduced its native range. As a result, the North Carolina Wildlife Resources Commission (NCWRC)...
Characterization of subsurface conditions and recharge at the irrigated four-plex baseball field, Fort Irwin National Training Center, California, 2018–20
Jill N. Densmore, Meghan C. Dick, Krishangi D. Groover, Christopher P. Ely, Anthony A. Brown
2022, Open-File Report 2022-1118
The U.S. Geological Survey performed subsurface and geophysical site characterization of the irrigated four-plex baseball field in the Langford Valley–Irwin Groundwater Subbasin, as part of a research study in cooperation with the U.S. Environmental Protection Agency, the Agricultural Research Service, and the Fort Irwin National Training Center, California. To help...
Range-wide population trend analysis for greater sage-grouse (Centrocercus urophasianus)—Updated 1960–2021
Peter S. Coates, Brian G. Prochazka, Cameron L. Aldridge, Michael S. O’Donnell, David R. Edmunds, Adrian P. Monroe, Steve E. Hanser, Lief A. Wiechman, Michael P. Chenaille
2022, Data Report 1165
Greater sage-grouse (Centrocercus urophasianus) are at the center of state and national land use policies largely because of their unique life-history traits as an ecological indicator for health of sagebrush ecosystems. This updated population trend analysis provides state and federal land and wildlife managers with best-available science to help guide...
Bureau of Reclamation: Visitor satisfaction survey instructions
Emily J. Wilkins, Nicholas W. Cole, Rudy Schuster
2022, Report
The purpose of the Bureau of Reclamation (BOR) Visitor Satisfaction Survey is to measure visitors’ opinions about BOR facilities, services, and recreational opportunities. This effort helps BOR meet requirements of the Government Performance and Results Act of 1993 (GPRA) and other BOR and Department of the Interior (DOI) strategic planning...
Red knot stopover population size and migration ecology at Delaware Bay, USA, 2022
James E. Lyons
2022, Report
Red Knots (Calidris canutus rufa) stop at Delaware Bay on the mid-Atlantic coast of North America during northward migration to feed on eggs of horseshoe crabs (Limulus polyphemus). In the late 1990s and early 2000s, the number of Red Knots found at Delaware Bay declined from ~50,000 to ~13,000. Horseshoe...
Continuous water-quality and suspended-sediment transport monitoring in San Francisco Bay, California, water years 2020–21
Danielle L. Palm, Darin C. Einhell, Selina M. Davila Olivera
2022, Fact Sheet 2022-3087
The U.S. Geological Survey (USGS) has continuously monitored real-time water quality and suspended-sediment transport in San Francisco Bay (the Bay) since 1989 as part of a multi-agency effort (see “Acknowledgments” section) to address estuary management, water supply, and ecological concerns. The San Francisco Bay area is home to millions of...
Environmental drivers of demography and potential factors limiting the recovery of an endangered marine top predator
Amanda J. Warlick, Devin S. Johnson, Tom S. Gelatt, Sarah J. Converse
2022, Ecosphere (13)
Understanding what drives changes in wildlife demography is fundamental to the conservation and management of depleted or declining populations, though making inference about the intrinsic and extrinsic factors that influence survival and reproduction remains challenging. Here we use mark–resight data from 2000 to 2018...
Hidden in plain sight: Integrated population models to resolve partially observable latent population structure
Abigail Jean Lawson, Patrick G.R. Jodice, Thomas R. Rainwater, Kylee Denise Dunham, Morgan Hart, Joseph W. Butfiloski, Philip M. Wilkinson, Clinton Moore
2022, Ecosphere (13)
Population models often require detailed information on sex-, age-, or size-specific abundances, but population monitoring programs cannot always acquire data at the desired resolution. Thus, state uncertainty in monitoring data can potentially limit the demographic resolution of management decisions, which may be particularly problematic for stage- or size-structured species subject...
Critical ShakeCast lifeline users and their response protocols
Kuo-wan Lin, David J. Wald, Daniel Slosky, Sterling Strait, Justin Smith, Sharon Yen, Nick Burmas
2022, Conference Paper, Lifelines 2022
ShakeCast is a US Geological Survey (USGS) software application that automatically retrieves ShakeMap shaking estimates and performs analyses using fragility functions for buildings and lifelines. The ShakeCast system aims to identify which facilities or lifeline segments are most likely impacted by an earthquake—and thus which ones should...
Field techniques for the determination of algal pigment fluorescence in environmental waters—Principles and guidelines for instrument and sensor selection, operation, quality assurance, and data reporting
Guy M. Foster, Jennifer L. Graham, Brian A. Bergamaschi, Kurt D. Carpenter, Bryan D. Downing, Brian A. Pellerin, Stewart A. Rounds, John Franco Saraceno
2022, Techniques and Methods 1-D10
The use of algal fluorometers by the U.S. Geological Survey (USGS) has become increasingly common. The basic principles of algal fluorescence, instrument calibration, interferences, data quantification, data interpretation, and quality control are given in Hambrook Berkman and Canova (2007). Much of the guidance given for instrument maintenance, data storage, and...
Estimated effects of pumping on groundwater storage and Walker River stream efficiencies in Smith and Mason Valleys, west-central Nevada
Gwendolyn E. Davies, Ramon C. Naranjo
2022, Scientific Investigations Report 2022-5123
The Walker River originates in the Sierra Nevada Mountains and flows nearly 160 miles to its terminus at Walker Lake in west-central Nevada. The river provides a source of irrigation water for tens of thousands of acres of agricultural lands in California and Nevada and is the principal source of...
Injuries and abnormalities of the southwestern pond turtle (Actinemys pallida) in the Mojave River of California
Kristy L. Cummings, Jeffrey E. Lovich, Michele R. Puffer, Sarah Greely, Christopher D Otahal, James Gannon
2022, Western North American Naturalist (82) 719-733
The southwestern pond turtle (Actinemys pallida) is a semiaquatic turtle that occasionally spends time on land to bask, oviposit, make intermittent overland movements, and overwinter in terrestrial locations. Use of both aquatic and terrestrial environments exposes semiaquatic turtles to increased risk of injury or mortality from floods, predation attempts, and...
Riparian plant evapotranspiration and consumptive use for selected areas of the Little Colorado River watershed on the Navajo Nation
Pamela L. Nagler, Armando Barreto-Muñoz, Ibrahima Sall, Matthew R. Lurtz, Kamel Didan
2022, Remote Sensing (15)
Estimates of riparian vegetation water use are important for hydromorphological assessment, partitioning within human and natural environments, and informing environmental policy decisions. The objectives of this study were to calculate the actual evapotranspiration (ETa) (mm/day and mm/year) and derive riparian vegetation annual consumptive use (CU) in acre-feet (AF) for select...
Do unpublished data help to redraw distributions? The case of the spectacled bear in Peru
Nereyda Falconi, John T. Finn, Todd K. Fuller, John F. Organ
2022, Mammal Research (68) 143-150
Data availability remains a principal factor limiting the use of species distribution models (SDMs) as tools for wildlife conservation and management of rare species. Although data collected in systematic and rigorous fashion are preferable, available data for most species of conservation interest are usually low in both quality and number....
Models combining multiple scales of inference capture hydrologic and climatic drivers of riparian tree distributions
Laura G Perry, Catherine S. Jarnevich, Patrick B. Shafroth
2022, Ecosphere (13)
Predicting species geographic distributions is key to managing invasive species, conserving biodiversity, and understanding species' environmental requirements. Species distribution models (SDMs) commonly focus on climatic predictors, but other environmental factors can also be essential, particularly for species with specialized habitats defined by hydrologic, topographic, or edaphic conditions (e.g., riparian, wetland,...
Global ocean wave fields show consistent regional trends between 1980 and 2014 in a multi-product ensemble
Li H. Erikson, J. Morim, M. Hemer, Ian Young, X. Wang, L. Mentaschi, N. Mori, A. Semedo, Justin Stopa, V Grigorieva, S. Gulev, O. Aarnes, J-R Bidlot, O. Breivik, P. Bricheno, P. Camus, T. Shimura, M. Menendez, M. Markina, V.D. Sharmar, C. Trenham, J.F. Wolf, C. Appendini, S. Caires, N. Groll, A. Webb
2022, Communications Earth & Environment (3)
Historical trends in the direction and magnitude of ocean surface wave height, period, or direction are debated due to diverse data, time-periods, or methodologies. Using a consistent community-driven ensemble of global wave products, we quantify and establish regions with robust trends in global multivariate wave fields...
North American Bat Monitoring Program (NABat) Mobile Acoustic Transect Surveys Standard Operating Procedure 2—Field Season and Survey Preparation
Jaclyn Martin, Jason Rae, MacKenzie Hall, Emily Ferrall, Han Li, Bethany R. Straw, Brian E. Reichert
2022, Techniques and Methods 2-C2
This document is the second of three standard operating procedures providing instructions and considerations for conducting mobile acoustic surveys along road transects to collect bat acoustic data following the North American Bat Monitoring Program (NABat) protocol and sample design. This standard operating procedure focuses specifically on considerations for establishing the...