Effects of climate on chemical weathering in watersheds
A. F. White, A.E. Blum
1995, Geochimica et Cosmochimica Acta (59) 1729-1747
Climatic effects on chemical weathering are evaluated by correlating variations On solute concentrations and fluxes with temperature, precipitation, runoff, and evapotranspiration (ET) for a worldwide distribution of sixty-eight watersheds underlain by granitoid rock types. Stream solute concentrations are strongly correlated with proportional ET loss, and evaporative concentration makes stream solute concentrations an...
Fluxes of water and solute in a coastal wetland sediment. 2. Effect of macropores on solute exchange with surface water
J. W. Harvey, W.K. Nuttle
1995, Journal of Hydrology (164) 109-125
Chloride was highly concentrated relative to seawater in matrix porewater but was comparatively dilute in macropores. Concentration differences in pore-size classes declined with depth until indistinguishable below 10 cm. The segregated chloride distribution can be explained if recharge to the sediment occurred by downward infiltration in macropores and discharge occurred...
Computational scheme for the prediction of metal ion binding by a soil fulvic acid
J.A. Marinsky, M.M. Reddy, J.H. Ephraim, A.S. Mathuthu
1995, Analytica Chimica Acta (302) 309-322
The dissociation and metal ion binding properties of a soil fulvic acid have been characterized. Information thus gained was used to compensate for salt and site heterogeneity effects in metal ion complexation by the fulvic acid. An earlier computational scheme has been modified by incorporating an additional step which improves...
Economics of mining law
K. R. Long
1995, Nonrenewable Resources (4) 74-83
Modern mining law, by facilitating socially and environmentally acceptable exploration, development, and production of mineral materials, helps secure the benefits of mineral production while minimizing environmental harm and accounting for increasing land-use competition. Mining investments are sunk costs, irreversibly tied to a particular mineral site, and require many years to...
Determination of water retention in stratified porous materials
J. Constantz
1995, Transport in Porous Media (18) 217-229
Predicted and measured water-retention values,θ(ψ), were compared for repacked, stratified core samples consisting of either a sand with a stone-bearing layer or a sand with a clay loam layer in various spatial orientations. Stratified core samples were packed in submersible pressure outflow cells, then water-retention...
Population viability of the Snake River chinook salmon (Oncorhynchus tshawytscha)
John M. Emlen
1995, Canadian Journal of Fisheries and Aquatic Sciences (52) 1442-1448
In the presence of historical data, population viability models of intermediate complexity can be parameterized and utilized to project the consequences of various management actions for endangered species. A general stochastic population dynamics model with density feedback, age structure, and autocorrelated environmental fluctuations was constructed and parameterized for best fit...
Bullfrogs: Introduced predators in southwestern wetlands
Philip C. Rosen, Cecil R. Schwalbe
Edward T. LaRoe, Gaye S. Farris, Catherine E. Puckett, Peter D. Doran, Michael J. Mac, editor(s)
1995, Book chapter, Our living resources: A report to the nation on the distribution, abundance, and health of U.S. plants, animals, and ecosystems
In the American Southwest, much of the native fish fauna is facing extinction (Minckley and Deacon 1991); frogs in California (Fellers and Drost 1993) and frogs and garter snakes in Arizona (Schwalbe and Rosen 1988) are also in critical decline. Habitat destruction and introduced predators appear to be primary causes...
GIS for mapping waterfowl density and distribution from aerial surveys
W.I. Butler, R.A. Stehn, G.R. Balogh
1995, Wildlife Society Bulletin (23) 140-147
We modified standard aerial survey data collection to obtain the geographic location for each waterfowl observation on surveys in Alaska during 1987-1993. Using transect navigation with CPS (global positioning system), data recording on continuously running tapes, and a computer data input program, we located observations with an average deviation along...
Effect of gear selectivity on recommended allowable harvest with application to the Lake Erie yellow perch fishery
Charles P. Madenjian, Philip A. Ryan
1995, North American Journal of Fisheries Management (15) 79-83
Because the 57-mm-mesh gill net is the predominant gear in the Lake Eric fishery for yellow perch Perca flavescens, gear selectivity is an important factor operating in that fishery. The selectivity curve for age-groups 2–6 is roughly symmetrical with peak vulnerability at age 4; younger and older perch are substantially...
Factors influencing the height of Hawaiian lava fountains: implications for the use of fountain height as an indicator of magma gas content
E.A. Parfitt, L. Wilson, C.A. Neal
1995, Bulletin of Volcanology (57) 440-450
The heights of lava fountains formed in Hawaiian-style eruptions are controlled by magma gas content, volume flux and the amounts of lava re-entrainment and gas bubble coalescence. Theoretical models of lava fountaining are used to analyse data on lava fountain height variations collected during the 1983–1986 Pu'u 'O'o vent...
An earthquake instability model based on faults containing high fluid-pressure compartments
D.A. Lockner, J.D. Byerlee
1995, Pure and Applied Geophysics PAGEOPH (145) 717-745
It has been proposed that large strike-slip faults such as the San Andreas contain water in seal-bounded compartments. Arguments based on heat flow and stress orientation suggest that in most of the compartments, the water pressure is so high that the average shear strength of the fault is less than...
Spatial variation in background groundwater geochemistry of the Gurinai Wetland, Gobi Desert, Inner Mongolia
Weizu Gu, N.E. Peters
1995, Models for assessing and monitoring groundwater quality. Proc. symposium, Boulder, 1995 (227) 85-90
Age dating of groundwater from several hand-dug wells in the Gurinai Wetland of the Badajilin-Gobi Desert, north-central China, indicated a continuum from present to 7625??155 years B.P. Water age correlates with concentration for some constituents. In general, concentrations of Fe, Cr, Se and Sr increase with increasing age, whereas Ca,...
Limitations to lake trout (Salvelinus namaycush) rehabilitation in the Great Lakes imposed by biotic interactions occurring at early life stages
Michael L. Jones, Gary W. Eck, David O. Evans, Mary C. Fabrizio, Michael H. Hoff, Patrick L. Hudson, John Janssen, David Jude, Robert O’Gorman, Jacqueline F. Savino
1995, Journal of Great Lakes Research (21) 505-517
We examine evidence that biotic factors, particularly predation, may be limiting early survival of wild lake trout (Salvelinus namaycush) juveniles in many areas of the Great Lakes. The Great Lakes contain numerous potential predators of lake trout eggs and fry, some of which are recent invaders, and most of which...
A decade of predatory control of zooplankton species composition of Lake Michigan
Joseph C. Makarewicz, Paul Bertram, Theodore Lewis, Edward H. Brown Jr.
1995, Journal of Great Lakes Research (21) 620-640
From 1983 to 1992, 71 species representing 38 genera from the Calanoida, Cladocera, Cyclopoida, Mysidacea, Rotifera, Mollusca and Harpacticoida comprised the offshore zooplankton community of Lake Michigan. Our data demonstrate that the composition and abundance of the calanoid community after 1983 is not unlike that of 1960s and that species...
Waterbird predation on fish in western Lake Erie: a bioenergetics model application
Charles P. Madenjian, Steven W. Gabrey
1995, Condor (97) 141-153
To better understand the role of piscivorous waterbirds in the food web of western Lake Erie, we applied a bioenergetics model to determine their total fish consumption, The important nesting species included the Herring Gull (Larus argentatus), Ring-billed Gull (L. delawarensis), Double-crested Cormorant (Phalacrocorax auritus), Great Blue Heron (Ardea herodias),...
Modified transmitter attachment method for adult ducks
P.J. Pietz, D.A. Brandt, Gary L. Krapu, D. A. Buhl
1995, Journal of Field Ornithology (66) 408-417
The value of radio telemetry for waterfowl research depends on the availability of suitable methods of attaching transmitters. In previous studies, external transmitters attached to adult Mallards (Anas platyrhynchos) with sutures and glue did not stay on birds reliably. In an attempt to improve transmitter retention, a method of attachment...
How much habitat management is needed to meet mallard production objectives?
L.M. Cowardin, T.L. Shaffer, K.M. Kraft
1995, Wildlife Society Bulletin (23) 48-55
We used results from simulation models to demonstrate the benefit-cost ratios of habitat management to increase the number of mallard (Anas platyrhynchos) recruits produced. The models were applied to hypothetical 2-habitat landscapes comprised of managed and unmanaged habitat. Managed habitats were predator barrier fencing and CRP cover; unmanaged habitat was...
Morphological differences in Pacific Coast populations of greater white-fronted geese
D.L. Orthmeyer, John Y. Takekawa, Craig R. Ely, M. Wege, W.E. Newton
1995, Condor (97) 123-132
We examined morphological relationships of three Pacific coast populations of Greater White-fronted Geese (Anser albifrons). Adult geese were captured and measured at three breeding areas in Alaska and two wintering areas in California, 1980-1991. A two-step discriminant function analysis examined morphological differences among the three populations. Stepwise discriminant function procedures...
Influence of temperature on incubation rates of coho salmon (Oncorhynchus kisutch) from ten Washington populations
John T. Konecki, Carol Ann Woody, Thomas P. Quinn
1995, Northwest Science (69) 126-132
Coho salmon from 10 Washington populations were incubated under controlled conditions to determine the levels of variation in time to hatch among populations and families within populations. The average incubation rate was somewhat slower than that estimated from a quantitative model derived from British Columbia populations, and was slightly faster...
Viewpoints and practices - numerical modeling of 3-D estuarine hydrodynamics
Ralph T. Cheng
1995, Book chapter, Advances in hydroscience and engineering, V. II, Part B
No abstract available....
Evolution of tholeiitic diabase sheet systems in the eastern United States: examples from the Culpeper Basin, Virginia-Maryland, and the Gettysburg Basin, Pennsylvania
Laurel G. Woodruff, A.J. Froelich, Harvey E. Belkin, D. Gottfried
1995, Journal of Volcanology and Geothermal Research (64) 143-169
High-TiO2, quartz-normative (HTQ) tholeiite sheets of Early Jurassic age have intruded mainly Late Triassic sedimentary rocks in several early Mesozoic basins in the eastern US. Field observations, petrographic study, geochemical analyses and stable isotope data from three HTQ sheet systems were used to develop a general model of magmatic differentiation...
Lake trout (Salvelinus namaycush) populations in Lake Superior and their restoration in 1959-1993
Michael J. Hansen, James W. Peck, Richard G. Schorfhaar, James H. Selgeby, Donald R. Schreiner, Stephen T. Schram, Bruce L. Swanson, Wayne R. MacCallum, Mary K. Burnham-Curtis, Gary L. Curtis, John W. Heinrich, Robert J. Young
1995, Journal of Great Lakes Research (21) 152-175
Naturally-reproducing populations of lake trout (Salvelinus namaycush) have been reestablished in most of Lake Superior, but have not been restored to 1929-1943 average abundance. Progress toward lake trout restoration in Lake Superior is described, management actions are reviewed, and the effectiveness of those actions is evaluated; especially stocking lake trout...
Geologic framework of a transect of the central Brooks Range: Regional relations and an alternative to the Endicott Mountains allochthon
John S. Kelley, W. P. Brosge
1995, American Association of Petroleum Geologists Bulletin (79) 1087-1115
This paper evaluates the geologic framework and tectonic development of the central Brooks Range based on a transect through the range and Arctic foothills. A geologic cross section constructed through the transect is confirmed by comparing the retrodeformed section with the regional distribution of lithofacies in the central Brooks Range....
The role of microcracking in shear-fracture propagation in granite
Diane E. Moore, D.A. Lockner
1995, Journal of Structural Geology (17) 95-114
Microcracking related to the formation of a laboratory shear fracture in a cylinder of Westerly granite has been investigated using image-analysis computer techniques. Well away from the fracture (farfield), the deformed granite has about twice the crack density (crack length per...
Techniques of contributing-area delineation for analysis of nonpoint-source contamination of Long Island, New York
P. Misut
1995, Models for assessing and monitoring groundwater quality. Proc. symposium, Boulder, 1995 (227) 31-37
Ninety shallow monitoring wells on Long Island, N.Y., were used to test the hypothesis that the correlation between the detection of volatile organic compounds (VOC's) at a well and explanatory variables representing land use, population density, and hydrogeologic conditions around the well is affected by the size and shape of...