Uncertainty, robustness, and the value of information in managing an expanding Arctic goose population
Fred A. Johnson, Gitte H. Jensen, Jesper Madsen, Byron K. Williams
2014, Ecological Modelling (273) 186-199
We explored the application of dynamic-optimization methods to the problem of pink-footed goose (Anser brachyrhynchus) management in western Europe. We were especially concerned with the extent to which uncertainty in population dynamics influenced an optimal management strategy, the gain in management performance that could be expected if uncertainty could be...
Thermal behavior and ice-table depth within the north polar erg of Mars
Nathaniel E. Putzig, Michael T. Mellon, Kenneth E. Herkenhoff, Roger J. Phillips, Brian J. Davis, Kenneth J. Ewer, Lauren M. Bowers
2014, Icarus (230) 64-76
We fully resolve a long-standing thermal discrepancy concerning the north polar erg of Mars. Several recent studies have shown that the erg’s thermal properties are consistent with normal basaltic sand overlying shallow ground ice or ice-cemented sand. Our findings bolster that conclusion by thoroughly characterizing the thermal behavior of the...
The Tetracorder user guide: version 4.4
Keith Eric Livo, Roger N. Clark
2014, Open-File Report 2013-1300
Imaging spectroscopy mapping software assists in the identification and mapping of materials based on their chemical properties as expressed in spectral measurements of a planet including the solid or liquid surface or atmosphere. Such software can be used to analyze field, aircraft, or spacecraft data; remote sensing datasets; or laboratory...
A bivalent scale for measuring crowding among deer hunters
Larry M. Gigliotti, Loren Chase
2014, Human Dimensions of Wildlife: An International Journal (19) 96-103
One factor that may influence satisfaction in outdoor recreation is crowding, which historically has been defined as a negative evaluation of the density of other participants. While this definition is suitable for most scenarios, there are circumstances where encounters with others in the area are evaluated positively and thus contribute...
Implementation of a non-lethal biopsy punch monitoring program for mercury in smallmouth bass, Micropterus dolomieu Lacepede, from the Eleven Point River, Missouri
J. R. Ackerson, M. J. McKee, C. J. Schmitt, William G. Brumbaugh
2014, Bulletin of Environmental Contamination and Toxicology (92) 125-131
A non-lethal biopsy method for monitoring mercury (Hg) concentrations in smallmouth bass (Micropterus dolomieu; smallmouth) from the Eleven Point River in southern Missouri USA was evaluated. A biopsy punch was used to remove a muscle tissue plug from the area immediately below the anterior dorsal fin of 31...
Tsunami impact to Washington and northern Oregon from segment ruptures on the southern Cascadia subduction zone
George R. Priest, Yinglong Zhang, Robert C. Witter, Kelin Wang, Chris Goldfinger, Laura Stimely
2014, Natural Hazards
This paper explores the size and arrival of tsunamis in Oregon and Washington from the most likely partial ruptures of the Cascadia subduction zone (CSZ) in order to determine (1) how quickly tsunami height declines away from sources, (2) evacuation time before significant inundation, and (3) extent of felt shaking...
Ocean warming and acidification have complex interactive effects on the dynamics of a marine fungal disease
Gareth J. Williams, Nichole N. Price, Blake Ushijima, Greta S. Aeby, Sean M. Callahan, Simon K. Davy, Jamison M. Gove, Maggie D. Johnson, Ingrid S. Knapp, Amanda Shore-Maggio, Jennifer E. Smith, Patrick Videau, Thierry M. Work
2014, Proceedings of the Royal Society B (281)
Diseases threaten the structure and function of marine ecosystems and are contributing to the global decline of coral reefs. We currently lack an understanding of how climate change stressors, such as ocean acidification (OA) and warming, may simultaneously affect coral reef disease dynamics, particularly diseases threatening key reef-building organisms, for...
In-place oil shale resources in the saline-mineral and saline-leached intervals, Parachute Creek Member of the Green River Formation, Piceance Basin, Colorado
Justin E. Birdwell, Tracey J. Mercier, Ronald C. Johnson, Michael E. Brownfield, John D. Dietrich
2014, Fact Sheet 2013-3115
A recent U.S. Geological Survey analysis of the Green River Formation of the Piceance Basin in western Colorado shows that about 920 and 352 billion barrels of oil are potentially recoverable from oil shale resources using oil-yield cutoffs of 15 and 25 gallons per ton (GPT), respectively. This represents most...
Late Devonian–Mississippian(?) Zn-Pb(-Ag-Au-Ba-F) deposits and related aluminous alteration zones in the Nome Complex, Seward Peninsula, Alaska
John F. Slack, Alison Till, Harvey E. Belkin, Wayne C. Shanks
2014, GSA Special Papers (506) 173-212
Stratabound base-metal sulfide deposits and occurrences are present in metasedimentary rocks of the Neoproterozoic and Paleozoic Nome Complex on south-central Seward Peninsula, Alaska. Stratabound and locally stratiform deposits including Aurora Creek (Zn-Au-Ba-F), Wheeler North (Pb-Zn-Ag-Au-F), and Nelson (Zn-Pb- Cu-Ag), consist of lenses typically 0.5–2.0 m thick containing disseminated to semimassive...
Bathymetric surveys and area/capacity tables of water-supply reservoirs for the city of Cameron, Missouri, July 2013
Richard J. Huizinga
2014, Open-File Report 2014-1005
Years of sediment accumulation and dry conditions in recent years have led to the decline of water levels and capacities for many water-supply reservoirs in Missouri, and have caused renewed interest in modernizing outdated area/capacity tables for these reservoirs. The U.S. Geological Survey, in cooperation with the Missouri Department of...
Landslides in the northern Colorado Front Range caused by rainfall, September 11-13, 2013
Jonathan W. Godt, Jeffrey A. Coe, Jason W. Kean, Rex L. Baum, Eric S. Jones, Edwin L. Harp, Dennis M. Staley, William D. Barnhart
2014, Fact Sheet 2013-3114
During the second week of September 2013, nearly continuous rainfall caused widespread landslides and flooding in the northern Colorado Front Range. The combination of landslides and flooding was responsible for eight fatalities and caused extensive damage to buildings, highways, and infrastructure. Three fatalities were attributed to a fast moving type...
Lake Louise Water (USGS47): A new isotopic reference water for stable hydrogen and oxygen isotope measurements
Haiping Qi, Jennifer M. Lorenz, Tyler B. Coplen, Lauren V. Tarbox, Bernhard Mayer, Steve Taylor
2014, Rapid Communications in Mass Spectrometry (28) 351-354
"RATIONALE: Because of the paucity of isotopic reference waters for daily use, a new secondary isotopic reference material has been prepared from Lake Louise water from Alberta, Canada for international distribution. MOTHODS: This water was filtered, homogenized, loaded into glass ampoules, sealed with a torch, autoclaved to eliminate biological activity,...
Evaluating the efficiency of environmental monitoring programs
Carrie R. Levine, Ruth D. Yanai, Gregory G. Lampman, Douglas A. Burns, Charles T. Driscoll, Gregory B. Lawrence, Jason Lynch, Nina Schoch
2014, Ecological Indicators (39) 94-101
Statistical uncertainty analyses can be used to improve the efficiency of environmental monitoring, allowing sampling designs to maximize information gained relative to resources required for data collection and analysis. In this paper, we illustrate four methods of data analysis appropriate to four types of environmental monitoring designs. To analyze a...
Complexity versus certainty in understanding species’ declines
Shana M. Sundstrom, Craig R. Allen
2014, Diversity and Distributions (3) 344-355
Aim Our understanding of and ability to predict species declines is limited, despite decades of study. We sought to expand our understanding of species declines within a regional landscape by testing models using both traditional hypotheses and those derived from a complex adaptive systems approach. Location Our study area was the dry mixed...
Lithologic influences on groundwater recharge through incised glacial till from profile to regional scales: Evidence from glaciated Eastern Nebraska
John B. Gates, Gregory V. Steele, Paolo Nasta, Jozsef Szilagyi
2014, Water Resources Research (50) 466-481
Variability in sediment hydraulic properties associated with landscape depositional and erosional features can influence groundwater recharge processes by affecting soil-water storage and transmission. This study considers recharge to aquifers underlying river-incised glaciated terrain where the distribution of clay-rich till is largely intact in upland locations but has been removed by...
Evaluating CO2 and CH4 dynamics of Alaskan ecosystems during the Holocene Thermal Maximum
Yujie He, Miriam C. Jones, Qianlai Zhuang, Christopher Bochicchio, B. S. Felzer, Erik Mason, Zicheng Yu
2014, Quaternary Science Reviews (86) 63-77
The Arctic has experienced much greater warming than the global average in recent decades due to polar amplification. Warming has induced ecological changes that have impacted climate carbon-cycle feedbacks, making it important to understand the climate and vegetation controls on carbon (C) dynamics. Here we used the Holocene Thermal Maximum...
Total mercury concentrations in lionfish (Pterois volitans/miles) from the Florida Keys National Marine Sanctuary, USA
Dane H. Huge, Pamela J. Schofield, Charles A. Jacoby, Thomas K. Frazer
2014, Marine Pollution Bulletin (78) 51-55
Strategies to control invasive lionfish in the western Atlantic and Caribbean are likely to include harvest and consumption. Until this report, total mercury concentrations had been documented only for lionfish from Jamaica, and changes in concentrations with increasing fish size had not been evaluated. In the Florida Keys, total mercury...
Seismicity within a propagating ice shelf rift: the relationship between icequake locations and ice shelf structure
David S. Heeszel, Helen A. Fricker, Jeremy N. Bassis, Shad O’Neel, Fabian Walter
2014, Journal of Geophysical Research F: Earth Surface (119) 731-744
Iceberg calving is a dominant mass loss mechanism for Antarctic ice shelves, second only to basal melting. An important known process involved in calving is the initiation and propagation of through-penetrating fractures called rifts; however, the mechanisms controlling rift propagation remain poorly understood. To investigate the mechanics of ice-shelf rifting,...
Geologic map of the eastern quarter of the Flagstaff 30’ x 60’ quadrangle, Coconino County, northern Arizona
George H. Billingsley, Debra L. Block, Margaret Hiza-Redsteer
2014, Scientific Investigations Map 3279
The eastern quarter of the Flagstaff 30′ x 60′ quadrangle includes eight USGS 1:24,000-scale quadrangles in Coconino County, northern Arizona (fig. 1, map sheet): Anderson Canyon, Babbitt Wash, Canyon Diablo, Grand Falls, Grand Falls SE, Grand Falls SW, Grand Falls NE, and Meteor Crater. The map is bounded by lat...
Inferences about population dynamics from count data using multi-state models: A comparison to capture-recapture approaches
Evan H. Campbell Grant, Elise Zipkin, Sillett T. Scott, Richard Chandler, J. Andrew Royle
2014, Ecology and Evolution (4) 417-426
Wildlife populations consist of individuals that contribute disproportionately to growth and viability. Understanding a population's spatial and temporal dynamics requires estimates of abundance and demographic rates that account for this heterogeneity. Estimating these quantities can be difficult, requiring years of intensive data collection. Often, this is accomplished through the capture...
Anatomy of the lamprey ear: morphological evidence for occurrence of horizontal semicircular ducts in the labyrinth of Petromyzon marinus
Adel Maklad, Caitlyn Reed, Nicholas S. Johnson, Bernd Fritzsch
2014, Journal of Anatomy (224) 432-446
In jawed (gnathostome) vertebrates, the inner ears have three semicircular canals arranged orthogonally in the three Cartesian planes: one horizontal (lateral) and two vertical canals. They function as detectors for angular acceleration in their respective planes. Living jawless craniates, cyclostomes (hagfish and lamprey) and their fossil records seemingly lack a...
DOI/GTN-P climate and active-layer data acquired in the National Petroleum Reserve: Alaska and the Arctic National Wildlife Refuge, 1998-2011
Frank E. Urban, Gary D. Clow
2014, Data Series 812
This report provides data collected by the climate monitoring array of the U.S. Department of the Interior on Federal lands in Arctic Alaska over the period August 1998 to July 2011; this array is part of the Global Terrestrial Network for Permafrost, (DOI/GTN-P). In addition to presenting data, this report...
The United States Geological Survey Science Data Lifecycle Model
John Faundeen, Thomas E. Burley, Jennifer A. Carlino, David L. Govoni, Heather S. Henkel, Sally L. Holl, Vivian B. Hutchison, Elizabeth Martín, Ellyn T. Montgomery, Cassandra Ladino, Steven Tessler, Lisa S. Zolly
2014, Open-File Report 2013-1265
U.S. Geological Survey (USGS) data represent corporate assets with potential value beyond any immediate research use, and therefore need to be accounted for and properly managed throughout their lifecycle. Recognizing these motives, a USGS team developed a Science Data Lifecycle Model (SDLM) as a high-level view of data—from conception through...
Response of diatom and silicoflagellate assemblages in the central Gulf of California to regional climate change during the past 55 kyrs
John A. Barron, David Bukry, Heather Cheshire
2014, Marine Micropaleontology (108) 28-40
High-resolution studies of diatoms and silicoflagellates of the past 55 kyrs in cores MD02-2517/2515 from the central Gulf of California (GoC) reveal profound changes in GoC surface waters. Roperia tesselata, a diatom proxy for late winter–early spring upwelling, and Dictyocha stapedia, a subtropical silicoflagellate indicative of GoC sea surface temperatures...
Phytoplankton growth balanced by clam and zooplankton grazing and net transport into the low-salinity zone of the San Francisco Estuary
Wim J. Kimmerer, Janet K. Thompson
2014, Estuaries and Coasts
We estimated the influence of planktonic and benthic grazing on phytoplankton in the strongly tidal, river-dominated northern San Francisco Estuary using data from an intensive study of the low salinity foodweb in 2006–2008 supplemented with long-term monitoring data. A drop in chlorophyll concentration in 1987 had previously been linked to...