Temporal and spatial variability of groundwater recharge on Jeju Island, Korea
Alan Mair, Benjamin Hagedorn, Suzanne Tillery, Aly I. El-Kadi, Stephen M. Westenbroek, Kyoochul Ha, Gi-Won Koh
2013, Journal of Hydrology (501) 213-226
Estimates of groundwater recharge spatial and temporal variability are essential inputs to groundwater flow models that are used to test groundwater availability under different management and climate conditions. In this study, a soil water balance analysis was conducted to estimate groundwater recharge on the island of Jeju, Korea, for baseline,...
Evidence for density-dependent changes in growth, downstream movement, and size of Chinook salmon subyearlings in a large-river landscape
William P. Connor, Kenneth F. Tiffan, John M. Plumb, Christine M. Moffit
2013, Transactions of the American Fisheries Society (142) 1453-1468
We studied the growth rate, downstream movement, and size of naturally produced fall Chinook Salmon Oncorhynchus tshawytscha subyearlings (age 0) for 20 years in an 8th-order river landscape with regulated riverine upstream rearing areas and an impounded downstream migration corridor. The population transitioned from low to high abundance in association with...
Convergent responses of nitrogen and phosphorus resorption to nitrogen inputs in a semiarid grassland
Xiao-Tao Lü, Sasha Reed, Qiang Yu, Nian-Peng He, Zheng-Wen Wang, Xing-Guo Han
2013, Global Change Biology (19) 2775-2784
Human activities have significantly altered nitrogen (N) availability in most terrestrial ecosystems, with consequences for community composition and ecosystem functioning. Although studies of how changes in N availability affect biodiversity and community composition are relatively common, much less remains known about the effects of N inputs on the coupled biogeochemical...
Environmental fate of fungicides and other current-use pesticides in a central California estuary
Kelly L. Smalling, Kathryn Kuivila, James L. Orlando, Bryn M. Phillips, Brian S. Anderson, Katie Siegler, John W. Hunt, Mary Hamilton
2013, Marine Pollution Bulletin (73) 144-153
The current study documents the fate of current-use pesticides in an agriculturally-dominated central California coastal estuary by focusing on the occurrence in water, sediment and tissue of resident aquatic organisms. Three fungicides (azoxystrobin, boscalid, and pyraclostrobin), one herbicide (propyzamide) and two organophosphate insecticides (chlorpyrifos and diazinon) were detected frequently. Dissolved...
Comparing catch orientation among Minnesota walleye, northern pike, and bass anglers
Susan A. Schroeder, David C. Fulton
2013, Human Dimensions of Wildlife: An International Journal (18) 355-372
We compared the catch orientations of Minnesota walleye (Sander vitreus), northern pike (Esox lucius), largemouth bass (Micropterus salmoides), and smallmouth bass (Micropterus dolomieu) anglers. Results were derived from 2009, 2010, and 2012 surveys of anglers targeting these different species. Consistent with previous research, we identified four dimensions of anglers’ catch...
Recent land-use/land-cover change in the Central California Valley
Christopher E. Soulard, Tamara S. Wilson
2013, Journal of Land Use Science
Open access to Landsat satellite data has enabled annual analyses of modern land-use and land-cover change (LULCC) for the Central California Valley ecoregion between 2005 and 2010. Our annual LULCC estimates capture landscape-level responses to water policy changes, climate, and economic instability. From 2005 to 2010, agriculture in the region...
Coping with the cold: An ecological context for the abundance and distribution of rock sandpipers during winter in upper Cook Inlet, Alaska
Daniel R. Ruthrauff, Robert E. Gill Jr., T. Lee Tibbitts
2013, Arctic (66) 269-278
Shorebirds are conspicuous and abundant at high northern latitudes during spring and summer, but as seasonal conditions deteriorate, few remain during winter. To the best of our knowledge, Cook Inlet, Alaska (60.6˚ N, 151.6˚ W), is the world’s coldest site that regularly supports wintering populations of shorebirds, and it is...
Projecting demographic responses to climate change: adult and juvenile survival respond differently to direct and indirect effects of weather in a passerine population
Kristen E. Dybala, John M. Eadie, Thomas Gardali, Nathaniel E. Seavy, Mark P. Herzog
2013, Global Change Biology (19) 2688-2697
Few studies have quantitatively projected changes in demography in response to climate change, yet doing so can provide important insights into the processes that may lead to population declines and changes in species distributions. Using a long-term mark-recapture data set, we examined the influence of multiple direct and indirect effects...
Consequences of least tern (Sternula antillarum) microhabitat nest-site selection on natural and mechanically constructed sandbars in the Missouri River
Jennifer H. Stucker, Deborah A. Buhl, Mark H. Sherfy
2013, The Auk (130) 753-763
Nest-habitat selection in colonial species has rarely been assessed at multiple spatial scales to evaluate its fitness consequences. Management for the federally endangered U.S. Interior population of Least Terns (Sternula antillarum) has focused on maintenance of breeding habitats, including mechanical construction of sandbars from dredged material. Least Terns are attracted...
A generalized Grubbs-Beck test statistic for detecting multiple potentially influential low outliers in flood series
T.A. Cohn, J.F. England, C. E. Berenbrock, R.R. Mason, J.R. Stedinger, J.R. Lamontagne
2013, Water Resources Research (49) 5047-5058
he Grubbs-Beck test is recommended by the federal guidelines for detection of low outliers in flood flow frequency computation in the United States. This paper presents a generalization of the Grubbs-Beck test for normal data (similar to the Rosner (1983) test; see also Spencer and McCuen (1996)) that can provide...
Widespread occurrence of neuro-active pharmaceuticals and metabolites in 24 Minnesota rivers and wastewaters
Jeffrey Writer, Imma Ferrer, Larry B. Barber, E. Michael Thurman
2013, Science of the Total Environment (461-462) 519-527
Concentrations of 17 neuro-active pharmaceuticals and their major metabolites (bupropion, hydroxy-bupropion, erythro-hydrobupropion, threo-hydrobupropion, carbamazepine, 10,11,-dihydro-10,11,-dihydroxycarbamazepine, 10-hydroxy-carbamazepine, citalopram, N-desmethyl-citalopram, fluoxetine, norfluoxetine, gabapentin, lamotrigine, 2-N-glucuronide-lamotrigine, oxcarbazepine, venlafaxine and O-desmethyl-venlafaxine), were measured in treated wastewater and receiving surface waters from 24 locations across Minnesota, USA. The analysis of upstream and downstream sampling sites indicated...
Effects of riparian vegetation on topographic change during a large flood event, Rio Puerco, New Mexico, USA
M. C. Perignon, G.E. Tucker, Eleanor R. Griffin, Jonathan M. Friedman
2013, Journal of Geophysical Research F: Earth Surface (118) 1193-1209
The spatial distribution of riparian vegetation can strongly influence the geomorphic evolution of dryland rivers during large floods. We present the results of an airborne lidar differencing study that quantifies the topographic change that occurred along a 12 km reach of the Lower Rio Puerco, New Mexico, during an extreme event...
Near-field tsunami edge waves and complex earthquake rupture
Eric L. Geist
2013, Pure and Applied Geophysics (170) 1475-1491
The effect of distributed coseismic slip on progressive, near-field edge waves is examined for continental shelf tsunamis. Detailed observations of edge waves are difficult to separate from the other tsunami phases that are observed on tide gauge records. In this study, analytic methods are used to compute tsunami edge waves...
Origin and lateral migration of linear dunes in the Qaidam Basin of NW China revealed by dune sediments, internal structures, and optically stimulated luminescence ages, with implications for linear dunes on Titan: discussion
David M. Rubin, Alan M. Rubin
2013, GSA Bulletin (125) 1943-1946
Zhou et al. (2012) proposed that longitudinal dunes in the Qaidam Basin, China, formed like yardangs: by erosion into sediment that was not deposited by those dunes. Because erosion occurs on the upwind flanks of most migrating dunes (Rubin and Hunter, 1982, 1985),...
Frameworks for amending reservoir water management
Ethan Mower, Leandro E. Miranda
2013, Lake and Reservoir Management (29) 194-201
Managing water storage and withdrawals in many reservoirs requires establishing seasonal targets for water levels (i.e., rule curves) that are influenced by regional precipitation and diverse water demands. Rule curves are established as an attempt to balance various water needs such as flood control, irrigation, and environmental benefits such as...
Status of exotic grasses and grass-like vegetation and potential impacts on wildlife in New England
Stephen DeStefano
2013, Wildlife Society Bulletin (37) 486-496
The Northeastern section of the United States, known as New England, has seen vast changes in land cover and human population over the past 3 centuries. Much of the region is forested; grasslands and other open-land cover types are less common, but provide habitat for many species that are currently...
Capacity, pressure, demand, and flow: A conceptual framework for analyzing ecosystem service provision and delivery
Amy M. Villamagna, Paul L. Angermeier, Elena M. Bennett
2013, Ecological Complexity (15) 114-121
Ecosystem services provide an instinctive way to understand the trade-offs associated with natural resource management. However, despite their apparent usefulness, several hurdles have prevented ecosystem services from becoming deeply embedded in environmental decision-making. Ecosystem service studies vary widely in focal services, geographic extent, and in methods for defining and measuring...
Temporal and spatial variability of global water balance
Gregory J. McCabe, David M. Wolock
2013, Climatic Change (120) 375-387
An analysis of simulated global water-balance components (precipitation [P], actual evapotranspiration [AET], runoff [R], and potential evapotranspiration [PET]) for the past century indicates that P has been the primary driver of variability in R. Additionally, since about 2000, there have been increases in P, AET, R, and PET for most...
Representing the effects of alpine grassland vegetation cover on the simulation of soil thermal dynamics by ecosystem models applied to the Qinghai-Tibetan Plateau
S. Yi, N. Li, B. Xiang, X. Wang, B. Ye, A. D. McGuire
2013, Journal of Geophysical Research: Biogeosciences (118) 1186-1199
Soil surface temperature is a critical boundary condition for the simulation of soil temperature by environmental models. It is influenced by atmospheric and soil conditions and by vegetation cover. In sophisticated land surface models, it is simulated iteratively by solving surface energy budget equations. In ecosystem, permafrost, and hydrology models,...
Extreme rainfall, vulnerability and risk: a continental-scale assessment for South America
Charles J. Vorosmarty, Lelys Bravo de Guenni, Wilfred M. Wollheim, Brian A. Pellerin, David M. Bjerklie, Manoel Cardoso, Cassiano D’Almeida, Lilybeth Colon
2013, Philosophical Transactions of the Royal Society A: Mathematical, Physical and Engineering Sciences
Extreme weather continues to preoccupy society as a formidable public safety concern bearing huge economic costs. While attention has focused on global climate change and how it could intensify key elements of the water cycle such as precipitation and river discharge, it is the conjunction of geophysical and socioeconomic forces...
U–Pb, Rb–Sr, and U-series isotope geochemistry of rocks and fracture minerals from the Chalk River Laboratories site, Grenville Province, Ontario, Canada
Leonid A. Neymark, Zell E. Peterman, Richard J. Moscati, R. H. Thivierge
2013, Applied Geochemistry (36) 10-33
As part of the Geologic Waste Management Facility feasibility study, Atomic Energy of Canada Ltd. (AECL) is evaluating the suitability of the Chalk River Laboratories (CRL) site in Ontario, situated in crystalline rock of the southwestern Grenville Province, for the possible development of an underground repository for low- and...
Mapping risk for nest predation on a barrier island
Amanda D. Hackney, Robert F. Baldwin, Patrick G.R. Jodice
2013, Journal of Coastal Conservation (17) 615-621
Barrier islands and coastal beach systems provide nesting habitat for marine and estuarine turtles. Densely settled coastal areas may subsidize nest predators. Our purpose was to inform conservation by providing a greater understanding of habitat-based risk factors for nest predation, for an estuarine turtle. We expected that habitat conditions at...
Ultimate pier and contraction scour prediction in cohesive soils at selected bridges in Illinois
Timothy D. Straub, Thomas M. Over, Marian M. Domanski
2013, Illinois Center for Transportation Series FHWA‐ICT‐13‐025
The Scour Rate In COhesive Soils-Erosion Function Apparatus (SRICOS-EFA) method includes an ultimate scour prediction that is the equilibrium maximum pier and contraction scour of cohesive soils over time. The purpose of this report is to present the results of testing the ultimate pier and contraction scour methods for cohesive...
A spatial capture-recapture model to estimate fish survival and location from linear continuous monitoring arrays
Joshua K. Raabe, Beth Gardner, Joseph E. Hightower
2013, Canadian Journal of Fisheries and Aquatic Sciences (71) 120-130
We developed a spatial capture–recapture model to evaluate survival and activity centres (i.e., mean locations) of tagged individuals detected along a linear array. Our spatially explicit version of the Cormack–Jolly–Seber model, analyzed using a Bayesian framework, correlates movement between periods and can incorporate environmental or other covariates. We demonstrate the...
Discussion: Numerical study on the entrainment of bed material into rapid landslides
Richard M. Iverson
2013, Geotechnique (63) 887-888
A paper recently published in this journal (Pirulli & Pastor, 2012) uses numerical modelling to study the important problem of entrainment of bed material by landslides. Unfortunately, some of the basic equations employed in the study are flawed, because they violate the principle of linear momentum conservation. Similar errors exist...