Mountain plover nest survival in relation to prairie dog and fire dynamics in shortgrass steppe
David J. Augustine, Susan K. Skagen
2014, Journal of Wildlife Management (78) 595-602
Disturbed xeric grasslands with short, sparse vegetation provide breeding habitat for mountain plovers (Charadrius montanus) across the western Great Plains. Maintaining local disturbance regimes through prairie dog conservation and prescribed fire may contribute to the sustainability of recently declining mountain plover populations, but these management approaches can be controversial. We...
Space use of wintering waterbirds in India: Influence of trophic ecology on home-range size
Tsewang Namgail, John Y. Takekawa, Sivananinthaperumal Balachandran, Ponnusamy Sathiyaselvam, Taej Mundkur, Scott H. Newman
2014, Current Zoology (60) 616-621
Relationship between species' home range and their other biological traits remains poorly understood, especially in migratory birds due to the difficulty associated with tracking them. Advances in satellite telemetry and remote sensing techniques have proved instrumental in overcoming such challenges. We studied the space use of migratory ducks through satellite...
Wintering ecology of adult North American ospreys
Brian E. Washburn, Mark S. Martell, Richard O. Bierregaard Jr., Charles J. Henny, Brian S. Dorr, Thomas J. Olexa
2014, Journal of Raptor Research (48) 325-333
North American Ospreys (Pandion haliaetus) typically migrate long distances to their wintering grounds in the tropics. Beyond the general distribution of their wintering range (i.e., the Caribbean, South America, and Central America), very little is known about the wintering ecology of these birds. We used satellite telemetry to determine the...
Sampling considerations in the mining environment
Kathleen S. Smith, Virginia T. McLemore, Carol C. Russell
Virginia T. McLemore, Kathleen S. Smith, Carol C. Russell, editor(s)
2014, Book chapter, Sampling and monitoring for the mine life cycle: Management technologies for metal mining influenced water
No abstract available. ...
Glacial and Quaternary geology of the northern Yellowstone area, Montana and Wyoming
Kenneth L. Pierce, Joseph M. Licciardi, Teresa R. Krause, Cathy Whitlock
2014, GSA Field Guides (37) 189-203
This field guide focuses on the glacial geology and paleoecology beginning in the Paradise Valley and progressing southward into northern Yellowstone National Park. During the last (Pinedale) glaciation, the northern Yellowstone outlet glacier flowed out of Yellowstone Park and down the Yellowstone River Valley into the Paradise Valley. The field...
Dendroclimatic potential of plains cottonwood (Populus deltoides subsp. monilifera) from the Northern Great Plains, USA
Jesse Edmonson, Jonathan Friedman, David Meko, Ramzi Touchan, Julian Scott, Alan Edmonson
2014, Tree-Ring Research (70) 21-30
A new 368-year tree-ring chronology (A.D. 1643–2010) has been developed in western North Dakota using plains cottonwood (Populus deltoides subsp. monilifera) growing on the relatively undisturbed floodplain of the Little Missouri River in the North Unit of Theodore Roosevelt National Park. We document many slow-growing living trees between 150–370 years old that contradict...
Suspended particulate layers and internal waves over the southern Monterey Bay continental shelf: an important control on shelf mud belts?
Olivia M. Cheriton, Erika E. McPhee-Shaw, William J. Shaw, Timothy P. Stanton, James G. Bellingham, Curt D. Storlazzi
2014, Journal of Geophysical Research C: Oceans (119) 428-444
Physical and optical measurements taken over the mud belt on the southern continental shelf of Monterey Bay, California documented the frequent occurrence of suspended particulate matter features, the majority of which were detached from the seafloor, centered 9–33 m above the bed. In fall 2011, an automated profiling mooring and...
A tetrapod-like repertoire of innate immune receptors and effectors for coelacanths
Pierre Boudinot, Jun Zou, Tatsuya Ota, Francesco Buonocore, Giuseppe Scapigliati, Adriana Canapa, John Cannon, Gary Litman, John D. Hansen
2014, Journal of Experimental Zoology Part B: Molecular and Developmental Evolution (322) 415-437
The recent availability of both robust transcriptome and genome resources for coelacanth (Latimeria chalumnae) has led to unique discoveries for coelacanth immunity such as the lack of IgM, a central component of adaptive immunity. This study was designed to more precisely address the origins and evolution of gene families involved...
The geochemistry of deep-sea coral skeletons: a review of vital effects and applications for palaeoceanography
Laura F. Robinson, Jess F. Adkins, Norbert Frank, Alexander C. Gagon, Nancy G. Prouty, E. Brendan Roark, Tina van de Flierdt
2014, Deep-Sea Research Part II: Topical Studies in Oceanography (99) 184-198
Deep-sea corals were discovered over a century ago, but it is only over recent years that focused efforts have been made to explore the history of the oceans using the geochemistry of their skeletal remains. They offer a promising archive of past oceanic environments given their global distribution, layered growth...
Mount St. Helens, Washington, USA
Chris Newhall, Peter Frenzen, Carolyn L. Mastin
Patricia Erfurt-Cooper, editor(s)
2014, Book chapter, Volcanic tourist destinations
May 18, 1980. Sunrise and a crystal-clear morning. Mount St. Helens was a beautiful, peaceful, snow-capped mountain surrounded by pristine forests and lakes(Fig. 15.1). Yes, it was known to be spitting ash and shaking, but it was still fundamentally the same Mount St. Helens that had for decades been a favorite...
Corridor- and stopover-use of the Hawaiian goose (Branta sandvicensis), an intratropical altitudinal migrant
Christina R. Leopold, Steven C. Hess
2014, Journal of Tropical Ecology (30) 67-78
We outfitted six male Hawaiian geese, or nene (Branta sandvicensis), with 45-g solar-powered satellite transmitters and collected four location coordinates d−1 from 2010 to 2012. We used 6193 coordinates to characterize migration corridors, habitat preferences and temporal patterns of displacement for 16 migration events with Brownian bridge utilization distributions (BBUD)....
Data management, assessment, and analysis for decision-making
Carol C. Russell, Kathleen S. Smith, Virginia T. McLemore
Virginia T. McLemore, Kathleen S. Smith, Carol C. Russell, editor(s)
2014, Book chapter, Sampling and monitoring for the mine life cycle: Management technologies for metal mining influenced water
No abstract available. ...
Decision making, risk, and uncertainty
Carol C. Russell, Kathleen S. Smith, Virginia T. McLemore
Virginia T. McLemore, Kathleen S. Smith, Carol C. Russell, editor(s)
2014, Book chapter, Sampling and monitoring for the mine life cycle: Management technologies for metal mining influenced water
No abstract available. ...
Sylphella puccoon gen. n., sp. n. and two additional new species of aquatic oligochaetes (Lumbriculidae, Clitellata) from poorly-known lotic habitats in North Carolina (USA)
Pilar Rodriguez, Steven V. Fend, David R. Lenat
2014, ZooKeys (451) 1-32
Three new species of Lumbriculidae were collected from floodplain seeps and small streams in southeastern North America. Some of these habitats are naturally acidic. Sylphella puccoon gen. n., sp. n. has prosoporous male ducts in X-XI, and spermathecae in XII-XIII. Muscular, spherical atrial ampullae and acuminate penial sheaths distinguish this...
Diverse rupture modes for surface-deforming upper plate earthquakes in the southern Puget Lowland of Washington State
Alan R. Nelson, Stephen F. Personius, Brian L. Sherrod, Harvey M. Kelsey, Samuel Y. Johnson, Lee-Ann Bradley, Ray E. Wells
2014, Geosphere (10) 769-796
Earthquake prehistory of the southern Puget Lowland, in the north-south compressive regime of the migrating Cascadia forearc, reflects diverse earthquake rupture modes with variable recurrence. Stratigraphy and Bayesian analyses of previously reported and new 14C ages in trenches and cores along backthrust scarps in the Seattle fault zone restrict a large...
The geobiology of sediment-hosted mineral deposits
Clint Scott, Karen D. Kelley, John F. Slack
2014, Book chapter, Building exploration capability for the 21st century
The role of biological processes in the formation of sediment-hosted ore deposits has long been recognized. In this review, we focus on the biogeochemical cycling of C, Mn, Fe, and S as they relate to the formation of sediment-hosted Mn and Fe deposits, metalliferous black shales, clastic-dominated (CD) Pb-Zn deposits,...
Sampling and monitoring program implementation
Carol C. Russell, Virginia T. McLemore, Kathleen S. Smith
Virginia T. McLemore, Kathleen S. Smith, Carol C. Russell, editor(s)
2014, Book chapter, Sampling and monitoring for the mine life cycle: Management technologies for metal mining influenced water
No abstract available....
Effects of Renibacterium salmoninarum on olfactory organs of Chinook salmon (Oncorhynchus tshawytscha) marked with coded wire tags
Diane G. Elliott, Carla M. Conway
D.W. Bruno, D.G. Elliott, B. Nowak, editor(s)
2014, Report, Proceedings of the European Association of Fish Pathologists 16th International Conference on Diseases of Fish and Shellfish Histopathology Workshop. Sensory System Pathology.
Bacterial kidney disease (BKD) caused by Renibacterium salmoninarum can cause significant morbidity and mortality in Chinook salmon (Oncorhynchus tshawytscha), particularly in Chinook salmon of the stream (spring) life history type, which migrate to sea as yearlings rather than subyearlings. R. salmoninarum can be transmitted vertically from the female parent to...
Age-Ratios and Condition of En Route Migrant Blackpoll Warblers in the British Virgin Islands
Clint W. Boal
2014, Wilson Journal of Ornithology (126) 568-574
The en route migration ecology of Blackpoll Warblers (Setophaga striata) is poorly understood, yet intriguing. Blackpoll Warblers undertake the longest open water migration of any wood warbler species, traveling from northeastern North America to South America, with the first potential landfall being the West Indies. This migration requires substantial energy...
A comparison of two gears for quantifying abundance of lotic-dwelling crayfish
Kristi Williams, Shannon K. Brewer, Mark R. Ellersieck
2014, Journal of Crustacean Biology (34) 54-60
Crayfish (saddlebacked crayfish, Orconectes medius) catch was compared using a kick seine applied two different ways with a 1-m2 quadrat sampler (with known efficiency and bias in riffles) from three small streams in the Missouri Ozarks. Triplicate samples (one of each technique) were taken from two creeks and one headwater...
Backcasting the decline of a vulnerable Great Plains reproductive ecotype: identifying threats and conservation priorities
Thomas A. Worthington, Shannon K. Brewer, Timothy B. Grabowski, Julia Mueller
2014, Global Change Biology (20) 89-102
Conservation efforts for threatened or endangered species are challenging because the multi-scale factors that relate to their decline or inhibit their recovery are often unknown. To further exacerbate matters, the perceptions associated with the mechanisms of species decline are often viewed myopically rather than across the entire species range. We...
Quantifying spatial scaling patterns and their local and regional correlates in headwater streams: Implications for resilience
Emma Gothe, Leonard Sandin, Craig R. Allen, David G. Angeler
2014, Ecology and Society (19)
The distribution of functional traits within and across spatiotemporal scales has been used to quantify and infer the relative resilience across ecosystems. We use explicit spatial modeling to evaluate within- and cross-scale redundancy in headwater streams, an ecosystem type with a hierarchical and dendritic network structure. We assessed the cross-scale...
Science applications of a multispectral microscopic imager for the astrobiological exploration of Mars
Jorge Nunez, Jack Farmer, R. Glenn Sellar, Gregg A. Swayze, Diana L. Blaney
2014, Astrobiology (14) 132-169
Future astrobiological missions to Mars are likely to emphasize the use of rovers with in situ petrologic capabilities for selecting the best samples at a site for in situ analysis with onboard lab instruments or for caching for potential return to Earth. Such observations are central to an understanding of the potential for past...
Equations for calculating hydrogeochemical reactions of minerals and gases such as CO2 at high pressures and temperatures
C.A.J. Appelo, David L. Parkhurst, V.E.A. Post
2014, Geochimica et Cosmochimica Acta (125) 49-67
Calculating the solubility of gases and minerals at the high pressures of carbon capture and storage in geological reservoirs requires an accurate description of the molar volumes of aqueous species and the fugacity coefficients of gases. Existing methods for calculating the molar volumes of aqueous species are limited to...
Forest ecosystem reorganization underway in the Southwestern US: A preview of widespread forest changes in the Anthropocene
Craig D. Allen
V. Alaric Sample, R. Patrick Bixler, editor(s)
2014, Proceedings RMRS-P-71
No abstract available....