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Page 145, results 3601 - 3625

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GeoImageNet: A multi-source natural feature benchmark dataset for GeoAI and supervised machine learning
Wenwen Li, Sizhe Wang, Samantha T. Arundel, Chia-Yu Hsu
2023, GeoInformatica (27) 619-640
The field of GeoAI or Geospatial Artificial Intelligence has undergone rapid development since 2017. It has been widely applied to address environmental and social science problems, from understanding climate change to tracking the spread of infectious disease. A foundational task in advancing GeoAI research is the...
Exploring metapopulation-scale suppression alternatives for a global invader in a river network experiencing climate change
Brian D. Healy, Phaedra E. Budy, Charles B. Yackulic, Brendan P. Murphy, Robert C. Schelly, Mark C. McKinstry
2023, Conservation Biology (37)
Invasive species can dramatically alter ecosystems, but eradication is difficult, and suppression is expensive once they are established. Uncertainties in the potential for expansion and impacts by an invader can lead to delayed and inadequate suppression, allowing for establishment. Metapopulation viability models can aid in planning...
Environmental DNA metabarcoding read numbers and their variability predict species abundance, but weakly in non-dominant species
James Skelton, Allison R. Cauvin, Margaret Hunter
2023, Environmental DNA (5) 1092-1104
Metabarcoding of environmental DNA (eDNA) provides more comprehensive, efficient, and non-invasive sampling of biological communities than conventional methods. However, limitations of metabarcoding include taxon-specific biases in amplification and sequencing that distort assessments of community composition. Further, hyper-abundant species may disproportionately affect community composition assessments and impair the detection of rare...
Hot, wet and rare: Modelling the occupancy dynamics of the narrowly distributed Dixie Valley toad
Jonathan P. Rose, Patrick M. Kleeman, Brian J. Halstead
2023, Wildlife Research (50) 552-567
Context: Small population sizes and no possibility of metapopulation rescue put narrowly distributed endemic species under elevated risk of extinction from anthropogenic change. Desert spring wetlands host many endemic species that require aquatic habitat and are isolated by the surrounding xeric terrestrial habitat.Aims: We sought to model the occupancy dynamics of the...
Impact of sedimentary basins on Green’s functions for static slip inversion
Leah Langer, Stephen Beller, Evan Tyler Hirakawa, Jeroen Tromp
2023, Geophysical Journal International (232) 569-580
Earthquakes often occur in regions with complex material structure, such as sedimentary basins or mantle wedges. However, the majority of co-seismic modelling studies assume a simplified, often homogeneous elastic structure in order to expedite the process of model construction and speed up calculations. These co-seismic forward models are used...
Assessing population genomic structure and polyploidy: A crucial step for native plant restoration
Bryce A. Richardson, Robert Massatti, Nurul Islam-Faridi, Skylar Johnson, Francis F. Kilkenny
2023, Restoration Ecology (31)
Establishing an effective restoration program requires baseline genetic information to make sound decisions for seed increase and transfer. For many plants this information is lacking, especially among native forbs that are critical for pollinator health. Erigeron speciosus is a widespread, perennial forb occupying montane environments in the western United States and Canada....
The global seismographic network reveals atmospherically coupled normal modes excited by the 2022 Hunga Tonga eruption
Adam T. Ringler, Robert Anthony, Rick Aster, T. Taira, Brian Shiro, David C. Wilson, S. H. De Angelis, C. Ebeling, Matthew M. Haney, R. Matoza, H. Ortiz
2023, Geophysical Journal International (232) 2160-2174
The eruption of the submarine Hunga Tonga-Hunga Haʻapai (Hunga Tonga) volcano on 15 January 2022, was one of the largest volcanic explosions recorded by modern geophysical instrumentation. The eruption was notable for the broad range of atmospheric wave phenomena it generated and for their unusual coupling with the oceans...
Relationship of greater sage-grouse to natural and assisted recovery of key vegetation types following wildfire: Insights from scat
Matthew J. Germino, Christopher R. Anthony, Chad Raymond Kluender, Ethan A. Ellsworth, Ann M. Moser, Cara Applestein, Matthew Fisk
2023, Restoration Ecology (31)
Megafires are creating severe conservation problems worldwide for wildlife that have obligate dependencies on plant species that are foundational but fire-intolerant. Wildfire-induced loss of native perennials and increases in exotic annual grasses threaten greater sage-grouse (GRSG, Centrocercus urophasianus) in its sagebrush steppe habitat in western North America. Post-fire restoration using herbicides,...
Beyond glacier-wide mass balances: Parsing seasonal elevation change into spatially resolved patterns of accumulation and ablation at Wolverine Glacier, Alaska
Lucas Zeller, Daniel J McGrath, Louis C. Sass, Shad O'Neel, Christopher J. McNeil, Emily Baker
2023, Journal of Glaciology (69) 87-102
We present spatially distributed seasonal and annual surface mass balances of Wolverine Glacier, Alaska, from 2016 to 2020. Our approach accounts for the effects of ice emergence and firn compaction on surface elevation changes to resolve the spatial patterns in mass balance at 10 m scale. We...
Integrative monitoring strategy for marine and freshwater harmful algal blooms and toxins across the freshwater-to-marine continuum
Meredith D. A. Howard, Jayme Smith, David A. Caron, Raphael Kudela, Keith A. Loftin, Kendra Hayashi, Rich Fadness, Susan Fricke, Jacob Kann, Miranda Roethler, A.O. Tatters, Susanna Theroux
2023, Integrated Environmental Assessment and Management (IEAM) (19) 586-604
Many coastal states throughout the USA have observed negative effects in marine and estuarine environments caused by cyanotoxins produced in inland waterbodies that were transported downstream or produced in the estuaries. Estuaries and other downstream receiving waters now face the dual risk of impacts...
Morphology and paleohydrology of intracrater alluvial fans north of Hellas Basin, Mars
Ryan B. Anderson, Rebecca Williams, Amber L. Gullikson, William Nelson
2023, Icarus (394)
Alluvial fans and sinuous ridges are both important records of the history of fluvial activity on Mars, and they often occur together. We present observations of alluvial fans, many of which exhibit inverted relief, in five craters in the region north of Hellas basin. The observed fans ranged in...
Management and environmental factors associated with simulated restoration seeding barriers in sagebrush steppe
Stella M. Copeland, John B. Bradford, Stuart P. Hardegree, Daniel Rodolphe Schlaepfer, Kevin J Badik
2023, Restoration Ecology (31)
Adverse weather conditions, particularly freezing or drought, are often associated with poor seedling establishment following restoration seeding in drylands like the Great Basin sagebrush steppe (USA). Management decisions such as planting date or seed source could improve restoration outcomes by reducing seedling exposure to weather barriers. We simulated the effects...
Late Cretaceous time-transgressive onset of Laramide arch exhumation and basin subsidence across northern Arizona−New Mexico, USA, and the role of a dehydrating Farallon flat slab
Jacob Thacker, Karl Karlstrom, Shari Kelley, Ryan S. Crow, Jerry Kendall
2023, GSA Bulletin (135) 389-406
Spatiotemporal constraints for Late Cretaceous tectonism across the Colorado Plateau and southern Rocky Mountains (northern Arizona−New Mexico, USA) are interpreted in regards to Laramide orogenic mechanisms. Onset of Laramide arch development is estimated from cooling recorded in representative thermochronologic samples in a three-step process of initial forward models, secondary HeFTy...
Spatially averaged stratigraphic data to inform watershed sediment routing: An example from the Mid-Atlantic United States
James Pizzuto, Katherine Skalak, Adam J. Benthem, Shannon A. Mahan, Mahmoud Sherif, Adam Pearson
2023, GSA Bulletin (135) 249-270
New and previously published stratigraphic data define Holocene to present sediment storage time scales for Mid-Atlantic river corridors. Empirical distributions of deposit ages and thicknesses were randomly sampled to create synthetic age-depth records. Deposits predating European settlement accumulated at a (median) rate of 0.06 cm yr−1, range from ∼18,000 to...
Alaskan Yelloweye Rockfish fecundity revealed through an automated egg count and digital imagery method
Donald E. Arthur, Jeffrey A. Falke, Brittany J. Blain-Roth, Trent M. Sutton
2023, North American Journal of Fisheries Management (42) 828-838
Spawning stock biomass (SSB) is often used as an index for reproductive potential (RP) in fisheries stock assessments. This method assumes that mature female biomass is proportional to total egg production and implies that (1) the fecundity–length relationship follows a cubic function or (2)...
Population connectivity of aquatic insects in a dam-regulated, desert river
Erin F. Abernethy, Jeffrey Muehlbauer, Theodore Kennedy, Katie E. Dziedzic, Holland Elder, Molly K. Burke, David A. Lytle
2023, River Research and Applications (39) 364-374
Humans have exaggerated natural habitat fragmentation, negatively impacting species dispersal and reducing population connectivity. Habitat fragmentation can be especially detrimental in freshwater populations, whose dispersal is already constrained by the river network structure. Aquatic insects, for instance, are generally limited to two primary modes...
2022 Crustal Deformation Modeling Workshop Report
Brad T. Aagaard, Sylvain Barbot, Brittany Erickson, Matthew Knepley, Mark Simons, Charles Williams
2023, Report
The 2022 Crustal Deformation Modeling Workshop was held June 20–24 at the Colorado School of Mines in Golden, Colorado. The workshop included two days of tutorials on the use of the open-source software PyLith for crustal deformation modeling followed by three days of science talks and discussions. The workshop focused...
Using physiological conditions to assess current and future habitat use of a Subarctic frog
T. Hastings, Blake R. Hossack, L. Fishback, J. M. Davenport
2023, Integrative Zoology (18) 2-14
Species with especially close dependence on the environment to meet physiological requirements, such as ectotherms, are highly susceptible to the impacts of climate change. Climate change is occurring rapidly in the Subarctic and Arctic, but there is limited knowledge on ectotherm physiology in these landscapes. We...
Estimating the aboveground biomass and carbon stocks of tall shrubs in a prerestoration degraded salt marsh
Jacqualyn Fouse, Meagan J. Eagle, Kevin D. Kroeger, Timothy P. Smith
2023, Restoration Ecology (31)
Wetlands play a vital role in Earth's carbon cycle and provide important ecosystem services. Their ability to perform their roles can be compromised by human activities that destroy or impair their functioning. The restoration of degraded wetlands may allow carbon cycle functioning, as well as other...
Luminescence ages and new interpretations of the timing and deposition of Quaternary sediments at Natural Trap Cave, Wyoming
Shannon A. Mahan, John R. Wood, Dave M Lovelace, Juan Laden, Jenny McGuire, Julie Meachen
2023, Quaternary International (647-648) 22-35
Natural Trap Cave, located in the Big Horn Mountains of north-central Wyoming, has a history of trapping and preserving a range of North American fauna that plummeted into the deep vertical entrance. These animal remains were buried and preserved within sediments of the main chamber and, in turn, have...
The Hawai'i groundwater recharge tool
Jared H. McLean, Sean B. Cleveland, Kolja Rotzoll, Scot K. Izuka, Jason Leigh, Gwen A. Jacobs, Ryan Theriot
2023, Concurrency and Computation: Practice and Experience (35)
This article discusses the design and implementation of the Hawai’i Groundwater Recharge Tool, an application for providing data and analyses of the impacts of land-cover modifications and changes in precipitation on groundwater-recharge rates for the island of O’ahu. This application uses simulation data based on a set of 29 land-cover types and 2 precipitation...
Winter habitat selection and efficacy of telemetry to aid Grass Carp removal efforts in a large reservoir
Tyler Michael Hessler, Duane Chapman, Craig P. Paukert, Jeff C. Jolley, Michael E. Byrne
2023, North American Journal of Fisheries Management (43) 189-202
Grass Carp Ctenopharyngodon idella were introduced in North America to control aquatic vegetation in small, closed systems. However, when they escape into larger systems in which they can reproduce, they have the potential to cause significant declines and alterations in aquatic vegetation communities. These alterations can in turn affect native species that...
Early Pliocene marine transgression into the lower Colorado River valley, southwestern USA, by re-flooding of a former tidal strait
Rebecca Dorsey, Juan Carlos Braga, Kevin Gardner, Kristin McDougall-Reid, Brennan O’Connell
2023, Book chapter, Straits and seaways: Controls, processes and implications in modern and ancient systems
Marine straits and seaways are known to host a wide range of sedimentary processes and products, but the role of marine connections in the development of large river systems remains little studied. This study explores a hypothesis that shallow-marine waters flooded the lower Colorado River valley at c. 5 Ma along a...
Signatures of high-latitude waves in observations of geomagnetic acceleration
Rodrigo Chi-Duran, Margaret Susan Avery, Bruce Buffett
2023, Geophysical Research Letters (48)
Models for the second time-derivative of the geomagnetic field reveal prominent activity at high latitudes. Alternating patches of positive and negative geomagnetic acceleration propagate to the west at speeds that exceed nominal fluid velocities in the core. We show that waves are a viable interpretation of these...