Periodicity in stem growth and litterfall in tidal freshwater forested wetlands: influence of salinity and drought on nitrogen recycling
Nicole Cormier, Ken W. Krauss, William H. Conner
2013, Estuaries and Coasts (36) 533-546
Many tidally influenced freshwater forested wetlands (tidal swamps) along the south Atlantic coast of the USA are currently undergoing dieback and decline. Salinity often drives conversion of tidal swamps to marsh, especially under conditions of regional drought. During this change, alterations in nitrogen (N) uptake from dominant vegetation or timing...
Low footwall accelerations and variable surface rupture behavior on the Fort Sage Mountains fault, northeast California
Richard W. Briggs, Steven G. Wesnousky, James N. Brune, Matthew D. Purvance, Shannon Mahan
2013, Bulletin of the Seismological Society of America (103) 157-168
The Fort Sage Mountains fault zone is a normal fault in the Walker Lane of the western Basin and Range that produced a small surface rupture (L 5.6 earthquake in 1950. We investigate the paleoseismic history of the Fort Sage fault and find evidence for two paleoearthquakes...
Evapotranspiration and water balance of an anthropogenic coastal desert wetland: responses to fire, inflows and salinities
Edward P. Glenn, Lourdes Mexicano, Jaqueline Garcia-Hernandez, Pamela L. Nagler, Martha M. Gomez-Sapiens, Dawei Tang, Marcelo A. Lomeli, Jorge Ramírez-Hernández, Francisco Zamora-Arroyo
2013, Ecological Engineering (59) 176-184
Evapotranspiration (ET) and other water balance components were estimated for Cienega de Santa Clara, an anthropogenic brackish wetland in the delta of the Colorado River in Mexico. The marsh is in the Biosphere Reserve of the Upper Gulf of California and Delta of the Colorado River, and supports a high...
Evaporative losses from soils covered by physical and different types of biological soil crusts
S. Chamizo, Y. Canton, F. Domingo, J. Belnap
2013, Hydrological Processes (27) 324-332
Evaporation of soil moisture is one of the most important processes affecting water availability in semiarid ecosystems. Biological soil crusts, which are widely distributed ground cover in these ecosystems, play a recognized role on water processes. Where they roughen surfaces, water residence time and thus infiltration can be greatly enhanced,...
Estimating irrigation water demand using an improved method and optimizing reservoir operation for water supply and hydropower generation: a case study of the Xinfengjiang reservoir in southern China
Yiping Wu, Ji Chen
2013, Agricultural Water Management (116) 110-121
The ever-increasing demand for water due to growth of population and socioeconomic development in the past several decades has posed a worldwide threat to water supply security and to the environmental health of rivers. This study aims to derive reservoir operating rules through establishing a multi-objective optimization model for the...
Ecosystem services from keystone species: diversionary seeding and seed-caching desert rodents can enhance Indian ricegrass seedling establishment
William Longland, Steven M. Ostoja
2013, Restoration Ecology (21) 285-291
Seeds of Indian ricegrass (Achnatherum hymenoides), a native bunchgrass common to sandy soils on arid western rangelands, are naturally dispersed by seed-caching rodent species, particularly Dipodomys spp. (kangaroo rats). These animals cache large quantities of seeds when mature seeds are available on or beneath plants and recover most of their...
Ecosystem services from converted land: the importance of tree cover in Amazonian pastures
Kirsten Barrett, Judson Valentim, B. L. Turner II
2013, Urban Ecosystems (16) 573-591
Deforestation is responsible for a substantial fraction of global carbon emissions and changes in surface energy budgets that affect climate. Deforestation losses include wildlife and human habitat, and myriad forest products on which rural and urban societies depend for food, fiber, fuel, fresh water, medicine, and recreation. Ecosystem services gained...
Present, future, and novel bioclimates of the San Francisco, California region
Alicia A. Torregrosa, Maxwell D. Taylor, Lorraine E. Flint, Alan L. Flint
2013, PLoS ONE (8) 1-14
Bioclimates are syntheses of climatic variables into biologically relevant categories that facilitate comparative studies of biotic responses to climate conditions. Isobioclimates, unique combinations of bioclimatic indices (continentality, ombrotype, and thermotype), were constructed for northern California coastal ranges based on the Rivas-Martinez worldwide bioclimatic classification system for the end of the...
Effects of food availability on yolk androgen deposition in the black-legged kittiwake (Rissa tridactyla), a seabird with facultative brood reduction
Z.M. Benowitz-Fredericks, Alexander S. Kitaysky, Jorg Welcker, Scott A. Hatch
2013, PLoS ONE (8)
In birds with facultative brood reduction, survival of the junior chick is thought to be regulated primarily by food availability. In black-legged kittiwakes (Rissa tridactyla) where parents and chicks are provided with unlimited access to supplemental food during the breeding season, brood reduction still occurs and varies interannually. Survival of...
The identity of the enigmatic "Black Shrew" (Sorex niger Ord, 1815)
Neal Woodman
2013, Proceedings of the Biological Society of Washington (126) 1-10
The scientific name Sorex niger Ord, 1815 (Mammalia, Soricidae) was originally applied to a North American species that George Ord called the “Black Shrew.” The origin of the name “Black Shrew,” however, was obscure, and Samuel Rhoads subsequently wrote that the species represented by this name could not be determined....
Type specimens of Crotalus scutulatus (Chordata: Reptilia: Squamata: Viperidae) re-examined, with new evidence after more than a century of confusion
Michael D. Cardwell, Steve W. Gotte, Roy W. McDiarmid, Ned Gilmore, James A. Poindexter
2013, Proceedings of the Biological Society of Washington (126) 11-16
The original description of Crotalus scutulatus (Chordata: Reptilia: Squamata: Viperidae) was published in 1861 by Robert Kennicott, who did not identify a type specimen or a type locality. We review the history of specimens purported to be the type(s) and various designations of type locality. We provide evidence that ANSP...
The SCEC geodetic transient detection validation exercise
Rowena B. Lohman, Jessica R. Murray
2013, Seismological Research Letters (84) 419-425
Over the past decade the number and size of continuously operating Global Positioning System (GPS) networks has grown substantially worldwide. A steadily increasing volume of freely available GPS measurements, combined with the application of new approaches for mining these data for signals of interest, has led to the identification of...
Method- and species-specific detection probabilities of fish occupancy in Arctic lakes: Implications for design and management
Trevor B. Haynes, Amanda E. Rosenberger, Mark S. Lindberg, Matthew Whitman, Joel A. Schmutz
2013, Canadian Journal of Fisheries and Aquatic Sciences (70) 1055-1062
Studies examining species occurrence often fail to account for false absences in field sampling. We investigate detection probabilities of five gear types for six fish species in a sample of lakes on the North Slope, Alaska. We used an occupancy modeling approach to provide estimates of detection probabilities for each...
A novel approach to surveying sturgeon using side-scan sonar and occupancy modeling
H. Jared Flowers, Joseph E. Hightower
2013, Marine and Coastal Fisheries: Dynamics, Management, and Ecosystem Science (5) 211-223
Technological advances represent opportunities to enhance and supplement traditional fisheries sampling approaches. One example with growing importance for fisheries research is hydroacoustic technologies such as side-scan sonar. Advantages of side-scan sonar over traditional techniques include the ability to sample large areas efficiently and the potential to survey fish without physical...
Colloid transport in saturated porous media: Elimination of attachment efficiency in a new colloid transport model
Lee L. Landkamer, Ronald W. Harvey, Timothy D. Scheibe, Joseph N. Ryan
2013, Water Resources Research (49) 2952-2965
A colloid transport model is introduced that is conceptually simple yet captures the essential features of colloid transport and retention in saturated porous media when colloid retention is dominated by the secondary minimum because an electrostatic barrier inhibits substantial deposition in the primary minimum. This model is based on conventional...
Annual modulation of non-volcanic tremor in northern Cascadia
Frederick Pollitz, Aaron G. Wech, Honn Kao, Roland Burgmann
2013, Journal of Geophysical Research B: Solid Earth (118) 2445-2459
Two catalogs of episodic tremor events in northern Cascadia, one from 2006 to 2012 and the other from 1997 to 2011, reveal two systematic patterns of tremor occurrence in southern Vancouver Island: (1) most individual events tend to occur in the third quarter of the year; (2) the number of...
Evidence for fluid-triggered slip in the 2009 Mount Rainier, Washington earthquake swarm
David R. Shelly, Seth C. Moran, Weston A. Thelen
2013, Geophysical Research Letters (40) 1506-1512
A vigorous swarm of over 1000 small, shallow earthquakes occurred 20–22 September 2009 beneath Mount Rainier, Washington, including the largest number of events ever recorded in a single day at Rainier since seismic stations were installed on the edifice in 1989. Many events were only clearly recorded on one or...
Radiometric cross-calibration of EO-1 ALI with L7 ETM+ and Terra MODIS sensors using near-simultaneous desert observations
Gyanesh Chander, Amit Angal, Taeyoung Choi, Xiaoxiong Xiong
2013, IEEE Journal of Selected Topics in Applied Earth Observations and Remote Sensing (6) 386-399
The Earth Observing-1 (EO-1) satellite was launched on November 21, 2000, as part of a one-year technology demonstration mission. The mission was extended because of the value it continued to add to the scientific community. EO-1 has now been operational for more than a decade, providing both multispectral and hyperspectral...
Current and future land use around a nationwide protected area network
Christopher M. Hamilton, Sebastian Martinuzzi, Andrew J. Plantinga, Volker C. Radeloff, David J. Lewis, Wayne E. Thogmartin, Patricia J. Heglund, Anna M. Pidgeon
2013, PLoS ONE (8)
Land-use change around protected areas can reduce their effective size and limit their ability to conserve biodiversity because land-use change alters ecological processes and the ability of organisms to move freely among protected areas. The goal of our analysis was to inform conservation planning efforts for a nationwide network of...
Chemical contaminants in water and sediment near fish nesting sites in the Potomac River basin: determining potential exposures to smallmouth bass (Micropterus dolomieu)
Dana W. Kolpin, Vicki Blazer, James L. Gray, Michael J. Focazio, John A. Young, David A. Alvarez, Luke R. Iwanowicz, William T. Foreman, Edward T. Furlong, Gary K. Speiran, Steven D. Zaugg, Laura E. Hubbard, Michael T. Meyer, Mark W. Sandstrom, Larry B. Barber
2013, Science of the Total Environment (443) 700-716
The Potomac River basin is an area where a high prevalence of abnormalities such as testicular oocytes (TO), skin lesions, and mortality has been observed in smallmouth bass (SMB, Micropterus dolomieu). Previous research documented a variety of chemicals in regional streams, implicating chemical exposure as one plausible explanation for these...
Validation of eDNA surveillance sensitivity for detection of Asian carps in controlled and field experiments
Andrew R. Mahon, Christopher L. Jerde, Matthew Galaska, Jennifer L. Bergner, W. Lindsay Chadderton, David M. Lodge, Margaret E. Hunter, Leo G. Nico
2013, PLoS ONE (8)
In many North American rivers, populations of multiple species of non-native cyprinid fishes are present, including black carp (Mylpharyngodon piceus), grass carp (Ctenopharyngodon idella), bighead carp (Hypophthalmichthys nobilis), silver carp (Hypophthalmichthys molitrix), common carp (Cyprinus carpio), and goldfish (Carassius auratus). All six of these species are found in the Mississippi...
A quantitative assessment of the conservation benefits of the Wetlands Reserve Program to amphibians
J. Hardin Waddle, Brad M. Glorioso, Stephen P. Faulkner
2013, Restoration Ecology (21) 200-206
The Mississippi Alluvial Valley (MAV) originally consisted of nearly contiguous bottomland hardwood (BLH) forest encompassing approximately 10 million hectares. Currently, only 20–25% of the historical BLH forests remain in small patches fragmented by agricultural lands. The Wetlands Reserve Program (WRP) was established to restore and protect the functions and values...
Automated cloud and shadow detection and filling using two-date Landsat imagery in the United States
Suming Jin, Collin G. Homer, Limin Yang, George Xian, Joyce Fry, Patrick Danielson, Philip A. Townsend
2013, International Journal of Remote Sensing (34) 1540-1560
A simple, efficient, and practical approach for detecting cloud and shadow areas in satellite imagery and restoring them with clean pixel values has been developed. Cloud and shadow areas are detected using spectral information from the blue, shortwave infrared, and thermal infrared bands of Landsat Thematic Mapper or Enhanced Thematic...
Human effects on the hydrologic system of the Verde Valley, central Arizona, 1910–2005 and 2005–2110, using a regional groundwater flow model
Bradley D. Garner, D. R. Pool, Fred D. Tillman, Brandon T. Forbes
2013, Scientific Investigations Report 2013-5029
Water budgets were developed for the Verde Valley of central Arizona in order to evaluate the degree to which human stresses have affected the hydrologic system and might affect it in the future. The Verde Valley is a portion of central Arizona wherein concerns have been raised about water availability,...
Absolute radiometric calibration of Landsat using a pseudo invariant calibration site
D. Helder, K. J. Thome, N. Mishra, G. Chander, Xiaoxiong Xiong, A. Angal, Tae-young Choi
2013, IEEE Transactions on Geoscience and Remote Sensing (51) 1360-1369
Pseudo invariant calibration sites (PICS) have been used for on-orbit radiometric trending of optical satellite systems for more than 15 years. This approach to vicarious calibration has demonstrated a high degree of reliability and repeatability at the level of 1-3% depending on the site, spectral channel, and imaging geometries. A...