Effects of grade control structures on fish passage, biological assemblages, and hydraulic environments in western Iowa streams: a multidisciplinary review
J.T. Thomas, M.E. Culler, D.C. Dermisis, Clay Pierce, A.N. Papanicolaou, T.W. Stewart, C.J. Larson
2011, River Research and Applications (29) 389-398
Land use changes and channelization of streams in the deep loess region of western Iowa have led to stream channel incision, altered flow regimes, increased sediment inputs, decreased habitat diversity and reduced lateral connectivity of streams and floodplains. Grade control structures (GCSs) are built in streams to prevent further erosion,...
Lidar vegetation mapping in national parks: Gulf Coast Network
John Brock, Monica Palaseanu-Lovejoy, Martha Segura
2011, Fact Sheet 2011-3137
Airborne lidar (Light Detection and Ranging) is an active remote sensing technique used to collect accurate elevation data over large areas. Lidar provides an extremely high level of regional topographic detail, which makes this technology an essential component of U.S. Geological Survey (USGS) science strategy. The USGS Coastal and Marine...
Pathogens and diseases of freshwater mussels in the United States: Studies on bacterial transmission and depuration
Clifford E. Starliper
R. C. Cipriano, A.W. Bruckner, I.S. Shchelkunov, editor(s)
2011, Conference Paper, Bridging America and Russia with shared perspectives on aquatic animal health: Proceedings of the Third Bilateral Conference between Russia and the United States
Unionid mussels are recognized as important contributors to healthy aquatic ecosystems, as well as bioindicators of environmental perturbations. Because they are sedentary, filter feeding animals and require hosts (i.e., fishes) to transform embryonic glochidia, mussels are susceptible to direct adverse environmental parameters, and indirect parameters that restrict the timely presence...
Electrofishing and the effects of depletion sampling on fish health: A review and recommendations for additional study
F. M. Panek, Christine L. Densmore
R. C. Cipriano, A.W. Bruckner, I.S. Shchelkunov, editor(s)
2011, Conference Paper, Bridging America and Russia with shared perspectives on aquatic animal health: Proceedings of the Third Bilateral Conference between Russia and the United States
Depletion sampling in combination with multiple-pass electrofishing is an important fisheries management tool for wadeable streams. This combination of techniques has been used routinely by federal and state fishery management agencies for several decades as a reliable means to obtain quantitative data on trout populations or to describe fish community...
An overview of estrogen-associated endocrine disruption in fishes: Evidence of effects on reproductive and immune physiology
Luke R. Iwanowicz, Vicki S. Blazer
2011, Conference Paper, Bridging America and Russia with shared perspectives on aquatic animal health: Proceedings of the Third Bilateral Conference between Russia and the United States
Simply and perhaps intuitively defined, endocrine disruption is the abnormal modulation of normal hormonal physiology by exogenous chemicals. In fish, endocrine disruption of the reproductive system has been observed worldwide in numerous species and is known to affect both males and females. Observations of biologically relevant endocrine disruption most commonly...
Overview on the effects of parasites on fish health
D.D. Iwanowicz
R. C. Cipriano, A.W. Bruckner, I.S. Shchelkunov, editor(s)
2011, Conference Paper, Bridging America and Russia with shared perspectives on aquatic animal health: Proceedings of the Third Bilateral Conference between Russia and the United States
It is believed by many that parasites are only as important as the fish they infect. Parasites are ubiquitous, primarily surviving in a dynamic equilibrium with their host(s) and they are often overlooked in fish health assessments. Changes in the environment, both anthropogenic and environmental, can alter the parasite/host equilibrium...
Response of western mountain ecosystems to climatic variability and change: A collaborative research approach
David L. Peterson, Craig D. Allen, Jill S. Baron, Daniel B. Fagre, Donald McKenzie, Nathan L. Stephenson, Andrew G. Fountain, Jeffrey A. Hicke, George P. Malanson, Dennis S. Ojima, Christina L. Tague, Phillip J. van Mantgem
Erik A. Beever, Jerrold L. Belant, editor(s)
2011, Book chapter, Ecological consequences of climate change: Mechanisms, conservation, and management
No abstract available....
Preface: Insights from environmental tracers in groundwater systems
Ward E. Sanford, Werner Aeschbach-Hertig, Andrew L. Herczeg
2011, Preface to the Hydrology Journal (19) 1-3
No abstract available....
Potentiometric surface of the upper Floridan aquifer, west-central Florida, May 2011
Anita G. Ortiz
2011, Scientific Investigations Map 3183
The Floridan aquifer system consists of the Upper and Lower Floridan aquifers separated by the middle confining unit. The middle confining unit and the Lower Floridan aquifer in west-central Florida generally contain highly mineralized water. The water-bearing units containing freshwater are herein referred to as the Upper Floridan aquifer. The...
Hyperspectral remote sensing of vegetation
Prasad S. Thenkabail, John G. Lyon, Alfredo Huete
2011, Book
Hyperspectral narrow-band (or imaging spectroscopy) spectral data are fast emerging as practical solutions in modeling and mapping vegetation. Recent research has demonstrated the advances in and merit of hyperspectral data in a range of applications including quantifying agricultural crops, modeling forest canopy biochemical properties, detecting crop stress and disease, mapping...
Global amphibian declines: perspectives from the United States and beyond
Christine L. Densmore
R. C. Cipriano, A.W. Bruckner, I.S. Shchelkunov, editor(s)
2011, Conference Paper, Bridging America and Russia with shared perspectives on aquatic animal health: Proceedings of the Third Bilateral Conference between Russia and the United States, 12-20 July, 2009, held in Shepherdstown, West Virginia
Over recent decades, amphibians have experienced population declines, extirpations and species-level extinctions at an alarming rate. Numerous potential etiologies for amphibian declines have been postulated including climate and habitat degradation. Other potential anthropogenic causes including overexploitation and the frequent introductions of invasive predatory species have also been blamed for amphibian...
Characterizing climate-change impacts on the 1.5-yr flood flow in selected basins across the United States: a probabilistic approach
John F. Walker, Lauren E. Hay, Steven L. Markstrom, Michael D. Dettinger
2011, Earth Interactions (15) 1-16
The U.S. Geological Survey Precipitation-Runoff Modeling System (PRMS) model was applied to basins in 14 different hydroclimatic regions to determine the sensitivity and variability of the freshwater resources of the United States in the face of current climate-change projections. Rather than attempting to choose a most likely scenario from the...
Bridging America and Russia with shared perspectives on aquatic animal health: Proceedings of the Third Bilateral Conference Between the United States and Russia, Aquatic Animal Health 2009
Rocco C. Cipriano, A.W. Bruckner, I.S. Shchelkunov, editor(s)
2011, Book
No abstract available....
The Nation's top 25 construction aggregates producers
Jason Christopher Willett, Wally Bolen
2011, Aggregates Manager (16) 4-9
On the contribution of reconstruction labor wages and material prices to demand surge
Anna H. Olsen, Keith A. Porter
2011, SESM 11-1
Demand surge is understood to be a socio-economic phenomenon of large-scale natural disasters, most commonly explained by higher repair costs (after a large- versus small-scale disaster) resulting from higher material prices and labor wages. This study tests this explanation by developing quantitative models for the cost change of sets, or...
Prominent emerging diseases within the United States
R. C. Cipriano, A. Bowser, A. Dove, A. Goodwin, C. Puzach
R. C. Cipriano, A.W. Bruckner, I.S. Shchelkunov, editor(s)
2011, Conference Paper, Bridging America and Russia with shared perspectives on aquatic animal health: Proceedings of the Third Bilateral Conference between Russia and the United States, 12-20 July, 2009, held in Shepherdstown, West Virginia
This manuscript reviews disease syndromes that have become significant aquatic animal health issues within the United States since 2003. The emergence of Viral Hemorrhagic Septicemia (VHS) disease among wild fish in the Great Lakes is probably the most problematic and political issue. The emergence of this pathogen resulted in the...
Book review: The world of wolves: New perspectives on ecology
L. David Mech
2011, International Wolf (21) 21-21
Wolf populations have proliferated in several areas and so have wolf books. The latest book is a good one. This compendium, The World of Wolves, covers a variety of fast-moving and controversial areas such as canid genetics, effects of wolves on ecosystems, climate change, hunting of wolves by snowmobile and...
The scientific classification of wolves: Canis lupus soupus
L. David Mech
2011, International Wolf (21) 5-7
Gray wolf, timber wolf, red wolf, eastern wolf, brush wolf, arctic wolf, Mexican wolf, maned wolf, Ethiopian wolf, etc., etc. How many kinds of wolves are there? And what are the differences? This is a really good question, and the answer is getting more complicated all the time....
Changes in historical Iowa land cover as context for assessing the environmental benefits of current and future conservation efforts on agricultural lands
Alisa L. Gallant, Walt Sadinski, Mark F. Roth, Charles A. Rewa
2011, Journal of Soil and Water Conservation (66) 67A-77A
Conservationists and agriculturists face unprecedented challenges trying to minimize tradeoffs between increasing demands for food, fiber, feed, and biofuels and the resulting loss or reduced values of other ecosystem services, such as those derived from wetlands and biodiversity (Millennium Ecosystem Assessment 2005a, 2005c; Maresch et al. 2008). The Food, Conservation,...
Lithium
B.W. Jaskula
2011, Mining Engineering (63) 79-80
In 2010, lithium consumption in the United States was estimated to have been about 1 kt (1,100 st) of contained lithium, a 23-percent decrease from 2009. The United States was estimated to be the fourth largest consumer of lithium. It remained the leading importer of lithium carbonate and the leading...
Magnesium compounds
D.A. Kramer
2011, Mining Engineering (63) 80-81
Seawater and natural brines accounted for about 54 percent of U.S. magnesium compounds production in 2010. Dead-burned magnesia was produced by Martin Marietta Magnesia Specialties from well brines in Michigan. Caustic-calcined magnesia was recovered from seawater by Premier Magnesia in Florida, from well brines in Michigan by Martin Marietta and...
Historical legacies, information and contemporary water science and management
Daniel J. Bain, Jennifer A.S. Arrigo, Mark B. Green, Brian A. Pellerin, Charles J. Vörösmarty
2011, Water (3) 566-575
Hydrologic science has largely built its understanding of the hydrologic cycle using contemporary data sources (i.e., last 100 years). However, as we try to meet water demand over the next 100 years at scales from local to global, we need to expand our scope and embrace other data that address...
Applying definitions of “asbestos” to environmental and “low-dose” exposure Levels and health effects, particularly malignant mesothelioma
B.W. Case, J.L. Abraham, G. Meeker, F.D. Pooley, K.E. Pinkerton
2011, Journal of Toxicology and Environmental Health, Part B: Critical Reviews (14) 3-39
Although asbestos research has been ongoing for decades, this increased knowledge has not led to consensus in many areas of the field. Two such areas of controversy include the specific definitions of asbestos, and limitations in understanding exposure-response relationships for various asbestos types and exposure levels and disease. This document...
Ecosystem approach to inland fisheries: research needs and implementation strategies
T. Douglas Beard Jr., Robert Arlinghaus, Steven J. Cooke, Peter B. McIntyre, Sena De Silva, Devin M. Bartley, Ian G. Cowx
2011, Biology Letters (7) 481-483
Inland fisheries are a vital component in the livelihoods and food security of people throughout the world, as well as contributing huge recreational and economic benefits. These valuable assets are jeopardized by lack of research-based understanding of the impacts of fisheries on inland ecosystems, and similarly the impact of human...
Kaolin
R.L. Virta
2011, Mining Engineering (63) 76-77
The article discusses the latest developments in the global kaolin industry, particularly in the U.S., as of June 2011. It claims that Georgia is the top producing state in the U.S., with a 94% share in total production. The other top producers include South Carolina, North Carolina and Florida. Kaolin...