Land cover change, biogeochemical modelling of carbon stocks, and climate change in West Africa
Larry L. Tieszen, G. Gray Tappan, Z. Tan, E. Tachie-Obeng
2011, Conference Paper, Africa and the carbon cycle: Proceedings of the open science conference
The carbon in ecosystems exists in dynamic soil and vegetation pools which vary in amounts and cycle with the global atmosphere at varying rates. These stocks and fluxes play important roles in global carbon regulation and in the maintenance of goods and services. Changes in land cover or ecosystems result...
Life-history notes on Cambarus hubbsi creaser (Hubbs crayfish) from the South Fork Spring River, Arkansas
E.R. Larson, Daniel D. Magoulick
2011, Southeastern Naturalist (10) 121-132
Many crayfish species native to the southeastern United States are imperiled due to small range sizes and anthropogenic impacts such as habitat loss and introduction of non-native species. Furthermore, effective management of crayfish is limited by the scarcity of life-history and ecological data for many of these species. We report...
Factors affecting detectability of river otters during sign surveys
Mackenzie R. Jeffress, Craig P. Paukert, Brett K. Sandercock, Philip S. Gipson
2011, Journal of Wildlife Management (75) 144-150
Sign surveys are commonly used to study and monitor wildlife species but may be flawed when surveys are conducted only once and cover short distances, which can lead to a lack of accountability for false absences. Multiple observers surveyed for river otter (Lontra canadensis) scat and tracks along stream and...
The May 2005 eruption of Fernandina volcano, Galápagos: The first circumferential dike intrusion observed by GPS and InSAR
W.W. Chadwick Jr., Sigurjon Jonsson, Dennis J. Geist, Michael P. Poland, Daniel J. Johnson, S. Batt, Karen S. Harpp, A. Ruiz
2011, Bulletin of Volcanology (73) 679-697
The May 2005 eruption of Fernandina volcano, Galápagos, occurred along circumferential fissures parallel to the caldera rim and fed lava flows down the steep southwestern slope of the volcano for several weeks. This was the first circumferential dike intrusion ever observed by both InSAR and GPS measurements and thus provides...
Water Use in Louisiana, 2010
B. Pierre Sargent
2011, Report
In 2010, approximately 8,500 million gallons per day (Mgal/d) of water was withdrawn from groundwater and surface-water sources in Louisiana. Total groundwater withdrawals were about 1,600 Mgal/d, and total surfacewater withdrawals were about 7,000 Mgal/d. From 2005 to 2010, groundwater withdrawals in Louisiana increased by 1.8 percent, and surface-water withdrawals...
Input, calibration, uncertainty, and limitations of the basin characterization model: appendix three
Alan L. Flint, Lorraine E. Flint, Melissa D. Masbruch
Victor M. Heilweil, Lynette E. Brooks, editor(s)
2011, Book chapter, Conceptual model of the Great Basic carbonate and alluvial aquifer system
No abstract available....
Sagebrush ecosystem conservation and management: Ecoregional assessment tools and models for the Wyoming Basins
Steve E. Hanser, Matthias Leu, Steven T. Knick, Cameron L. Aldridge, editor(s)
2011, Book
The Wyoming Basins are one of the remaining strongholds of the sagebrush ecosystem. However, like most sagebrush habitats, threats to this region are numerous. This book adds to current knowledge about the regional status of the sagebrush ecosystem, the distribution of habitats, the threats to the ecosystem, and the influence...
Long-term increases in young-of-the-year growth of Arctic cisco Coregonus autumnalis and environmental influences
Vanessa R. von Biela, Christian E. Zimmerman, L. L. Moulton
2011, Journal of Fish Biology (78) 39-56
Arctic cisco Coregonus autumnalis young-of-year (YOY) growth was used as a proxy to examine the long-term response of a high-latitude fish population to changing climate from 1978 to 2004. YOY growth increased over time (r2 = 0·29) and was correlated with monthly averages of the Arctic oscillation index, air temperature,...
Nanoparticles formed from bacterial oxyanion reduction of toxic Group 15 and 16 metalloids
C.I. Pearce, S. Baseman, J.W. Fellowes, Ronald S. Oremland
J.F. Stolz, Ronald S. Oremland, editor(s)
2011, Book chapter, Microbial metal and metalloid metabolism: Advances and applications
This chapter presents some examples of nanoparticles formed by only a few microbial species that are cultivated in only a handful of laboratories worldwide. The investigations so far have just scratched the surface of the potential of the natural world to yield bionanomineral producers. While future research should involve screening...
Boiga irregularis (Brown Treesnake). Predation attempt by praying mantis
Bjorn Lardner, Julie A. Savidge, Robert N. Reed, Gordon H. Rodda
2011, Herpetological Review (42) 435-436
No abstract available....
What is that mysterious booming sound?
David P. Hill
2011, Seismological Research Letters (82) 619-622
The residents of coastal North Carolina are occasionally treated to sequences of booming sounds of unknown origin. The sounds are often energetic enough to rattle windows and doors. A recent sequence occurred in early January 2011 during clear weather with no evidence of local thunder storms. Queries by a local...
Land remote sensing and global environmental change: NASA's Earth observing system and the science of ASTER and MODIS
Bhaskar Ramachandran, Christopher O. Justice, Michael J. Abrams
2011, Book
No abstract available....
Alien reptiles and amphibians: a scientific compendium and analysis, by Fred Kraus
R.N. Reed
2011, Herpetological Review (42) 306-309
No abstract available....
Evaluation of adrenocortical function in Florida manatees (Trichechus manatus latirostris)
K.M. Tripp, J.P. Verstegen, C. Deutsch, Robert K. Bonde, M. de Wit, Charles A. Manire, J. Gaspard, K.E. Harr
2011, Zoo Biology (30) 17-31
The study objectives were to determine the predominant manatee glucocorticoid; validate assays to measure this glucocorticoid and adrenocorticotropic hormone (ACTH); determine diagnostic thresholds to distinguish physiological vs. pathological concentrations; identify differences associated with sex, age class, female reproductive status, capture time, and lactate; and determine the best methods for manatee...
Hydrology and biogeochemistry linkages
Norman E. Peters, J. K. Bohlke, P. D. Brooks, T.P. Burt, Michael N. Gooseff, David P. Hamilton, P. J. Mulholland, Nigel Roulet, J.V. Turner
P. Wilderer, editor(s)
2011, Book chapter, Treatise on water science
This chapter provides an overview of the linkages between hydrology and biogeochemistry in terrestrial and aquatic systems. Selected topics include hydrological pathways on drainage basin slopes, mountain environments, within-river (or in-stream) processes, wetlands, groundwater (and groundwater–surface water interactions), and lakes. Beginning from catchment...
The Edwardsburg Formation and related rocks, Windermere Supergroup, central Idaho, USA
Karen Lund, John N. Aleinikoff, Karl V. Evans
2011, Book chapter, The Geological Record of Neoproterozoic
In central Idaho, Neoproterozoic stratified rocks are engulfed by the Late Cretaceous Idaho batholith and by Eocene volcanic and plutonic rocks of the Challis event. Studied sections in the Gospel Peaks and Big Creek areas of west-central Idaho are in roof pendants of the Idaho batholith. A drill core section...
Patch reefs: Lidar morphometric analysis
John Brock, Monica Palaseanu-Lovejoy
David Hopley, editor(s)
2011, Book chapter, Encyclopedia of modern coral reefs: Structure, form and process
Alina Reef is one of several thousand patch reefs that lie across the shallow carbonate platform seaward of Hawk Channel off the northern Florida Keys. The site is near the northern latitudinal fringe of the late Holocene western Atlantic coral reef distribution (Figure 1). The area is covered by calcareous sand...
Long-term natural attenuation of crude oil in the subsurface
Barbara A. Bekins, Mary Jo Baedecker, Robert P. Eganhouse, William N. Herkelrath
2011, Conference Paper, Groundwater management in a rapidly changing world: Proceedings of the 7th international groundwater quality conference
The time frame for natural attenuation of crude oil contamination in the subsurface has been studied for the last 27 years at a spill site located near Bemidji, Minnesota, USA. Data from thegroundwater contaminant plume show that dissolved benzene concentrations adjacent to the oil decreased by 50% between 1993 and...
Introduction: An ecoregional assessment of the Wyoming Basins
Steven T. Knick, Steve E. Hanser, Matthias Leu, Cameron L. Aldridge, Michael J. Wisdom
2011, Book chapter, Sagebrush ecosystem conservation and management: Ecoregional assessment tools and models for the Wyoming Basins
The Wyoming Basins Ecoregional Assessment (WBEA) area in the western United States contains a number of important land cover types, including nearly one-fourth of the sagebrush (Artemisia spp.) in North America. Although relatively unappreciated until recent decades, the broad open landscapes dominated by sagebrush communities have received increasing attention for...
Deep rock damage in the San Andreas Fault revealed by P- and S-type fault-zone-guided waves
William L. Ellsworth, Peter E. Malin
2011, Book chapter, Geology of the earthquake source: a volume in honour of Rick Sibson
Damage to fault-zone rocks during fault slip results in the formation of a channel of low seismic-wave velocities. Within such channels guided seismic waves, denoted by Fg, can propagate. Here we show with core samples, well logs and Fg-waves that such a channel is crossed by the SAFOD (San...
Distribution and abundance of saltcedar and Russian olive in the western United States
Pamela L. Nagler, Edward P. Glenn, Catherine S. Jarnevich, Patrick B. Shafroth
2011, Critical Reviews in Plant Science (30) 508-523
Over the past century, two introduced Eurasian trees, saltcedar (Tamarix spp.) and Russian olive (Elaeagnus angustifolia) have become wide spread on western United States of American (U.S.) rivers. This paper reviews the literature on the following five key areas related to their distribution and abundance in the western United States:...
Herding sparrows for science: they're not just "LBJs"
Janet M. Ruth
2011, Report
No abstract available....
Geoinformatics in the public service: Building a cyberinfrastructure across the geological surveys
M. Lee Allison, Linda C. Gundersen, Stephen M. Richard
G. Randy Keller, Chaitanya Baru, editor(s)
2011, Book chapter, Geoinformatics: cyberinfrastructure for the solid Earth sciences
Advanced information technology infrastructure is increasingly being employed in the Earth sciences to provide researchers with efficient access to massive central databases and to integrate diversely formatted information from a variety of sources. These geoinformatics initiatives enable manipulation, modeling and visualization of data in a consistent way, and are helping...
Secular trends in the geologic record and the supercontinent cycle
Dwight Bradley
2011, Earth-Science Reviews (108) 16-33
Geologic secular trends are used to refine the timetable of supercontinent assembly, tenure, and breakup. The analysis rests on what is meant by the term supercontinent, which here is defined broadly as a grouping of formerly dispersed continents. To avoid the artificial pitfall of an all-or-nothing definition, quantitative measures of...
Florida Keys
Barbara H Lidz
2011, Book chapter, Encyclopedia of modern coral reefs: Structure, form and process
No abstract available....