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Page 1789, results 44701 - 44725

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Not all publications have extents, not all extents are completely accurate
EAARL coastal topography - Assateague Island National Seashore, Maryland and Virginia, 2010
J.M. Bonisteel-Cormier, Amar Nayegandhi, C. W. Wright, J. C. Brock, D.B. Nagle, Saisudha Vivekanandan, E.S. Klipp, Xan Fredericks, Sara Stevens
2011, Data Series 628
This DVD contains lidar-derived bare-earth (BE) and first-surface (FS) topography GIS datasets of a portion of the Assateague Island National Seashore in Maryland and Virginia. These datasets were acquired on March 19 and 24, 2010....
Columbus crater and other possible groundwater-fed paleolakes of Terra Sirenum, Mars
J.J. Wray, R.E. Milliken, Colin M. Dundas, Gregg A. Swayze, J. C. Andrews-Hanna, A.M. Baldridge, M. Chojnacki, J.L. Bishop, B.L. Ehlmann, S.L. Murchie, Roger N. Clark, F.P. Seelos, L.L. Tornabene, S. W. Squyres
2011, Journal of Geophysical Research E: Planets (116)
Columbus crater in the Terra Sirenum region of the Martian southern highlands contains light‐toned layered deposits with interbedded sulfate and phyllosilicate minerals, a rare occurrence on Mars. Here we investigate in detail the morphology, thermophysical properties, mineralogy, and stratigraphy of these deposits; explore their regional context; and interpret the crater's...
An ecosystem-scale model for the spread of a host-specific forest pathogen in the Greater Yellowstone Ecosystem
J.A. Hatala, M.C. Dietze, R.L. Crabtree, Katherine C. Kendall, D. Six, P.R. Moorcroft
2011, Ecological Applications (21) 1138-1153
The introduction of nonnative pathogens is altering the scale, magnitude, and persistence of forest disturbance regimes in the western United States. In the high-altitude whitebark pine (Pinus albicaulis) forests of the Greater Yellowstone Ecosystem (GYE), white pine blister rust (Cronartium ribicola) is an introduced fungal pathogen that is...
Setting limits: Using air pollution thresholds to protect and restore U.S. ecosystems
M.E. Fenn, K.F. Lambert, T.F. Blett, Douglas A. Burns, L.H. Pardo, Gary M. Lovett, R. A. Haeuber, D.C. Evers, C. T. Driscoll, D.S. Jeffries
2011, Issues in Ecology
More than four decades of research provide unequivocal evidence that sulfur, nitrogen, and mercury pollution have altered, and will continue to alter, our nation's lands and waters. The emission and deposition of air pollutants harm native plants and animals, degrade water quality, affect forest productivity, and are damaging to human...
Watershed-scale response to climate change through the twenty-first century for selected basins across the United States
Lauren E. Hay, Steven L. Markstrom, Christian D. Ward-Garrison
2011, Earth Interactions (15) 1-37
The hydrologic response of different climate-change emission scenarios for the twenty-first century were evaluated in 14 basins from different hydroclimatic regions across the United States using the Precipitation-Runoff Modeling System (PRMS), a process-based, distributed-parameter watershed model. This study involves four major steps: 1) setup and calibration of the PRMS model...
Experimental infection of bats with Geomyces destructans causes white-nose syndrome
J.M. Lorch, C.U. Meteyer, M.J. Behr, J.G. Boyles, P.M. Cryan, A.C. Hicks, A.E. Ballmann, J.T.H. Coleman, D.N. Redell, D.M. Reeder, D.S. Blehert
2011, Nature (480) 376-378
White-nose syndrome (WNS) has caused recent catastrophic declines among multiple species of bats in eastern North America. The disease's name derives from a visually apparent white growth of the newly discovered fungus Geomyces destructans on the skin (including the muzzle) of hibernating bats. Colonization of skin by this fungus is...
A simple graphical approach to quantitative monitoring of rangelands
C. Riginos, J. E. Herrick, S.R. Sundaresan, C. Farley, J. Belnap
2011, Rangelands (33) 6-13
The article reviews graphical interpretation of the four monitoring methods that can be used to generate a variety of indicators of rangeland ecosystem function. Data for all four of the monitoring methods can be recorded on a single data sheet that is designed to be usable by somebody with minimal...
Secondary chaotic terrain formation in the higher outflow channels of southern circum-Chryse, Mars
J.A.P. Rodriguez, J.S. Kargel, K. L. Tanaka, D.A. Crown, D.C. Berman, A.G. Fairen, V.R. Baker, R. Furfaro, P. Candelaria, S. Sasaki
2011, Icarus (213) 150-194
Higher outflow channel dissection in the martian region of southern circum-Chryse appears to have extended from the Late Hesperian to the Middle Amazonian Epoch. These outflow channels were excavated within the upper 1. km of the cryolithosphere, where no liquid water is expected to have existed during these geologic epochs....
An improved understanding of the Alaska coastal current: The application of a bivalve growth-temperature model to reconstruct freshwater-influenced paleoenvironments
N. Hallmann, B.R. Schone, G.V. Irvine, M. Burchell, E.D. Cokelet, M.R. Hilton
2011, Palaios (26) 346-363
Shells of intertidal bivalve mollusks contain sub-seasonally to interannually resolved records of temperature and salinity variations in coastal settings. Such data are essential to understand changing land-sea interactions through time, specifically atmospheric (precipitation rate, glacial meltwater, river discharge) and oceanographic circulation patterns; however, independent temperature and salinity proxies are currently...
Spatial mapping of mineralization with manganese-enhanced magnetic resonance imaging
I.E. Chesnick, J.A. Centeno, T.I. Todorov, A.E. Koenig, K. Potter
2011, Bone (48) 1194-1201
Paramagnetic manganese can be employed as a calcium surrogate to sensitize the magnetic resonance imaging (MRI) technique to the processing of calcium during the bone formation process. At low doses, after just 48h of exposure, osteoblasts take up sufficient quantities of manganese to cause marked reductions in the water proton...
From deposition to erosion: Spatial and temporal variability of sediment sources, storage, and transport in a small agricultural watershed
J.L. Florsheim, B.A. Pellerin, N.H. Oh, N. Ohara, P.A.M. Bachand, Sandra M. Bachand, B.A. Bergamaschi, P.J. Hernes, M.L. Kavvas
2011, Geomorphology (132) 272-286
The spatial and temporal variability of sediment sources, storage, and transport were investigated in a small agricultural watershed draining the Coast Ranges and Sacramento Valley in central California. Results of field, laboratory, and historical data analysis in the Willow Slough fluvial system document changes that transformed a transport-limited depositional system...
Dynamic habitat selection by two wading bird species with divergent foraging strategies in a seasonally fluctuating wetland
James M. Beerens, Dale E. Gawlik, Garth Herring, Mark I. Cook
2011, The Auk (128) 651-662
Seasonal and annual variation in food availability during the breeding season plays an influential role in the population dynamics of many avian species. In highly dynamic ecosystems like wetlands, finding and exploiting food resources requires a flexible behavioral response that may produce different population trends that vary with a species'...
Predominant bacteria isolated from moribund Fusconaia ebena ebonyshells experiencing die-offs in Pickwick Reservoir, Tennessee River, Alabama
C. E. Starliper, J. Powell, J.T. Garner, W. B. Schill
2011, Journal of Shellfish Research (30) 359-366
Mussel die-offs have been noted in recent years in Pickwick Reservoir, Tennessee River, Alabama. The primary affected species was Fusconaia ebena, but also affected to lesser degrees were Ellipsaria lineolata, Quadrula pustulosa, and Quadrula quadrula. These events were characterized by large numbers of empty shells—fresh-dead and live individuals that were...
The LANDFIRE Total Fuel Change Tool (ToFuΔ) user’s guide
Tobin Smail, Charley Martin, Jim Napoli
2011, Report
LANDFIRE fuel data were originally developed from coarse-scale existing vegetation type, existing vegetation cover, existing vegetation height, and biophysical setting layers. Fire and fuel specialists from across the country provided input to the original LANDFIRE National (LF_1.0.0) fuel layers to help calibrate fuel characteristics on a more localized scale. The...
Ground motion attenuation during M 7.1 Darfield and M 6.2 Christchurch, New Zealand, earthquakes and performance of global predictive models
Margaret Segou, Erol Kalkan
2011, Seismological Research Letters (82) 866-874
The M 7.1 Darfield earthquake occurred 40 km west of Christchurch (New Zealand) on 4 September 2010. Six months after, the city was struck again with an M 6.2 event on 22 February local time (21 February UTC). These events resulted in significant damage to infrastructure in the city...
Groundwater conditions in Utah, spring of 2011
Carole B. Burden
2011, Cooperative Investigations Report 52
This is the forty-eighth in a series of annual reports that describe groundwater conditions in Utah. Reports in this series, published cooperatively by the U.S. Geological Survey and the Utah Department of Natural Resources, Division of Water Rights, and the Utah Department of Environmental Quality, Division of Water Quality, provide...
Optical ages indicate the southwestern margin of the Green Bay Lobe in Wisconsin, USA, was at its maximum extent until about 18,500 years ago
J.W. Attig, P.R. Hanson, J.E. Rawling, A.R. Young, E.C. Carson
2011, Geomorphology (130) 384-390
Samples for optical dating were collected to estimate the time of sediment deposition in small ice-marginal lakes in the Baraboo Hills of Wisconsin. These lakes formed high in the Baraboo Hills when drainage was blocked by the Green Bay Lobe when it was at or very near its maximum...
Changes in monoterpene mixing ratios during summer storms in rural New Hampshire (USA)
Karl B. Haase, C. Jordan, E. Mentis, L. Cottrell, H.R. Mayne, R. Talbot, B.C. Sive
2011, Atmospheric Chemistry and Physics Discussions (11) 20631-20665
Monoterpenes are an important class of biogenic hydrocarbons that influence ambient air quality and are a principle source of secondary organic aerosol (SOA). Emitted from vegetation, monoterpenes are a product of photosynthesis and act as a response to a variety of environmental factors. Most parameterizations of monoterpene emissions are based...
Preening behavior of adult gyrfalcons tagged with backpack transmitters
T.L. Booms, P.F. Schempf, M.R. Fuller
2011, Journal of Raptor Research (45) 264-267
Radio transmitters provide data that enhance understanding of raptor biology (Walls and Kenward 2007) and are now used to answer a multitude of research questions (Meyburg and Fuller 2007). However, transmitters affect the birds that carry them (Barron et al. 2010), and it is important to document and evaluate such...
Effects of dynamically variable saturation and matrix-conduit coupling of flow in karst aquifers
Thomas Reimann, T. Geyer, W.B. Shoemaker, R. Liedl, M. Sauter
2011, Water Resources Research (47)
Well-developed karst aquifers consist of highly conductive conduits and a relatively low permeability fractured and/or porous rock matrix and therefore behave as a dual-hydraulic system. Groundwater flow within highly permeable strata is rapid and transient and depends on local flow conditions, i.e., pressurized or nonpressurized flow. The characterization of karst...
Competitive interactions between walleye (Sander vitreus) and smallmouth bass (Micropterus dolomieu) under various controlled conditions
M.R. Wuellner, B. D. S. Graeb, D.W. Willis, B.J. Galster, T.M. Selch, S. R. Chipps
2011, Journal of Freshwater Ecology (26) 299-314
The range of smallmouth bass (Micropterus dolomieu) is expanding northward, creating new interactions with native predators, including walleye (Sander vitreus). We used a series of experiments to investigate competition between walleye (WAE) and smallmouth bass (SMB) at different life stages and light conditions, identified behaviors that allowed one fish to...
Assessment of clinical pathology and pathogen exposure in sea otters (Enhydra lutris) bordering the threatened population in Alaska
Tracey Goldstein, Verena A. Gill, Pamela A. Tuomi, Daniel H. Monson, Alexander Burdin, Patricia A. Conrad, J. Lawrence Dunn, Cara L. Field, Christine K. Johnson, David A. Jessup, James L. Bodkin, Angela M. Doroff
2011, Journal of Wildlife Diseases (47) 579-592
Northern sea otter (Enhydra lutris kenyoni) abundance has decreased dramatically over portions of southwest Alaska, USA, since the mid-1980s, and this stock is currently listed as threatened under the Endangered Species Act. In contrast, adjacent populations in south central Alaska, USA, and Russia have been stable to increasing during the...
Exploring geophysical processes influencing U.S. West Coast precipitation and water supply
F.M. Ralph, K. Prather, D. Cayan
2011, Eos, Transactions, American Geophysical Union (92) 352
CalWater Science Workshop; La Jolla, California, 8-10 June 2011 CalWater is a multiyear, multiagency research project with two primary research themes: the effects of changing climate on atmospheric rivers (ARs) and associated extreme events, and the potential role of aerosols in modulating cloud properties and precipitation, especially regarding orographic precipitation...
Sulfur geochemistry and microbial sulfate reduction during low-temperature alteration of uplifted lower oceanic crust: Insights from ODP Hole 735B
Susan E. Alford, Jeffrey C. Alt, Wayne C. Shanks III
2011, Chemical Geology (286) 185-195
Sulfide petrography plus whole rock contents and isotope ratios of sulfur were measured in a 1.5 km section of oceanic gabbros in order to understand the geochemistry of sulfur cycling during low-temperature seawater alteration of the lower oceanic crust, and to test whether microbial effects may be present. Most samples...
Integrating occupancy modeling and interview data for corridor identification: A case study for jaguars in Nicaragua
K.A. Zeller, S. Nijhawan, R. Salom-Perez, S.H. Potosme, James E. Hines
2011, Biological Conservation (144) 892-901
Corridors are critical elements in the long-term conservation of wide-ranging species like the jaguar (Panthera onca). Jaguar corridors across the range of the species were initially identified using a GIS-based least-cost corridor model. However, due to inherent errors in remotely sensed data and model uncertainties, these corridors warrant field verification...