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Page 179, results 4451 - 4475

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Publication Extents

Not all publications have extents, not all extents are completely accurate
Submarine landslide susceptibility mapping in recently deglaciated terrain, Glacier Bay, Alaska
Nikita N. Avdievitch, Jeffrey A. Coe
2022, Frontiers in Earth Science (10)
Submarine mass wasting events have damaged underwater structures and propagated waves that have inundated towns and affected human populations in nearby coastal areas. Susceptibility to submarine landslides can be pronounced in degrading cryospheric environments, where existing glaciers can provide high volumes of sediment, while cycles of glaciation and ice-loss can...
Nanoscale isotopic evidence resolves origins of giant Carlin-type ore deposits
Elizabeth A. Holley, Alexandria M Fulton, C Jilly-Rehak, Craig A. Johnson, Michael J. Pribil
2022, Geology (50) 660-664
The western North American Great Basin's Carlin-type deposits represent the largest accumulation of gold in the Northern Hemisphere. The controversy over their origins echoes the debate between Neptunists and Plutonists at the birth of modern geology: were the causative processes meteoric or magmatic? Sulfur...
Secretive marsh bird habitat relationships at mid-continent spring migration stopover sites
Elisabeth B. Webb, E.B. Hill, K.M. Malone, D. Mengel
2022, The Journal of Wildlife Management (86)
Despite several secretive marsh bird (SMB) species being listed as critically imperiled throughout the mid-continent of North America, limited information on SMB distribution and habitat use within primary migratory corridors results in uncertainty on contributions of wetlands in mid-latitude states toward their annual cycle...
Remote sensing of visible dye concentrations during a tracer experiment on a large, turbid river
Carl J. Legleiter, Brandon James Sansom, R. B. Jacobson
2022, Water Resources Research (58)
Understanding dispersion in rivers is critical for numerous applications, such as characterizing larval drift for endangered fish species and responding to spills of hazardous materials. Injecting a visible dye into the river can yield insight on dispersion processes, but conventional field instrumentation yields limited data on variations in dye concentration...
Bridging the gap between spatial modeling and management of invasive annual grasses in the imperiled sagebrush biome
Bryan C. Tarbox, Nathan D. Van Schmidt, Jessica E. Shyvers, D. Joanne Saher, Julie A. Heinrichs, Cameron L. Aldridge
2022, Rangeland Ecology & Management (82) 104-115
Invasions of native plant communities by non-native species present major challenges for ecosystem management and conservation. Invasive annual grasses such as cheatgrass, medusahead, and ventenata are pervasive and continue to expand their distributions across imperiled sagebrush-steppe communities of the western United States. These invasive grasses alter native plant communities, ecosystem...
Positively selected genes in the hoary bat (Lasiurus cinereus) lineage: Prominence of thymus expression, immune and metabolic function, and regions of ancient synteny
Robert S. Cornman, Paul M. Cryan
Madhava Meegaskumbura, editor(s)
2022, PeerJ (10)
BackgroundBats of the genus Lasiurus occur throughout the Americas and have diversified into at least 20 species among three subgenera. The hoary bat (Lasiurus cinereus) is highly migratory and ranges farther across North America than any other wild mammal. Despite the ecological importance of this species as a major insect predator,...
Mass balance of two perennial snowfields: Niwot Ridge, Colorado and the Ulaan Taiga, Mongolia.
Kaj E. Williams, Christopher P. McKay, Owen B. Toon, Keith S. Jennings
2022, Arctic, Antarctic, and Alpine Research (54) 41-61
Perennial snowfields are generally receding worldwide, though the precise mechanisms causing recessions are not always well understood. Here we apply a numerical snowpack model to identify the leading factors controlling the mass balance of two perennial snowfields that have significant human interest: Arapaho glacier, located at Niwot Ridge in the...
Geophysical imaging of the Yellowstone hydrothermal plumbing system
Carol A. Finn, Paul A. Bedrosian, W. Steven Holbrook, Esben Auken, Benjamin R. Bloss, Kayla J Crosbie
2022, Nature (603) 643-647
The nature of Yellowstone National Park’s plumbing system linking deep thermal fluids to its legendary thermal features is virtually unknown. The prevailing concepts of Yellowstone hydrology and chemistry are that fluids reside in reservoirs with unknown geometries, flow laterally from distal sources and emerge at the edges of lava flows....
Spatially integrating microbiology and geochemistry to reveal complex environmental health issues: Anthrax in the contiguous United States
Erin Silvestri, Stephen Douglas, Vicky Luna, C.A.O. Jean-Babtiste, D. Harbin, Laura Hempel, Timothy Boe, Tonya Nichols, Dale W. Griffin
2022, Book chapter, Geospatial Technology for Human Well-Being and Health
Maxent models were run using the B. anthracis presence data and/or the animal outbreak presence data. Models run using the animal outbreak data alone utilized two scales: the Outbreak State scale which included only states reporting animal anthrax outbreaks from 2001 to 2013 and the National scale which included all states in...
Chandeleur Islands to Breton Island bathymetric and topographic datasets and operational sediment budget development: Methodology and analysis report
James G. Flocks, Arnell S. Forde, Julie Bernier
2022, Open-File Report 2022-1020
This study is part of the Coastal Protection and Restoration Authority (CPRA) Louisiana Barrier Island Comprehensive Monitoring (BICM) program. The goal of the BICM program is to provide long-term data on the barrier islands of Louisiana for monitoring change and assisting in coastal management. The BICM program uses historical data...
FishStan: Hierarchical Bayesian models for fisheries
Richard A. Erickson, Daniel S. Stich, Jillian Lee Hebert
2022, Journal of Open Source Software (7)
Fisheries managers and ecologists use statistical models to estimate population-level relations and demographic rates (e.g., length-maturity curves, growth curves, and mortality rates). These relations and rates provide insight into populations and inputs for other models. For example, growth curves may vary across lakes showing fish populations differ due to management...
Documentation of models describing relations between continuous real-time and discrete water-quality constituents in the Little Arkansas River, south-central Kansas, 1998–2019
Mandy L. Stone, Brian J. Klager
2022, Open-File Report 2022-1010
Data were collected at two monitoring sites along the Little Arkansas River in south-central Kansas that bracket most of the easternmost part of the Equus Beds aquifer. The data were used as part of the city of Wichita’s aquifer storage and recovery project to evaluate source water quality. The U.S....
Greater sage-grouse respond positively to intensive post-fire restoration treatments
Sharon A. Poessel, David M Barnard, Cara Applestein, Matthew J. Germino, Ethan A. Ellsworth, Donald J. Major, Ann Moser, Todd E. Katzner
2022, Ecology and Evolution (12)
Habitat loss is the most prevalent threat to biodiversity in North America. One of the most threatened landscapes in the United States is the sagebrush (Artemisia spp.) ecosystem, much of which has been fragmented or converted to non-native grasslands via the cheatgrass-fire cycle. Like many sagebrush obligates,...
Contemporary spatial extent and environmental drivers of larval coregonine distributions across Lake Ontario
Taylor A. Brown, Suresh Sethi, Lars G. Rudstam, Jeremy P. Holden, Michael J. Connerton, Dimitry Gorsky, Curtis T. Karboski, Marc Chalupnicki, Nicholas M. Sard, Edward F. Roseman, Scott E. Prindle, Matthew J. Sanderson, Thomas M. Evans, Amanda Cooper, Daren J. Reinhart, Cameron David, Brian Weidel
2022, Journal of Great Lakes Research (48) 359-370
Coregonine fishes are important to Laurentian Great Lakes food webs and fisheries and are central to basin-wide conservation initiatives. In Lake Ontario, binational management objectives include conserving and restoring spawning stocks of cisco (Coregonus artedi) and lake whitefish (C. clupeaformis), but the spatial extent of contemporary coregonine spawning habitat and the environmental factors...
Microbial source tracking and evaluation of best management practices for restoring degraded beaches of Lake Michigan
Meredith B. Nevers, Paul M. Buszka, Muruleedhara Byappanahalli, Travis Cole, Steven R. Corsi, P. Ryan Jackson, Julie L. Kinzelman, Cindy H Nakatsu, Mantha S. Phanikumar
2022, Journal of Great Lakes Research (48) 441-454
Attempts to mitigate shoreline microbial contamination require a thorough understanding of pollutant sources, which often requires multiple years of data collection (e.g., point/nonpoint) and the interacting factors that influence water quality. Because restoration efforts can alter shoreline or beach morphology, revisiting source inputs is often necessary. Microbial source tracking (MST) using source-specific molecular markers, genomic community...
Anthropogenic stressors compound climate impacts on inland lake dynamics: The case of Hamun Lakes
Arash Modaresi Rad, Jason R. Kreitler, John T. Abatzoglou, Kendra Fallon, Kevin Roche, Mojitaba Sadegh
2022, Science of the Total Envionrment (829)
Inland lakes face unprecedented pressures from climatic and anthropogenic stresses, causing their recession and desiccation globally. Climate change is increasingly blamed for such environmental degradation, but in many regions, direct anthropogenic pressures compound, and sometimes supersede, climatic factors. This study examined a human-environmental system –...
Estimating detection and occupancy of secretive marsh bird species in low and high saline marshes in southwestern Louisiana using automated recording units
Hardin Waddle, Landon R. Jones, Phillip L. Vasseur, Clint W. Jeske
2022, Wetlands (42)
Secretive marsh birds (SMBs) are important indicator species of coastal wetlands but are difficult to detect and monitor. In coastal Louisiana, an important stronghold for these species, climate and hydrological models predict that freshwater and intermediate marshes will expand in the next 50 years, while brackish marshes...
Heterogeneous patterns of aged organic carbon export driven by hydrologic flow paths, soil texture, fire, and thaw in discontinuous permafrost headwaters
Joshua C. Koch, Matthew Bogard, David Butman, Kerri Finlay, Brian A. Ebel, Jason James, Sarah Ellen Johnston, M. Torre Jorgenson, Neal Pastick, Rob Spencer, Rob Striegl, Michelle A. Walvoord, Kimberly Wickland
2022, Global Biogeochemical Cycles (36)
Climate change is thawing and potentially mobilizing vast quantities of organic carbon (OC) previously stored for millennia in permafrost soils of northern circumpolar landscapes. Climate-driven increases in fire and thermokarst may play a key role in OC mobilization by thawing permafrost and promoting transport of OC. Yet, the extent of...
A comparison of eDNA and visual survey methods for detection of longnose darter Percina nasuta in Missouri
Jacob Thomas Westhoff, Leah K. Berkman, Katy E. Klymus, Nathan Thompson, Cathy A. Richter
2022, Fishes (7)
The longnose darter Percina nasuta is a rare and cryptic fish that recently disappeared from much of its historic range. We developed and used an environmental DNA (eDNA) assay for longnose darter paired with visual surveys to better determine the species’ range and compare detection probability between sampling approaches in an...
Errors in aerial survey count data: Identifying pitfalls and solutions
Kayla L. Davis, Emily D Silverman, Allison Sussman, R. Randy Wilson, Elise F. Zipkin
2022, Ecology and Evolution (12)
Accurate estimates of animal abundance are essential for guiding effective management, and poor survey data can produce misleading inferences. Aerial surveys are an efficient survey platform, capable of collecting wildlife data across large spatial extents in short timeframes. However, these surveys can yield unreliable data if not carefully executed. Despite...
Comparative virulence of spring viremia of carp virus (SVCV) genotypes in two koi varieties
Eveline J. Emmenegger, Emma K. Bueren, Peng Jia, Noble Hendrix, Hong Liu
2022, Disease of Aquatic Organisms (148) 95-112
Spring viremia of carp virus (SVCV), is a lethal freshwater pathogen of cyprinid fish, and Cyprinus carpio koi is a primary host species. The virus was initially described in the 1960s after outbreaks occurred in Europe, but a global expansion of SVCV has been ongoing since the late 1990s. Genetic typing of...
Temporal greenness trends in stable natural land cover and relationships with climatic variability across the conterminous United States
Lei Ji, Jesslyn F. Brown
2022, Earth Interactions (26) 66-83
Assessment of temporal trends in vegetation greenness and related influences aids understanding of recent change in terrestrial ecosystems and feedbacks from weather, climate, and environment. We analyzed 1-km normalized difference vegetation index (NDVI) timeseries data (1989–2016) derived from the Advanced Very High Resolution Radiometer (AVHRR) and developed growing season...
Regional-scale liquefaction analyses
Michael W. Greenfield, Alex R. Grant
2022, Conference Paper, Geo-Congress 2022: Geophysical and earthquake engineering and soil dynamics
Regional-scale liquefaction hazard analyses are necessary for resilience planning and prioritization of seismic upgrades for critical distributed infrastructure such as levees, pipelines, roadways, and electrical transmission facilities. Two approaches are often considered for liquefaction hazard analysis of distributed infrastructure: (1) conventional, site-specific probe or borehole-based analyses, which do not quantify...
Using ensemble data assimilation to estimate transient hydrologic exchange flow under highly dynamic flow conditions
K. C. Chen, Xingyuan Chen, X. Song, Martin A. Briggs, P. Jiang, P. Shuai, G. Hammond, H. Zhang, J. Zachara
2022, Water Resources Research (58)
Quantifying dynamic hydrologic exchange flows (HEFs) within river corridors that experience high-frequency flow variations caused by dam regulations is important for understanding the biogeochemical processes at the river water and groundwater interfaces. Heat has been widely used as a tracer to infer steady-state flow velocities through analytical...