Advanced distributed acoustic sensing vertical seismic profile imaging of an Alaska North Slope gas hydrate field
Cullen Young, Jeffrey Shragge, Whitney Shultz, Seth S. Haines, Can Oren, James Simmons, Timothy Collett
2022, Journal of Energy and Fuels (36) 3481-3495
Gas hydrates are found in significant quantities on the North Slope of Alaska in subpermafrost sand units and intermixed in lower portions of permafrost within the hydrate stability window. While conventional surface seismic data and established imaging methods can indicate the presence of gas hydrate reservoirs,...
The effects of requested flows for native fish on sediment dynamics, geomorphology, and riparian vegetation for the Green River in Canyonlands National Park, Utah
Paul E. Grams, Jonathan M. Friedman, David J. Dean, David J. Topping
2022, Open-File Report 2022-1019
Releases of water from Flaming Gorge Dam together with climate-related variations in runoff determine the streamflow regime of the Green River, which affects the physical characteristics of the channel and riparian ecosystem of the Green River corridor in Canyonlands National Park. The dam has decreased peak streamflows and raised base...
Virtual training prepared for the former Afghanistan Ministry of Energy and Water—Streamgaging, fluvial sediment sampling, bathymetry, and streamflow and sediment modeling
Joel T. Groten, Joshua F. Valder, Brenda K. Densmore, Logan W. Neal, Justin Krahulik, Thomas J. Mack
2022, Fact Sheet 2022-3014
The U.S. Geological Survey (USGS) created a virtual training series for the Afghanistan Ministry of Energy and Water (MEW), now known as the National Water Affairs Regulation Authority (NWARA), to provide critical hydrological training as an alternative to an in-person training. The USGS was scheduled to provide in-person surface-water training...
Woody plant encroachment of grassland and the reversibility of shrub dominance: Erosion, fire, and feedback processes
Junran Li, Sujith Ravi, Guan Wang, R. Scott Van Pelt, Thomas E. Gill, Joel B. Sankey
2022, Ecosphere (13)
Many grass-dominated ecosystems in dryland regions have experienced increasing woody plant density and abundance during the past century. In many cases, this process has led to land degradation and declines in ecosystem functions. An example is the Chihuahuan Desert in the southwestern United States, which experienced different stages of shrub...
The cost of avoiding predators: A bioenergetic analysis of diel vertical migration by the opossum shrimp Mysis diluviana
Steven R. Chipps, David H. Bennett, David Deslauriers, Lars G. Rudstam
2022, Hydrobiologia (849) 1871-1884
The freshwater opossum shrimp Mysis diluviana can undergo extensive diel vertical migration (DVM) to feed in shallow, prey rich strata at night. Bright moonlight limits their night-time migration presumably due to predator avoidance. Using a linked, foraging-bioenergetics model, we evaluated the cost of avoiding predators by simulating the effects of prey density, water temperature, and...
Multi-scale patterns in occurrence of an ephemeral pool-breeding amphibian
Brian J. Halstead, Jonathan P. Rose, Denise Clark, Patrick M. Kleeman, Robert N. Fisher
2022, Ecosphere (13)
Species distributions are governed by processes occurring at multiple spatial scales. For species with complex life cycles, the needs of all life stages must be met within the dispersal limitations of the species. Multi-scale processes can be particularly important for these species, where small-scale patterns in specific habitat components can...
Deep learning detection and recognition of spot elevations on historic topographic maps
Samantha T. Arundel, Trenton P. Morgan, Philip T. Thiem
Yao-Yi Chiang, editor(s)
2022, Frontiers in Environmental Science (10) 1-10
Some information contained in historical topographic maps has yet to be captured digitally, which limits the ability to automatically query such data. For example, U.S. Geological Survey’s historical topographic map collection (HTMC) displays millions of spot elevations at locations that were carefully chosen to best represent the terrain at the...
Warming in the upper San Francisco Estuary: Patterns of water temperature change from five decades of data
Samuel M. Bashevkin, Brian Mahardja, Larry R. Brown
2022, Limnology and Oceanography (67) 1065-1080
Temperature is a key controlling variable from subcellular to ecosystem scales. Thus, climatic warming is expected to have broad impacts, especially in economically and ecologically valuable systems such as estuaries. The heavily managed upper San Francisco Estuary supplies water to millions of people and is home...
Shallow faulting and folding in the epicentral area of the 1886 Charleston, South Carolina, earthquake
Thomas L. Pratt, Anjana K. Shah, R.C Counts, J. Wright Horton, Jr., M.C. Chapman
2022, Bulletin of the Seismological Society of America (112) 2097-2123
The moment magnitude (Mw">Mw�w) ∼7 earthquake that struck Charleston, South Carolina, on 31 August 1886 is the largest historical earthquake in the United States east of the Appalachian Mountains. The fault(s)...
The effects of discharge and bank orientation on the annual riverbank erosion along Powder River in Montana, USA
John A. Moody
2022, Geomorphology (403)
Annual bank erosion was measured at multiple cross sections along the free-flowing meandering Powder River in the western United States from 1979 through 2019. Bank erosion was separated into two components—above water and underwater erosion. Above water erosion was measured as the annual bank retreat rate (0–15.4 m y−1). Underwater erosion rate (0–47 m3 m−1 y−1) was calculated...
Electrical properties and anisotropy of schists and fault rocks from New Zealand’s Southern Alps under confining pressure
Katherine E Kluge, Virginia G. Toy, David A. Lockner
2022, Geosciences (12)
Magnetotelluric models spanning the Pacific–Australian Plate boundary in New Zealand’s South Island indicate a localized zone of low electrical resistivity that is spatially coincident with theductile mid-crustal part of the Alpine Fault Zone (AFZ). We explored the source of this anomaly bymeasuring the electrical properties of samples collected from surface...
Leveraging rangeland monitoring data for wildlife: From concept to practice
David S. Pilliod, Jeffrey L. Beck, Courtney Jean Duchardt, Janet L. Rachlow, Kari E. Veblen
2022, Rangelands (44) 87-98
Available rangeland data, from field-measured plots to remotely sensed landscapes, provide much needed information for mapping and modeling wildlife habitats.Better integration of wildlife habitat characteristics into rangeland monitoring schemes is needed for most rangeland wildlife species at varying spatial and temporal scales.Here, we aim to stimulate use of and inspire...
Power analysis for detecting the effects of best management practices on reducing nitrogen and phosphorus fluxes to the Chesapeake Bay watershed, USA
Paul McLaughlin, Richard Alexander, Joel D. Blomquist, Olivia H. Devereux, Gregory E. Noe, Tyler Wagner, Kelly L. Smalling
2022, Ecological Indicators (136) 1-12
In 2010 the U.S. Environmental Protection Agency established the Total Maximum Daily Load (TMDL) which is a “pollution diet” that aims to reduce the amount of nitrogen and phosphorus entering the Chesapeake Bay, the largest estuary in the United States, by 25 and 24% percent, respectively. To achieve this goal...
Early Neoproterozoic gold deposits of the Alto Guaporé province, southwestern Amazon craton, western Brazil
Rodrigo Prudente de Melo, Marcos Aurelio Farias de Oliveira, Richard J. Goldfarb, Craig A. Johnson, Erin E. Marsh, Roberto Perez Xavier, Leandro Rocha de Oliveira, Leah E. Morgan
2022, Economic Geology (117) 127-163
The Alto Guaporé gold province, southwestern Amazon craton, contains gold deposits that have been mined since the beginning of the 18th century and these deposits, together, have modern-day, pre-mining gold resources of at least 1.8 Moz. The ore is associated with quartz vein systems along the southeastern part of the...
Adaptive monitoring in support of adaptive management in rangelands
Sarah E. McCord, David S. Pilliod
2022, Rangelands (44) 1-7
Monitoring supports iterative learning about the effectiveness of management actions, information that can help managers plan future actions, facilitate decision-making, and improve outcomes.Adaptive monitoring is the evolution of a monitoring program in response to new management questions; new or changing environmental or socioeconomic conditions, improved monitoring methods, models, and...
Stage-specific environmental correlates of reproductive success in Boreal Toads (Anaxyrus boreas boreas)
Gabriel M. Barrile, Annika W. Walters, Anna D. Chalfoun
2022, Journal of Herpetology (56) 34-44
Compensatory recruitment can facilitate the persistence of populations experiencing high adult mortality. Because early life-stages of many taxa, including amphibians, are difficult to mark and recapture, sources of variation in survival at these stages often are unknown, which creates barriers to improving in situ...
Chenier Plain region bathymetric and topographic datasets: Methodology report
James G. Flocks, Arnell S. Forde, Julie Bernier
2022, Open-File Report 2022-1014
The goal of the Louisiana Barrier Island Comprehensive Monitoring (BICM) program is to provide long-term data on coastal Louisiana for monitoring change and assisting in coastal management. This study (carried out under Coastal Protection and Restoration Authority contract number 2000339324, BICM2—Chenier TopoBathy DEM) builds upon the previous BICM physical assessment...
How low should we alert? Quantifying intensity threshold alerting strategies for earthquake early warning in the United States
Jessie Kate Saunders, Sarah E. Minson, Annemarie S. Baltay Sundstrom
2022, Earth's Future (10)
We use a suite of historical earthquakes to quantitatively determine earthquake early warning (EEW) alert threshold strategies for a range of shaking intensity targets for EEW in the U.S. West Coast. The current method for calculating alert regions for the ShakeAlert EEW System does not take into account variabilities and...
Identifying factors linked with persistence of reintroduced populations: Lessons learned from 25 years of amphibian translocations
Blake R. Hossack, Paige E. Howell, Audrey K Owens, C Cobos, Caren S. Goldberg, David L. Hall, Shaula Hedwall, Susi MacVean, Magnus McCaffery, A. Hunter McCall, C Mosley, Emily Bea Oja, James C. Rorabaugh, Brent H. Sigafus, Michael J Sredl
2022, Global Ecology and Conservation (35)
Conservation translocations are increasingly used to help recover imperiled species. However, success of establishing populations remains low, especially for amphibians. Identifying factors associated with translocation success can help increase efficiency and efficacy of recovery efforts. Since the 1990s, several captive and semi-captive facilities have produced Chiricahua Leopard Frogs (Rana chiricahuensis) to...
Documentation for the Skeletal Storage, Compaction, and Subsidence (CSUB) Package of MODFLOW 6
Joseph D. Hughes, Stanley A. Leake, Devin L. Galloway, Jeremy T. White
2022, Techniques and Methods 6-A62
This report describes the skeletal storage, compaction and subsidence (CSUB) package of MODFLOW 6. The CSUB package simulates the vertical compaction of compressible sediments and land subsidence. The package simulates groundwater storage changes and elastic compaction in coarse-grained aquifer sediments. The CSUB package also simulates groundwater storage changes and elastic...
Documentation for the MODFLOW 6 Groundwater Transport Model
Christian D. Langevin, Alden M. Provost, Sorab Panday, Joseph D. Hughes
2022, Techniques and Methods 6-A61
This report documents a new Groundwater Transport (GWT) Model for MODFLOW 6. The GWT Model simulates three-dimensional transport of a single chemical species in fowing groundwater based on a generalized control-volume fnite-difference approach. Although each GWT Model is only able to represent a single chemical species, multiple GWT Models may...
Temperature optimum for marsh resilience and carbon accumulation revealed in a whole ecosystem warming experiment
Alexander J. Smith, Genevieve L. Noyce, J. Patrick Megonigal, Glenn R. Guntenspergen, Matthew L. Kirwan
2022, Global Change Biology (28) 3236-3245
Coastal marshes are globally important, carbon dense ecosystems simultaneously maintained and threatened by sea-level rise. Warming temperatures may increase wetland plant productivity and organic matter accumulation, but temperature-modulated feedbacks between productivity and decomposition make it difficult to assess how wetlands and their thick, organic rich soils...
A novel application of hierarchical modelling to decouple sampling artifacts from socio-ecological effects on poaching intensity
Mahmood Soofi, Ali T. Qashqaei, Jan-Niklas Trei, Shirko Shokri, Javad Selyari, Benjamin Ghasemi, Poorya Sepahvand, Lukas Egli, Bagher Nezami, Navid Zamani, Gholam Hosein Yusefi, Bahram H. Kiabi, Niko Balkenhol, J. Andrew Royle, Chris R. Pavey, Steve M. Redpath, Matthias Waltert
2022, Biological Conservation (267) 1-12
Poaching is a global driver of wildlife population decline, including inside protected areas (PAs). Reducing poaching requires an understanding of its cryptic drivers and accurately quantifying poaching scales and intensity. There is little quantification of how poaching is affected by law enforcement intensity (e.g., ranger stations) versus economic factors (e.g.,...
Multi-task deep learning of daily streamflow and water temperature
Jeffrey Michael Sadler, Alison P. Appling, Jordan Read, Samantha K. Oliver, Xiaowei Jia, Jacob Aaron Zwart, Vipin Kumar
2022, Water Resources Research (58)
Deep learning (DL) models can accurately predict many hydrologic variables including streamflow and water temperature; however, these models have typically predicted hydrologic variables independently. This study explored the benefits of modeling two interdependent variables, daily average streamflow and daily average stream water temperature, together using multi-task DL. A multi-task scaling...
Contrasting Common Era climate and hydrology sensitivities from paired lake sediment dinosterol hydrogen isotope records in the South Pacific Convergence Zone
Ashley E. Maloney, Julie N. Richey, Daniel B. Nelson, Samantha N Hing, David A. Sear, Jonathan D. Hassall, Peter G. Langdon, Ursula Sichrowsky, Robert Schabetsberger, Atoloto Malau, Jean-Yves Meyer, Ian W. Croudace, Julian P. Sachs
P. Rioual, editor(s)
2022, Quaternary Science Reviews (281) 1-18
Hydroclimate on ‘Uvea (Wallis et Futuna) is controlled by rainfall associated with the South Pacific Convergence Zone (SPCZ), the southern hemisphere's largest precipitation feature. To extend the short observational precipitation record, the hydrogen isotopic composition of the algal lipid biomarker dinosterol (δ2Hdinosterol) was measured in sediment...