Living on the edge: Distribution of Dungeness crab Cancer magister in a recently deglaciated fjord
S. James Taggart, P.N. Hooge, Jennifer Mondragon, Elizabeth Ross Hooge, A.G. Andrews
2003, Marine Ecology Progress Series (246) 241-252
Glacier Bay, Alaska, has supported a productive Dungeness crab fishery, although the area where the fishery occurred was small relative to the remainder of the Bay. We hypothesized that 1 or more abiotic limiting factors prevented crabs from surviving in the upper Bay. We tested this hypothesis by systematically sampling...
Modeling soil thermal and carbon dynamics of a fire chronosequence in interior Alaska
Q. Zhuang, A. D. McGuire, K. P. O’Neill, J.W. Harden, V.E. Romanovsky, J. Yarie
2003, Journal of Geophysical Research D: Atmospheres (108) FFR 3-1-FFR 3-26
In this study, the dynamics of soil thermal, hydrologic, and ecosystem processes were coupled to project how the carbon budgets of boreal forests will respond to changes in atmospheric CO2, climate, and fire disturbance. The ability of the model to simulate gross primary production and ecosystem respiration was verified for...
Arctic transitions in the Land - Atmosphere System (ATLAS): Background, objectives, results, and future directions
A. D. McGuire, M. Sturm, F. S. Chapin III
2003, Journal of Geophysical Research D: Atmospheres (108)
This paper briefly reviews the background, objectives, and results of the Arctic Transitions in the Land-Atmosphere System (ATLAS) Project to date and provides thoughts on future directions. The key goal of the ATLAS Project is to improve understanding of controls over spatial and temporal variability of terrestrial processes in the...
Isotopic composition of carbon dioxide from a boreal forest fire: Inferring carbon loss from measurements and modeling
E.A.G. Schuur, S.E. Trumbore, M.C. Mack, J.W. Harden
2003, Global Biogeochemical Cycles (17)
Fire is an important pathway for carbon (C) loss from boreal forest ecosystems and has a strong effect on ecosystem C balance. Fires can range widely in severity, defined as the amount of vegetation and forest floor consumed by fire, depending on local fuel and climatic conditions. Here we...
The importance of genetic verification for determination of Atlantic salmon in north Pacific waters
J.L. Nielsen, I. Williams, G. Kevin Sage, Christian E. Zimmerman
2003, Journal of Fish Biology (62) 871-878
Genetic analyses of two unknown but putative Atlantic salmon Salmo salar captured in the Copper River drainage, Alaska, demonstrated the need for validation of morphologically unusual fishes. Mitochondrial DNA sequences (control region and cytochrome b) and data from two nuclear genes [first internal transcribed spacer (ITS-1) sequence and growth hormone...
Habitat characteristics of polar bear terrestrial maternal den sites in northern Alaska
George M. Durner, Steven C. Amstrup, Anthony S. Fischbach
2003, Arctic (56) 55-62
Polar bears (Ursus maritimus) give birth to and nurture their young in dens of ice and snow. During 1999-2001, we measured the structure of 22 dens on the coastal plain of northern Alaska after polar bear families had evacuated their dens in the spring. During the summers of 2001 and...
Identification of linear and threshold responses in streams along a gradient of urbanization in Anchorage, Alaska
Robert T. Ourso, S.A. Frenzel
2003, Hydrobiologia (501) 117-131
We examined biotic and physiochemical responses in urbanized Anchorage, Alaska, to the percent of impervious area within stream basins, as determined by high-resolution IKONOS satellite imagery and aerial photography. Eighteen of the 86 variables examined, including riparian and instream habitat, macroinvertebrate communities, and water/sediment chemistry, were significantly correlated with percent...
Radio tag retention and tag-related mortality among adult sockeye salmon
Kristina M. Ramstad, Carol Ann Woody
2003, North American Journal of Fisheries Management (23) 978-982
Tag retention and tag-related mortality are concerns for any tagging study but are rarely estimated. We assessed retention and mortality rates for esophageal radio tag implants in adult sockeye salmon Oncorhynchus nerka. Migrating sockeye salmon captured at the outlet of Lake Clark, Alaska, were implanted with one of four different...
Photographic techniques for characterizing streambed particle sizes
Matthew S. Whitman, Edward H. Moran, Robert T. Ourso
2003, Transactions of the American Fisheries Society (132) 605-610
We developed photographic techniques to characterize coarse (>2-mm) and fine (≤2-mm) streambed particle sizes in 12 streams in Anchorage, Alaska. Results were compared with current sampling techniques to assess which provided greater sampling efficiency and accuracy. The streams sampled were wadeable and contained gravel—cobble streambeds. Gradients ranged from about 5%...
Polar bear, Ursus maritimus
Steven C. Amstrup
G.A. Feldhamer, B.C. Thompson, J.A. Chapman, editor(s)
2003, Book chapter, Wild Mammals of North America: Biology, management, and conservation
No abstract available....
Static stress transfer during the 2002 Nenana Mountain-Denali Fault, Alaska, earthquake sequence
G. Anderson, C. Ji
2003, Geophysical Research Letters (30) 43-1
On 23 October 2002, the Mw 6.7 Nenana Mountain earthquake occurred in central Alaska. It was followed on 3 November 2002 by the Mw 7.9 Denali Fault mainshock, the largest strike-slip earthquake to occur in North America during the past 150 years. We have modeled static Coulomb stress transfer effects...
Clinical pathology and assessment of pathogen exposure in southern and Alaskan sea otters
K.D. Hanni, J.A.K. Mazet, F.M.D. Gulland, James A. Estes, M. Staedler, M.J. Murray, Melissa A. Miller, David A. Jessup
2003, Journal of Wildlife Diseases (39) 837-850
The southern sea otter (Enhydra lutris nereis) population in California (USA) and the Alaskan sea otter (E. lutris kenyoni) population in the Aleutian Islands (USA) chain have recently declined. In order to evaluate disease as a contributing factor to the declines, health assessments of these two sea otter populations were...
Effects of implanted radio transmitters with percutaneous antennas on the behavior of Canada Geese
Jerry W. Hupp, G.A. Ruhl, John M. Pearce, Daniel M. Mulcahy, M.A. Tomeo
2003, Journal of Field Ornithology (74) 250-256
We examined whether surgically-implanted radio transmitters with percutaneous antennas affected behavior of Lesser Canada Geese (Branta canadensis parvipes) in Anchorage, Alaska. We implanted either a 26-g VHF radio transmitter or a larger VHF radio that was the same mass (35 g) and shape as a satellite transmitter in the coelom...
Dungeness crab, Cancer magister, do not extrude eggs annually in southeastern Alaska: An in situ study
K.M. Swiney, Thomas C. Shirley, S. James Taggart, Charles E. O’Clair
2003, Journal of Crustacean Biology (23) 280-288
The reproductive biology of female Dungeness crabs was studied with crab-pot and dive-transect sampling in five bays within or near Glacier Bay National Park and Preserve, southeastern Alaska, in April and September yearly from 1992 to 1998. A large percentage of nonovigerous, mature females was found in April, a time...
Using 1-Hz GPS data to measure deformations caused by the denali fault earthquake
K.M. Larson, P. Bodin, J. Gomberg
2003, Science (300) 1421-1424
The 3 November 2002 moment magnitude 7.9 Denali fault earthquake generated large, permanent surface displacements in Alaska and large-amplitude surface waves throughout western North America. We find good agreement between strong ground-motion records integrated to displacement and 1-hertz Global Positioning System (GPS) position estimates collected ??? 140 kilometers from the...
Body molt of male long-tailed ducks in the nearshore waters of the north slope, Alaska
M.D. Howell, J.B. Grand, Paul L. Flint
2003, The Wilson Bulletin (115) 170-175
We examined the timing and intensity of body molt in relation to stage of remige growth for postbreeding adult male Long-tailed Ducks (Clangula hyemalis) off the coast of northern Alaska. During this period, remige and rectrix feathers are molted simultaneously with body feathers during the prebasic molt, which results...
Coupled heat and fluid flow modeling of the Carboniferous Kuna Basin, Alaska: Implications for the genesis of the Red Dog Pb-Zn-Ag-Ba ore district
G. Garven, Jeff P. Raffensperger, Julie A. Dumoulin, D.A. Bradley, L. E. Young, K.D. Kelley, D. L. Leach
2003, Conference Paper, Journal of Geochemical Exploration
The Red Dog deposit is a giant 175 Mton (16% Zn, 5% Pb), shale-hosted Pb-Zn-Ag-Ba ore district situated in the Carboniferous Kuna Basin, Western Brooks Range, Alaska. These SEDEX-type ores are thought to have formed in calcareous turbidites and black mudstone at elevated sub-seafloor temperatures (120-150??C) within a hydrogeologic framework...
Lead isotopes in North Pacific deep water - Implications for past changes in input sources and circulation patterns
T. van de Flierdt, M. Frank, A. N. Halliday, J.R. Hein, B. Hattendorf, D. Gunther, P.W. Kubik
2003, Earth and Planetary Science Letters (209) 149-164
The sources of non-anthropogenic Pb in seawater have been the subject of debate. Here we present Pb isotope time-series that indicate that the non-anthropogenic Pb budget of the northernmost Pacific Ocean has been governed by ocean circulation and riverine inputs, which in turn have ultimately been controlled by tectonic processes....
Estimating lava volume by precision combination of multiple baseline spaceborne and airborne interferometric synthetic aperture radar: The 1997 eruption of Okmok Volcano, Alaska
Z. Lu, E. Fielding, M.R. Patrick, C. M. Trautwein
2003, IEEE Transactions on Geoscience and Remote Sensing (41) 1428-1436
Interferometric synthetic aperture radar (InSAR) techniques are used to calculate the volume of extrusion at Okmok volcano, Alaska by constructing precise digital elevation models (DEMs) that represent volcano topography before and after the 1997 eruption. The posteruption DEM is generated using airborne topographic synthetic aperture radar (TOPSAR) data where a...
Metamorphic origin of ore-forming fluids for orogenic gold-bearing quartz vein systems in the North American Cordillera: constraints from a reconnaissance study of δ15N, δD, and δ18O
Y. Jia, R. Kerrich, R. Goldfarb
2003, Economic Geology (98) 109-123
The western North American Cordillera hosts a large number of gold-bearing quartz vein systems from the Mother Lode of southern California, through counterparts in British Columbia and southeastern Alaska, to the Klondike district in central Yukon. These vein systems are structurally controlled by major fault zones, which are often reactivated...
Numerical simulation of tsunami generation by pryoclastic flow at Aniakchak Volcano, Alaska
C. F. Waythomas, P. Watts
2003, Geophysical Research Letters (30)
Pyroclastic flows entering the sea are plausible mechanisms for tsunami generation at volcanic island arcs worldwide. We evaluate tsunami generation by pyroclastic flow using an example from Aniakchak volcano in Alaska where evidence for tsunami inundation coincident with a major, caldera-forming eruption of the volcano ca. 3.5 ka has been...
Statistical power for detecting trends with applications to seabird monitoring
Scott A. Hatch
2003, Biological Conservation (111) 317-329
Power analysis is helpful in defining goals for ecological monitoring and evaluating the performance of ongoing efforts. I examined detection standards proposed for population monitoring of seabirds using two programs (MONITOR and TRENDS) specially designed for power analysis of trend data. Neither program models within- and among-years components of variance...
Breeding ecology of Horned Puffins (Fratercula corniculata) in Alaska: annual variation and effects of El Niño
A.M.A. Harding, John F. Piatt, Keith C. Hamer
2003, Canadian Journal of Zoology (81) 1004-1013
Both within and among seabird species, different aspects of breeding biology may respond to changes in prey availability in distinct ways, and the identification of species-specific breeding parameters that are sensitive to food availability is useful for monitoring purposes. We present data from a 5-year study (19951999) of the breeding...
Effect of analytical conditions in wavelength dispersive electron microprobe analysis on the measurement of strontium-to-calcium (Sr/Ca) ratios in otoliths of anadromous salmonids
Christian E. Zimmerman, Roger L. Nielsen
2003, Fishery Bulletin (101) 712-718
The use of strontium-to-calcium (Sr/Ca) ratios in otoliths is becoming a standard method to describe life history type and the chronology of migrations between freshwater and seawater habitats in teleosts (e.g. Kalish, 1990; Radtke et al., 1990; Secor, 1992; Rieman et al., 1994; Radtke, 1995; Limburg, 1995; Tzeng et al....
Seagrasses of the Pacific Coast of North America
David H. Ward, S.E. Ibarra-Obando
Edmund P. Green, Frederick T. Short, editor(s)
2003, Book chapter, World atlas of seagrasses
No abstract available....