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10462 results.

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Page 184, results 4576 - 4600

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Publication Extents

Not all publications have extents, not all extents are completely accurate
Selection indicates preference in diverse habitats: A Ground-Nesting bird (charadrius melodus) using reservoir shoreline
M.J. Anteau, M. H. Sherfy, M.T. Wiltermuth
2012, PLoS ONE (7)
Animals use proximate cues to select resources that maximize individual fitness. When animals have a diverse array of available habitats, those selected could give insights into true habitat preferences. Since the construction of the Garrison Dam on the Missouri River in North Dakota, Lake Sakakawea (SAK) has become an important...
The impact of biotic/abiotic interfaces in mineral nutrient cycling: A study of soils of the Santa Cruz chronosequence, California
A. F. White, M. S. Schulz, D.V. Vivit, T.D. Bullen, J. Fitzpatrick
2012, Geochimica et Cosmochimica Acta (77) 62-85
Biotic/abiotic interactions between soil mineral nutrients and annual grassland vegetation are characterized for five soils in a marine terrace chronosequence near Santa Cruz, California. A Mediterranean climate, with wet winters and dry summers, controls the annual cycle of plant growth and litter decomposition, resulting in net above-ground productivities of...
Climate change and human health: Spatial modeling of water availability, malnutrition, and livelihoods in Mali, Africa
Marta M. Jankowska, David Lopez-Carr, Chris Funk, Gregory J. Husak, Z.A. Chafe
2012, Applied Geography (33) 4-15
This study develops a novel approach for projecting climate trends in the Sahel in relation to shifting livelihood zones and health outcomes. Focusing on Mali, we explore baseline relationships between temperature, precipitation, livelihood, and malnutrition in 407 Demographic and Health Survey (DHS) clusters with a total of 14,238 children, resulting...
Quantifying anthropogenically driven morphologic changes on a barrier island: Fire Island National Seashore, New York
Meredith G. Kratzmann, Cheryl J. Hapke
2012, Journal of Coastal Research (28) 76-88
Beach scraping, beach replenishment, and the presence of moderate development have altered the morphology of the dune–beach system at Fire Island National Seashore, located on a barrier island on the south coast of Long Island, New York. Seventeen communities are interspersed with sections of natural, nonmodified land within the park...
A new method of calculating electrical conductivity with applications to natural waters
R. Blaine McCleskey, D. Kirk Nordstrom, J. N. Ryan, J. W. Ball
2012, Geochimica et Cosmochimica Acta (77) 369-382
A new method is presented for calculating the electrical conductivity of natural waters that is accurate over a large range of effective ionic strength (0.0004–0.7 mol kg−1), temperature (0–95 °C), pH (1–10), and conductivity (30–70,000 μS cm−1). The method incorporates a reliable set of equations to...
Experimental determination of soil heat storage for the simulation of heat transport in a coastal wetland
Michael Swain, Matthew Swain, Melinda Lohmann, Eric Swain
2012, Journal of Hydrology (422-423) 53-62
Two physical experiments were developed to better define the thermal interaction of wetland water and the underlying soil layer. This information is important to numerical models of flow and heat transport that have been developed to support biological studies in the South Florida coastal wetland areas. The experimental apparatus...
Migrating birds’ use of stopover habitat in the southwestern United States
Janet M. Ruth, R.H. Diehl, R.K. Felix Jr.
2012, The Condor (114) 698-710
In the arid Southwest, migratory birds are known to use riparian stopover habitats; we know less about how migrants use other habitat types during migratory stopover. Using radar data and satellite land-cover data, we determined the habitats with which birds are associated during migration stopover. Bird densities differed significantly by...
A newly discovered impact crater in Titan's Senkyo: Cassini VIMS observations and comparison with other impact features
B. J. Buratti, Christophe Sotin, K. Lawrence, R. H. Brown, Stéphane Le Mouélic, J.M. Soderblom, J. Barnes, Roger N. Clark, K. H. Baines, P. D. Nicholson
2012, Planetary and Space Science (60) 18-25
Senkyo is an equatorial plain on Titan filled with dunes and surrounded by hummocky plateaus. During the Titan targeted flyby T61 on August 25, 2009, the Cassini Visual and Infrared Mapping Spectrometer (VIMS) onboard the Cassini spacecraft observed a circular feature, centered at 5.4° N and 341°W, that superimposes the dune fields and a...
The impact of biotic/abiotic interfaces in mineral nutrient cycling: A study of soils of the Santa Cruz chronosequence, California
Art F. White, Marjorie S. Schulz, Davison V. Vivit, Tomas D. Bullen, John A. Fitzpatrick
2012, Geochimica et Cosmochimica Acta (77) 62-85
Biotic/abiotic interactions between soil mineral nutrients and annual grassland vegetation are characterized for five soils in a marine terrace chronosequence near Santa Cruz, California. A Mediterranean climate, with wet winters and dry summers, controls the annual cycle of plant growth and litter decomposition, resulting in net above-ground productivities of...
Temporal trends in algae, benthic invertebrate, and fish assemblages in streams and rivers draining basins of varying land use in the south-central United States, 1993-2007
Matthew P. Miller, Jonathan G. Kennen, Jeffrey A. Mabe, Scott V. Mize
2012, Hydrobiologia (684) 15-33
Site-specific temporal trends in algae, benthic invertebrate, and fish assemblages were investigated in 15 streams and rivers draining basins of varying land use in the south-central United States from 1993–2007. A multivariate approach was used to identify sites with statistically significant trends in aquatic assemblages which were then tested for...
Programs for calibration‐based Monte Carlo simulation of recharge areas
J. Jeffrey Starn, Amvrossios C. Bagtzoglou
2012, Ground Water (50) 472-476
One use of groundwater flow models is to simulate contributing recharge areas to wells or springs. Particle tracking can be used to simulate these recharge areas, but in many cases the modeler is not sure how accurate these recharge areas are because parameters such as hydraulic conductivity and recharge have...
MODFLOW-style parameters in underdetermined parameter estimation
Marco D. D’Oria, Michael N. Fienen
2012, Groundwater (50) 149-153
In this article, we discuss the use of MODFLOW-Style parameters in the numerical codes MODFLOW_2005 and MODFLOW_2005-Adjoint for the definition of variables in the Layer Property Flow package. Parameters are a useful tool to represent aquifer properties in both codes and are the only option available in the adjoint version. Moreover, for overdetermined parameter...
Evaluation of two forms of electroanesthesia and carbon dioxide for short-term anesthesia in walleye
Christopher S. Vandergoot, Karen J Murchie, Steven J. Cooke, John M. Dettmers, Roger A. Bergstedt, David G. Fielder
2011, North American Journal of Fisheries Management (31) 914-922
Anesthetics immobilize fish, reducing physical damage and stress during aquaculture practices, stock assessment, and experimental procedures. Currently, only tricaine methanesulfonate (MS-222) is approved for use as an anesthetic for food fish in Canada and the United States; however, MS-222 can only be used with certain fish species, and treated fish...
Arsenic in Chinese coals: Distribution, modes of occurrence, and environmental effects
Y. Kang, Guijian Liu
2011, Article
Arsenic, one of the most hazardous elements occurring in coals, can be released to the environment during coal processing and combustion. Based on the available literature and published results obtained in our laboratory, the content, distribution and the modes of occurrence of As in Chinese coals, and its environmental and...
Book review: The world of wolves: New perspectives on ecology
L. David Mech
2011, International Wolf (21) 21-21
Wolf populations have proliferated in several areas and so have wolf books. The latest book is a good one. This compendium, The World of Wolves, covers a variety of fast-moving and controversial areas such as canid genetics, effects of wolves on ecosystems, climate change, hunting of wolves by snowmobile and...
Mineral resource of the month: copper
Water Resources Division, U.S. Geological Survey
2011, Earth (56) 28-29
The article provides information on copper and its various uses. It was the first metal used by humans and is considered as one of the materials that played an important role in the development of civilization. It is a major industrial metal because of its low cost, availability, electrical conductivity,...
Variation in spring migration routes and breeding distribution of northern pintails Anas acuta that winter in Japan
Jerry W. Hupp, Noriyuki Yamaguchi, Paul L. Flint, John M. Pearce, Ken-ichi Tokita, Tetsuo Shimada, Andrew M. Ramey, Sergei Kharitonov, Hiroyoshi Higuchi
2011, Journal of Avian Biology (42) 289-300
In North America, spring migration routes and breeding distribution of northern pintails Anas acuta vary because some individuals opportunistically nest at mid-latitudes in years when ephemeral prairie wetlands are available, whereas others regularly nest in arctic and sub-arctic regions where wetland abundance is more constant. Less was known about migration...
Gopherus agassizii (desert tortoise). Burrow collapse
Caleb L. Loughran, Joshua Ennen, Jeffrey E. Lovich
2011, Herpetological Review (42) 593-593
In the deserts of the southwestern U.S., burrows are utilized by the Desert Tortoise to escape environmental extremes (reviewed by Ernst and Lovich 2009. Turtles of the United States and Canada. 2nd ed. Johns Hopkins Univ. Press, Baltimore, Maryland. 827 pp.). However, the potential for mortality through burrow collapse and...
Assessment of topographic and drainage network controls on debris-flow travel distance along the west coast of the United States
Jeffrey A. Coe, Mark E. Reid, Dainne L. Brien, John A. Michael
2011, Italian Journal of Engineering Geology and Environment; 5th International Conference on Debris-Flow Hazards "Mitigation, Mechanics, Prediction and Assessment" 199-209
To better understand controls on debris-flow entrainment and travel distance, we examined topographic and drainage network characteristics of initiation locations in two separate debris-flow prone areas located 700 km apart along the west coast of the U.S. One area was located in northern California, the other in southern Oregon. In...
Lithium
B.W. Jaskula
2011, Mining Engineering (63) 79-80
In 2010, lithium consumption in the United States was estimated to have been about 1 kt (1,100 st) of contained lithium, a 23-percent decrease from 2009. The United States was estimated to be the fourth largest consumer of lithium. It remained the leading importer of lithium carbonate and the leading...
Contexts for change in alpine tundra
George P. Malanson, Jonathan P. Rose, P. Jason Schroeder, Daniel B. Fagre
2011, Physical Geography (32) 97-113
Because alpine tundra is responding to climate change, a need exists to understand the meaning of observed changes. To provide context for such interpretation, the relevance of niche and neutral theories of biogeography and the continuum and classification approaches to biogeographic description are assessed. Two extensive studies of alpine tundra,...
Infectious diseases in Yellowstone’s canid community
Emily S. Almberg, Paul C. Cross, L. David Mech, Doug W. Smith, Jennifer W. Sheldon, Robert L. Crabtree
2011, Yellowstone Science (19) 16-24
Each summer Yellowstone Wolf Project staff visit den sites to monitor the success of wolf reproduction and pup rearing behavior. For the purposes of wolf monitoring, Yellowstone National Park (YNP) is divided into two study areas, the northern range and the interior, each distinguished by their ecological and physiographical differences....
Geological impacts and implications of the 2010 tsunami along the central coast of Chile
Robert A. Morton, Guy Gelfenbaum, Mark L. Buckley, Bruce M. Richmond
2011, Sedimentary Geology (242) 34-51
Geological effects of the 2010 Chilean tsunami were quantified at five near-field sites along a 200 km segment of coast located between the two zones of predominant fault slip. Field measurements, including topography, flow depths, flow directions, scour depths, and deposit thicknesses, provide insights into the processes and morphological changes...
Landscape models of brook trout abundance and distribution in lotic habitat with field validation
James E. McKenna Jr., James H. Johnson
2011, North American Journal of Fisheries Management (31) 742-756
Brook trout Salvelinus fontinalis are native fish in decline owing to environmental changes. Predictions of their potential distribution and a better understanding of their relationship to habitat conditions would enhance the management and conservation of this valuable species. We used over 7,800 brook trout observations throughout New York State and...
Effects of baseline conditions on the simulated hydrologic response to projected climate change
Kathryn M. Koczot, Steven L. Markstrom, Lauren E. Hay
2011, Earth Interactions (15) 1-23
Changes in temperature and precipitation projected from five general circulation models, using one late-twentieth-century and three twenty-first-century emission scenarios, were downscaled to three different baseline conditions. Baseline conditions are periods of measured temperature and precipitation data selected to represent twentieth-century climate. The hydrologic effects of the climate projections are evaluated...