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Page 187, results 4651 - 4675

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Not all publications have extents, not all extents are completely accurate
Synthesis of isotopically modified ZnO nanoparticles and their potential as nanotoxicity tracers
A.D. Dybowska, Marie Noele Croteau, S.K. Misra, D. Berhanu, Samuel N. Luoma, P. Christian, P. O'Brien, E. Valsami-Jones
2011, Environmental Pollution (159) 266-273
Understanding the behavior of engineered nanoparticles in the environment and within organisms is perhaps the biggest obstacle to the safe development of nanotechnologies. Reliable tracing is a particular issue for nanoparticles such as ZnO, because Zn is an essential element and a common pollutant thus present at elevated background concentrations. We synthesized isotopically...
Understanding the role of fog in forest hydrology: Stable isotopes as tools for determining input and partitioning of cloud water in montane forests
Martha A. Scholl, W. Eugster, R. Burkard
2011, Hydrological Processes (25) 353-366
Understanding the hydrology of tropical montane cloud forests (TMCF) has become essential as deforestation of mountain areas proceeds at an increased rate worldwide. Passive and active cloud‐water collectors, throughfall and stemflow collectors, visibility or droplet size measurements, and micrometeorological sensors are typically used to measure the fog water inputs to...
Secular trends in storm-level geomagnetic activity
J.J. Love
2011, Annales Geophysicae (29) 251-262
Analysis is made of K-index data from groups of ground-based geomagnetic observatories in Germany, Britain, and Australia, 1868.0–2009.0, solar cycles 11–23. Methods include nonparametric measures of trends and statistical significance used by the hydrological and climatological research communities. Among the three observatory groups, German K data systematically record the highest disturbance levels,...
Influence of changing water sources and mineral chemistry on the everglades ecosystem
Paul V. McCormick, Judson Harvey, Eric Crawford
2011, Critical Reviews in Environmental Science and Technology (41) 28-63
Human influences during the previous century increased mineral inputs to the Florida Everglades by changing the sources and chemistry of surface inflows. Biogeochemical responses to this enrichment include changes in the availability of key limiting nutrients such as P, the potential for increased turnover of nutrient pools due to accelerated...
Dissolved organic matter in the Florida everglades: Implications for ecosystem restoration
G. R. Aiken, C.C. Gilmour, D. P. Krabbenhoft, W. Orem
2011, Critical Reviews in Environmental Science and Technology (41) 217-248
Dissolved organic matter (DOM) in the Florida Everglades controls a number of environmental processes important for ecosystem function including the absorption of light, mineral dissolution/precipitation, transport of hydrophobic compounds (e.g., pesticides), and the transport and reactivity of metals, such as mercury. Proposed attempts to return the Everglades to more natural...
Canopy water balance of windward and leeward Hawaiian cloud forests on Haleakalā, Maui, Hawai'i
Thomas W. Giambelluca, John K. DeLay, Michael A. Nullet, Martha A. Scholl, Stephen B. Gingerich
2011, Hydrological Processes (25) 438-447
The contribution of intercepted cloud water to precipitation at windward and leeward cloud forest sites on the slopes of Haleakalā, Maui was assessed using two approaches. Canopy water balance estimates based on meteorological monitoring were compared with interpretations of fog screen measurements collected over a 2-year period at each location....
Ammonium in thermal waters of Yellowstone National Park: Processes affecting speciation and isotope fractionation
J.M. Holloway, D. Kirk Nordstrom, J.K. Böhlke, R. Blaine McCleskey, J.W. Ball
2011, Geochimica et Cosmochimica Acta (75) 4611-4636
Dissolved inorganic nitrogen, largely in reduced form (NH4(T)≈NH4(aq)++NH3(aq)o), has been documented in thermal waters throughout Yellowstone National Park, with concentrations ranging from a few micromolar along the Firehole River to millimolar concentrations at Washburn Hot Springs. Indirect evidence from rock nitrogen analyses and previous work on organic compounds associated with...
Climatic controls on the snowmelt hydrology of the northern Rocky Mountains
Gregory T. Pederson, S.T. Gray, T. Ault, W. Marsh, Daniel B. Fagre, A.G. Bunn, C.A. Woodhouse, L.J. Graumlich
2011, Journal of Climate (24) 1666-1687
The northern Rocky Mountains (NRMs) are a critical headwaters region with the majority of water resources originating from mountain snowpack. Observations showing declines in western U.S. snowpack have implications for water resources and biophysical processes in high-mountain environments. This study investigates oceanic and atmospheric controls underlying changes in timing, variability,...
Biogeochemical processes on tree islands in the greater everglades: Initiating a new paradigm
P.R. Wetzel, Fred H. Sklar, C.A. Coronado, T.G. Troxler, S.L. Krupa, P.L. Sullivan, S. Ewe, R.M. Price, S. Newman, William H. Orem
2011, Critical Reviews in Environmental Science and Technology (41) 670-701
Scientists’ understanding of the role of tree islands in the Everglades has evolved from a plant community of minor biogeochemical importance to a plant community recognized as the driving force for localized phosphorus accumulation within the landscape. Results from this review suggest that tree transpiration, nutrient infiltration from the soil...
Hydrological mobilization of mercury and dissolved organic carbon in a snow-dominated, forested watershed: Conceptualization and modeling
J. Schelker, Douglas A. Burns, M. Weiler, H. Laudon
2011, Journal of Geophysical Research G: Biogeosciences (116)
The mobilization of mercury and dissolved organic carbon (DOC) during snowmelt often accounts for a major fraction of the annual loads. We studied the role of hydrological connectivity of riparian wetlands and upland/wetland transition zones to surface waters on the mobilization of Hg and DOC in Fishing Brook, a headwater...
Use of hydrologic and hydrodynamic modeling for ecosystem restoration
J. Obeysekera, L. Kuebler, S. Ahmed, M.-L. Chang, V. Engel, Christian D. Langevin, Eric D. Swain, Y. Wan
2011, Critical Reviews in Environmental Science and Technology (41) 447-488
Planning and implementation of unprecedented projects for restoring the greater Everglades ecosystem are underway and the hydrologic and hydrodynamic modeling of restoration alternatives has become essential for success of restoration efforts. In view of the complex nature of the South Florida water resources system, regional-scale (system-wide) hydrologic models have been...
Environmental controls of wood entrapment in upper Midwestern streams
Eric C. Merten, Jacques Finlay, Lucinda Johnson, Raymond Newman, Heinz Stefan, Bruce C. Vondracek
2011, Hydrological Processes (25) 593-602
Wood deposited in streams provides a wide variety of ecosystem functions, including enhancing habitat for key species in stream food webs, increasing geomorphic and hydraulic heterogeneity and retaining organic matter. Given the strong role that wood plays in streams, factors that influence wood inputs, retention and transport are critical to...
Effect of tidal fluctuations on transient dispersion of simulated contaminant concentrations in coastal aquifers
Ivana La Licata, Christian D. Langevin, Alyssa M. Dausman, Luca Alberti
2011, Hydrogeology Journal (19) 1313-1322
Variable-density groundwater models require extensive computational resources, particularly for simulations representing short-term hydrologic variability such as tidal fluctuations. Saltwater-intrusion models usually neglect tidal fluctuations and this may introduce errors in simulated concentrations. The effects of tides on simulated concentrations in a coastal aquifer were assessed. Three analyses are reported: in...
Impacts of agricultural land use on biological integrity: A causal analysis
C.M. Riseng, M.J. Wiley, Robert W. Black, M.D. Munn
2011, Ecological Applications (21) 3128-3146
Agricultural land use has often been linked to nutrient enrichment, habitat degradation, hydrologic alteration, and loss of biotic integrity in streams. The U.S. Geological Survey's National Water Quality Assessment Program sampled 226 stream sites located in eight agriculture‐dominated study units across the United States to investigate the geographic variability and...
Exchange of groundwater and surface-water mediated by permafrost response to seasonal and long term air temperature variation
S. Ge, J. McKenzie, C. Voss, Q. Wu
2011, Geophysical Research Letters (38)
Permafrost dynamics impact hydrologic cycle processes by promoting or impeding groundwater and surface water exchange. Under seasonal and decadal air temperature variations, permafrost temperature changes control the exchanges between groundwater and surface water. A coupled heat transport and groundwater flow model, SUTRA, was modified to simulate groundwater flow and heat...
Magnetic susceptibility as a proxy for investigating microbially mediated iron reduction
F.M. Mewafy, E.A. Atekwana, D.D. Werkema, L.D. Slater, D. Ntarlagiannis, A. Revil, M. Skold, Geoffrey N. Delin
2011, Geophysical Research Letters (38)
We investigated magnetic susceptibility (MS) variations in hydrocarbon contaminated sediments. Our objective was to determine if MS can be used as an intrinsic bioremediation indicator due to the activity of iron-reducing bacteria. A contaminated and an uncontaminated core were retrieved from a site contaminated with crude oil near Bemidji, Minnesota...
Using Lagrangian sampling to study water quality during downstream transport in the San Luis Drain, California, USA
E.C. Volkmar, R.A. Dahlgren, W.T. Stringfellow, S.S. Henson, S.E. Borglin, C. Kendall, E. E. Van Nieuwenhuyse
2011, Chemical Geology (283) 68-77
To investigate the mechanism for diel (24h) changes commonly observed at fixed sampling locations and how these diel changes relate to downstream transport in hypereutrophic surface waters, we studied a parcel of agricultural drainage water as it traveled for 84h in a concrete-lined channel having no additional water inputs or...
Glacial flour dust storms in the Gulf of Alaska: hydrologic and meteorological controls and their importance as a source of bioavailable iron
John Crusius, A.W. Schroth, S. Gasso, C.M. Moy, R.C. Levy, M. Gatica
2011, Geophysical Research Letters (38)
Iron is an essential micronutrient that limits primary productivity in much of the ocean, including the Gulf of Alaska (GoA). However, the processes that transport iron to the ocean surface are poorly quantified. We combine satellite and meteorological data to provide the first description of widespread dust transport from coastal...
A perspective on nonstationarity and water management
R.M. Hirsch
2011, Journal of the American Water Resources Association (47) 436-446
This essay offers some perspectives on climate-related nonstationarity and water resources. Hydrologists must not lose sight of the many sources of nonstationarity, recognizing that many of them may be of much greater magnitude than those that may arise from climate change. It is paradoxical that statistical and deterministic approaches give...
Demasculinization of male fish by wastewater treatment plant effluent
A.M. Vajda, Larry B. Barber, James L. Gray, E.M. Lopez, A.M. Bolden, H.L. Schoenfuss, D.O. Norris
2011, Aquatic Toxicology (103) 213-221
Adult male fathead minnows (Pimephales promelas) were exposed to effluent from the City of Boulder, Colorado wastewater treatment plant (WWTP) under controlled conditions in the field to determine if the effluent induced reproductive disruption in fish. Gonadal intersex and other evidence of...
Arsenic in sediments, groundwater, and streamwater of a glauconitic Coastal Plain terrain, New Jersey, USA-Chemical " fingerprints" for geogenic and anthropogenic sources
Julia Barringer, Pamela A. Reilly, D. D. Eberl, A.E. Blum, J.L. Bonin, Robert Rosman, B. Hirst, M. Alebus, K. Cenno, M. Gorska
2011, Applied Geochemistry (26) 763-776
Glauconite-bearing deposits are found worldwide, but As levels have been determined for relatively few. The As content of glauconites in sediments of the Inner Coastal Plain of New Jersey can exceed 100 mg/kg, and total As concentrations (up to 5.95 μg/L) found historically and recently in streamwaters exceed the State standard. In...
Comparison of bottom-track to global positioning system referenced discharges measured using an acoustic Doppler current profiler
Chad R. Wagner, David S. Mueller
2011, Journal of Hydrology (401) 250-258
A negative bias in discharge measurements made with an acoustic Doppler current profiler (ADCP) can be caused by the movement of sediment on or near the streambed. The integration of a global positioning system (GPS) to track the movement of the ADCP can be used to avoid the systematic negative...
Biomarkers of mercury exposure in two eastern Ukraine cities
H. Gibb, C. Haver, K. Kozlov, J.A. Centeno, V. Jurgenson, Allan Kolker, Kathryn M. Conko, Edward R. Landa, H. Xu
2011, Journal of Occupational and Environmental Hygiene (8) 187-193
This study evaluates biomarkers of mercury exposure among residents of Horlivka, a city in eastern Ukraine located in an area with geologic and industrial sources of environmental mercury, and residents of Artemivsk, a nearby comparison city outside the mercury-enriched area. Samples of urine, blood, hair, and...
Food availability is expressed through physiological stress indicators in nestling white ibis: A food supplementation experiment
Garth Herring, Mark I. Cook, D.E. Gawlik, Erynn M. Call
2011, Functional Ecology (25) 682-690
1.Physiological responses to environmental stress such as adrenocortical hormones and cellular stress proteins have recently emerged as potentially powerful tools for investigating physiological effects of avian food limitation. However, little is known about the physiological stress responses of free‐living nestling birds to environmental variation in food availability.2. We experimentally tested how...
Engineering a future for amphibians under climate change
L.P. Shoo, D.H. Olson, S.K. Mcmenamin, K.A. Murray, M. Van Sluys, M.A. Donnelly, D. Stratford, J. Terhivuo, A. Merino-Viteri, S.M. Herbert, P.J. Bishop, P.S. Corn, L. Dovey, R.A. Griffiths, K. Lowe, M. Mahony, H. McCallum, J.D. Shuker, C. Simpkins, L.F. Skerratt, S.E. Williams, J.-M. Hero
2011, Journal of Applied Ecology (48) 487-492
1. Altered global climates in the 21st century pose serious threats for biological systems and practical actions are needed to mount a response for species at risk. 2. We identify management actions from across the world and from diverse disciplines that are applicable to minimizing loss of amphibian biodiversity under climate change. Actions...