Effect of water hardness and dissolved-solid concentration on hatching success and egg size in bighead carp
Duane Chapman, Joseph E. Deters
2009, Transactions of the American Fisheries Society (138) 1226-1231
Bighead carp Hypophthalmichthys nobilis is an Asian species that has been introduced to the United States and is regarded as a highly undesirable invader. Soft water has been said to cause the bursting of Asian carp eggs and thus has been suggested as a factor that would limit the spread...
The Water Availability Tool for Environmental Resources (WATER): A water-budget modeling approach for managing water-supply resources in non-karst areas of Kentucky (phase I) — Data processing and model structure documentstion
Tanja N. Williamson, Kenneth R. Odom, Jeremy K. Newson, Aimee C. Downs, Hugh L. Nelson, Peter J. Cinotto, Mark A. Ayers
2009, Scientific Investigations Report 2009-5248
The Water Availability Tool for Environmental Resources (WATER) was developed in cooperation with the Kentucky Division of Water to provide a consistent and defensible method of estimating streamflow and water availability in ungaged basins. WATER is process oriented; it is based on the TOPMODEL code and incorporates historical water-use data...
Regression models to estimate real-time concentrations of selected constituents in two tributaries to Lake Houston near Houston, Texas, 2005-07
Timothy D. Oden, William H. Asquith, Matthew S. Milburn
2009, Scientific Investigations Report 2009-5231
In December 2005, the U.S. Geological Survey in cooperation with the City of Houston, Texas, began collecting discrete water-quality samples for nutrients, total organic carbon, bacteria (total coliform and Escherichia coli), atrazine, and suspended sediment at two U.S. Geological Survey streamflow-gaging stations upstream from Lake Houston near Houston (08068500 Spring...
A topographic feature taxonomy for a U.S. national topographic mapping ontology
Dalia E. Varanka
2009, Book, 24th International Cartographic Conference
Using legacy feature lists from the U.S. National Topographic Mapping Program of the twentieth century, a taxonomy of features is presented for purposes of developing a national topographic feature ontology for geographic mapping and analysis. After reviewing published taxonomic classifications, six basic classes are suggested; terrain, surface water, ecological regimes,...
USGS standard quadrangle maps for emergency response
Laurence R. Moore
2009, Book, Annual Association of American Geographers Meeting
The 1:24,000-scale topographic quadrangle was the primary product of the U.S. Geological Survey's (USGS) National Mapping Program from 1947-1992. This map series includes about 54,000 map sheets for the conterminous United States, and is the only uniform map series ever produced that covers this area at such a large...
Using a coupled groundwater/surface-water model to predict climate-change impacts to lakes in the Trout Lake Watershed, northern Wisconsin
Randall J. Hunt, John F. Walker, Steven L. Markstrom, Lauren E. Hay, John Doherty
Richard M. T. Webb, Darius J. Semmens, editor(s)
2009, Conference Paper, Planning for an uncertain future - monitoring, integration, and adaptation (SIR 2009-5049)
A major focus of the U.S. Geological Survey’s Trout Lake Water, Energy, and Biogeochemical Budgets (WEBB) project is the development of a watershed model to allow predictions of hydrologic response to future conditions including land-use and climate change. The coupled groundwater/surface-water model GSFLOW was chosen for this purpose because it...
Hindcasting of decadal‐timescale estuarine bathymetric change with a tidal‐timescale model
Neil K. Ganju, David H. Schoellhamer, Bruce E. Jaffe
2009, Journal of Geophysical Research F: Earth Surface (114)
Hindcasting decadal-timescale bathymetric change in estuaries is prone to error due to limited data for initial conditions, boundary forcing, and calibration; computational limitations further hinder efforts. We developed and calibrated a tidal-timescale model to bathymetric change in Suisun Bay, California, over the 1867–1887 period. A general, multiple-timescale calibration ensured robustness...
Fractionation of stable isotopes in perchlorate and nitrate during in situ biodegradation in a sandy aquifer
P.B. Hatzinger, John Karl Bohlke, N.C. Sturchio, B. Gu, L.J. Heraty, R.C. Borden
2009, Environmental Chemistry (6) 44-52
An in situ experiment was performed in a shallow alluvial aquifer in Maryland to quantify the fractionation of stable isotopes in perchlorate (Cl and O) and nitrate (N and O) during biodegradation. An emulsified soybean oil substrate that was previously injected into this aquifer provided the electron donor necessary for...
Distinct freshwater and seawater isoforms of Na+/K+-ATPase in gill chloride cells of Atlantic salmon
Stephen D. McCormick, A.M. Regish, A.K. Christensen
2009, Journal of Experimental Biology (212) 3994-4001
Gill Na(+)/K(+)-ATPase (NKA) in teleost fishes is involved in ion regulation in both freshwater and seawater. We have developed and validated rabbit polyclonal antibodies specific to the NKA alpha1a and alpha1b protein isoforms of Atlantic salmon (Salmo salar Linnaeus), and used western blots and immunohistochemistry to characterize their size, abundance...
Geochemical Evolution of Great Salt Lake, Utah, USA
Blair F. Jones, David L. Naftz, Ronald J. Spencer, Charles G. Oviatt
2009, Aquatic Geochemistry (15) 95-121
"The Great Salt Lake (GSL) of Utah, USA, is the largest saline lake in North America, and its brines are some of the most concentrated anywhere in the world. The lake occupies a closed basin system whose chemistry reflects solute inputs from the weathering of a diverse suite of rocks in its drainage...
Organochlorine pesticides residue in lakes of Khorezm, Uzbekistan
Michael R. Rosen, Bakhriddin Nishonov, Dilorom Fayzieva, L. Saito, J. Lamers
2009, Book, 10th International HCH and pesticide forum book of papers: how many obsolete pesticides have been disposed of 8 years after signature of Stockholm Convention
The Khorezm province in northwest Uzbekistan is a productive agricultural area within the Aral Sea Basin that produces cotton, rice and wheat. Various organochlorine pesticides were widely used for cotton production before Uzbekistan's independence in 1991. In Khorezm, small lakes have formed in natural depressions that receive inputs mostly from...
Predicting the natural flow regime: Models for assessing hydrological alteration in streams
D.M. Carlisle, J. Falcone, D.M. Wolock, M. R. Meador, R.H. Norris
2009, River Research and Applications (26) 118-136
Understanding the extent to which natural streamflow characteristics have been altered is an important consideration for ecological assessments of streams. Assessing hydrologic condition requires that we quantify the attributes of the flow regime that would be expected in the absence of anthropogenic modifications. The objective of this study was to...
Hatch Timing Variations Among Reservoir Gizzard Shad Populations: Implications for Stocked Sander spp. Fingerlings
Richard D. Zweifela, David B. Bunnell, Mary T. Bremiganc, R. Scott Hale
2009, North American Journal of Fisheries Management (29) 488-494
Growth and survival of stocked Sander spp. fingerlings can be influenced by timing of stocking in relation to the peak in density of larval gizzard shad Dorosoma cepedianum. However, coordinating stockings to coincide with peaks in gizzard shad density is difficult due to temporal variation in spawn timing among reservoirs....
Effects of commercial harvest on shovelnose sturgeon populations in the Upper Mississippi River
Jeff D. Koch, Michael C. Quist, Clay L. Pierce, Kirk A. Hansen, Michael J. Steuck
2009, North American Journal of Fisheries Management (29) 84-100
Shovelnose sturgeon Scaphirhynchus platorynchus have become an increasingly important commercial species in the upper Mississippi River (UMR) because of the collapse of foreign sturgeon (family Acipenseridae) populations and bans on imported caviar. In response to concerns about the sustainability of the commercial shovelnose sturgeon fishery in the UMR, we undertook...
Geomorphology and river dynamics of the lower Copper River, Alaska
Timothy P. Brabets, Jeffrey S. Conaway
2009, Scientific Investigations Report 2009-5257
Located in south-central Alaska, the Copper River drains an area of more than 24,000 square miles. The average annual flow of the river near its mouth is 63,600 cubic feet per second, but is highly variable between winter and summer. In the winter, flow averages approximately 11,700 cubic feet per...
Estimated land-surface subsidence in Harris County, Texas, 1915-17 to 2001
Mark C. Kasmarek, Robert K. Gabrysch, Michaela R. Johnson
2009, Scientific Investigations Map 3097
Land-surface subsidence, or land subsidence, in Harris County, Texas, which encompasses much of the Houston area, has been occurring for decades. Land subsidence has increased the frequency and extent of flooding, damaged buildings and transportation infrastructure, and caused adverse environmental effects. The primary cause of land subsidence in the Houston...
Geochemistry of inorganic nitrogen in waters released from coal-bed natural gas production wells in the Powder River Basin, Wyoming
Richard L. Smith, Deborah A. Repert, Charles P. Hart
2009, Environmental Science & Technology (43) 2348-2354
Water originating from coal-bed natural gas (CBNG) production wells typically contains ammonium and is often disposed via discharge to ephemeral channels. A study conducted in the Powder River Basin, Wyoming, documented downstream changes in CBNG water composition, emphasizing nitrogen-cycling processes and the fate of ammonium. Dissolved ammonium concentrations from 19...
Declining global per capita agricultural production and warming oceans threaten food security
Christopher C. Funk, Molly E. Brown
2009, Food Security (1) 271-289
Despite accelerating globalization, most people still eat food that is grown locally. Developing countries with weak purchasing power tend to import as little food as possible from global markets, suffering consumption deficits during times of high prices or production declines. Local agricultural production, therefore, is critical to both food security...
Sexing sirenians: Validation of visual and molecular sex determination in both wild dugongs (Dugong dugon) and Florida manatees (Trichechus manatus latirostris)
J. Lanyon, H. Sneath, J. Ovenden, D. Broderick, Robert K. Bonde
2009, Aquatic Mammals (35) 187-192
Sexing wild marine mammals that show little to no sexual dimorphism is challenging. For sirenians that are difficult to catch or approach closely, molecular sexing from tissue biopsies offers an alternative method to visual discrimination. This paper reports the results of a field study to validate the use of two...
Potential Inundation due to Rising Sea Levels in the San Francisco Bay Region
Noah Knowles
2009, Report
An increase in the rate of sea level rise is one of the primary impacts of projected global climate change. To assess potential inundation associated with a continued acceleration of sea level rise, the highest resolution elevation data available were assembled from various sources and mosaicked to cover the land...
Lysimetric Evaluation of Simplified Surface Energy Balance Approach in the Texas High Plains
Gabriel B. Senay, P.H. Gowda, T.A. Howell, T.H. Marek
2009, Applied Engineering in Agriculture (25) 665-669
Numerous energy balance (EB) algorithms have been developed to make use of remote sensing data to estimate evapotranspiration (ET) regionally. However, most EB models are complex to use and efforts are being made to simplify procedures mainly through the scaling of reference ET. The Simplified Surface Energy Balance (SSEB) is...
Sensitivity of the carbon cycle in the Arctic to climate change
A. David McGuire, Leif G. Anderson, Torben R. Christensen, Scott Dallimore, Laodong Guo, Daniel J. Hayes, Martin Heimann, T.D. Lorenson, Robie W. Macdonald, Nigel Roulet
2009, Ecological Monographs (79) 523-555
The recent warming in the Arctic is affecting a broad spectrum of physical, ecological, and human/cultural systems that may be irreversible on century time scales and have the potential to cause rapid changes in the earth system. The response of the carbon cycle of the Arctic to changes in climate...
Importance of light, temperature, zooplankton, and fish in predicting the nighttime vertical distribution of Mysis diluviana
Brent Boscarino, Lars G. Rudstam, S.A. Ellenberger, Robert O’Gorman
2009, Aquatic Biology (5) 263-279
The opossum shrimp Mysis diluviana (formerly M. relicta) performs large amplitude diel vertical migrations in Lake Ontario and its nighttime distribution is influenced by temperature, light and the distribution of its predators and prey. At one location in southeastern Lake Ontario, we measured the vertical distribution of mysids, mysid predators (i.e. planktivorous fishes)...
Local versus landscape-scale effects of savanna trees on grasses
Corinna Riginos, James B. Grace, David J. Augustine, Truman P. Young
2009, Journal of Ecology (97) 1337-1345
1. Savanna ecosystems – defined by the coexistence of trees and grasses – cover more than one‐fifth the world’s land surface and harbour most of the world’s rangelands, livestock and large mammal diversity. Savanna trees can have a variety of effects on grasses, with consequences for the wild and domestic...
Effects of Groundwater Development on Uranium: Central Valley, California, USA
Bryant C. Jurgens, Miranda S. Fram, Kenneth Belitz, Karen R. Burow, Matthew K. Landon
2009, Ground Water (48) 913-928
Uranium (U) concentrations in groundwater in several parts of the eastern San Joaquin Valley, California, have exceeded federal and state drinking water standards during the last 20 years. The San Joaquin Valley is located within the Central Valley of California and is one of the most productive agricultural areas in...