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Publication Extents

Not all publications have extents, not all extents are completely accurate
A consumer-resource approach to the density-dependent population dynamics of mutualism
J. Nathaniel Holland, Donald L. DeAngelis
2010, Ecology (91) 1286-1295
Like predation and competition, mutualism is now recognized as a consumer resource (C-R) interaction, including, in particular, bi-directional (e.g., coral, plant- mycorrhizae) and uni-directional (e.g., ant-plant defense, plant-pollinator) C-R mutualisms. Here, we develop general theory for the density-dependent population dynamics of mutualism based on the C-R mechanism of interspecific interaction....
Hazards affecting grizzly bear survival in the Greater Yellowstone Ecosystem
Charles C. Schwartz, Mark A. Haroldson, Gary C. White
2010, Journal of Wildlife Management (74) 654-667
During the past 2 decades, the grizzly bear (Ursus arctos) population in the Greater Yellowstone Ecosystem (GYE) has increased in numbers and expanded its range. Early efforts to model grizzly bear mortality were principally focused within the United States Fish and Wildlife Service Grizzly Bear Recovery Zone, which currently...
Sediment-hosted lead-zinc deposits in Earth history
David L Leach, Dwight Bradley, David Huston, Sergei A. Pisarevsky, Ryan D. Taylor, S. Gardoll
2010, Economic Geology (105) 593-625
Sediment-hosted Pb-Zn deposits can be divided into two major subtypes. The first subtype is clastic-dominated lead-zinc (CD Pb-Zn) ores, which are hosted in shale, sandstone, siltstone, or mixed clastic rocks, or occur as carbonate replacement, within a CD sedimentary rock sequence. This subtype includes deposits that have been traditionally referred...
Displaying seismic deaggregation: The importance of the various sources
Warwick D. Smith, Stephen Harmsen
2010, Seismological Research Letters (81) 488-497
Seismic hazard deaggregation has become a standard part of probabilistic seismic hazard assessment (PSHA). The first product of PSHA is calculation of the likely severity of ground motion at a given range of annual probability levels, and this is extremely important for seismic design...
Modeling the production, decomposition, and transport of dissolved organic carbon in boreal soils
Zhaosheng Fan, Jason C. Neff, Kimberly P. Wickland
2010, Soil Science (175) 223-232
The movement of dissolved organic carbon (DOC) through boreal ecosystems has drawn increased attention because of its potential impact on the feedback of OC stocks to global environmental change in this region. Few models of boreal DOC exist. Here we present a one-dimensional model with simultaneous production, decomposition, sorption/desorption, and...
Holocene stratigraphy and chronology of the Casper Dune Field, Casper, Wyoming, USA
Alan F. Halfen, G. G. Fredlund, Shannon A. Mahan
2010, Holocene (20) 773-783
Activation chronologies of dune fields within the North American Great Plains are significant sources of paleoclimate information. Although many regional chronologies exist, several dune fields have been understudied, including the Casper Dune Field of central Wyoming. This study investigated aeolian dune sediment and buried soils of the Casper Dune Field....
Contamination of basaltic lava by seawater: Evidence found in a lava pillar from Axial Seamount, Juan de Fuca Ridge
Peter Schiffman, Robert A. Zierenberg, William W Chadwick, David A. Clague, Jacob B. Lowenstern
2010, Geochemistry, Geophysics, Geosystems (11)
A lava pillar formed during the 1998 eruption at Axial Seamount exhibits compositional and textural evidence for contamination by seawater under magmatic conditions. Glass immediately adjacent to anastomosing microfractures within 1 cm of the inner pillar wall is oxidized and significantly enriched in Na and Cl and depleted in Fe...
Documentation for initial seismic hazard maps for Haiti
Arthur Frankel, Stephen Harmsen, Charles Mueller, Eric Calais, Jennifer Haase
2010, Open-File Report 2010-1067
In response to the urgent need for earthquake-hazard information after the tragic disaster caused by the moment magnitude (M) 7.0 January 12, 2010, earthquake, we have constructed initial probabilistic seismic hazard maps for Haiti. These maps are based on the current information we have on fault slip rates and historical...
Dissolution-reprecipitation of igneous zircon in mid-ocean ridge gabbro, Atlantis Bank, Southwest Indian Ridge
J. Schwartz, Barbara E John, Michael J. Cheadle, Joseph L. Wooden, F. Mazdab, Susan Swapp, Craig B. Grimes
2010, Chemical Geology (274)-68
Zircons recovered from oceanic gabbro exposed on Atlantis Bank, Southwest Indian Ridge, typically display oscillatory and sector zoning consistent with igneous crystallization from mafic magmas. In one rock (of twenty investigated), weak-oscillatory-zonation patterns are overprinted by secondary textural features characterized by mottled, convoluted and wavy internal zonation patterns that are...
Ferromanganese crusts as archives of deep water Cd isotope compositions
T. J. Horner, M. Schonbachler, M. Rehkämper, S.G. Nielsen, H. Williams, A. N. Halliday, Z. George Xue, James R. Hein
2010, Geochemistry, Geophysics, Geosystems (11)
The geochemistry of Cd in seawater has attracted significant attention owing to the nutrient-like properties of this element. Recent culturing studies have demonstrated that Cd is a biologically important trace metal that plays a role in the sequestration of inorganic carbon. This conclusion is supported by recent isotope data for...
Reply to “Comment on ‘Is There a Basis for Preferring Characteristic Earthquakes over a Gutenberg–Richter Distribution in Probabilistic Earthquake Forecasting?’ by Tom Parsons and Eric L. Geist” by Jens-Uwe Klügel
Thomas E. Parsons, Eric L. Geist
2010, Bulletin of the Seismological Society of America (100) 898-899
The focus of Parsons and Geist (2009) was to test whether the key observational data used in earthquake forecasting necessitate a characteristic earthquake rupture model. The point of our article was not to suggest that a specific form of the Gutenberg–Richter earthquake distribution is a perfect representation of reality. The...
Climate-induced tree mortality: Earth system consequences
Henry D. Adams, Alison K. Macalady, David D. Breshears, Craig D. Allen, Nathan L. Stephenson, Scott Saleska, Travis E. Huxman, Nathan G. McDowell
2010, Eos, Transactions, American Geophysical Union (91) 153-154
One of the greatest uncertainties in global environmental change is predicting changes in feedbacks between the biosphere and the Earth system. Terrestrial ecosystems and, in particular, forests exert strong controls on the global carbon cycle and influence regional hydrology and climatology directly through water and surface energy budgets [Bonan, 2008;...
Measuring bulrush culm relationships to estimate plant biomass within a southern California treatment wetland
Joan S. Daniels, Brian S. Cade, James J. Sartoris
2010, Wetlands (30) 231-239
Assessment of emergent vegetation biomass can be time consuming and labor intensive. To establish a less onerous, yet accurate method, for determining emergent plant biomass than by direct measurements we collected vegetation data over a six-year period and modeled biomass using easily obtained variables: culm (stem) diameter, culm height and...
Assessing effects of water abstraction on fish assemblages in Mediterranean streams
Lluis Benejam, Paul L. Angermeier, Antoni Munne, Emili García-Berthou
2010, Freshwater Biology (55) 628-642
1. Water abstraction strongly affects streams in arid and semiarid ecosystems, particularly where there is a Mediterranean climate. Excessive abstraction reduces the availability of water for human uses downstream and impairs the capacity of streams to support native biota. 2. We investigated the flow regime and related variables in...
Consumption of baits containing raccoon pox-based plague vaccines protects black-tailed prairie dogs (Cynomys ludovicianus)
Tonie E. Rocke, Nicola Pussini, Susan Smith, Judy L. Williamson, Bradford Powell, Jorge E. Osorio
2010, Vector-Borne and Zoonotic Diseases (10) 51-58
Baits containing recombinant raccoon poxvirus (RCN) expressing plague antigens (fraction 1 [F1] and a truncated form of the V protein-V307) were offered for voluntary consumption several times over the course of several months to a group of 16 black-tailed prairie dogs (Cynomys ludovicianus). For comparison, another group of prairie dogs...
Invasion and production of New Zealand mud snails in the Colorado River, Glen Canyon
Wyatt F. Cross, E.J. Rosi-Marshall, Katherine E. Behn, Theodore A. Kennedy, Robert O Hall, A. Elizabeth Fuller, C. V. Baxter
2010, Biological Invasions (12) 3033-3043
Species invasions are often associated with large-scale human alteration of ecosystems. One classic example is the increasing dominance of non-native taxa below and above dams on large rivers. These dams substantially alter the physical template of river ecosystems, and exotic taxa often proliferate with potentially large impacts on coexisting taxa...
To reactivate or not to reactivate: nature and varied behavior of structural inheritance in the Proterozoic basement of the Eastern Colorado mineral belt over 1.7 billion years of earth history
Jonathan S. Caine, John Ridley, Zachary R. Wessel
2010, GSA Field Guides (18) 119-140
The eastern central Front Range of the Rocky Mountains in Colorado has long been a region of geologic interest because of Laramide-age hydrothermal polymetallic vein-related ores. The region is characterized by a well-exposed array of geologic structures associated with ductile and brittle deformation, which record crustal strain over 1.7 billion...
Subevents of long-period seismicity: implications for hydrothermal dynamics during the 2004-2008 eruption of Mount St. Helens
Robin S. Matoza, Bernard A. Chouet
2010, Journal of Geophysical Research (115)
One of the most striking aspects of seismicity during the 2004–2008 eruption of Mount St. Helens (MSH) was the precise regularity in occurrence of repetitive long-period (LP) or “drumbeat” events over sustained time periods. However, this precise regularity was not always observed, and at times the temporal occurrence of LP...
Diet shift of lentic dragonfly larvae in response to reduced terrestrial prey subsidies
Johanna M. Kraus
2010, Journal of the North American Benthological Society (29) 602-613
Inputs of terrestrial plant detritus and nutrients play an important role in aquatic food webs, but the importance of terrestrial prey inputs in determining aquatic predator distribution and abundance has been appreciated only recently. I examined the numerical, biomass, and diet responses of a common predator, dragonfly larvae, to experimental...
A methodology for the assessment of unconventional (continuous) resources with an application to the Greater Natural Buttes gas field, Utah
Ricardo A. Olea, Troy A. Cook, James L. Coleman
2010, Natural Resources Research (19) 237-251
The Greater Natural Buttes tight natural gas field is an unconventional (continuous) accumulation in the Uinta Basin, Utah, that began production in the early 1950s from the Upper Cretaceous Mesaverde Group. Three years later, production was extended to the Eocene Wasatch Formation. With the exclusion of 1100 non-productive (“dry”) wells,...
Significance of dredging on sediment denitrification in Meiliang Bay, China: A year long simulation study
Jicheng Zhong, Chengxin Fan, Lu Zhang, Hall Edward, Shiming Ding, Bao Li, Guofeng Liu
2010, Journal of Environmental Sciences (22) 68-75
An experiment for studying the effects of sediment dredging on denitrification in sediments was carried out through a one-year incubation of undredged (control) and dredged cores in laboratory. Dredging the upper 30 cm of sediment can significantly affect physico-chemical characteristics of sediments. Less degradation of organic matter in the dredged...
Evidence of weak contaminant-related oxidative stress in glaucous gulls (Larus hyperboreus) from the Canadian arctic
Mark Wayland, David J. Hoffman, Mark L. Mallory, Ray T. Alisauskas, Katherine R. Stebbins
2010, Journal of Toxicology and Environmental Health, Part A: Current Issues (73) 1058-1073
Environmental contaminants are transported over great distances to Arctic ecosystems, where they can accumulate in wildlife. Whether contaminant concentrations in wildlife are sufficient to produce adverse effects remains poorly understood. Exposure to contaminants elevates oxidative stress with possible fitness consequences. The glaucous gull (Larus hyperboreus), an Arctic top predator, was...
Effects of model layer simplification using composite hydraulic properties
Nicasio Sepulveda, Eve L. Kuniansky
2010, Hydrogeology Journal (18) 405-416
The effects of simplifying hydraulic property layering within an unconfined aquifer and the underlying confining unit were assessed. The hydraulic properties of lithologic units within the unconfined aquifer and confining unit were computed by analyzing the aquifer-test data using radial, axisymmetric two-dimensional (2D) flow. Time-varying recharge to the unconfined aquifer...
Workshop targets development of geodetic transient detection methods: 2009 SCEC Annual Meeting: Workshop on transient anomalous strain detection; Palm Springs, California, 12-13 September 2009
Jessica R. Murray-Moraleda, Rowena Lohman
2010, Eos, Transactions, American Geophysical Union (91) 58-58
The Southern California Earthquake Center (SCEC) is a community of researchers at institutions worldwide working to improve understanding of earthquakes and mitigate earthquake risk. One of SCEC's priority objectives is to “develop a geodetic network processing system that will detect anomalous strain transients.” Given the growing number of continuously recording...