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Page 2060, results 51476 - 51500

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Publication Extents

Not all publications have extents, not all extents are completely accurate
How useful are the "other" semipermeable membrane devices (SPMDs); the mini-unit (15.2 cm long)?
Steven L. Goodbred, Wade L. Bryant Jr., Michael R. Rosen, David Alvarez, Terri Spencer
2009, Science of the Total Environment (407) 4149-4156
Mini (15.2 cm) semipermeable membrane devices (SPMDs) were used successfully in 169 streams from six metropolitan areas of the US to sequester hydrophobic organic compounds (HOCs) that are indicative of urbanization. A microscale assay the P450RGS, which responds to compounds that bind to the aryl hydrocarbon receptor (AhR), and the Fluoroscan,...
Influence of small impoundments on habitat and fish communities in headwater streams
M.T. Kashiwagi, L.E. Miranda
2009, Southeastern Naturalist (8) 23-36
We surveyed the habitat and fish assemblages of four impounded and three unimpounded neighboring headwater streams, separated longitudinally into multiple upstream and downstream reaches. Instream habitat characteristics were similar between reaches of unimpounded streams and reaches above impoundments, and differed significantly from reaches below impoundments that included deeper water and...
Halogen degassing during ascent and eruption of water-poor basaltic magma
M. Edmonds, T.M. Gerlach, Richard A. Herd
2009, Chemical Geology (263) 122-130
A study of volcanic gas composition and matrix glass volatile concentrations has allowed a model for halogen degassing to be formulated for K??lauea Volcano, Hawai'i. Volcanic gases emitted during 2004-2005 were characterised by a molar SO2/HCl of 10-64, with a mean of 33; and a molar HF/HCl of 0-5, with...
Flexibility in the parental effort of an Arctic-breeding seabird
Ann Harding, Alexander S. Kitaysky, Margaret E. Hall, Jorg Welcker, Nina J. Karnovsky, Sandra L. Talbot, Keith C. Hamer, David Gremillet
2009, Functional Ecology (23) 348-358
Parental investment strategies are considered to represent a trade-off between the benefits of investment in current offspring and costs to future reproduction. Due to their high residual reproductive value, long-lived organisms are predicted to be more reluctant to increase parental effort. 2. We tested the hypothesis that breeding little auks...
Assessing reservoir operations risk under climate change
L.D. Brekke, E.P. Maurer, J.D. Anderson, M. D. Dettinger, E.S. Townsley, A. Harrison, T. Pruitt
2009, Water Resources Research (45)
Risk-based planning offers a robust way to identify strategies that permit adaptive water resources management under climate change. This paper presents a flexible methodology for conducting climate change risk assessments involving reservoir operations. Decision makers can apply this methodology to their systems by selecting future periods and risk metrics relevant...
Salinity effects on behavioural response to hypoxia in the non-native Mayan cichlid Cichlasoma urophthalmus from Florida Everglades wetlands
P. J. Schofield, W.F. Loftus, J.A. Fontaine
2009, Journal of Fish Biology (74) 1245-1258
This study quantified the hypoxia tolerance of the Mayan cichlid Cichlasoma urophthalmus over a range of salinities. The species was very tolerant of hypoxia, using aquatic surface respiration (ASR) and buccal bubble holding when oxygen tensions dropped to <20 mmHg (c. 1??0 mg l-1) and 6 mmHg, respectively. Salinity had...
Temporal latitudinal-gradient dynamics and tropical instability of deep-sea species diversity
Moriaki Yasuhara, G. Hunt, T. M. Cronin, H. Okahashi
2009, Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences of the United States of America (106) 21717-21720
A benthic microfaunal record from the equatorial Atlantic Ocean over the past four glacial-interglacial cycles was investigated to understand temporal dynamics of deep-sea latitudinal species diversity gradients (LSDGs). The results demonstrate unexpected instability and high amplitude fluctuations of species diversity in the tropical deep ocean that are correlated with orbital-scale...
Rapid middle Miocene collapse of the Mesozoic orogenic plateau in north-central Nevada
Joseph P. Colgan, Christopher D. Henry
2009, International Geology Review (51) 920-961
The modern Sierra Nevada and Great Basin were likely the site of a high-elevation orogenic plateau well into Cenozoic time, supported by crust thickened during Mesozoic shortening. Although crustal thickening at this scale can lead to extension, the relationship between Mesozoic shortening and subsequent formation of the Basin and Range...
Comparison of recharge estimates at a small watershed in east-central Pennsylvania, USA
D. W. Risser, W.J. Gburek, G.J. Folmar
2009, Hydrogeology Journal (17) 287-298
The common recommendation that recharge should be estimated from multiple methods is sound, but the inherent differences of the methods make it difficult to assess the accuracy of differing results. In this study, four methods for estimating groundwater recharge and two methods for estimating base flow (as a proxy for...
Isotopic composition of low-latitude paleoprecipitation during the Early Cretaceous
M.B. Suarez, Luis A. Gonzalez, Greg A. Ludvigson, F.J. Vega, J. Alvarado-Ortega
2009, Geological Society of America Bulletin (121) 1584-1595
The response of the hydrologic cycle in global greenhouse conditions is important to our understanding of future climate change and to the calibration of global climate models. Past greenhouse conditions, such as those of the Cretaceous, can be used to provide empirical data with which to evaluate climate models. Recent...
Semivolatile organic compounds in residential air along the Arizona - Mexico border
R.W. Gale, W.L. Cranor, D.A. Alvarez, J.N. Huckins, J. D. Petty, G.L. Robertson
2009, Environmental Science & Technology (43) 3054-3060
Concerns about indoor air quality and the potential effects on people living in these environments are increasing as more reports about the toxicities and the potential indoor air exposure levels of household-use chemicals and chemicals fromhousingandfurnishingmanufactureinairarebeingassessed. Gas chromatography/mass spectrometry was used to confirm numerous airborne contaminants obtained from the analysis...
Systematic approaches to comprehensive analyses of natural organic matter
Jerry A. Leenheer
2009, Annals of Environmental Science (3) 1-130
The more that is learned of the chemistry of aquatic natural organic matter (NOM) the greater is the scientific appreciation of the vast complexity of this subject. This complexity is due not only to a multiplicity of precursor molecules in any environment but to their associations with each other and...
Faecal indicator bacteria enumeration in beach sand: A comparison study of extraction methods in medium to coarse sands
A.B. Boehm, J. Griffith, C. McGee, T.A. Edge, H. M. Solo-Gabriele, R. Whitman, Y. Cao, M. Getrich, J.A. Jay, D. Ferguson, K.D. Goodwin, C.M. Lee, M. Madison, S.B. Weisberg
2009, Journal of Applied Microbiology (107) 1740-1750
Aims: The absence of standardized methods for quantifying faecal indicator bacteria (FIB) in sand hinders comparison of results across studies. The purpose of the study was to compare methods for extraction of faecal bacteria from sands and recommend a standardized extraction technique. Methods and Results: Twenty-two methods of extracting enterococci...
Toxicity of atmospheric aerosols on marine phytoplankton
A. Paytan, K.R.M. Mackey, Y. Chen, I.D. Lima, S.C. Doney, N. Mahowald, R. Labiosa, A.F. Post
2009, Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences of the United States of America (106) 4601-4605
Atmospheric aerosol deposition is an important source of nutrients and trace metals to the open ocean that can enhance ocean productivity and carbon sequestration and thus influence atmospheric carbon dioxide concentrations and climate. Using aerosol samples from different back trajectories in incubation experiments with natural communities, we demonstrate that the...
Influences of high-flow events on a stream channel altered by construction of a highway bridge: A case study
Lara B. Hedrick, Stuart A. Welsh, James T. Anderson
2009, Northeastern Naturalist (16) 375-394
Impacts of highway construction on streams in the central Appalachians are a growing concern as new roads are created to promote tourism and economic development in the area. Alterations to the streambed of a first-order stream, Sauerkraut Run, Hardy County, WV, during construction of a highway overpass included placement and...
Environmental correlates of breeding in the Crested Caracara (Caracara cheriway)
J. L. Morrison, Kyle E. Pias, J.B. Cohen, D.H. Catlin
2009, The Auk (126) 755-764
We evaluated the influence of weather on reproduction of the Crested Caracara (Caracara cheriway) in an agricultural landscape in south-central Florida. We used a mixed logistic-regression modeling approach within an information-theoretic framework to examine the influence of total rainfall, rainfall frequency, and temperature on the number of breeding pairs, timing...
Climate-induced changes in high elevation stream nitrate dynamics
Jill Baron, T.M. Schmidt, M.D. Hartman
2009, Global Change Biology (15) 1777-1789
Mountain terrestrial and aquatic ecosystems are responsive to external drivers of change, especially climate change and atmospheric deposition of nitrogen (N). We explored the consequences of a temperature-warming trend on stream nitrate in an alpine and subalpine watershed in the Colorado Front Range that has long been the recipient of...
Cooperation and competition: nepotistic tolerance and intrasexual aggression in western bluebird winter groups
J.L. Dickinson, M. Euaparadorn, K. Greenwald, C. Mitra, Daizaburo Shizuka
2009, Animal Behaviour (77) 867-872
Two hypothesized benefits of delayed dispersal are access to resources and prolonged brood care (or??parental nepotism). Resource abundance (mistletoe wealth) is a key factor influencing whether sons stay home in western bluebirds, Sialia mexicana, but nepotism is also observed. Western bluebird sons commonly remain in their family groups throughout the...
Estimating accuracy of land-cover composition from two-stage cluster sampling
S.V. Stehman, J.D. Wickham, L. Fattorini, T.D. Wade, F. Baffetta, J.H. Smith
2009, Remote Sensing of Environment (113) 1236-1249
Land-cover maps are often used to compute land-cover composition (i.e., the proportion or percent of area covered by each class), for each unit in a spatial partition of the region mapped. We derive design-based estimators of mean deviation (MD), mean absolute deviation (MAD), root mean square error (RMSE), and correlation...
Soil nitrogen balance under wastewater management: Field measurements and simulation results
M. Sophocleous, M.A. Townsend, F. Vocasek, Liwang Ma, A. KC
2009, Journal of Environmental Quality (38) 1286-1301
The use of treated wastewater for irrigation of crops could result in high nitrate-nitrogen (NO3-N) concentrations in the vadose zone and ground water. The goal of this 2-yr field-monitoring study in the deep silty clay loam soils south of Dodge City, Kansas, was to assess how and under what circumstances...
Hurricane Rita and the destruction of Holly Beach, Louisiana: Why the chenier plain is vulnerable to storms
Asbury H. Sallenger Jr., C. W. Wright, Kara Doran, K. Guy, Karen Morgan
2009, Special Paper of the Geological Society of America (460) 127-135
Hurricane Rita devastated gulf-front communities along the western Louisiana coast in 2005. LIDAR (light detection and ranging) topographic surveys and aerial photography collected before and after the storm showed the loss of every structure within the community of Holly Beach. Average shoreline change along western Louisiana's 140-km-long impacted shore was...
Rates and trends of coastal change in california and the regional behavior of the beach and cliff system
C.J. Hapke, Don Reid, B. Richmond
2009, Journal of Coastal Research (25) 603-615
The U.S. Geological Survey (USGS) recently completed an analysis of shoreline change and cliff retreat along the California coast. This is the first regional, systematic measurement of coastal change conducted for the West Coast. Long-term (-120 y) and short-term (-25 y) shoreline change rates were calculated for more than 750...