Mapping regional distribution of a single tree species: Whitebark pine in the Greater Yellowstone Ecosystem
L. Landenburger, R.L. Lawrence, S. Podruzny, C.C. Schwartz
2008, Sensors (8) 4983-4994
Moderate resolution satellite imagery traditionally has been thought to be inadequate for mapping vegetation at the species level. This has made comprehensive mapping of regional distributions of sensitive species, such as whitebark pine, either impractical or extremely time consuming. We sought to determine whether using a combination of moderate resolution...
Evaluating regional patterns in nitrate sources to watersheds in national parks of the Rocky Mountains using nitrate isotopes
L. Nanus, M.W. Williams, K. Campbell, E.M. Elliott, C. Kendall
2008, Environmental Science & Technology (42) 6487-6493
In the Rocky Mountains, there is uncertainty about the source areas and emission types that contribute to nitrate (NO3) deposition, which can adversely affect sensitive aquatic habitats of high-elevation watersheds. Regional patterns in NO3 deposition sources were evaluated using NO3 isotopes in five National Parks, including 37 lakes and 7...
Two-phase Neogene extension in the northwestern basin and range recorded in a single thermochronology sample
J.P. Colgan, D.L. Shuster, P.W. Reiners
2008, Geology (36) 631-634
We use a combination of apatite 4He/3He, (U-Th)/ He, and fission-track thermochronology to date slip on the Surprise Valley fault in northeastern California by analyzing a single sample from the Warner Range in the footwall of the fault. This sample, a granitic clast from a conglomerate, yielded a fission-track age...
Trace elements in hydrothermal quartz: Relationships to cathodoluminescent textures and insights into vein formation
B.G. Rusk, H.A. Lowers, M.H. Reed
2008, Geology (36) 547-550
High-resolution electron microprobe maps show the distribution of Ti, Al, Ca, K, and Fe among quartz growth zones revealed by scanning electron microscope-cathodoluminescence (SEM-CL) from 12 hydrothermal ore deposits formed between ???100 and e1750 ??C. The maps clearly show the relationships between trace elements and CL intensity in quartz. Among...
Sources and fate of nitrate in the Illinois River Basin, Illinois
S.V. Panno, W.R. Kelly, Keith C. Hackley, H.-H. Hwang, A.T. Martinsek
2008, Journal of Hydrology (359) 174-188
We conducted a two-year investigation into the sources and fate of nitrate (NO3-) in the Illinois River from the Chicago area to the river's confluence with the Mississippi River. Samples from waterways in the Chicago area (Des Plaines River and the Sanitary and Ship Canal) had relatively high concentrations of...
Diversity of soil yeasts isolated from South Victoria Land, Antarctica
L. Connell, R. Redman, S. Craig, G. Scorzetti, M. Iszard, R. Rodriguez
2008, Microbial Ecology (56) 448-459
Unicellular fungi, commonly referred to as yeasts, were found to be components of the culturable soil fungal population in Taylor Valley, Mt. Discovery, Wright Valley, and two mountain peaks of South Victoria Land, Antarctica. Samples were taken from sites spanning a diversity of soil habitats that were not directly associated...
Performance of a prototype surface collector for juvenile salmonids at Bonneville dam's first powerhouse on the Columbia River, Oregon
S.D. Evans, N.S. Adams, D.W. Rondorf, J.M. Plumb, B.D. Ebberts
2008, River Research and Applications (24) 960-974
During April-July 2000, we radio-tagged and released juvenile Chinook salmon (Oncorhynchus tshawytscha) and steelhead (Oncorhynchus mykiss) to evaluate a prototype surface flow bypass at Bonneville Dam on the Columbia River. The mock bypass, called a prototype surface collector (PSC), had six vertical slot entrances that were each 6 m wide...
A double-observer method for reducing bias in faecal pellet surveys of forest ungulates
K.J. Jenkins, B.F.J. Manly
2008, Journal of Applied Ecology (45) 1339-1348
1. Faecal surveys are used widely to study variations in abundance and distribution of forest-dwelling mammals when direct enumeration is not feasible. The utility of faecal indices of abundance is limited, however, by observational bias and variation in faecal disappearance rates that obscure their relationship to population size. We developed...
Disentangling the role of hybridization in the evolution of the endangered Arizona cliffrose (Purshia subintegra; Rosaceae): A molecular and morphological analysis
S.E. Travis, J.E. Baggs, J. Maschinski
2008, Conservation Genetics (9) 1183-1194
Hybridization may threaten the conservation status of rare species through genetic assimilation and may confound the ability to distinguish among taxa. We studied these issues in an endangered shrub, Purshia subintegra (Rosaceae), known from four populations growing on limestone outcrops in central Arizona (USA). Using amplified fragment length polymorphisms (AFLP)...
Calculating wave-generated bottom orbital velocities from surface-wave parameters
P.L. Wiberg, C. R. Sherwood
2008, Computers & Geosciences (34) 1243-1262
Near-bed wave orbital velocities and shear stresses are important parameters in many sediment-transport and hydrodynamic models of the coastal ocean, estuaries, and lakes. Simple methods for estimating bottom orbital velocities from surface-wave statistics such as significant wave height and peak period often are inaccurate except in very shallow water. This...
Atmospheric mercury accumulation and washoff processes on impervious urban surfaces
C.S. Eckley, B. Branfireun, M. Diamond, P. C. Van Metre, F. Heitmuller
2008, Atmospheric Environment (42) 7429-7438
The deposition and transport of mercury (Hg) has been studied extensively in rural environments but is less understood in urbanized catchments, where elevated atmospheric Hg concentrations and impervious surfaces may efficiently deliver Hg to waterways in stormwater runoff. We determined the rate at which atmospheric Hg accumulates on windows, identified...
Assessing streamflow characteristics as limiting factors on benthic invertebrate assemblages in streams across the western United States
C.P. Konrad, A.M.D. Brasher, J. T. May
2008, Freshwater Biology (53) 1983-1998
1. Human use of land and water resources modifies many streamflow characteristics, which can have significant ecological consequences. Streamflow and invertebrate data collected at 111 sites in the western U.S.A. were analysed to identify streamflow characteristics (magnitude, frequency, duration, timing and variation) that are probably to limit characteristics of benthic...
Organochlorine pollutants and stable isotopes in resident and migrant passerine birds from northwest Michoacán, Mexico
Miguel A. Mora
2008, Archives of Environmental Contamination and Toxicology (55) 488-495
Although concentrations of organochlorine compounds (OCs) in birds from most of the United States and Canada have decreased over the last 30 years, there is still concern that migrant birds might be exposed to elevated concentrations of OCs during migration in Latin America. The Lerma-Chapala Basin in west-central Mexico is an...
Variability of geochemical properties in a microbially dominated coalbed gas system from the eastern margin of the Illinois Basin, USA
D. Strapoc, Maria Mastalerz, A. Schimmelmann, A. Drobniak, S. Hedges
2008, International Journal of Coal Geology (76) 98-110
This study outlines gas characteristics along the southeastern margins of the Illinois Basin and evaluates regional versus local gas variations in Seelyville and Springfield coal beds. Our findings suggest that high permeability and shallow (100-250??m) depths of these Indiana coals allowed inoculation with methanogenic microbial consortia, thus leading to widespread...
Biogenic origin of coalbed gas in the northern Gulf of Mexico Coastal Plain, U.S.A
Peter D. Warwick, F. Clayton Breland Jr., Paul C. Hackley
2008, International Journal of Coal Geology (76) 119-137
New coal-gas exploration and production in northern Louisiana and south-central Mississippi, Gulf of Mexico Basin, is focused on the Wilcox Group (Paleocene–Eocene), where the depth to targeted subbituminous C to high volatile C bituminous coal beds ranges from 300 to 1680 m, and individual coal beds have a maximum thickness of...
Geochemical controls of elevated arsenic concentrations in groundwater, Ester Dome, Fairbanks district, Alaska
P. L. Verplanck, S. H. Mueller, R.J. Goldfarb, D. Kirk Nordstrom, E. K. Youcha
2008, Chemical Geology (255) 160-172
Ester Dome, an upland area near Fairbanks, Alaska, was chosen for a detailed hydrogeochemical study because of the previously reported elevated arsenic in groundwater, and the presence of a large set of wells amenable to detailed sampling. Ester Dome lies within the Fairbanks...
Mercury and other element exposure to tree swallows (Tachycineta bicolor) nesting on Lostwood National Wildlife Refuge, North Dakota
T. W. Custer, Christine M. Custer, K. M. Johnson, D. J. Hoffman
2008, Environmental Pollution (155) 217-226
Elevated mercury concentrations in water were reported in the prairie wetlands at Lostwood National Wildlife Refuge, ND. In order to determine whether wildlife associated with these wetlands was exposed to and then accumulated higher mercury concentrations than wildlife living near more permanent wetlands (e.g. lakes), tree swallow (Tachycineta bicolor) eggs...
Galileo observations of volcanic plumes on Io
P.E. Geissler, M.T. McMillan
2008, Icarus (197) 505-518
Io's volcanic plumes erupt in a dazzling variety of sizes, shapes, colors and opacities. In general, the plumes fall into two classes, representing distinct source gas temperatures. Most of the Galileo imaging observations were of the smaller, more numerous Prometheus-type plumes that are produced when hot flows of silicate lava...
Mineralogy and geochemistry of a superhigh-organic-sulfur coal, Yanshan Coalfield, Yunnan, China: Evidence for a volcanic ash component and influence by submarine exhalation
S. Dai, D. Ren, Y. Zhou, C. L. Chou, X. Wang, L. Zhao, Xudong Zhu
2008, Chemical Geology (255) 182-194
The mineralogy and geochemistry of a superhigh-organic-sulfur (SHOS) coal of Late Permian age from the Yanshan Coalfield, Yunnan Province, southwestern China, have been studied using optical microscope, low-temperature ashing plus X-ray diffraction analysis, scanning electron microscope equipped with energy-dispersive X-ray spectrometer, a sequential chemical extraction procedure, and inductively coupled plasma...
Anomalous cold in the Pangaean tropics
G.S. Soreghan, M. J. Soreghan, C.J. Poulsen, R.A. Young, C.F. Eble, D.E. Sweet, O.C. Davogustto
2008, Geology (36) 659-662
The late Paleozoic archives the greatest glaciation of the Phanerozoic. Whereas high-latitude Gondwanan strata preserve widespread evidence for continental ice, the Permo-Carboniferous tropics have long been considered analogous to today's: warm and shielded from the highlatitude cold. Here, we report on glacial and periglacial indicators that record episodes of freezing...
Weathering of the Rio Blanco quartz diorite, Luquillo Mountains, Puerto Rico: Coupling oxidation, dissolution, and fracturing
H.L. Buss, P.B. Sak, S.M. Webb, S.L. Brantley
2008, Geochimica et Cosmochimica Acta (72) 4488-4507
In the mountainous Rio Icacos watershed in northeastern Puerto Rico, quartz diorite bedrock weathers spheroidally, producing a 0.2-2 m thick zone of partially weathered rock layers (???2.5 cm thickness each) called rindlets, which form concentric layers around corestones. Spheroidal fracturing has been modeled to occur when a weathering reaction with...
Egg rejection behavior in a population exposed to parasitism: Village Weavers on Hispaniola
A. Cruz, J.W. Prather, J. W. Wiley, P.F. Weaver
2008, Behavioral Ecology (19) 398-403
In contrast to African Village Weavers (Ploceus cucullatus) that are parasitized by Diederik Cuckoos (Chrysococcyx caprius), introduced weavers on Hispaniola existed without parasitism for at least 2 centuries until the arrival of the Shiny Cowbird (Molothrus bonariensis) in the 1970s. Cruz and Wiley (1989) found that Hispaniolan weavers had a...
Wave climate, sediment supply and the depth of the sand-mud transition: A global survey
D.A. George, P.S. Hill
2008, Marine Geology (254) 121-128
The influences of wave climate and sediment supply on the depths of sand-mud transitions (hSMT) are investigated. Depths of sand-mud transitions (SMT) are based on published granulometric data from surface samples gathered from 14 sites in different wave-dominated coastal environments with fluvial input, including high energy (Columbia, Eel, Russian, San...
Monitoring waterbird abundance in wetlands: The importance of controlling results for variation in water depth
F. Bolduc, A. D. Afton
2008, Ecological Modelling (216) 402-408
Wetland use by waterbirds is highly dependent on water depth, and depth requirements generally vary among species. Furthermore, water depth within wetlands often varies greatly over time due to unpredictable hydrological events, making comparisons of waterbird abundance among wetlands difficult as effects of habitat variables and water depth are confounded....
Importance of agricultural landscapes to nesting burrowing owls in the Northern Great Plains, USA
M. Restani, J.M. Davies, W.E. Newton
2008, Landscape Ecology (23) 977-987
Anthropogenic habitat loss and fragmentation are the principle factors causing declines of grassland birds. Declines in burrowing owl (Athene cunicularia) populations have been extensive and have been linked to habitat loss, primarily the decline of black-tailed prairie dog (Cynomys ludovicianus) colonies. Development of habitat use models is a research priority...