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Page 2223, results 55551 - 55575

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Integrating remotely acquired and field data to assess effects of setback levees on riparian and aquatic habitat in glacial-melt water rivers
C.P. Konrad, R. W. Black, F. Voss, C. M. U. Neale
2008, River Research and Applications (24) 355-372
Setback levees, in which levees are reconstructed at a greater distance from a river channel, are a promising restoration technique particularly for alluvial rivers with broad floodplains where river-floodplain connectivity is essential to ecological processes. Documenting the ecological outcomes of restoration activities is essential for assessing the comparative benefits of...
Multidecadal climate-induced variability in microseisms
R.C. Aster, D.E. McNamara, P.D. Bromirski
2008, Seismological Research Letters (79) 194-202
Microseisms are the most ubiquitous continuous seismic signals on Earth at periods between approximately 5 and 25 s (Peterson 1993; Kedar and Webb 2005). They arise from atmospheric energy converted to (primarily) Rayleigh waves via the intermediary of wind-driven oceanic swell and occupy a period band that is uninfluenced by...
Environmental occurrence of the enterococcal surface protein (esp) gene is an unreliable indicator of human fecal contamination
M.N. Byappanahalli, K. Przybyla-Kelly, D.A. Shively, R.L. Whitman
2008, Environmental Science & Technology (42) 8014-8020
The enterococcal surface protein (esp) gene found in Enterococcus faecalis and E. faecium has recently been explored as a marker of sewage pollution in recreational waters but its occurrence and distribution in environmental enterococci has not been well-documented. If the esp gene is found in environmental samples, there are potential...
Atmospherically deposited PBDEs, pesticides, PCBs, and PAHs in western U.S. National Park fish: Concentrations and consumption guidelines
L.K. Ackerman, A.R. Schwindt, S.L.M. Simonich, D.C. Koch, T.F. Blett, C.B. Schreck, M.L. Kent, D.H. Landers
2008, Environmental Science & Technology (42) 2334-2341
Concentrations of polybrominated diphenyl ethers (PBDEs), pesticides, polychlorinated biphenyls (PCBs), and polycyclic aromatic hydrocarbons were measured in 136 fish from 14 remote lakes in 8 western U.S. National Parks/Preserves between 2003 and 2005 and compared to human and wildlife contaminant health thresholds. A sensitive (median detection limit, -18 pg/g wet...
Stress tolerance in plants via habitat-adapted symbiosis
R. J. Rodriguez, J. Henson, E. Van Volkenburgh, M. Hoy, L. Wright, F. Beckwith, Y.-O. Kim, R. S. Redman
2008, ISME Journal (2) 404-416
We demonstrate that native grass species from coastal and geothermal habitats require symbiotic fungal endophytes for salt and heat tolerance, respectively. Symbiotically conferred stress tolerance is a habitat-specific phenomenon with geothermal endophytes conferring heat but not salt tolerance, and coastal endophytes conferring salt but not heat tolerance. The same fungal...
Evolution of the Mazatzal province and the timing of the Mazatzal orogeny: Insights from U-Pb geochronology and geochemistry of igneous and metasedimentary rocks in southern New Mexico
J.M. Amato, A.O. Boullion, A.M. Serna, A.E. Sanders, G. L. Farmer, G. E. Gehrels, J. L. Wooden
2008, Geological Society of America Bulletin (120) 328-346
New U-Pb zircon ages, geochemistry, and Nd isotopic data are presented from three localities in the Paleoproterozoic Mazatzal province of southern New Mexico, United States. These data help in understanding the source regions and tectonic setting of magmatism from 1680 to 1620 Ma, the timing of the Mazatzal orogeny, the...
Nitrogen fluxes through unsaturated zones in five agricultural settings across the United States
C.T. Green, L.H. Fisher, B.A. Bekins
2008, Journal of Environmental Quality (37) 1073-1085
The main physical and chemical controls on nitrogen (N) fluxes between the root zone and the water table were determined for agricultural sites in California, Indiana, Maryland, Nebraska, and Washington from 2004 to 2005. Sites included irrigated and nonirrigated fields; soil textures ranging from clay to sand; crops including corn,...
Identifying habitat sinks: A case study of Cooper's hawks in an urban environment
R.W. Mannan, R.J. Steidl, C. W. Boal
2008, Urban Ecosystems (11) 141-148
We studied a population of Cooper's hawks (Accipiter cooperii) in Tucson, Arizona from 1994 to 2005. High rates of mortality of nestlings from an urban-related disease prompted speculation that the area represented an ecological trap and habitat sink for Cooper's hawks. In this paper, we used estimates of survival and...
Spectroscopy, morphometry, and photoclinometry of Titan's dunefields from Cassini/VIMS
J. W. Barnes, R. H. Brown, L. Soderblom, Christophe Sotin, S. Le Mouelic, S. Rodriguez, R. Jaumann, R.A. Beyer, B. J. Buratti, K. Pitman, K. H. Baines, R. Clark, P. Nicholson
2008, Icarus (195) 400-414
Fine-resolution (500 m/pixel) Cassini Visual and Infrared Mapping Spectrometer (VIMS) T20 observations of Titan resolve that moon's sand dunes. The spectral variability in some dune regions shows that there are sand-free interdune areas, wherein VIMS spectra reveal the exposed dune substrate. The interdunes from T20 are, variously, materials that correspond...
National, holistic, watershed-scale approach to understand the sources, transport, and fate of agricultural chemicals
P. D. Capel, K. A. McCarthy, J.E. Barbash
2008, Journal of Environmental Quality (37) 983-993
This paper is an introduction to the following series of papers that report on in-depth investigations that have been conducted at five agricultural study areas across the United States in order to gain insights into how environmental processes and agricultural practices interact to determine the transport and fate of agricultural...
Estimation of successful breeding pairs for wolves in the Northern Rocky Mountains, USA
M.S. Mitchell, D.E. Ausband, C.A. Sime, E.E. Bangs, J.A. Gude, M.D. Jimenez, C.M. Mack, T.J. Meier, M.S. Nadeau, D.W. Smith
2008, Journal of Wildlife Management (72) 881-891
Under the Endangered Species Act, documenting recovery and federally mandated population levels of wolves (Canis lupus) in the Northern Rocky Mountains (NRM) requires monitoring wolf packs that successfully recruit young. United States Fish and Wildlife Service regulations define successful breeding pairs as packs estimated to contain an adult male and...
New porcellioidean gastropods from early Devonian of Royal Creek area, Yukon Territory, Canada, with notes on their early phylogeny
J. Fryda, R. B. Blodgett, A.C. Lenz, S. Manda
2008, Journal of Paleontology (82) 595-603
This paper presents a description of new gastropods belonging to the superfamily Porcellioidea (Vetigastropoda) from the richly diverse Lower Devonian gastropod fauna of the Road River Formation in the Royal Creek area, Yukon Territory. This fauna belongs to Western Canada Province of the Old World Realm. The Pragian species Porcellia...
The distribution of modified mercalli intensity in the 18 April 1906 San Francisco earthquake
J. Boatwright, H. Bundock
2008, Conference Paper, Bulletin of the Seismological Society of America
We analyze Boatwright and Bundock's (2005) modified Mercalli intensity (MMI) map for the 18 April 1906 San Francisco earthquake, reviewing their interpretation of the MMI scale and testing their correlation of 1906 cemetery damage with MMI intensity. We consider in detail four areas of the intensity map where Boatwright and...
More than 400 million years of evolution and some plants still can't make it on their own: Plant stress tolerance via fungal symbiosis
R. Rodriguez, R. Redman
2008, Conference Paper, Journal of Experimental Botany
All plants in natural ecosystems are thought to be symbiotic with mycorrhizal and/or endophytic fungi. Collectively, these fungi express different symbiotic lifestyles ranging from parasitism to mutualism. Analysis of Colletotrichum species indicates that individual isolates can express either parasitic or mutualistic lifestyles depending on the host genotype colonized. The endophyte...
Comparative phylogeography and population genetics within Buteo lineatus reveals evidence of distinct evolutionary lineages
J.M. Hull, Bradley N. Strobel, C. W. Boal, A.C. Hull, Cheryl R. Dykstra, A.M. Irish, A.M. Fish, H. B. Ernest
2008, Molecular Phylogenetics and Evolution (49) 988-996
Traditional subspecies classifications may suggest phylogenetic relationships that are discordant with evolutionary history and mislead evolutionary inference. To more accurately describe evolutionary relationships and inform conservation efforts, we investigated the genetic relationships and demographic histories of Buteo lineatus subspecies in eastern and western North America using 21 nuclear microsatellite loci...
Use of volatile organic components in scat to identify canid species
E. Burnham, Louis C. Bender, G.A. Eiceman, K.M. Pierce, S. Prasad
2008, Journal of Wildlife Management (72) 792-797
Identification of wildlife species from indirect evidence can be an important part of wildlife management, and conventional +methods can be expensive or have high error rates. We used chemical characterization of the volatile organic constituents (VOCs) in scat as a method to identify 5 species of North American canids from...
Population structure and genetic diversity of black redhorse (Moxostoma duquesnei) in a highly fragmented watershed
S.M. Reid, C.C. Wilson, N.E. Mandrak, L.M. Carl
2008, Conservation Genetics (9) 531-546
Dams have the potential to affect population size and connectivity, reduce genetic diversity, and increase genetic differences among isolated riverine fish populations. Previous research has reported adverse effects on the distribution and demographics of black redhorse (Moxostoma duquesnei), a threatened fish species in Canada. However, effects on genetic diversity and...
Dislocation models of interseismic deformation in the western United States
F. F. Pollitz, P. McCrory, J. Svarc, J. Murray
2008, Journal of Geophysical Research B: Solid Earth (113)
The GPS-derived crustal velocity field of the western United States is used to construct dislocation models in a viscoelastic medium of interseismic crustal deformation. The interseismic velocity field is constrained by 1052 GPS velocity vectors spanning the ???2500-km-long plate boundary zone adjacent to the San Andreas fault and Cascadia subduction...
Late Pleistocene Hansel Valley basaltic ash, northern Lake Bonneville, Utah, USA
D. M. Miller, Charles G. Oviatt, B.P. Nash
2008, Quaternary International (178) 238-245
The Hansel Valley ash bed lies within 5 cm of the base of deposits of Lake Bonneville (???28 ka) in the vicinity of Great Salt Lake and provides a useful stratigraphic marker for this area of the lake basin. However, it has not been matched to an eruptive edifice, presumably...
Assigning king eiders to wintering regions in the Bering Sea using stable isotopes of feathers and claws
S. Oppel, A.N. Powell
2008, Marine Ecology Progress Series (373) 149-156
Identification of wintering regions for birds sampled during the breeding season is crucial to understanding how events outside the breeding season may affect populations. We assigned king eiders captured on breeding grounds in northern Alaska to 3 broad geographic wintering regions in the Bering Sea using stable carbon and nitrogen...
Stratigraphic and compositional complexities of the late Quaternary Lethe tephra in South-central Alaska
J.R. Riehle, T. A. Ager, R.D. Reger, D.S. Pinney, D. S. Kaufman
2008, Quaternary International (178) 210-228
Recently discovered Lethe tephra has been proposed as a latest Pleistocene marker bed in Bristol Bay lowland NE to the Cook Inlet region, Alaska, on the basis of correlations involving a single "Lethe average" glass composition. Type deposits in the Valley of Ten Thousand Smokes, however, are chemically heterogeneous-individual lapilli...
Cathodoluminescence, laser ablasion inductively coupled plasma mass spectrometry, electron probe microanalysis and electron paramagnetic resonance analyses of natural sphalerite
M. Karakus, R.D. Hagni, A. Koenig, E. Ciftc
2008, Conference Paper, Australasian Institute of Mining and Metallurgy Publication Series
Natural sphalerite associated with copper, silver, lead-zinc, tin and tungsten deposits from various world-famous mineral deposits have been studied by cathodoluminescence (CL), laser ablasion inductively coupled plasma mass spectrometry (LA-ICP-MS), electron probe microanalysis (EPMA) and electron paramagnetic resonance (EPR) to determine the relationship between trace element type and content and...
Fish passage in a western Iowa stream modified by grade control structures
M.E. Litvan, C.L. Pierce, T.W. Stewart, C.J. Larson
2008, North American Journal of Fisheries Management (28) 1384-1397
Grade control structures (GCSs) are commonly used in streams of western Iowa to control bank erosion and channel headcutting but may be barriers to fish passage. From May 2002 to May 2006, we used mark-recapture methods to evaluate fish passage over a total of five GCSs, ranging in slope (run...
Natural history and breeding biology of the Rusty-breasted Antpitta (Grallaricula ferrugineipectus)
Alina M. Niklison, J.I. Areta, R.A. Ruggera, Karie L. Decker, C. Bosque, T. E. Martin
2008, Wilson Journal of Ornithology (120) 345-352
We provide substantial new information on the breeding biology of the Rusty-breasted Antpitta (Grallaricula ferrugineipectus ferrugineipectus) from 40 nests during four consecutive breeding seasons at Yacambu National Park in Venezuela. Vocalizations are quite variable in G. ferrugineipectus. Nesting activity peaked in April when laying began for half of all nests...