Skip to main content
U.S. flag

An official website of the United States government

Dot gov

Official websites use .gov
A .gov website belongs to an official government organization in the United States.

Https

Secure .gov websites use HTTPS
A lock ( ) or https:// means you’ve safely connected to the .gov website. Share sensitive information only on official, secure websites.

Search Results

184617 results.

Alternate formats: RIS file of the first 3000 search results  |  Download all results as CSV | TSV | Excel  |  RSS feed based on this search  |  JSON version of this page of results

Page 2226, results 55626 - 55650

Show results on a map

Publication Extents

Not all publications have extents, not all extents are completely accurate
Desert bird associations with broad-scale boundary length: Applications in avian conservation
K.J. Gutzwiller, W.C. Barrow Jr.
2008, Journal of Applied Ecology (45) 873-882
1. Current understanding regarding the effects of boundaries on bird communities has originated largely from studies of forest-non-forest boundaries in mesic systems. To assess whether broad-scale boundary length can affect bird community structure in deserts, and to identify patterns and predictors of species' associations useful in avian conservation, we studied...
Space and habitat use by black bears in the Elwha valley prior to dam removal
K.A. Sager-Fradkin, K.J. Jenkins, P.J. Happe, J.J. Beecham, R.G. Wright, R.A. Hoffman
2008, Northwest Science (82) 164-178
Dam removal and subsequent restoration of salmon to the Elwha River is expected to cause a shift in nutrient dynamics within the watershed. To document how this influx of nutrients and energy may affect black bear (Ursus americanus) ecology, we used radio-telemetry to record movements of 11 male and two...
Redox processes and water quality of selected principal aquifer systems
P.B. McMahon, F. H. Chapelle
2008, Ground Water (46) 259-271
Reduction/oxidation (redox) conditions in 15 principal aquifer (PA) systems of the United States, and their impact on several water quality issues, were assessed from a large data base collected by the National Water-Quality Assessment Program of the USGS. The logic of these assessments was based on the observed ecological succession...
Effect of well disinfection on arsenic in ground water
M. Gotkowitz, K. Ellickson, A. Clary, G. Bowman, J. Standridge, W. Sonzogni
2008, Ground Water Monitoring and Remediation (28) 60-67
Domestic water wells are routinely subjected to in situ chemical disinfection treatments to control nuisance or pathogenic bacteria. Most treatments are chlorine based and presumably cause strongly oxidizing conditions in the wellbore. Water resource managers in Wisconsin were concerned that such treatments might facilitate release of arsenic from sulfide minerals...
Mercury concentrations in salmonids from western U.S. National Parks and relationships with age and macrophage aggregates
A.R. Schwindt, J.W. Fournie, D.H. Landers, C.B. Schreck, M.L. Kent
2008, Environmental Science & Technology (42) 1365-1370
Mercury accumulation in aquatic foodwebs and its effects on aquatic biota are of growing concern both for the health of the fish and the piscivores that prey upon them. This is of particular concern for western U.S. National Parks because it is known that mountainous and Arctic areas are sinks...
Occurrence, distribution and transport of pesticides into the Salton Sea Basin, California, 2001-2002
L.A. LeBlanc, K.M. Kuivila
2008, Hydrobiologia (604) 151-172
The Salton Sea is a hypersaline lake located in southeastern California. Concerns over the ecological impacts of sediment quality and potential human exposure to dust emissions from exposed lakebed sediments resulting from anticipated shrinking of shoreline led to a study of pesticide distribution and transport within the Salton Sea Basin,...
Change in the forested and developed landscape of the Lake Tahoe basin, California and Nevada, USA, 1940-2002
C.G. Raumann, Mary E. Cablk
2008, Forest Ecology and Management (255) 3424-3439
The current ecological state of the Lake Tahoe basin has been shaped by significant landscape-altering human activity and management practices since the mid-1850s; first through widespread timber harvesting from the 1850s to 1920s followed by urban development from the 1950s to the present. Consequences of landscape change, both from development...
Challenges of DNA-based mark-recapture studies of American black bears
K.E. Settlage, F.T. Van Manen, J. D. Clark, T.L. King
2008, Journal of Wildlife Management (72) 1035-1042
We explored whether genetic sampling would be feasible to provide a region-wide population estimate for American black bears (Ursus americanus) in the southern Appalachians, USA. Specifically, we determined whether adequate capture probabilities (p >0.20) and population estimates with a low coefficient of variation (CV <20%) could be achieved given typical agency...
Simulating water, solute, and heat transport in the subsurface with the VS2DI software package
R. W. Healy
2008, Vadose Zone Journal (7) 632-639
The software package VS2DI was developed by the U.S. Geological Survey for simulating water, solute, and heat transport in variably saturated porous media. The package consists of a graphical preprocessor to facilitate construction of a simulation, a postprocessor for visualizing simulation results, and two numerical models that solve for flow...
Whole-stream response to nitrate loading in three streams draining agricultural landscapes
J.H. Duff, A. J. Tesoriero, W. B. Richardson, E.A. Strauss, M.D. Munn
2008, Journal of Environmental Quality (37) 1133-1144
Physical, chemical, hydrologic, and biologic factors affecting nitrate (NO3 −) removal were evaluated in three agricultural streams draining orchard/dairy and row crop settings. Using 3-d “snapshots” during biotically active periods, we estimated reach-level NO3 − sources, NO3 − mass balance, in-stream processing (nitrification, denitrification, and NO3 − uptake), and NO3 − retention potential associated with surface water transport and...
Seasonal and distributional patterns of seabirds along the Aleutian Archipelago
M. Renner, G.L. Hunt Jr., John F. Piatt, G.V. Byrd
2008, Marine Ecology Progress Series (357) 301-311
The Aleutian Archipelago is of global importance to seabirds during the northern summer, but little is known about seabird use of these waters during winter. We compare summer and winter abundances of seabirds around 3 islands: Buldir in the western, Kasatochi in the central, and Aiktak in the eastern Aleutians....
Soil magnetic susceptibility reflects soil moisture regimes and the adaptability of tree species to these regimes
J.-S. Wang, D.A. Grimley, C. Xu, J.O. Dawson
2008, Forest Ecology and Management (255) 1664-1673
Flooded, saturated or poorly drained soils are frequently anaerobic, leading to dissolution of the strongly magnetic minerals, magnetite and maghemite, and a corresponding decrease in soil magnetic susceptibility (MS). In this study of five temperate deciduous forests in east-central Illinois, USA, mean surface soil MS was significantly higher adjacent to...
Agricultural management affects evolutionary processes in a migratory songbird
N.G. Perlut, C. R. Freeman-Gallant, A.M. Strong, T.M. Donovan, C.W. Kilpatrick, N.J. Zalik
2008, Molecular Ecology (17) 1248-1255
Hay harvests have detrimental ecological effects on breeding songbirds, as harvesting results in nest failure. Importantly, whether harvesting also affects evolutionary processes is not known. We explored how hay harvest affected social and genetic mating patterns, and thus, the overall opportunity for sexual selection and evolutionary processes for a ground-nesting...
The 8 October 2006 Md 4.5 Cowlitz chimneys earthquake in Mount Rainier National Park
J. Renate Hartog, Joan S. Gomberg, Seth C. Moran, Amy K. Wright, Karen L. Meagher
2008, Seismological Research Letters (79) 186-193
An Md 4.5 earthquake located ∼12 km east of Mount Rainier occurred on 8 October 2006 at 02:48 UTC (figure 1). Although not large enough to be damaging or of major tectonic significance, a summary description of the earthquake is warranted because of its proximity to Mount...
Reverse Evolution of Armor Plates in the Threespine Stickleback
J. Kitano, D.I. Bolnick, D.A. Beauchamp, M.M. Mazur, S. Mori, T. Nakano, C.L. Peichel
2008, Current Biology (18) 769-774
Faced with sudden environmental changes, animals must either adapt to novel environments or go extinct. Thus, study of the mechanisms underlying rapid adaptation is crucial not??only for the understanding of natural evolutionary processes but also for the understanding of human-induced evolutionary change, which is an increasingly important problem [1-8]. In...
Coupled effect of chemotaxis and growth on microbial distributions in organic-amended aquifer sediments: Observations from laboratory and field studies
M. Wang, R.M. Ford, R.W. Harvey
2008, Environmental Science & Technology (42) 3556-3562
The inter-relationship of growth and chemotactic response exhibited by two common soil-inhabiting bacteria was investigated to determine its impact on bacterial migration. Filter-chambers were used to simulate aquifer sediments characterized by vertical gradients of organic contaminants in both artificial groundwater flow systems in the laboratory and within...
Detection rates of the MODIS active fire product in the United States
T. J. Hawbaker, V. C. Radeloff, A.D. Syphard, Z. Zhu, S. I. Stewart
2008, Remote Sensing of Environment (112) 2656-2664
MODIS active fire data offer new information about global fire patterns. However, uncertainties in detection rates can render satellite-derived fire statistics difficult to interpret. We evaluated the MODIS 1??km daily active fire product to quantify detection rates for both Terra and Aqua MODIS sensors, examined how cloud cover and fire...
A Visual Basic program to plot sediment grain-size data on ternary diagrams
L.J. Poppe, A.H. Eliason
2008, Computers & Geosciences (34) 561-565
Sedimentologic datasets are typically large and compiled into tables or databases, but pure numerical information can be difficult to understand and interpret. Thus, scientists commonly use graphical representations to reduce complexities, recognize trends and patterns in the data, and develop hypotheses. Of the graphical techniques, one of the most...
Probable flood predictions in ungauged coastal basins of El Salvador
M.J. Friedel, M.E. Smith, A.M.E. Chica, D. Litke
2008, Conference Paper, Journal of Hydrologic Engineering
A regionalization procedure is presented and used to predict probable flooding in four ungauged coastal river basins of El Salvador: Paz, Jiboa, Grande de San Miguel, and Goascoran. The flood-prediction problem is sequentially solved for two regions: upstream mountains and downstream alluvial plains. In the upstream mountains, a set of...
Simulation of fluid, heat transport to estimate desert stream infiltration
J.T. Kulongoski, J. A. Izbicki
2008, Ground Water (46) 462-474
In semiarid regions, the contribution of infiltration from intermittent streamflow to ground water recharge may be quantified by comparing simulations of fluid and heat transport beneath stream channels to observed ground temperatures. In addition to quantifying natural recharge, streamflow infiltration estimates provide a means to characterize the physical properties of...
Coastal typology: An integrative "neutral" technique for coastal zone characterization and analysis
R. W. Buddemeier, S. V. Smith, D.P. Swaney, C.J. Crossland, B.A. Maxwell
2008, Estuarine, Coastal and Shelf Science (77) 197-205
Typology, the 'study or systematic classification of types that have characteristics or traits in common', has become a commonly used term and technique in coastal zone studies over the past two decades. At least part of this is due to adoption by the first Land-Ocean Interactions in the Coastal Zone...
Interactive visualization to advance earthquake simulation
L.H. Kellogg, G.W. Bawden, T. Bernardin, M. Billen, E. Cowgill, B. Hamann, M. Jadamec, O. Kreylos, O. Staadt, D. Sumner
2008, Pure and Applied Geophysics (165) 621-633
The geological sciences are challenged to manage and interpret increasing volumes of data as observations and simulations increase in size and complexity. For example, simulations of earthquake-related processes typically generate complex, time-varying data sets in two or more dimensions. To facilitate interpretation and analysis of these data sets, evaluate the...
Great-earthquake paleogeodesy and tsunamis of the past 2000 years at Alsea Bay, central Oregon coast, USA
A.R. Nelson, Y. Sawai, A. E. Jennings, L. A. Bradley, L. Gerson, B.L. Sherrod, J. Sabean, B. P. Horton
2008, Quaternary Science Reviews (27) 747-768
The width of plate-boundary fault rupture at the Cascadia subduction zone, a dimension related to earthquake magnitude, remains uncertain because of the lack of quantitative information about land-level movements during past great-earthquake deformation cycles. Beneath a marsh at Alsea Bay, on the central Oregon coast, four sheets of tsunami-deposited sand...
Predictions for an invaded world: A strategy to predict the distribution of native and non-indigenous species at multiple scales
D.A. Reusser, H. Lee II
2008, Conference Paper, ICES Journal of Marine Science
Habitat models can be used to predict the distributions of marine and estuarine non-indigenous species (NIS) over several spatial scales. At an estuary scale, our goal is to predict the estuaries most likely to be invaded, but at a habitat scale, the goal is to predict the specific locations within...
Paired charcoal and tree-ring records of high-frequency Holocene fire from two New Mexico bog sites
Craig D. Allen, R. Scott Anderson, R.B. Jass, J.L. Toney, C.H. Baisan
2008, International Journal of Wildland Fire (17) 115-130
Two primary methods for reconstructing paleofire occurrence include dendrochronological dating of fire scars and stand ages from live or dead trees (extending back centuries into the past) and sedimentary records of charcoal particles from lakes and bogs, providing perspectives on fire history that can extend back for many thousands of...