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10465 results.

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Page 227, results 5651 - 5675

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Not all publications have extents, not all extents are completely accurate
Factors influencing nesting success of king eiders on northern Alaska's Coastal Plain
R.L. Bentzen, A.N. Powell, R.S. Suydam
2008, Journal of Wildlife Management (72) 1781-1789
King eider (Somateria spectabilis) populations have declined markedly in recent decades for unknown reasons. Nest survival is one component of recruitment, and a female's chance of reproductive success increases with her ability to choose an appropriate nesting strategy. We estimated variation in daily nest survival of king eiders at 2...
SAGE celebrates 25 years of learning geophysics by doing geophysics
G.R. Jiracek, W.S. Baldridge, A.J. Sussman, S. Biehler, L.W. Braile, J.F. Ferguson, B.E. Gilpin, D.K. McPhee, L. Pellerin
2008, Leading Edge (Tulsa, OK) (27) 1340-1344
The increasing world demand and record-high costs for energy and mineral resources, along with the attendant environmental and climate concerns, have escalated the need for trained geophysicists to unprecedented levels. This is not only a national need; it's a critical global need. As Earth scientists and educators we must seriously...
Historical changes in the Mississippi-Alabama barrier-island chain and the roles of extreme storms, sea level, and human activities
Robert A Morton
2008, Journal of Coastal Research (246) 1587-1600
Barrier-island chains worldwide are undergoing substantial changes, and their futures remain uncertain. An historical analysis of a barrier-island chain in the north-central Gulf of Mexico shows that the Mississippi barriers are undergoing rapid systematic land loss and translocation associated with: (1) unequal lateral transfer of sand related to greater updrift...
Restoring habitat permeability to roaded landscapes with isometrically-scaled wildlife crossings
J.A. Bissonette, W. Adair
2008, Biological Conservation (141) 482-488
Globally, human activities impact from one-third to one-half of the earth's land surface; a major component of development involves the construction of roads. In the US and Europe, road networks fragment normal animal movement patterns, reduce landscape permeability, and increase wildlife-vehicle collisions, often with serious wildlife population and human health...
Grizzly bear density in Glacier National Park, Montana
K.C. Kendall, J.B. Stetz, David A. Roon, L.P. Waits, J.B. Boulanger, David Paetkau
2008, Journal of Wildlife Management (72) 1693-1705
We present the first rigorous estimate of grizzly bear (Ursus arctos) population density and distribution in and around Glacier National Park (GNP), Montana, USA. We used genetic analysis to identify individual bears from hair samples collected via 2 concurrent sampling methods: 1) systematically distributed, baited, barbed-wire hair traps and 2)...
The role of local soil-induced amplification in the 27 July 1980 northeastern Kentucky earthquake
E.W. Woolery, T.-L. Lin, Z. Wang, B. Shi
2008, Environmental & Engineering Geoscience (14) 267-280
Amplification of earthquake ground motions by near-surface soil deposits was believed to have occurred in Maysville, Kentucky, U.S.A. during the northeast Kentucky (Sharpsburg) earthquake (mb,Lg 5.3) of July 27, 1980. The city of Maysville, founded on approximately 30 m of Late Quaternary Ohio River flood plain alluvium, was 52 km...
Impact of West Nile virus and other mortality factors on American white pelicans at breeding colonies in the northern plains of North America
M.A. Sovada, P.J. Pietz, K. A. Converse, D. Tommy, Erik K. Hofmeister, P. Scherr, Hon S. Ip
2008, Biological Conservation (141) 1021-1031
American white pelicans (Pelecanus erythrorhynchos) are colonial-nesting birds and their breeding sites are concentrated in a few small areas, making this species especially vulnerable to factors that can influence productivity, such as disease, disturbance, predation, weather events and loss of nesting habitat. Nearly half of the American white pelican population...
Using amplified fragment length polymorphism analysis to differentiate isolates of Pasteurella multocida serotype 1
David S. Blehert, K. L. Jefferson, Dennis M. Heisey, M. D. Samuel, Brenda M. Berlowski-Zier, Daniel J. Shadduck
2008, Journal of Wildlife Diseases (44) 209-225
Avian cholera, an infectious disease caused by the bacterium Pasteurella multocida, kills thousands of North American wild waterfowl annually. Pasteurella multocida serotype 1 isolates cultured during a laboratory challenge study of Mallards (Anas platyrhynchos) and collected from wild birds and environmental samples during avian cholera outbreaks were characterized using amplified fragment length polymorphism...
Dissolved metals and associated constituents in abandoned coal-mine discharges, Pennsylvania, USA. Part 1: Constituent quantities and correlations
C.A. Cravotta III
2008, Applied Geochemistry (23) 166-202
Complete hydrochemical data are rarely reported for coal-mine discharges (CMD). This report summarizes major and trace-element concentrations and loadings for CMD at 140 abandoned mines in the Anthracite and Bituminous Coalfields of Pennsylvania. Clean-sampling and low-level analytical methods were used in 1999 to collect data that could be useful to...
Validation of daily ring deposition in the otoliths of age-0 channel catfish
P.C. Sakaris, E.R. Irwin
2008, North American Journal of Fisheries Management (28) 212-218
We developed and validated methods for estimating the daily age of age-0 channel catfish Ictalurus punctatus. Two clutches of channel catfish eggs were hatched in the laboratory; subsequently, one was stocked in a 186-m2 earthen nursery pond and the other in a 757-L outdoor circular tank. Before stocking, subsamples of...
Factors affecting bottom trawl catches: Implications for monitoring the fishes of Lake Superior
D.L. Yule, J.V. Adams, J.D. Stockwell, O. T. Gorman
2008, North American Journal of Fisheries Management (28) 109-122
An annual daytime bottom trawl survey of the Lake Superior fish community designed in 1978 does not adequately assess the entire community. Whereas recent studies have recommended that pelagic species be surveyed with a combination of acoustic and midwater trawling methods (AC-MT), we used bottom trawling to study the effects...
Utilizing spectral analysis of coastal discharge computed by a numerical model to determine boundary influence
E.D. Swain, C.D. Langevin, J.D. Wang
2008, Journal of Coastal Research (24) 1418-1429
In the present study, a spectral analysis was applied to field data and a numerical model of southeastern Everglades and northeastern Florida Bay that involved computing and comparing the power spectrum of simulated and measured flows at the primary coastal outflow creek. Four dominant power frequencies, corresponding to the S1,...
Kaguyak dome field and its Holocene caldera, Alaska Peninsula
J. Fierstein, W. Hildreth
2008, Journal of Volcanology and Geothermal Research (177) 340-366
Kaguyak Caldera lies in a remote corner of Katmai National Park, 375 km SW of Anchorage, Alaska. The 2.5-by-3-km caldera collapsed ~ 5.8 ± 0.2 ka (14C age) during emplacement of a radial apron of poorly pumiceous crystal-rich dacitic pyroclastic flows (61–67% SiO2). Proximal pumice-fall deposits are thin...
Environmental geochemistry of a Kuroko-type massive sulfide deposit at the abandoned Valzinco mine, Virginia, USA
R.R. Seal II, J. M. Hammarstrom, A.N. Johnson, N.M. Piatak, G.A. Wandless
2008, Applied Geochemistry (23) 320-342
The abandoned Valzinco mine, which worked a steeply dipping Kuroko-type massive sulfide deposit in the Virginia Au-pyrite belt, contributed significant metal-laden acid-mine drainage to the Knight's Branch watershed. The host rocks were dominated by metamorphosed felsic volcanic rocks, which offered limited acid-neutralizing potential. The ores were dominated by pyrite, sphalerite,...
Three-dimensional flow in the storative semiconfining layers of a leaky aquifer
N. Sepulveda
2008, Ground Water (46) 144-155
An analytical solution for three-dimensional (3D) flow in the storative semiconfining layers of a leaky aquifer fully penetrated by a production well is developed in this article to provide a method from which accurate hydraulic parameters in the semiconfining layers can be derived from aquifer test data. The analysis of...
Relationships between microbial communities and environmental parameters at sites impacted by mining of volcanogenic massive sulfide deposits, Prince William Sound, Alaska
A. L. Foster, L. Munk, R.A. Koski, Wayne C. Shanks III, L.L. Stillings
2008, Applied Geochemistry (23) 279-307
The relations among geochemical parameters and sediment microbial communities were examined at three shoreline sites in the Prince William Sound, Alaska, which display varying degrees of impact by acid-rock drainage (ARD) associated with historic mining of volcanogenic massive sulfide deposits. Microbial communities were examined using total fatty acid methyl esters...
Holocene vegetation and fire regimes in subalpine and mixed conifer forests, southern Rocky Mountains, USA
R. Scott Anderson, Craig D. Allen, J.L. Toney, R.B. Jass, A.N. Bair
2008, International Journal of Wildland Fire (17) 96-114
Our understanding of the present forest structure of western North America hinges on our ability to determine antecedent forest conditions. Sedimentary records from lakes and bogs in the southern Rocky Mountains of Colorado and New Mexico provide information on the relationships between climate and vegetation change, and fire history since...
Ways of learning: Observational studies versus experiments
T.L. Shaffer, Douglas H. Johnson
2008, Journal of Wildlife Management (72) 4-13
Manipulative experimentation that features random assignment of treatments, replication, and controls is an effective way to determine causal relationships. Wildlife ecologists, however, often must take a more passive approach to investigating causality. Their observational studies lack one or more of the 3 cornerstones of experimentation: controls, randomization, and replication. Although...
The Ellsworth terrane, coastal Maine: Geochronology, geochemistry, and Nd-Pb isotopic composition - Implications for the rifting of Ganderia
K. J. Schulz, D. B. Stewart, R. D. Tucker, J.C. Pollock, R. A. Ayuso
2008, Geological Society of America Bulletin (120) 1134-1158
The Ellsworth terrane is one of a number of fault-bounded blocks that occur along the eastern margin of Ganderia, the western-most of the peri-Gondwanan domains in the northern Appalachians that were accreted to Laurentia in the Paleozoic. Geologic relations, detrital zircon ages, and basalt geochemistry suggest that the Ellsworth terrane...
Relative importance of natural disturbances and habitat degradation on snail kite population dynamics
J. Martin, W.M. Kitchens, Christopher E. Cattau, M.K. Oli
2008, Endangered Species Research (6) 25-39
Natural disturbances and habitat degradation are major factors influencing the dynamics and persistence of many wildlife populations, yet few large-scale studies have explored the relative influence of these factors on the dynamics and persistence of animal populations. We used longterm demographic data and matrix population models to examine the potential...
Dynamic stresses, Coulomb failure, and remote triggering
David P. Hill
2008, Bulletin of the Seismological Society of America (98) 66-92
Dynamic stresses associated with crustal surface waves with 15-30-sec periods and peak amplitudes < 1 MPa are capable of triggering seismicity at sites remote from the generating mainshock under appropriate conditions. Coulomb failure models based on a frictional strength threshold offer one explanation for instances of rapid-onset triggered seismicity that...
Pathogen and chemical transport in the karst limestone of the Biscayne aquifer: 1. Revised conceptualization of groundwater flow
Robert A. Renken, Kevin J. Cunningham, Allen M. Shapiro, Ronald W. Harvey, Michael R. Zygnerski, David W. Metge, Michael A. Wacker
2008, Water Resources Research (44)
The Biscayne aquifer is a highly transmissive karst limestone that serves as the sole source of drinking water to over two million residents in south Florida. The aquifer is characterized by eogenetic karst, where the most transmissive void space can be an interconnected, touching‐vug, biogenically influenced porosity of biogenic origin....
Temporal evolution of continental lithospheric strength in actively deforming regions
W. Thatcher, F. F. Pollitz
2008, GSA Today (18) 4-11
It has been agreed for nearly a century that a strong, load-bearing outer layer of earth is required to support mountain ranges, transmit stresses to deform active regions and store elastic strain to generate earthquakes. However the dept and extent of this strong layer remain controversial. Here we use a...
Structural equation modeling for observational studies
J.B. Grace
2008, Journal of Wildlife Management (72) 14-22
Structural equation modeling (SEM) represents a framework for developing and evaluating complex hypotheses about systems. This method of data analysis differs from conventional univariate and multivariate approaches familiar to most biologists in several ways. First, SEMs are multiequational and capable of representing a wide array of complex hypotheses about how...
Relation between species assemblages of fishes and water quality in salt ponds and sloughs in South San Francisco Bay
F. Mejia, M. K. Saiki, John Y. Takekawa
2008, Southwestern Naturalist (53) 335-345
This study was conducted to characterize fishery resources inhabiting salt-evaporation ponds and sloughs in South San Francisco Bay, and to identify key environmental variables that influence distribution of fishes. The ponds, which were originally constructed and operated for commercial production of salt, have undergone preliminary modifications (installation of culverts, gates,...