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Publication Extents

Not all publications have extents, not all extents are completely accurate
Seabirds as indicators of marine ecosystems: Introduction: A modern role for seabirds as indicators
John F. Piatt, William J. Sydeman, Francis Wiese
2007, Marine Ecology Progress Series (352) 199-204
A key requirement for implementing ecosystem-based management is to obtain timely information on significant fluctuations in the ecosystem (Botsford et al. 1997). However, obtaining all necessary information about physical and biological changes at appropriate temporal and spatial scales is a daunting task. Intuitively, one might assume that physical data are more...
Luminescence ages for alluvial-fan deposits in Southern Death Valley: Implications for climate-driven sedimentation along a tectonically active mountain front
M.F. Sohn, S. A. Mahan, J.R. Knott, D.D. Bowman
2007, Quaternary International (166) 49-60
Controversy exists over whether alluvial-fan sedimentation along tectonically active mountain fronts is driven by climatic changes or tectonics. Knowing the age of sedimentation is the key to understanding the relationship between sedimentation and its cause. Alluvial-fan deposits in Death Valley and throughout the arid southwestern United States have long been...
Structure of the California Coast Ranges and San Andreas Fault at SAFOD from seismic waveform inversion and reflection imaging
F. Bleibinhaus, J.A. Hole, T. Ryberg, G. S. Fuis
2007, Journal of Geophysical Research B: Solid Earth (112)
[1] A seismic reflection and refraction survey across the San Andreas Fault (SAF) near Parkfield provides a detailed characterization of crustal structure across the location of the San Andreas Fault Observatory at Depth (SAFOD). Steep-dip prestack migration and frequency domain acoustic waveform tomography were applied to...
Suspended sediment transport in an ephemeral stream following wildfire
D.V. Malmon, Steven L. Reneau, D. Katzman, A. Lavine, J. Lyman
2007, Journal of Geophysical Research F: Earth Surface (112)
We examine the impacts of a stand-clearing wildfire on the characteristics and magnitude of suspended sediment transport in ephemeral streams draining the burn area. We report the results of a monitoring program that includes 2 years of data prior to the Cerro Grande fire in...
Environmental and ecological conditions surrounding the production of large year classes of walleye (Sander vitreus) in Saginaw Bay, Lake Huron
D.G. Fielder, J.S. Schaeffer, M.V. Thomas
2007, Journal of Great Lakes Research (33) 118-132
The Saginaw Bay walleye population (Sander vitreus) has not fully recovered from a collapse that began in the 1940s and has been dependent on stocking with only limited natural reproduction. Beginning in 2003, and through at least 2005, reproductive success of walleye surged to unprecedented levels. The increase was concurrent...
Eogenetic karst hydrology: Insights from the 2004 hurricanes, peninsular Florida
L.J. Florea, H. Leonard Vacher
2007, Ground Water (45) 439-446
Eogenetic karst lies geographically and temporally close to the depositional environment of limestone in warm marine water at low latitude, in areas marked by midafternoon thunderstorms during a summer rainy season. Spring hydrographs from such an environment in north-central Florida are characterized by smooth, months-long, seasonal maxima. The passage of...
Rapid plant diversity assessment using a pixel nested plot design: A case study in Beaver Meadows, Rocky Mountain National Park, Colorado, USA
M. A. Kalkhan, E.J. Stafford, T.J. Stohlgren
2007, Diversity and Distributions (13) 379-388
Geospatial statistical modelling and thematic maps have recently emerged as effective tools for the management of natural areas at the landscape scale. Traditional methods for the collection of field data pertaining to questions of landscape were developed without consideration for the parameters of these applications. We introduce an alternative field...
Species richness and soil properties in Pinus ponderosa forests: A structural equation modeling analysis
D.C. Laughlin, S.R. Abella, W.W. Covington, J.B. Grace
2007, Journal of Vegetation Science (18) 231-242
Question: How are the effects of mineral soil properties on understory plant species richness propagated through a network of processes involving the forest overstory, soil organic matter, soil nitrogen, and understory plant abundance? Location: North-central Arizona, USA. Methods: We sampled 75 0.05-ha plots across a broad soil gradient in a...
Population-specific demographic estimates provide insights into declines of Lark Buntings (Calamospiza melanocorys)
A. A. Yackel Adams, S. K. Skagen, J. A. Savidge
2007, The Auk (124) 578-593
Many North American prairie bird populations have recently declined, and the causes of these declines remain largely unknown. To determine whether population limitation occurs during breeding, we evaluated the stability of a population of prairie birds using population-specific values for fecundity and postfledging survival. During 2001-2003, we radiomarked 67 female...
Lead (Pb) in old Antarctic ice: Some from dust, some from other sources
T. Hinkley
2007, Geophysical Research Letters (34)
Recently published data on amounts and isotopic compositions of lead (Pb) and on amounts of mineral dust in pre-industrial Antarctic ice can be further interpreted by means of simple calculations. These show that two distinct types of Pb were provided by the atmosphere to the continent in varying proportions during...
On the formation and structure of rare-earth element complexes in aqueous solutions under hydrothermal conditions with new data on gadolinium aqua and chloro complexes
Robert A. Mayanovic, Alan J. Anderson, William A. Bassett, I.-M. Chou
2007, Chemical Geology (239) 266-283
Synchrotron X-ray spectroscopy experiments were made on the Gd(III) aqua and chloro complexes in low pH aqueous solutions at temperatures ranging from 25 to 500????C and at pressures up to 480??MPa using a hydrothermal diamond anvil cell. Analysis of fluorescence Gd L3-edge X-ray absorption fine structure (XAFS) spectra measured from...
Improved wetland remote sensing in Yellowstone National Park using classification trees to combine TM imagery and ancillary environmental data
C. Wright, Alisa L. Gallant
2007, Remote Sensing of Environment (107) 582-605
The U.S. Fish and Wildlife Service uses the term palustrine wetland to describe vegetated wetlands traditionally identified as marsh, bog, fen, swamp, or wet meadow. Landsat TM imagery was combined with image texture and ancillary environmental data to model probabilities of palustrine wetland occurrence in Yellowstone National Park using classification...
Mangrove removal in the belize cays: effects on mangrove-associated fish assemblages in the intertidal and subtidal
D.S. Taylor, E.A. Reyier, W.P. Davis, C.C. McIvor
2007, Bulletin of Marine Science (80) 879-890
We investigated the effects of mangrove cutting on fish assemblages in Twin Cays, Belize, in two habitat types. We conducted visual censuses at two sites in adjoining undisturbed/disturbed (30%–70% of shoreline fringe removed) sub-tidal fringing Rhizophora mangle Linnaeus, 1753. Observers recorded significantly more species and individuals in undisturbed sites, especially...
Temperature-mediated differences in bacterial kidney disease expression and survival in Renibacterium salmoninarum-challenged bull trout and other salmonids
D.T. Jones, C.M. Moffitt, K.K. Peters
2007, North American Journal of Fisheries Management (27) 695-706
Resource managers considering restoration and reconnection of watersheds to protect and enhance threatened populations of bull trout Salvelinus confluentus have little information about the consequences of bacterial kidney disease (BKD) caused by Renibacterium salmoninarum. To better understand the response of bull trout to R. salmoninarum challenge, we conducted several laboratory...
Effects of management and climate on elk brucellosis in the Greater Yellowstone Ecosystem
P.C. Cross, W.H. Edwards, B.M. Scurlock, E.J. Maichak, J.D. Rogerson
2007, Ecological Applications (17) 957-964
Every winter, government agencies feed ∼6000 metric tons (6 × 106 kg) of hay to elk in the southern Greater Yellowstone Ecosystem (GYE) to limit transmission of Brucella abortus, the causative agent of brucellosis, from elk to cattle. Supplemental feeding, however, is likely to increase the transmission of brucellosis in...
Land cover variation and West Nile virus prevalence: Patterns, processes, and implications for disease control
V.O. Ezenwa, L.E. Milheim, M.F. Coffey, M.S. Godsey, R.J. King, S.C. Guptill
2007, Vector-Borne and Zoonotic Diseases (7) 173-180
Identifying links between environmental variables and infectious disease risk is essential to understanding how human-induced environmental changes will effect the dynamics of human and wildlife diseases. Although land cover change has often been tied to spatial variation in disease occurrence, the underlying factors driving the correlations are often unknown, limiting...
Using simulated historical time series to prioritize fuel treatments on landscapes across the United States: The LANDFIRE prototype project
Robert E. Keane, Matthew Rollins, Zhi-Liang Zhu
2007, Ecological Modelling (204) 485-502
Canopy and surface fuels in many fire-prone forests of the United States have increased over the last 70 years as a result of modern fire exclusion policies, grazing, and other land management activities. The Healthy Forest Restoration Act and National Fire Plan establish a national commitment to reduce fire hazard...
Using biodynamic models to reconcile differences between laboratory toxicity tests and field biomonitoring with aquatic insects
D.B. Buchwalter, Daniel J. Cain, W.H. Clements, S. N. Luoma
2007, Environmental Science & Technology (41) 4821-4828
Aquatic insects often dominate lotic ecosystems, yet these organisms are under-represented in trace metal toxicity databases. Furthermore, toxicity data for aquatic insects do not appear to reflect their actual sensitivities to metals in nature, because the concentrations required to elicit toxicity...
Stochastic uncertainty analysis for solute transport in randomly heterogeneous media using a Karhunen‐Loève‐based moment equation approach
Gaisheng Liu, Zhiming Lu, Dongxiao Zhang
2007, Water Resources Research (43)
A new approach has been developed for solving solute transport problems in randomly heterogeneous media using the Karhunen‐Loève‐based moment equation (KLME) technique proposed by Zhang and Lu (2004). The KLME approach combines the Karhunen‐Loève decomposition of the underlying random conductivity field and the perturbative and polynomial expansions of dependent variables...
Long-term perspectives on giant earthquakes and tsunamis at subduction zones
K. Satake, B.F. Atwater
Jeanloz R.Albee A.L.Burke K.C.Freeman K.H., editor(s)
2007, Annual Review of Earth and Planetary Sciences (35) 349-374
Histories of earthquakes and tsunamis, inferred from geological evidence, aid in anticipating future catastrophes. This natural warning system now influences building codes and tsunami planning in the United States, Canada, and Japan, particularly where geology demonstrates the past occurrence of earthquakes and tsunamis larger than those known from written and...
Nutrient addition differentially affects ecological processes of Avicennia germinans in nitrogen versus phosphorus limited mangrove ecosystems
Ilka C. Feller, C. E. Lovelock, K.L. McKee
2007, Ecosystems (10) 347-359
Nutrient over-enrichment is a major threat to marine environments, but system-specific attributes of coastal ecosystems may result in differences in their sensitivity and susceptibility to eutrophication. We used fertilization experiments in nitrogen (N)- and phosphorus (P)-limited mangrove forests to test the hypothesis that alleviating different kinds of nutrient limitation may...
Hydrographic characterization of two tidal creeks with implications for watershed land use, flushing times, and benthic production
C. Buzzelli, Austin F. Holland, D.M. Sanger, P.C. Conrads
2007, Estuaries and Coasts (30) 321-330
Many coastal ecosystems are undergoing anthropogenic stress from large increases in population and urbanization. In many regions changes in freshwater and material inputs to the coastal zone are altering the biogeochemical and biological capacities of ecosystems. Despite increased watershed inputs, large tidal volumes and flushing indicative of macrotidal estuaries can...
Occurrence and food habits of the round goby in the profundal zone of southwestern Lake Ontario
M. G. Walsh, D.E. Dittman, R. O'Gorman
2007, Journal of Great Lakes Research (33) 83-92
Little is known about the ecology of round goby (Neogobius melanostomus), an invasive benthic fish, in the profundal zone of the Great Lakes. In April 2002–2005 we caught increasing numbers of round gobies with a bottom trawl in the 45–150 m depth range of southwestern Lake Ontario. In 2005, we...
The microbial community structure in petroleum-contaminated sediments corresponds to geophysical signatures
J.P. Allen, E.A. Atekwana, J.W. Duris, D.D. Werkema, S. Rossbach
2007, Applied and Environmental Microbiology (73) 2860-2870
The interdependence between geoelectrical signatures at underground petroleum plumes and the structures of subsurface microbial communities was investigated. For sediments contaminated with light non-aqueousphase liquids, anomalous high conductivity values have been observed. Vertical changes in the geoelectrical properties of the sediments were concomitant with significant changes in the microbial community...
Thermal, chemical, and optical properties of Crater Lake, Oregon
Gary L. Larson, Robert L. Hoffman, D. C. McIntire, M.W. Buktenica, Scott Girdner
2007, Hydrobiologia (574) 69-84
Crater Lake covers the floor of the Mount Mazama caldera that formed 7700 years ago. The lake has a surface area of 53 km2 and a maximum depth of 594 m. There is no outlet stream and surface inflow is limited to small streams and springs. Owing to its great volume and heat, the...