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Page 2368, results 59176 - 59200

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Publication Extents

Not all publications have extents, not all extents are completely accurate
Selenium and metal concentrations in waterbird eggs and chicks at Agassiz National Wildlife Refuge, Minnesota
T. W. Custer, Christine M. Custer, B.A. Eichhorst, D. Warburton
2007, Archives of Environmental Contamination and Toxicology (53) 103-109
Exceptionally high cadmium (Cd) and chromium (Cr) concentrations were reported in eggs, feathers, or livers of selected waterbird species nesting at Agassiz National Wildlife Refuge (Agassiz) in 1994. Ten- to 15-day-old Franklin's gull (Larus pipixcan), black-crowned night-heron (Nycticorax nycticorax), and eared grebe (Podiceps nigricollis) chicks were collected in 1998, 1999,...
Composite analysis for Escherichia coli at coastal beaches
E.E. Bertke
2007, Journal of Great Lakes Research (33) 335-341
At some coastal beaches, concentrations of fecal-indicator bacteria can differ substantially between multiple points at the same beach at the same time. Because of this spatial variability, the recreational water quality at beaches is sometimes determined by stratifying a beach into several areas and collecting a sample from each area...
Oxygen isotopes in nitrite: Analysis, calibration, and equilibration
K.L. Casciotti, John Karl Bohlke, M.R. McIlvin, Stanley J. Mroczkowski, Janet E. Hannon
2007, Analytical Chemistry (79) 2427-2436
Nitrite is a central intermediate in the nitrogen cycle and can persist in significant concentrations in ocean waters, sediment pore waters, and terrestrial groundwaters. To fully interpret the effect of microbial processes on nitrate (NO3-), nitrite (NO2-), and nitrous oxide (N2O) cycling in these systems, the nitrite pool must be...
Amplitude loss of sonic waveform due to source coupling to the medium
Myung W. Lee, William F. Waite
2007, Geophysical Research Letters (34)
In contrast to hydrate-free sediments, sonic waveforms acquired in gas hydrate-bearing sediments indicate strong amplitude attenuation associated with a sonic velocity increase. The amplitude attenuation increase has been used to quantify pore-space hydrate content by attributing observed attenuation to the hydrate-bearing sediment's intrinsic attenuation. A second attenuation mechanism must be...
Dominance of organic nitrogen from headwater streams to large rivers across the conterminous United States
D. Scott, J. Harvey, R. Alexander, G. Schwarz
2007, Global Biogeochemical Cycles (21)
The frequency and magnitude of hypoxic areas in coastal waterbodies are increasing across the globe, partially in response to the increase in nitrogen delivery from the landscape (Diaz, 2001; Rabalais et al., 2002). Although studies of annual total nitrogen and nitrate yields have greatly improved understanding of the contaminant sources...
Longterm trends in nest counts of colonial seabirds in South Carolina, USA
P.G.R. Jodice, T.M. Murphy, F.J. Sanders, L.M. Ferguson
2007, Waterbirds (30) 40-51
We analyzed temporal and spatial trends in annual nest counts of Brown Pelicans (Pelecanus occidentalis), Royal Terns (Sterna maxima), and Sandwich Terns (Sterna sandvicensis) throughout South Carolina from 1969 through 2005. There was an increase in the number of active pelican nests from 1969 through the mid 1980s, although this...
Resource availability, matrix quality, microclimate, and spatial pattern as predictors of patch use by the Karner blue butterfly
R. Grundel, N.B. Pavlovic
2007, Biological Conservation (135) 135-144
Determination of which aspects of habitat quality and habitat spatial arrangement best account for variation in a species’ distribution can guide management for organisms such as the Karner blue butterfly (Lycaeides melissa samuelis), a federally endangered subspecies inhabiting savannas of Midwest and Eastern United States. We examined the extent to...
Water use regimes: Characterizing direct human interaction with hydrologic systems
Peter K. Weiskel, Richard M. Vogel, Peter A. Steeves, Philip J. Zarriello, Leslie A. DeSimone, Kernell G. Ries III
2007, Water Resources Research (43)
The sustainability of human water use practices is a rapidly growing concern in the United States and around the world. To better characterize direct human interaction with hydrologic systems (stream basins and aquifers), we introduce the concept of the water use regime. Unlike scalar indicators of anthropogenic hydrologic stress in...
Isotopic analysis of N and O in nitrite and nitrate by sequential selective bacterial reduction to N2O
John Karl Bohlke, Richard L. Smith, Janet E. Hannon
2007, Analytical Chemistry (79) 5888-5895
Nitrite is an important intermediate species in the biogeochemical cycling of nitrogen, but its role in natural aquatic systems is poorly understood. Isotopic data can be used to study the sources and transformations of NO2- in the environment, but methods for independent isotopic analyses of NO2- in the presence of...
Ecohydrological controls on soil moisture and hydraulic conductivity within a pinyon‐juniper woodland
I. Lebron, M.D. Madsen, D.G. Chandler, D.A. Robinson, O. Wendroth, J. Belnap
2007, Water Resources Research (43)
The impact of pinyon‐juniper woodland encroachment on rangeland ecosystems is often associated with a reduction of streamflow and recharge and an increase in soil erosion. The objective of this study is to investigate vegetational control on seasonal soil hydrologic properties along a 15‐m transect in pinyon‐juniper woodland with biocrust. We...
First steps in developing a multimetric macroinvertebrate index for the Ohio River
J.M. Applegate, P. C. Baumann, E.B. Emery, M.S. Wooten
2007, River Research and Applications (23) 683-697
The causes of degradation of aquatic systems are often complex and stem from a variety of human influences. Comprehensive, multimetric biological indices have been developed to quantify this degradation and its effect on aquatic communities, and measure subsequent recovery from anthropogenic stressors. Traditionally, such indices have concentrated on small-to medium-sized...
Characteristics of fly ashes from full-scale coal-fired power plants and their relationship to mercury adsorption
Y. Lu, M. Rostam-Abadi, R. Chang, C. Richardson, J. Paradis
2007, Energy and Fuels (21) 2112-2120
Nine fly ash samples were collected from the particulate collection devices (baghouse or electrostatic precipitator) of four full-scale pulverized coal (PC) utility boilers burning eastern bituminous coals (EB-PC ashes) and three cyclone utility boilers burning either Powder River Basin (PRB) coals or PRB blends,(PRB-CYC ashes). As-received fly ash samples were...
Activity, aggression, and habitat use of ruffe (Gymnocephalus cernuus) and round goby (Apollonia melanostoma) under laboratory conditions
J.F. Savino, S.C. Riley, M.J. Holuszko
2007, Journal of Great Lakes Research (33) 326-334
Potential negative ecological interactions between ruffe Gymnocephalus cernuus and round gobyApollonia melanostoma (formerly Neogobius melanostomus) might affect the colonization dynamics of these invasive species where they are sympatric in the Great Lakes. In order to determine the potential for ecological interactions between these species, we examined the activity, aggression, and habitat use of round...
Selection for rapid embryo development correlates with embryo exposure to maternal androgens among passerine birds
H. Schwabl, M.G. Palacios, T. E. Martin
2007, American Naturalist (170) 196-206
Greater offspring predation favors evolution of faster development among species. We hypothesized that greater offspring predation exerts selection on mothers to increase levels of anabolic androgens in egg yolks to achieve faster development. Here, we tested whether (1) concentrations of yolk androgens in passerine species were associated with offspring predation...
Lateral variation in geochemistry, petrology, and palynology in the Elswick coal bed, Pike County, Kentucky
J.C. Hower, L.F. Ruppert, C.F. Eble
2007, International Journal of Coal Geology (69) 165-178
The Middle Pennsylvanian/Langsettian (Westphalian A) Elswick coal bed, correlative to the Upper Banner of Virginia, is a rare example of a mined high-sulfur (> 2%) coal in Eastern Kentucky, a region known for low-sulfur coals. To characterize lateral variation in the geochemistry, petrography, and palynology of the Elswick coal bed,...
Persistence of pharmaceuticals and other organic compounds in chlorinated drinking water as a function of time
Jacob Gibs, Paul E. Stackelberg, Edward T. Furlong, Michael T. Meyer, Steven D. Zaugg, R.L. Lippincott
2007, Science of the Total Environment (373) 240-249
Ninety eight pharmaceuticals and other organic compounds (POOCs) that were amended to samples of chlorinated drinking-water were extracted and analyzed 1, 3, 6, 8, and 10 days after amendment to determine whether the total chlorine residual reacted with the amended POOCs in drinking water in a time frame similar to...
Do soil characteristics or microhabitat determine field emergence and success of Bromus tectorum?
B.A. Newingham, P. Vidiella, J. Belnap
2007, Journal of Arid Environments (70) 389-402
In southeastern Utah, Bromus tectorum occurs where Hilaria jamesii is dominant and rarely where Stipa hymenoides/S. comata dominate. To determine whether this distribution is due to soil characteristics or microhabitat, we transplanted H. jamesii soil to a Stipa site and vice versa during a severe drought (2001) and a wetter...
Characterization of microsatellite loci isolated in Mountain Plover (Charadrius montanus)
J. St John, R.F. Kysela, S.J. Oyler-McCance
2007, Molecular Ecology Notes (7) 802-804
Primers for 15 microsatellite loci were developed for Mountain Plover, a species whose distribution and abundance have been reduced drastically in the past 30 years. In a screen of 126 individuals collected from four breeding locales across the species' range, levels of polymorphism ranged from two to 13 alleles per...
Shorebird abundance and distribution on the coastal plain of the Arctic National Wildlife Refuge
S. Brown, J. Bart, Richard B. Lanctot, J. A. Johnson, S. Kendall, D. Payer, J. Johnson
2007, Condor (109) 1-14
The coastal plain of the Arctic National Wildlife Refuge hosts seven species of migratory shorebirds listed as highly imperiled or high priority by the U.S. Shorebird Conservation Plan and five species listed as Birds of Conservation Concern by the U.S. Fish and Wildlife Service. During the first comprehensive shorebird survey...
Environmental geochemistry at Red Mountain, an unmined volcanogenic massive sulphide deposit in the Bonnifield district, Alaska Range, east-central Alaska
Robert G. Eppinger, Paul H. Briggs, Cynthia Dusel-Bacon, Stuart A. Giles, Larry P. Gough, Jane M. Hammarstrom, Bernard E. Hubbard
2007, Geochemistry: Exploration, Environment, Analysis (7) 207-223
The unmined, pyrite-rich Red Mountain (Dry Creek) deposit displays a remarkable environmental footprint of natural acid generation, high metal and exceedingly high rare earth element (REE) concentrations in surface waters. The volcanogenic massive sulphide deposit exhibits well-constrained examples of acid-generating, metal-leaching, metal-precipitation and self-mitigation (via co-precipitation, dilution and neutralization) processes...
Investigation of reductive dechlorination supported by natural organic carbon
Heather V. Rectanus, Mark A. Widdowson, Francis H. Chapelle, C.A. Kelly, John T. Novak
2007, Ground Water Monitoring and Remediation (27) 53-62
Because remediation timeframes using monitored natural attenuation may span decades or even centuries at chlorinated solvent sites, new approaches are needed to assess the long-term sustainability of reductive dechlorination in ground water systems. In this study, extraction procedures were used to investigate the mass of indigenous organic carbon in aquifer...
First report of Jefferson's ground sloth (Megalonyx jeffersonii) in North Dakota: Paleobiogeographical and paleoecological significance
J.W. Hoganson, H. Gregory McDonald
2007, Journal of Mammalogy (88) 73-80
A well-preserved ungual of a pes documents the presence of Jefferson's ground sloth (Megalonyx jeffersonii) at the end of the Wisconsinan in North Dakota. This is the 1st report of M. jeffersonii in North Dakota, and one of few records from the upper Great Plains. An accelerator mass spectrometer radiocarbon...
Electrofishing capture probability of smallmouth bass in streams
D.C. Dauwalter, W.L. Fisher
2007, North American Journal of Fisheries Management (27) 162-171
Abundance estimation is an integral part of understanding the ecology and advancing the management of fish populations and communities. Mark-recapture and removal methods are commonly used to estimate the abundance of stream fishes. Alternatively, abundance can be estimated by dividing the number of individuals sampled by the probability of capture....
Microplate model for the present-day deformation of Tibet
W. Thatcher
2007, Journal of Geophysical Research B: Solid Earth (112)
[1] Site velocities from 349 Global Positioning System (GPS) stations are used to construct an 11-element quasi-rigid block model of the Tibetan Plateau and its surroundings. Rigid rotations of five major blocks are well determined, and average translation velocities of six smaller blocks can be constrained....
Responses of hydrochemical inorganic ions in the rainfall-runoff processes of the experimental catchments and its significance for tracing
W.-Z. Gu, J.-J. Lu, X. Zhao, N.E. Peters
2007, Shuikexue Jinzhan/Advances in Water Science (18) 1-7
Aimed at the rainfall-runoff tracing using inorganic ions, the experimental study is conducted in the Chuzhou Hydrology Laboratory with special designed experimental catchments, lysimeters, etc. The various runoff components including the surface runoff, interflow from the unsaturated zone and the groundwater flow from saturated zone were monitored hydrometrically. Hydrochemical inorganic...