Helium isotopes in ferromanganese crusts from the central Pacific Ocean
S. Basu, F.M. Stuart, V. Klemm, G. Korschinek, K. Knie, J.R. Hein
2006, Geochimica et Cosmochimica Acta (70) 3996-4006
Helium isotopes have been measured in samples of two ferromanganese crusts (VA13/2 and CD29-2) from the central Pacific Ocean. With the exception of the deepest part of crust CD29-2 the data can be explained by a mixture of implanted solar- and galactic cosmic ray-produced (GCR) He, in extraterrestrial grains, and...
Controls of bedrock geochemistry on soil and plant nutrients in Southeastern Utah
J. C. Neff, Richard L. Reynolds, R.L. Sanford Jr., D. Fernandez, Paul J. Lamothe
2006, Ecosystems (9) 879-893
The cold deserts of the Colorado Plateau contain numerous geologically and geochemically distinct sedimentary bedrock types. In the area near Canyonlands National Park in Southeastern Utah, geochemical variation in geologic substrates is related to the depositional environment with higher concentrations of Fe, Al, P, K, and Mg in sediments deposited...
Pharmaceuticals and other organic chemicals in selected north-central and northwestern Arkansas streams
B. E. Haggard, J.M. Galloway, W. R. Green, M. T. Meyer
2006, Journal of Environmental Quality (35) 1078-1087
Recently, our attention has focused on the low level detection of many antibiotics, pharmaceuticals, and other organic chemicals in water resources. The limited studies available suggest that urban or rural streams receiving wastewater effluent are more susceptible to contamination. The purpose of this study was to evaluate the occurrence of...
Evaluating the relative contributions of hydroperiod and soil fertility on growth of south Florida mangroves
K. W. Krauss, T.W. Doyle, R.R. Twilley, V. H. Rivera-Monroy, J.K. Sullivan
2006, Hydrobiologia (569) 311-324
Low and high water periods create contrasting challenges for trees inhabiting periodically flooded wetlands. Low to moderate flood durations and frequencies may bring nutrient subsidies, while greater hydroperiods can be energetically stressful because of oxygen deficiency. We tested the hypothesis that hydroperiod affects the growth of mangrove seedlings and saplings...
Comparison of selenium bioaccumulation in the clams Corbicula fluminea and Potamocorbula amurensis: A bioenergetic modeling approach
B.-G. Lee, J.-S. Lee, S. N. Luoma
2006, Environmental Toxicology and Chemistry (25) 1933-1940
Selenium uptake from food (assimilation efficiency) and dissolved phase (influx rate) as well as loss kinetics (efflux rate) were compared between two bivalves, Corbicula fluminea and Potamocorbula amurensis. The effects of salinity and temperature on these kinetic parameters for both clam species also were evaluated. The Asiatic clam, C. fluminea,...
Devils Hole, Nevada, δ18O record extended to the mid-Holocene
Isaac J. Winograd, Jurate M. Landwehr, Tyler B. Coplen, Warren D. Sharp, Alan C. Riggs, Kenneth R. Ludwig, Peter T. Kolesar
2006, Quaternary Research (66) 202-212
The mid-to-late Pleistocene Devils Hole δ18O record has been extended from 60,000 to 4500 yr ago. The new δ18O time series, in conjunction with the one previously published, is shown to be a proxy of Pacific Ocean sea surface temperature (SST) off the coast of California. During marine oxygen isotope stages...
Earthquake lights and the stress-activation of positive hole charge carriers in rocks
F. St-Laurent, J.S. Derr, F.T. Freund
2006, Physics and Chemistry of the Earth (31) 305-312
Earthquake-related luminous phenomena (also known as earthquake lights) may arise from (1) the stress-activation of positive hole (p-hole) charge carriers in igneous rocks and (2) the accumulation of high charge carrier concentrations at asperities in the crust where the stress rates increase very rapidly as an earthquake approaches. It is...
Bluff evolution along coastal drumlins: Boston Harbor Islands, Massachusetts
E. A. Himmelstoss, D. M. FitzGerald, P.S. Rosen, J.R. Allen
2006, Journal of Coastal Research (22) 1230-1240
A series of partially drowned drumlins forms the backbone of the inner islands within Boston Harbor. The shoreline of these rounded glacial deposits is composed of actively retreating bluffs formed by continual wave attack. Comparisons of bluffs reveal variability in their height and lateral extent, as well as in the...
A landscape-scale model of yellow-billed loon (Gavia adamsii) habitat preferences in northern alaska
Susan L. Earnst, Robert Platte, Laura Bond
2006, Hydrobiologia (567) 227-236
We modeled yellow-billed loon (Gavia adamsii) habitat preferences in a 23,500 km2 area of northern Alaska using intensive aerial surveys and landscape-scale habitat descriptors. Of the 757 lakes censused, yellow-billed loons occupied 15% and Pacific loons (G. pacifica) 42%. Lake area, depth, proportion of shoreline in aquatic vegetation,...
River size and fish assemblages in southwestern South Dakota
C.W. Hoagstrom, S.S. Wall, J.P. Duehr, C. R. Berry Jr.
2006, Great Plains Research (16) 117-126
We studied relations between river size, fish species diversity, and fish species composition along four major rivers in the Great Plains of southwestern South Dakota to assess patterns of species diversity and composition. We expected diversity to increase with river size and fish composition to change via species addition downstream....
Modeling the probability of arsenic in groundwater in New England as a tool for exposure assessment
J. D. Ayotte, B. T. Nolan, J.R. Nuckols, K.P. Cantor, G.R. Robinson Jr., D. Baris, L. Hayes, M. Karagas, W. Bress, D.T. Silverman, J.H. Lubin
2006, Environmental Science & Technology (40) 3578-3585
We developed a process-based model to predict the probability of arsenic exceeding 5 ??g/L in drinking water wells in New England bedrock aquifers. The model is being used for exposure assessment in an epidemiologic study of bladder cancer. One important study hypothesis that may explain increased bladder cancer risk is...
Effects of tributary debris on the longitudinal profile of the Colorado River in Grand Canyon
Thomas C. Hanks, R. H. Webb
2006, Journal of Geophysical Research F: Earth Surface (111)
The Colorado River in Grand Canyon has long been known as a "rapids-and-pools" river, with the rapids owing their existence primarily to tributary debris flows. The debris flows deposit subaerial debris fans that constrict the channel laterally and, when they enter the river, raise the bed elevation. The rapids are...
Determination of bromine, chlorine and iodine in environmental aqueous samples by epithermal neutron activation analysis and Compton suppression
S. Landsberger, D. J. O’Kelly, J. Braisted, S. Panno
2006, Journal of Radioanalytical and Nuclear Chemistry (269) 697-702
Halides, particularly Br- and Cl-, have been used as indicators of potential sources of Na+ and Cl- in surface water and groundwater with limited success. Contamination of groundwater and surface water by Na+ and Cl- is a common occurrence in growing urban areas and adversely affects municipal and private water...
Evolution of the CD4 family: teleost fish possess two divergent forms of CD4 in addition to lymphocyte activation gene-3
K.J. Laing, J.J. Zou, M. K. Purcell, R. Phillips, C.J. Secombes, J.D. Hansen
2006, Journal of Immunology (177) 3939-3951
The T cell coreceptor CD4 is a transmembrane glycoprotein belonging to the Ig superfamily and is essential for cell-mediated immunity. Two different genes were identified in rainbow trout that resemble mammalian CD4. One (trout CD4) encodes four extracellular Ig domains reminiscent off mammalian CD4, whereas the other (CD4REL) codes for...
Simulating the influences of various fire regimes on caribou winter habitat
T. Scott Rupp, Mark Olson, Layne G. Adams, Bruce W. Dale, Kyle Joly, Jonathan Henkelman, William B. Collins, Anthony M. Starfield
2006, Ecological Applications (16) 1730-1743
Caribou are an integral component of high‐latitude ecosystems and represent a major subsistence food source for many northern people. The availability and quality of winter habitat is critical to sustain these caribou populations. Caribou commonly use older spruce woodlands with adequate terrestrial lichen, a preferred winter forage, in the understory....
Age model for a continuous, ca 250-ka Quaternary lacustrine record from Bear Lake, Utah-Idaho
Steven M. Colman, D. S. Kaufman, Jordon Bright, C. Heil, J.W. King, W.E. Dean, J. G. Rosenbaum, R. M. Forester, J. L. Bischoff, Marie Perkins, J. P. McGeehin
2006, Quaternary Science Reviews (25) 2271-2282
The Quaternary sediments sampled by continuous 120-m-long drill cores from Bear Lake (Utah-Idaho) comprise one of the longest lacustrine sequences recovered from an extant lake. The cores serve as a good case study for the construction of an age model for sequences that extend beyond the range of radiocarbon dating....
Multiphase, multicomponent parameter estimation for liquid and vapor fluxes in deep arid systems using hydrologic data and natural environmental tracers
Edward M. Kwicklis, Andrew V. Wolfsberg, Philip H. Stauffer, Michelle Ann Walvoord, Michael J. Sully
2006, Vadose Zone Journal (5) 934-950
Multiphase, multicomponent numerical models of long-term unsaturated-zone liquid and vapor movement were created for a thick alluvial basin at the Nevada Test Site to predict present-day liquid and vapor fluxes. The numerical models are based on recently developed conceptual models of unsaturated-zone moisture movement in thick alluvium that explain present-day...
Genetic characterization of Zostera asiatica on the Pacific Coast of North America
Sandra L. Talbot, S. Wyllie-Echeverria, David H. Ward, Jolene R. Rearick, George K. Sage, B. Chesney, R. C. Phillips
2006, Aquatic Botany (85) 169-176
We gathered sequence information from the nuclear 5.8S rDNA gene and associated internal transcribed spacers, ITS-1 and ITS-2 (5.8S rDNA/ITS), and the chloroplast maturase K (matK) gene, from Zostera samples collected from subtidal habitats in Monterey and Santa Barbara (Isla Vista) bays, California, to test the hypothesis that these plants are conspecific...
Conspecific attraction in a grassland bird, the Baird's Sparrow
M.A. Ahlering, Douglas H. Johnson, John Faaborg
2006, Journal of Field Ornithology (77) 365-371
Territorial songbirds generally use song to defend territories and attract mates, but conspecific song may also serve as a cue to attract other male songbirds to a breeding site. Although known to occur in some colonial and forest-associated species, only recently have investigators examined conspecific attraction in grassland species. We...
The proinflammatory cytokine interleukin-18 alters multiple signaling pathways to inhibit natural killer cell death
D. L. Hodge, J.J. Subleski, D. A. Reynolds, M.D. Buschman, W. B. Schill, M.W. Burkett, A.M. Malyguine, H. A. Young
2006, Journal of Interferon and Cytokine Research (26) 706-718
The proinflammatory cytokine, interleukin-18 (IL-18), is a natural killer (NK) cell activator that induces NK cell cytotoxicity and interferon-?? (IFN-??) expression. In this report, we define a novel role for IL-18 as an NK cell protective agent. Specifically, IL-18 prevents NK cell death initiated by different and distinct stress mechanisms....
Numerical modeling of magnetic moments for UXO applications
V. Sanchez, Y. Li, M. Nabighian, D. Wright
2006, Conference Paper, Proceedings of SPIE - The International Society for Optical Engineering
The surface magnetic anomaly observed in UXO clearance is mainly dipolar and, consequently, the dipole is the only magnetic moment regularly recovered in UXO applications. The dipole moment contains information about intensity of magnetization but lacks information about shape. In contrast, higher-order moments, such as quadrupole and octupole, encode asymmetry...
Earthquake and volcano clustering via stress transfer at Yucca Mountain, Nevada
T. Parsons, G. A. Thompson, A.H. Cogbill
2006, Geology (34) 785-788
The proposed national high-level nuclear waste repository at Yucca Mountain is close to Quaternary cinder cones and faults with Quaternary slip. Volcano eruption and earthquake frequencies are low, with indications of spatial and temporal clustering, making probabilistic assessments difficult. In an effort to identify the most likely intrusion sites, we...
Biliary PAH metabolites and the hepatosomatic index of brown bullheads from Lake Erie tributaries
X. Yang, P. C. Baumann
2006, Ecological Indicators (6) 567-574
In studies designed to investigate the environmental exposure of fish in Lake Erie tributaries, a benthic fish, the brown bullhead (Ameiurus nebulosus), was collected from the industrially contaminated Detroit River, Ottawa River, Black River, Cuyahoga River-harbor and -upstream, Ashtabula River, Buffalo River, and Niagara River, and the non-industrialized Old Woman...
Growth, body condition, reproduction and survival of stocked barrens topminnows, Fundulus julisia (Fundulidae)
C.A. Goldsworthy, P.W. Bettoli
2006, American Midland Naturalist (156) 331-343
We documented the fate of 29 cohorts of propagated Barrens topminnows Fundulus julisia stocked as juveniles and adults (ntotal = 2770 fish) into 17 springheads and small ponds in middle Tennessee in 2003 and 2004. Annual mortality rates were calculated after estimating the number of individuals of each cohort remaining...
Leaf gas exchange characteristics of three neotropical mangrove species in response to varying hydroperiod
Ken W. Krauss, Robert R. Twilley, Thomas W. Doyle, Emile S. Gardiner
2006, Tree Physiology (26) 959-968
We determined how different hydroperiods affected leaf gas exchange characteristics of greenhouse-grown seedlings (2002) and saplings (2003) of the mangrove species Avicennia germinans (L.) Stearn., Laguncularia racemosa (L.) Gaertn. f., and Rhizophora mangle L. Hydroperiod treatments included no flooding (unflooded), intermittent flooding (intermittent), and permanent flooding (flooded). Plants in the intermittent treatment were measured under both...