An integrated approach to flood hazard assessment on alluvial fans using numerical modeling, field mapping, and remote sensing
J.D. Pelletier, L. Mayer, P. A. Pearthree, P.K. House, K.A. Demsey, J.K. Klawon, K.R. Vincent
2005, Geological Society of America Bulletin (117) 1167-1180
Millions of people in the western United States live near the dynamic, distributary channel networks of alluvial fans where flood behavior is complex and poorly constrained. Here we test a new comprehensive approach to alluvial-fan flood hazard assessment that uses four complementary methods: two-dimensional raster-based hydraulic modeling, satellite-image change detection,...
Regulation of sand transport in the Colorado River by changes in the surface grain size of eddy sandbars over multi-year timescales
D.J. Topping, D. M. Rubin, J. C. Schmidt
2005, Sedimentology (52) 1133-1153
In settings where the transport of sand is partially or fully supply limited, changes in the upstream supply of sand are coupled to changes in the grain size of sand on the bed. In this manner, the transport of sand under the supply-limited case is 'grain-size regulated'. Since the closure...
Juvenile rainbow trout production in New York tributaries of Lake Ontario: implications for Atlantic salmon restoration
James E. McKenna Jr., James H. Johnson
2005, North American Journal of Fisheries Management (25) 391-403
Three Pacific salmonid species Onchorynchus spp. have replaced the extirpated Atlantic salmon Salmo salar as the main migratory salmonid in the Lake Ontario drainage. One of those species, the nonnative rainbow trout O. mykiss, has become widely distributed within the historical Atlantic salmon habitat, occupying an ecological niche similar to...
Nowcast modeling of Escherichia coli concentrations at multiple urban beaches of southern Lake Michigan
Meredith B. Nevers, Richard L. Whitman
2005, Water Research (39) 5250-5260
Predictive modeling for Escherichia coli concentrations at effluent-dominated beaches may be a favorable alternative to current, routinely criticized monitoring standards. The ability to model numerous beaches simultaneously and provide real-time data decreases cost and effort associated with beach monitoring. In 2004, five Lake Michigan beaches and the nearby Little Calumet River outfall...
Relationship between demographics and diet specificity of Imperial Eagles Aquila heliaca in Kazakhstan
Todd Katzner, Evgeny A. Bragin, Steven T. Knick, Andrew T. Smith
2005, Ibis (147) 576-586
The demographic consequences of within-population variability in predator foraging are not well understood. We assessed the relationship between the degree of diet specialization and two demographic parameters, population density and reproductive output, within a single population of Imperial Eagles Aquila heliaca at a nature reserve in north-central Kazakhstan. Nearest-neighbour distances between eagle...
Klamath basin called "critical" for pintail that depart Grasslands
M. R. Miller, J. P. Fleskes
2005, Grassland Today (15) 3
No abstract available at this time...
Temporal changes in the vertical distribution of flow and chloride in deep wells
John A. Izbicki, Allen H. Christensen, Mark W. Newhouse, Gregory A. Smith, Randall T. Hanson
2005, Ground Water (43) 531-544
The combination of flowmeter and depth-dependent water-quality data was used to evaluate the quantity and source of high-chloride water yielded from different depths to eight production wells in the Pleasant Valley area of southern California. The wells were screened from 117 to 437 m below land surface, and in most...
Diel behavior of iron and other heavy metals in a mountain stream with acidic to neutral pH: Fisher Creek, Montana, USA
C.H. Gammons, D. A. Nimick, S.R. Parker, T.E. Cleasby, R. Blaine McCleskey
2005, Geochimica et Cosmochimica Acta (69) 2505-2516
Three simultaneous 24-h samplings at three sites over a downstream pH gradient were conducted to examine diel fluctuations in heavy metal concentrations in Fisher Creek, a small mountain stream draining abandoned mine lands in Montana. Average pH values at the upstream (F1), middle (F2),...
Mathematical analysis demonstrates that interferons-β and -γ Interact in a multiplicative manner to disrupt herpes simplex virus replication
William P. Halford, Keith J. Halford, Amy T. Pierce
2005, Journal of Theoretical Biology (234) 439-454
Several studies suggest that the innate interferons (IFNs), IFN-α and IFN-β, can act in concert with IFN-<span class="formulatext stixSupport mathImg" title="Click to view the MathML...
Effects of rainfall seasonality and soil moisture capacity on mean annual water balance for Australian catchments
N.J. Potter, L. Zhang, P. C. D. Milly, T.A. McMahon, A.J. Jakeman
2005, Water Resources Research (41)
An important factor controlling catchment‐scale water balance is the seasonal variation of climate. The aim of this study is to investigate the effect of the seasonal distributions of water and energy, and their interactions with the soil moisture store, on mean annual water balance in Australia at catchment scales using...
Aeolian sand preserved in Silver Lake: a new signal of Holocene high stands of Lake Michigan
Timothy G. Fisher, Walter L. Loope
2005, Holocene (15) 1072-1078
Aeolian sand within lake sediment from Silver Lake, Michigan can be used as a proxy for the timing of high lake levels of Lake Michigan.We demonstrate that the sand record from Silver Lake plotted as percent weight is in-phase with the elevation curve of Lake Michigan since the mid-Holocene Nipissing...
Pathways of food uptake in native (Unionidae) and introduced (Corbiculidae and Dreissenidae) freshwater bivalves
S. Jerrine Nichols, Harold Silverman, Thomas H. Dietz, John W. Lynn, Donald L. Garling
2005, Journal of Great Lakes Research (31) 87-96
Nineteen species of adult freshwater bivalves were able to use water currents generated from within the mantle cavity to move non-suspended algae into the shell through non-siphon areas such as the anterior shell valve edge and the mid-ventral point of the shell. This was in addition to, and not in...
Nonlinear dynamics in ecosystem response to climatic change: Case studies and policy implications
Virginia R. Burkett, Douglas A. Wilcox, Robert Stottlemyer, Wylie Barrow, Dan Fagre, Jill Baron, Jeff Price, Jennifer L. Nielsen, Craig D. Allen, David L. Peterson, Greg Ruggerone, Thomas Doyle
2005, Ecological Complexity (2) 357-394
Many biological, hydrological, and geological processes are interactively linked in ecosystems. These ecological phenomena normally vary within bounded ranges, but rapid, nonlinear changes to markedly different conditions can be triggered by even small differences if threshold values are exceeded. Intrinsic and extrinsic ecological thresholds can lead to effects that cascade...
Assessment of bird populations in a high quality savanna/woodland: a banding approach
Sandra L. Wilmore, Gary A. Glowacki, Ralph Grundel
2005, Chicago Wilderness Journal (3) 5-13
Between 1999 and 2004, Save the Dunes Conservation Fund's Miller Woods Bird Banding Program monitored migrating and breeding bird populations within a high quality black oak, dry-mesic sand savanna/woodland with ridge and swale topography. The objectives of this program were to collect consistent and reliable demographic and abundance data on...
Changes in mass and nutrient content of wood during decomposition in a south Florida mangrove forest
L.M. Romero, T. J. Smith III, J.W. Fourqurean
2005, Journal of Ecology (93) 618-631
1 Large pools of dead wood in mangrove forests following disturbances such as hurricanes may influence nutrient fluxes. We hypothesized that decomposition of wood of mangroves from Florida, USA (Avicennia germinans, Laguncularia racemosa and Rhizophora mangle), and the consequent nutrient dynamics, would depend on species, location in the forest relative...
Application of neural networks to prediction of fish diversity and salmonid production in the Lake Ontario basin
James E. McKenna Jr.
2005, Transactions of the American Fisheries Society (134) 28-43
Diversity and fish productivity are important measures of the health and status of aquatic systems. Being able to predict the values of these indices as a function of environmental variables would be valuable to management. Diversity and productivity have been related to environmental conditions by multiple linear regression and discriminant...
Establishing native grasses in a big sagebrush-dominated site: An intermediate restoration step
Elisabeth Huber-Sannwald, David A. Pyke
2005, Restoration Ecology (13) 292-301
Many semiarid rangelands in the Great Basin, U.S.A., are shifting dominance to woody species as a consequence of land degradation including intense livestock grazing and fire suppression. Whereas past rehabilitation efforts in Big sagebrush (Artemisia tridentata) steppes removed the shrub and added introduced forage grasses to successfully shift communities from...
A new reserve growth model for United States oil and gas fields
M.K. Verma
2005, Natural Resources Research (14) 77-89
Reserve (or field) growth, which is an appreciation of total ultimate reserves through time, is a well-recognized phenomenon, particularly in mature petroleum provinces. The importance of forecasting reserve growth accurately in a mature petroleum province made it necessary to develop improved growth functions, and a critical review of the original...
Sensitivity analysis of conservative and reactive stream transient storage models applied to field data from multiple-reach experiments
M.N. Gooseff, K.E. Bencala, D.T. Scott, R.L. Runkel, Diane M. McKnight
2005, Advances in Water Resources (28) 479-492
The transient storage model (TSM) has been widely used in studies of stream solute transport and fate, with an increasing emphasis on reactive solute transport. In this study we perform sensitivity analyses of a conservative TSM and two different reactive solute transport models...
U-Pb zircon ages and Pb isotope geochemistry of gold deposits in the Carolina slate belt of South Carolina
Robert A. Ayuso, Joseph L. Wooden, Nora K. Foley, Robert R. Seal, A. Krishna Sinha
2005, Economic Geology (100) 225-252
Volcanic rocks of the Persimmon Fork Formation host the largest known gold mines of the Carolina slate belt. U-Pb (SHRIMP) zircon ages have been obtained from rocks closely associated with pyrite-enargite-gold deposits at Brewer (quartz-topaz rhyolite breccia from the argillic alteration zone in the Brewer pit and felsic ash-flow tuff...
Seismic precursory patterns before a cliff collapse and critical point phenomena
D. Amitrano, J.-R. Grasso, G. Senfaute
2005, Geophysical Research Letters (32) 1-5
We analyse the statistical pattern of seismicity before a 1-2 103 m3 chalk cliff collapse on the Normandie ocean shore, Western France. We show that a power law acceleration of seismicity rate and energy in both 40 Hz-1.5 kHz and 2 Hz-10kHz frequency range, is defined on 3 orders of...
An evaluation of the U.S. Geological Survey World Petroleum Assessment 2000
T. R. Klett, D. L. Gautier, Thomas S. Ahlbrandt
2005, American Association of Petroleum Geologists Bulletin (89) 1033-1042
This study compares the additions to conventional crude oil and natural gas reserves as reported from January 1996 to December 2003 with the estimated undiscovered and reserve-growth volumes assessed in the U.S. Geological Survey World Petroleum Assessment 2000, which used data current through 1995. Approximately 28% of the estimated additions...
Paleoproterozoic Mojave Province in northwestern Mexico? Isotopic and U-Pb zircon geochronologic studies of Precambrian and Cambrian crystalline and sedimentary rocks, Caborca, Sonora
G. Lang Farmer, S. A. Bowring, J. Matzel, G.E. Maldonado, C. Fedo, J. Wooden
2005, Special Paper of the Geological Society of America (393) 183-198
Whole-rock Nd isotopic data and U-Pb zircon geochronology from Precambrian crystalline rocks in the Caborca area, northern Sonora, reveal that these rocks are most likely a segment of the Paleoproterozoic Mojave province. Supporting this conclusion are the observations that paragneiss from the > or =1.75 Ga Bamori Complex has a...
American black bears and bee yard depredation at Okefenokee Swamp, Georgia
J. D. Clark, S. Dobey, D.V. Masters, B.K. Scheick, M.R. Pelton, M.E. Sunquist
2005, Ursus (16) 234-244
We studied American black bears (Ursus americanus), on the northwest periphery of Okefenokee Swamp in southeast Georgia, to assess landowner attitudes toward bears, estimate the extent of damage to commercial honey bee operations by bears, and evaluate methods to reduce bear depredations to apiaries. We collected 8,351 black bear radiolocations...
Monitoring of a Southern Giant Petrel Macronectes giganteus population on the Frazier Islands, Wilkes Land, Antarctica
J.C.S. Creuwels, J.S. Stark, Eric J. Woehler, J. A. Van Franeker, C. A. Ribic
2005, Polar Biology (28) 483-493
Since 1956, Southern Giant Petrels on the Frazier Islands, East Antarctica, have been counted with different census techniques, sometimes varying within seasons and among islands, which hindered analysis of the data. Protective measures for the islands from 1986 onwards have increased the need for reliable long-term census data, but reduced...