Effectiveness of methyl bromide as a cargo fumigant for brown treesnakes
P.J. Savarie, W.S. Wood, G.H. Rodda, R. L. Bruggers, R.M. Engeman
2005, International Biodeterioration and Biodegradation (56) 40-44
The effectiveness of methyl bromide as a fumigant for brown treesnake (Boiga irregularis) management was evaluated on Guam. Eighteen snakes in secured cloth bags were randomly positioned in a 47.7-m3 tarpaulin-covered cargo container for each fumigation treatment. Methyl bromide treatments tested were: 24 g m−3 and and 12 g m−3, both for 2-h and...
Glueboards for estimating lizard abundance
G.H. Rodda, K. Dean-Bradley, T. H. Fritts
2005, Herpetological Review (36) 252-259
No abstract available....
Anesthesia and blood sampling of wild big brown bats (Eptesicus fuscus) with an assessment of impacts on survival
J. Wimsatt, T. J. O'Shea, L.E. Ellison, R.D. Pearce, V.R. Price
2005, Journal of Wildlife Diseases (41) 87-95
We anesthetized and blood sampled wild big brown bats (Eptesicus fuscus) in Fort Collins, Colorado (USA) in 2001 and 2002 and assessed effects on survival. Inhalant anesthesia was delivered into a specially designed restraint and inhalation capsule that minimized handling and bite exposures. Bats were immobilized an average of 9.1±5.1...
Structure and regional significance of the Late Permian(?) Sierra Nevada - Death Valley thrust system, east-central California
C.H. Stevens, P. Stone
2005, Earth-Science Reviews (73) 103-113
An imbricate system of north-trending, east-directed thrust faults of late Early Permian to middle Early Triassic (most likely Late Permian) age forms a belt in east-central California extending from the Mount Morrison roof pendant in the eastern Sierra Nevada to Death Valley. Six major thrust faults typically with a spacing...
An updated global earthquake catalogue for stable continental regions: Reassessing the correlation with ancient rifts
S.M. Schulte, Walter D. Mooney
2005, Geophysical Journal International (161) 707-721
We present an updated global earthquake catalogue for stable continental regions (SCRs; i.e. intraplate earthquakes) that is available on the Internet. Our database contains information on location, magnitude, seismic moment and focal mechanisms for over 1300 M (moment magnitude) ≥ 4.5 historic and instrumentally recorded crustal events. Using this updated earthquake database...
Global land cover mapping and characterization: present situation and future research priorities
Chandra Giri
2005, Geocarto International (20) 35-42
The availability and accessibility of global land cover data sets plays an important role in many global change studies. The importance of such science‐based information is also reflected in a number of international, regional, and national projects and programs. Recent developments in earth observing satellite technology, information technology, computer hardware...
Comparing electronic probes for volumetric water content of low-density feathermoss
P.P. Overduin, K. Yoshikawa, D.L. Kane, J.W. Harden
2005, Sensor Review (25) 215-221
Purpose - Feathermoss is ubiquitous in the boreal forest and across various land-cover types of the arctic and subarctic. A variety of affordable commercial sensors for soil moisture content measurement have recently become available and are in use in such regions, often in conjunction with fire-susceptibility or ecological studies. Few...
The role of abiotic conditions in shaping the long-term patterns of a high-elevation Argentine ant invasion
P.D. Krushelnycky, S.M. Joe, A.C. Medeiros, C.C. Daehler, L.L. Loope
2005, Diversity and Distributions (11) 319-331
Analysis of long-term patterns of invasion can reveal the importance of abiotic factors in influencing invasion dynamics, and can help predict future patterns of spread. In the case of the invasive Argentine ant (Linepithema humile), most prior studies have investigated this species' limitations in hot and dry climates. However, spatial...
Comparison of individual and pooled sampling methods for detecting bacterial pathogens of fish
Sonia Mumford, Chris Patterson, J. Evered, Ray Brunson, J. Levine, J. Winton
2005, Journal of Veterinary Diagnostic Investigation (17) 305-310
Examination of finfish populations for viral and bacterial pathogens is an important component of fish disease control programs worldwide. Two methods are commonly used for collecting tissue samples for bacteriological culture, the currently accepted standards for detection of bacterial fish pathogens. The method specified in the Office International des Epizooties...
Willingness to pay for non angler recreation at the lower Snake River reservoirs
J.R. McKean, D. Johnson, R.G. Taylor, Richard L. Johnson
2005, Journal of Leisure Research (37) 178-194
This study applied the travel cost method to estimate demand for non angler recreation at the impounded Snake River in eastern Washington. Net value per person per recreation trip is estimated for the full non angler sample and separately for camping, boating, water-skiing, and swimming/picnicking. Certain recreation activities would be...
Incorporating seepage losses into the unsteady streamflow equations for simulating intermittent flow along mountain front streams
R.G. Niswonger, David E. Prudic, G. Pohll, J. Constantz
2005, Water Resources Research (41) 1-16
Seepage losses along numerous mountain front streams that discharge intermittently onto alluvial fans and piedmont alluvial plains are an important source of groundwater in the Basin and Range Province of the Western United States. Determining the distribution of seepage loss along mountain front streams is important when assessing groundwater resources...
Population trends of Mariana Crow Corvus kubaryi on Rota, Commonwealth of the Northern Mariana Islands
S. Plentovich, J.M. Morton, J. Bart, R.J. Camp, M. Lusk, N. Johnson, E. VanderWerf
2005, Bird Conservation International (15) 211-224
Endemic to the islands of Guam and Rota in the Mariana Islands, Mariana Crow Corvus kubaryi is the only corvid in Micronesia. Currently, it survives on Guam only because of translocation of individuals from Rota (1999-2003). Island-wide surveys in 1982 and 1995 on Rota yielded population estimates of 1,348 and...
Predicted sex ratio of juvenile Kemp's Ridley sea turtles captured near Steinhatchee, Florida
A.A. Geis, W.J. Barichivich, T. Wibbels, M. Coyne, A.M. Landry Jr., D. Owens
2005, Copeia 393-398
The Kemp's Ridley (Lepidochelys kempii) is one of the most endangered sea turtles in the world, and it possesses temperature-dependent sex determination (TSD). Sex ratios produced under TSD can vary widely and can affect the reproductive ecology of a population. Therefore, sex ratios produced from TSD are of ecological and...
Temporal analysis of the frequency and duration of low and high streamflow: Years of record needed to characterize streamflow variability
S. Huh, D.A. Dickey, M. R. Meador, K.E. Ruhl
2005, Journal of Hydrology (310) 78-94
A temporal analysis of the number and duration of exceedences of high- and low-flow thresholds was conducted to determine the number of years required to detect a level shift using data from Virginia, North Carolina, and South Carolina. Two methods were used - ordinary least squares assuming a known error...
Snow-fed streamflow timing at different basin scales: Case study of the Tuolumne River above Hetch Hetchy, Yosemite, California
J.D. Lundquist, M. D. Dettinger, D.R. Cayan
2005, Water Resources Research (41) 1-14
Diurnal cycles in snow‐fed streams provide a useful technique for measuring the time it takes water to travel from the top of the snowpack, where snowmelt typically peaks in the afternoon, to the river gauge, where the daily maximum flows may arrive many hours later. Hourly stage measurements in nested...
Terlinguacreekite, Hg2+3O2 Cl2, a new mineral species from the Perry pit, Mariposa mine, Terlingua mining district, Brewster County, Texas, U.S.A
Andrew C. Roberts, Robert A. Gault, W.H. Paar, M. A. Cooper, Frank C. Hawthorne, P. C. Burns, S. Cisneros, E.E. Foord
2005, Canadian Mineralogist (43) 1055-1060
Terlinguacreekite, ideally Hg2+ 3O2Cl2, has a very pronounced subcell that is orthorhombic, space-group choices Imam, Imcm, Ima2 and I2cm, with unit-cell parameters refined from powder data: a 6.737(3), b 25.528(10), c 5.533(2) Å, V 951.6(6) Å3, a:b:c 0.2639:1:0.2167, Z = 8. The true symmetry, supercell unit-cell parameters, and details regarding the crystal structure are unknown. The strongest nine lines of the X-ray powder-diffraction pattern [d in Å (I)(subcell hkl)]...
Conceptual model of sediment processes in the upper Yuba River watershed, Sierra Nevada, CA
Jennifer A. Curtis, Lorraine E. Flint, Charles N. Alpers, S.M. Yarnell
2005, Geomorphology (68) 149-166
This study examines the development of a conceptual model of sediment processes in the upper Yuba River watershed; and we hypothesize how components of the conceptual model may be spatially distributed using a geographical information system (GIS). The conceptual model illustrates key processes controlling sediment dynamics in the upper Yuba...
Seasonal variations of alkenones and UK37 in the Chesapeake Bay water column
J.L. Mercer, M. Zhao, Steven M. Colman
2005, Estuarine, Coastal and Shelf Science (63) 675-682
Alkenone unsaturation indices (UK37 and U K???37) have long been used as proxies for surface water temperature in the open ocean. Recent studies have suggested that in other marine environments, variables other than temperature may affect both the production of alkenones and the values of the indices. Here, we present...
The role of fire in structuring sagebrush habitats and bird communities
S.T. Knick, A.L. Holmes, R.F. Miller
Victoria A. Saab, Hugo D. W. Powell, editor(s)
2005, Book chapter, Fire and avian ecology in North America (Studies in Avian Biology No. 30)
Fire is a dominant and highly visible disturbance in sagebrush (Artemisia spp.) ecosystems. In lower elevation, xeric sagebrush communities, the role of fire has changed in recent decades from an infrequent disturbance maintaining a landscape mosaic and facilitating community processes to frequent events that alter sagebrush communities to exotic vegetation,...
Changing land management practices and vegetation on the Central Plateau of Burkina Faso (1968-2002)
C. Reij, G. Tappan, A. Belemvire
2005, Journal of Arid Environments (63) 642-659
In the early 1980s, the situation on the northern part of the Central Plateau of Burkina Faso was characterized by expanding cultivation on lands marginal to agriculture, declining rainfall, low and declining cereal yields, disappearing and impoverishing vegetation, falling ground-water levels and strong outmigration. This crisis situation provoked two reactions....
Diel behavior of rare earth elements in a mountain stream with acidic to neutral pH
C.H. Gammons, S.A. Wood, D. A. Nimick
2005, Geochimica et Cosmochimica Acta (69) 3747-3758
Diel (24-h) changes in concentrations of rare earth elements (REE) were investigated in Fisher Creek, a mountain stream in Montana that receives acid mine drainage in its headwaters. Three simultaneous 24-h samplings were conducted at an upstream station (pH = 3.3), an intermediate station (pH = 5.5), and a downstream...
SHRIMP U-Pb dating of zircon from the Xugou UHP eclogite, Sulu terrane, eastern China
R. Zhao, J. G. Liou, R. Y. Zhang, Joseph L. Wooden
2005, International Geology Review (47) 805-814
clogites, together with garnet clinopyroxenites, occur as lenses within the Xugou garnet peridotite body in the southern Sulu ultrahigh-pressure (UHP) terrane. Combined cathodoluminescence (CL) imaging and SHRIMP U-Pb dating of zircon from two Xugou mafic eclogites provide added constraints on the timing of UHP metamorphism in this area. Zircons from...
Sources, bioavailability, and photoreactivity of dissolved organic carbon in the Sacramento-San Joaquin River Delta
R. Stepanauskas, M.A. Moran, B.A. Bergamaschi, J.T. Hollibaugh
2005, Biogeochemistry (74) 131-149
We analyzed bioavailability, photoreactivity, fluorescence, and isotopic composition of dissolved organic carbon (DOC) collected at 13 stations in the Sacramento-San Joaquin River Delta during various seasons to estimate the persistence of DOC from diverse shallow water habitat sources. Prospective large-scale wetland restorations in the Delta may change the amount of...
Waveform inversion of volcano-seismic signals assuming possible source geometries
M. Nakano, Hiroyuki Kumagai
2005, Geophysical Research Letters (32) 1-5
We propose an approach to quantify the source of volcano-seismic signals assuming possible source geometries. Such an assumption reduces the number of free parameters in a waveform inversion, so we can quantify the source of these signals observed by a small number of seismic stations. We test this method by...
Seismic hazard in the South Carolina coastal plain: 2002 update of the USGS national seismic hazard maps
C.H. Cramer, T.W. Mays
Wallendorf L.Ewing L.Rogers S.Jones C., editor(s)
2005, Conference Paper, Solutions to Coastal Disasters 2005 - Proceedings of the Conference
The damaging 1886 moment magnitude ???7 Charleston, South Carolina earthquake is indicative of the moderately likely earthquake activity along this portion of the Atlantic Coast. A recurrence of such an earthquake today would have serious consequences for the nation. The national seismic hazard maps produced by the U.S. Geological Survey...