Sources of nitrate in the Arno River waters: Constraints from d15N and d18O
Barbara Nisi, Orlando Vaselli, Antonella Buccianti, Steven R. Silva
2005, GeoActa (4) 13-24
Running waters in anthropogenically affected areas are susceptible to nitrate contamination. Source identification is a fundamental step for the development of effective remediation. Previous studies pointed to pollution by nitrogen-bearing contaminants in the Arno Basin. In this paper, eleven surface water samples have been analysed for main and trace components...
Suspended sediment fluxes in a tidal wetland: Measurement, controlling factors, and error analysis
N. K. Ganju, D. H. Schoellhamer, B.A. Bergamaschi
2005, Estuaries (28) 812-822
Suspended sediment fluxes to and from tidal wetlands are of increasing concern because of habitat restoration efforts, wetland sustainability as sea level rises, and potential contaminant accumulation. We measured water and sediment fluxes through two channels on Browns Island, at the landward end of San Francisco Bay, United States, to...
Status and conservation of the fish fauna of the Alabama River system
Mary C. Freeman, E.R. Irwin, N.M. Burkhead, B. J. Freeman, H.L. Bart Jr.
2005, American Fisheries Society Symposium (2005) 557-585
The Alabama River system, comprising the Alabama, Coosa, and Tallapoosa subsystems, forms the eastern portion of the Mobile River drainage. Physiographic diversity and geologic history have fostered development in the Alabama River system of globally significant levels of aquatic faunal diversity and endemism. At least 184 fishes are native to...
Historical and current perspectives on fish assemblages of the Snake River, Idaho and Wyoming
T.R. Maret, C.A. Mebane
2005, American Fisheries Society Symposium (2005) 41-59
The Snake River is the tenth longest river in the United States, extending 1,667 km from its origin in Yellowstone National Park in western Wyoming to its union with the Columbia River at Pasco, Washington. Historically, the main-stem Snake River upstream from the Hells Canyon Complex supported at least 26...
The wrinkle-like slip pulse is not important in earthquake dynamics
D.J. Andrews, R.A. Harris
2005, Geophysical Research Letters (32) 1-4
A particular solution for slip on an interface between different elastic materials, the wrinkle-like slip pulse, propagates in only one direction with reduced normal compressive stress. More general solutions, and natural earthquakes, need not share those properties. In a 3D dynamic model with a drop in friction and heterogeneous initial...
Variation in mangrove forest structure and sediment characteristics in Bocas del Toro, Panama
C. E. Lovelock, Ilka C. Feller, K.L. McKee, R. Thompson
2005, Caribbean Journal of Science (41) 456-464
Mangrove forest structure and sediment characteristics were examined in the extensive mangroves of Bocas del Toro, Republic of Panama. Forest structure was characterized to determine if spatial vegetation patterns were repeated over the Bocas del Toro landscape. Using a series of permanent plots and transects we found that the forests...
California giant salamander, Dicamptodon ensatus Eschscholtz
Gary M. Fellers, Shawn R. Kuchta
Laurence L. C. Jones, William P. Leonard, Deanna H. Olson, editor(s)
2005, Book chapter, Amphibians of the Pacific Northwest
No abstract available at this time...
Nature's style: Naturally trendy
T.A. Cohn, H.F. Lins
2005, Geophysical Research Letters (32) 1-5
Hydroclimatological time series often exhibit trends. While trend magnitude can be determined with little ambiguity, the corresponding statistical significance, sometimes cited to bolster scientific and political argument, is less certain because significance depends critically on the null hypothesis which in turn reflects subjective notions about what one expects to see....
DEM, tide and velocity over sulzberger ice shelf, West Antarctica
S. Baek, C. K. Shum, H. Lee, Y. Yi, Oh-Ig Kwoun, Z. Lu, Andreas Braun
2005, Conference Paper, International Geoscience and Remote Sensing Symposium (IGARSS) proceedings
Arctic and Antarctic ice sheets preserve more than 77% of the global fresh water and could raise global sea level by several meters if completely melted. Ocean tides near and under ice shelves shifts the grounding line position significantly and are one of current limitations to study glacier dynamics and...
Geomorphic control of radionuclide diffusion in desert soils
J.D. Pelletier, C.D. Harrington, J.W. Whitney, M. Cline, S.B. DeLong, G. Keating, T.K. Ebert
2005, Geophysical Research Letters (32) 1-4
Diffusion is a standard model for the vertical migration of radionuclides in soil profiles. Here we show that diffusivity values inferred from fallout 137CS profiles in soils on the Fortymile Wash alluvial fan, Nye County, Nevada, have a strong inverse correlation with the age of the geomorphic surface. This result...
Black Carp: Biological synopsis and risk assessment of an introduced fish
L.G. Nico, J.D. Williams, H.L. Jelks
2005, Special Publication 32
This book is a detailed risk assessment and biological synopsis of the black carp, a large mollusk-eating cyprinid fish native to eastern Asia. A great deal of controversy surrounds the presence of this foreign fish in the United States. Most of those associated with the aquaculture industry view black carp...
Markov Chain Monte Carlo estimation of species distributions: A case study of the swift fox in western Kansas
Glen A. Sargeant, Marsha A. Sovada, Christiane C. Slivinski, Douglas H. Johnson
2005, Journal of Wildlife Management (69) 483-487
Accurate maps of species distributions are essential tools for wildlife research and conservation. Unfortunately, biologists often are forced to rely on maps derived from observed occurrences recorded opportunistically during observation periods of variable length. Spurious inferences are likely to result because such maps are profoundly affected by the duration and...
Decline and recovery of a high Arctic wolf-prey system
L. David Mech
2005, Arctic (58) 305-307
A long-existing system of wolves (Canis lupus), muskoxen (Ovibos moschatus), and arctic hares (Lepus arcticus) in a 2600 km2 area of Canada’s High Arctic (80° N latitude) began collapsing in 1997 because of unusual adverse summer weather but recovered to a level at which all three species were reproducing by 2004. Recovery...
Nitrogen retention across a gradient of 15N additions to an unpolluted temperate forest soil in Chile
Steven S. Perakis, Jana E. Compton, L. O. Hedin
2005, Ecology (86) 96-105
Accelerated nitrogen (N) inputs can drive nonlinear changes in N cycling, retention, and loss in forest ecosystems. Nitrogen processing in soils is critical to understanding these changes, since soils typically are the largest N sink in forests. To elucidate soil mechanisms that underlie shifts in N cycling across a wide...
Terrestrial C sequestration at elevated CO2 and temperature: the role of dissolved organic N loss
Edward B. Rastetter, Steven S. Perakis, Gaius R. Shaver, Goran I. Agren
2005, Ecological Applications (15) 71-86
We used a simple model of carbon–nitrogen (C–N) interactions in terrestrial ecosystems to examine the responses to elevated CO2 and to elevated CO2 plus warming in ecosystems that had the same total nitrogen loss but that differed in the ratio of dissolved organic nitrogen (DON) to dissolved inorganic nitrogen (DIN) loss. We...
Yellowstone elk calf mortality following wolf restorations: Bears remain top summer predators
S.M. Barber, L.D. Mech, P.J. White
2005, Yellowstone Science (13) 37-44
Based on 151 neonate elk calves radio-tagged in YNP, bears accounted for 55-60% of deaths, coyotes, 10-15%, and wolves 10-15%. More than 70% of this predation occurred within the calves' first 15 days....
Selection of arboreal termitaria for nesting by cooperatively breeding Micronesian Kingfishers Todiramphus cinnamominus reichenbachii
Dylan C. Kesler, Susan M. Haig
2005, Ibis (147) 188-196
Limited nest-site availability appears to be an important factor in the evolution of delayed dispersal and cooperative breeding in some cavity-nesting species. The cooperatively breeding Pohnpei subspecies of Micronesian Kingfisher Todiramphus cinnamominus reichenbachii excavates nest cavities from the nests of arboreal termites Nasutitermes spp., or termitaria. In this first published description of nest-sites for...
Environmental stresses and skeletal deformities in fish from the Willamette River, Oregon
Daniel L. Villeneuve, Lawrence R. Curtis, Jeffrey J. Jenkins, Kara E. Warner, Fred Tilton, Michael L. Kent, Virginia G. Watral, Michael E. Cunningham, Douglas F. Markle, Doolalai Sethajintanin, Oraphin Krissanakriangkrai, Eugene R. Johnson, Robert Grove
2005, Environmental Science & Technology (39) 3495-3506
The Willamette River, one of 14 American Heritage Rivers, flows through the most densely populated and agriculturally productive region of Oregon. Previous biological monitoring of the Willamette River detected elevated frequencies of skeletal deformities in fish from certain areas of the lower (Newberg pool [NP], rivermile [RM] 26−55) and middle...
Inter-species variation in yolk steroid levels and a cowbird-host comparison
D. Caldwell Hahn, Jeffrey S. Hatfield, Mahmoud A. Abdelnabi, Julie M. Wu, Lawrence D. Igl, Mary A. Ottinger
2005, Journal of Avian Biology (36) 40-46
We examined variability in yolk hormone levels among songbird species and the role of yolk steroids as a mechanism for enhanced exploitation of hosts by the parasitic Brown-headed Cowbird Molothrus ater. Within-clutch variation in yolk steroids has been found in several avian species in single species studies, but few comparisons...
What hypothesis tests are not: a response to Colegrave and Ruxton
Douglas H. Johnson
2005, Behavioral Ecology (16) 323-324
Habitat preferences of migrant and wintering northern harriers in northwestern Texas
C.D. Littlefield, Douglas H. Johnson
2005, Southwestern Naturalist (50) 448-452
We studied habitat preferences of northern harriers ( Circus cyaneus) in four counties of the Southern High Plains of northwestern Texas from October 1989 to May 1995. Harriers generally arrived in late July and departed in April. They hunted over a variety of habitats in the study area but mainly...
Possible cryptic invasion through "back introduction"?
Qinfeng Guo
2005, Frontiers in Ecology and the Environment (3) 470-471
No abstract available....
High priority needs for range-wide monitoring of North American landbirds
Erica H. Dunn, B.L. Altman, J. Bart, C.J. Beardmore, H. Berlanga, P.J. Blancher, G.S. Butcher, D.W. Demarest, R. Dettmers, W.C. Hunter, Eduardo E. Inigo-Elias, A.O. Panjabi, D.N. Pashley, C.J. Ralph, T.D. Rich, K.V. Rosenberg, C.M. Rustay, J. M. Ruth, T.C. Will
2005, Partners in Flight Technical Series 2
This document is an extension of work done for the Partners in Flight North American Landbird Conservation Plan (Rich et al. 2004). The Continental Plan reviewed conservation status of the 448 native landbird species that regularly breed in the United States and Canada. Two groups of species were...
Does choice of estimators influence conclusions from true metabolizable energy feeding trials?
Mark H. Sherfy, R. L. Kirkpatrick, K. E. Webb Jr.
2005, Journal of Ornithology (146) 383-389
True metabolizable energy (TME) is a measure of avian dietary quality that accounts for metabolic fecal and endogenous urinary energy losses (EL) of non-dietary origin. The TME is calculated using a bird fed the test diet and an estimate of EL derived from another bird (Paired Bird Correction), the same...
Host diversity begets parasite diversity: Bird final hosts and trematodes in snail intermediate hosts
Ryan F. Hechinger, Kevin D. Lafferty
2005, Proceedings of the Royal Society B: Biological Sciences (272) 1059-1066
An unappreciated facet of biodiversity is that rich communities and high abundance may foster parasitism. For parasites that sequentially use different host species throughout complex life cycles, parasite diversity and abundance in ‘downstream’ hosts should logically increase with the diversity and abundance of ‘upstream’ hosts (which carry the preceding stages...