Hydrologic resilience from summertime fog and recharge: A case study for coho salmon recovery planning
Alicia A. Torregrosa, Lorraine E. Flint, Alan L. Flint
2020, Journal of the American Water Resources Association (56) 134-160
Fog and low cloud cover (FLCC) and late summer recharge increase stream baseflow and decrease stream temperature during arid Mediterranean climate summers, which benefits salmon especially under climate warming conditions. The potential to discharge cool water to streams during the late summer (hydrologic capacity; HC) furnished by FLCC and recharge...
Controls on sediment distribution in the coastal zone of the central California transform continental margin, USA
Samuel Y. Johnson, Jeffrey W. Beeson, Janet Watt, Ray Sliter, Antoinette Papesh
2020, Marine Geology (420)
We use >10,000 km of high-resolution seismic-reflection data together with multibeam bathymetry to document complex and highly variable post-Last Glacial Maximum (LGM) sediment distribution and thickness in the coastal zone (~10 m isobath to 5.6 km offshore) along a ~800 km section of central California's transform continental margin. Sediment thickness ranges from 0...
Using integrated population models for insights into monitoring programs: An application using pink-footed geese
Fred Johnson, Guthrie S. Zimmerman, Gitte H. Jensen, Kevin K. Clausen, Morten Frederiksen, Jesper Madsen
2020, Ecological Modelling (415)
Development of integrated population models (IPMs) assume the absence of systematic bias in monitoring programs, yet many potential sources of systematic bias in monitoring data exist (e.g., under-counts of abundance). By integrating multiple sources of data, we can assess whether various sources of monitoring data provide consistent inferences about changes...
RAD-seq refines previous estimates of genetic structure in Lake Erie walleye
Kuan-Yu Chen, Peter T. Euclide, Stuart A. Ludsin, Wesley Larson, Michael G. Sovic, H. Lisle Gibbs, Elizabeth A. Marschall
2020, Transactions of the American Fisheries Society (149) 159-173
Delineating population structure helps fishery managers to maintain a diverse “portfolio” of local spawning populations (stocks), as well as facilitate stock-specific management. In Lake Erie, commercial and recreational fisheries for Walleye Sander vitreus exploit numerous local spawning populations, which cannot be easily differentiated using traditional genetic data (e.g., microsatellites). Here, we used...
Directivity of M 3.1 earthquake near Anza, California and the effect on peak ground motion
Jon Peter B. Fletcher, John Boatwright
2020, Bulletin of the Seismological Society of America (110) 312-318
We show the effect of rupture directivity on peak ground‐motion values for a moderate magnitude event at Anza, California, and neighboring stations at the Imperial Valley. The event was located near Borrego Springs on the west side of the Salton Sea and was well recorded at broadband stations near Anza,...
Estimating population size with imperfect detection using a parametric bootstrap
Lisa Madsen, Daniel Dalthorp, Manuela Huso, Andy Aderman
2020, Environmetrics (31)
We develop a novel method of estimating population size from imperfectly detected counts of individuals and a separate estimate of detection probability. Observed counts are separated into classes within which detection probability is assumed constant. Within a detection class, counts are modeled as a single binomial...
Latitudinal variation in snowshoe hare (Lepus americanus) body mass: A test of Bergmann’s Rule
Laura C. Gigliotti, Nathan D. Berg, Rudy Boonstra, Shawn M. Cleveland, Duane R. Diefenbach, Eric M. Gese, Jacob S. Ivan, Knut Kielland, Charles J. Krebs, Alexander V. Kumar, L. Scott Mills, Jonathan N. Pauli, H. Brian Underwood, Evan Wilson, M.J. Sheriff
2020, Canadian Journal of Zoology (98) 88-95
The relationship between body size and latitude have been the focus of dozens of studies across many species. However, results of testing Bergmann’s Rule – that organisms in colder climates or at higher latitudes possess larger body sizes – have been inconsistent across studies. We investigated whether snowshoe hares (Lepus...
Microplastic concentrations in two Oregon bivalve species: Spatial, temporal, and species variability
Britta Baechler, Elise F. Granek, Matthew G. Hunter, Kathleen E. Conn
2020, Limnology and Oceanography Letters (5) 54-65
Microplastics are an ecological stressor with implications for ecosystem and human health when present in seafood. We quantified microplastic types, concentrations, anatomical burdens, geographic distribution, and temporal differences in Pacific oysters (Crassostrea gigas) and Pacific razor clams (Siliqua patula) from 15 Oregon coast, U.S.A. sites. Microplastics were present in organisms...
Classification of oil spill by thicknesses using multiple remote sensors
Oscar Garcia-Pineda, Gordon Staples, Cathleen E Jones, Chuanmin Hu, Benjamin Holt, Villy Kourafalou, George Graettinger, Lisa DiPinto, Ellen Ramirez, David Street, Jay Cho, Gregg A. Swayze, Shaojie Sun, Diana Garcia, Francisco Haces-Garcia
2020, Remote Sensing of Environment (236)
Satellite Synthetic Aperture Radar (SAR) is an operational tool for monitoring and assessment of oil spills. Satellite SAR has primarily been used to detect the presence/absence of oil, yet its ability to discriminate oil emulsions within a detected oil slick has...
Seasonal variation in sediment delivery across the bay-marsh interface of an estuarine salt marsh
Jessica R. Lacy, Madeline R. Foster-Martinez, Rachel Allen, Matthew C. Ferner, John C. Callaway
2020, Journal of Geophysical Research C: Oceans (125)
Sediment transport across bay–marsh interfaces depends on wave energy, vegetation, and marsh-edge morphology, and varies over a range of timescales. We investigated these dynamics in a tidal salt marsh with a gently-sloped, vegetated edge adjacent to northern San Francisco Bay. Spartina foliosa (cordgrass) inhabits the lower marsh and Salicornia pacifica...
Nonlinear reaction–diffusion process models improve inference for population dynamics
Xinyi Lu, Perry J. Williams, Mevin Hooten, James A. Powell, Jamie N. Womble, Michael R. Bower
2020, Environmetrics (31)
Partial differential equations (PDEs) are a useful tool for modeling spatiotemporal dynamics of ecological processes. However, as an ecological process evolves, we need statistical models that can adapt to changing dynamics as new data are collected. We developed a model that combines an ecological diffusion equation and logistic growth to...
Change points in annual peak streamflows: Method comparisons and historical change points in the United States
Karen R. Ryberg, Glenn A. Hodgkins, Robert W. Dudley
2020, Journal of Hydrology (583)
Change-point, or step-trend, detection is an active area of research in statistics and an area of great interest in hydrology because change points may be evidence of natural or anthropogenic changes in climatic, hydrologic, or landscape processes. A common change-point technique is the Pettitt test; however, many change-point methods are...
Occupancy Patterns of Breeding American Black Ducks
Anthony J. Roberts, J. Andrew Royle, Paul I. Padding, Patrick K. Devers, Christine Lepage, Daniel Bordage
2020, Journal of Wildlife Management (84) 150-160
Occupancy patterns can assist with the determination of habitat limitation during breeding or wintering periods and can help guide population and habitat management efforts. American black ducks (Anas rubripes; black ducks) are thought to be limited by habitat and food availability during the winter, but breeding sites may also limit...
Population ecology and evaluation of suppression scenarios for an introduced Utah Chub population
Curtis J. Roth, Zachary S. Beard, Jonathan M Flinders, Michael C. Quist
2020, North American Journal of Fisheries Management (40) 133-144
Introduced Utah Chub Gila atraria were first sampled in Henrys Lake, Idaho, in 1993, and their presence in the system is a concern given possible interactions with sport fishes. Our objective was to describe the population dynamics of Utah Chub in Henrys Lake. A total of 362 Utah Chub was sampled via...
Seasonal cycles in hematology and body mass in free-ranging gray wolves (Canis lupus) from northeastern Minnesota, USA
L. David Mech, Deborah A. Buhl
2020, Journal of Wildlife Diseases (56) 179-185
Studies of captive gray wolves (Canis lupus) showed seasonal cycles in hematologic values and female body mass. We used a remotely controlled recapture collar to determine whether nine female and five male free-ranging wolves handled four to 17 times in NE Minnesota, US...
Recovery of soils from acidic deposition may exacerbate nitrogen export from forested watersheds
Gregory B. Lawrence, Sara E. Scanga, Robert D. Sabo
2020, JGR: Biogeosciences (125)
Effects of ambient decreases in N deposition on forest N cycling remain unclear as soils recover from acidic deposition. To investigate, repeated soil sampling data were related to deposition, vegetation, and stream data, for 2000–2015 in North and South Buck Creek watersheds, in the Adirondack region of New York, USA....
Plate boundary localization, slip-rates and rupture segmentation of the Queen Charlotte Fault based on submarine tectonic geomorphology
Daniel S. Brothers, Nathaniel C. Miller, Vaughn Barrie, Peter J. Haeussler, H. Gary Greene, Brian D. Andrews, Olaf Zielke, Peter Dartnell
2020, Earth and Planetary Science Letters
Linking fault behavior over many earthquake cycles to individual earthquake behavior is a primary goal in tectonic geomorphology, particularly across an entire plate boundary. Here, we examine the 1150-km-long, right-lateral Queen Charlotte-Fairweather fault system using comprehensive multibeam bathymetry data acquired along the Queen Charlotte Fault (QCF) offshore southeastern Alaska and...
Predictive multi-scale occupancy models at range-wide extents: Effects of habitat and human disturbance on distributions of wetland birds
Bryan S. Stevens, Courtney J. Conway
2020, Diversity and Distributions (26) 34-48
AimPredicting distributions is fundamental to ecology, yet hindered by spatially restricted sampling, scale-dependent relationships and detection error associated with field surveys. Predictive species distribution models (SDMs) are nonetheless vital for conservation of many species. We developed a framework for building predictive SDMs with multi-scale data and used...
Low streamflow trends at human-impacted and reference basins in the United States
Robert W. Dudley, Robert M. Hirsch, Stacey A. Archfield, Annalise G. Blum, Benjamin Renard
2020, Journal of Hydrology (580)
We present a continent-scale exploration of trends in annual 7-day low streamflows at 2482 U.S. Geological Survey streamgages across the conterminous United States over the past 100, 75, and 50 years (1916–2015, 1941–2015 and 1966–2015). We used basin characteristics to identify subsets of study basins representative of reference basins with streamflow...
Late Quaternary evolution and stratigraphic framework influence on coastal systems along the north-central Gulf of Mexico, USA
Robert S Hollis, Davin J Wallace, Michael D Miner, Nina S Gal, Clayton H Dike, James Flocks
2020, Quaternary Science Reviews (223)
Coastal systems in the Gulf of Mexico are threatened by reduced sediment supply, storm impacts and relative sea-level rise (RSLR). The geologic record provides insight into geomorphic evolution thresholds to these forcing mechanisms to help predict future barrier evolution in response to climate change. This study synthesizes ∼2100 km of...
Assessing the hydrologic impact of historical railroad embankments on wetland vegetation response in Canaan Valley, WV (USA): The value of high-resolution data
John A. Young, Daniel Welsch, Sarah Deacon
2020, Restoration Ecology (28) 51-62
The recovery of natural ecological processes after disturbance is poorly understood. Some disturbances may be so severe as to set ecosystems onto a new trajectory. The Canaan Valley National Wildlife Refuge in West Virginia protects a unique high-altitude wetland that was heavily disturbed by logging 100 years BP and...
Changes in event‐based streamflow magnitude and timing after suburban development with infiltration‐based stormwater management
Kristina G. Hopkins, Aditi S. Bhaskar, Sean Woznicki, Rosemary M. Fanelli
2020, Hydrological Processes (34) 387-403
Green stormwater infrastructure implementation in urban watersheds has outpaced our understanding of practice effectiveness on streamflow response to precipitation events. Long‐term monitoring of experimental urban watersheds in Clarksburg, Maryland, USA, provided an opportunity to examine changes in event‐based streamflow metrics in two treatment watersheds that transitioned from agriculture to suburban...
Predicting functional responses in agro-ecosystems from animal movement data to improve management of invasive pests
Mark Q. Wilber, Sarah M. Chinn, James C. Beasley, Raoul Boughton, Ryan K. Brook, Stephen S. Ditchkoff, Justin W. Fischer, Stephen B. Hartley, Lindsey K. Holmstrom, John C. Kilgo, Jesse S. Lewis, Ryan S. Miller, Nathan P. Snow, Kurt C. Vercauteren, Samantha M. Wisely, Colleen T. Webb, Kim M. Pepin
2020, Ecological Applications (30)
Functional responses describe how changing resource availability affects consumer resource use, thus providing a mechanistic approach to prediction of the invasibility and potential damage of invasive alien species (IAS). However, functional responses can be context dependent, varying with resource characteristics and availability, consumer attributes, and environmental variables. Identifying context dependencies...
Influence of land use and hydrologic variability on seasonal dissolved organic carbon and nitrate export: Insights from a multi-year regional analysis for the northeastern USA
Erin Seybold, Arthur J. Gold, Shreeram P. Inamdar, Carol Adair, W.B. Bowden, Matthew Vaughan, Soni M. Pradhanang, Kelly Addy, James B. Shanley, Andrew W. Vermilyea, Delphis F. Levia, Beverley Wemple, Andrew W. Schroth
2020, Biogeochemistry (146) 31-49
Land use/land cover (LULC) change has significant impacts on nutrient loading to aquatic systems and has been linked to deteriorating water quality globally. While many relationships between LULC and nutrient loading have been identified, characterization of the interaction between LULC, climate (specifically variable hydrologic forcing) and solute export across seasonal...
Alignment of surface water ontologies: A comparison of manual and automated approaches
Michelle Cheatham, Dalia E. Varanka, Fatima Arauz, Lu Zhou
2020, Journal of Geographical Systems (22) 267-289
More data are being collected about the world around us than ever before, but effectively using this information requires different data stores to be integrated in such a way that they can be seamlessly queried and analyzed. Automated alignment algorithms exist to facilitate this data integration challenge. In this paper...