Influence of waves and horseshoe crab spawning on beach morphology and sediment grain-size characteristics on a sandy estuarine beach
N.L. Jackson, K.F. Nordstrom, D. R. Smith
2005, Sedimentology (52) 1097-1108
The effects of wave action and horseshoe crab spawning on the topography and grain-size characteristics on the foreshore of an estuarine sand beach in Delaware Bay, New Jersey, USA were evaluated using data collected over six consecutive high tides. Data were gathered inside and outside a 25 m long exclosure...
Comparison of the lognormal and beta distribution functions to describe the uncertainty in permeability
K.L. Ricciardi, G.F. Pinder, K. Belitz
2005, Journal of Hydrology (313) 248-256
The permeability of a single hydrostratigraphic unit is associated with considerable uncertainty due to measurement errors and significant spatial variability. Historically this uncertainty is characterized by a lognormal distribution. This distribution is generally heavy tailed, so using this distribution to describe the permeability has the limitation that all positive values...
Back to the basics: Birmingham, Alabama, measurement and scale
Lawrence R. Handley, Catherine M. Lockwood, Nathan Handley
2005, Journal of Geography (104) 225-230
Back to the Basics: Birmingham, Alabama is the fourth in a series of workshops that focus on teaching foundational map reading and spatial differentiation skills. It is the second published exercise from the Back to the Basics series developed by the Wetland Education through Maps and Aerial Photography (WETMAAP) Program...
A comprehensive study on urban true orthorectification
G. Zhou, W. Chen, J.A. Kelmelis, Dongxiao Zhang
2005, IEEE Transactions on Geoscience and Remote Sensing (43) 2138-2147
To provide some advanced technical bases (algorithms and procedures) and experience needed for national large-scale digital orthophoto generation and revision of the Standards for National Large-Scale City Digital Orthophoto in the National Digital Orthophoto Program (NDOP), this paper presents a comprehensive study on theories, algorithms, and methods of large-scale urban...
Intraovum infection caused by Flavobacterium psychrophilum among eggs from captive Atlantic salmon broodfish
R. C. Cipriano
2005, Journal of Aquatic Animal Health (17) 275-283
This study indicated that the bacterium Flavobacterium psychrophilum induced an infection within eggs of Atlantic salmon Salmo salar that were held at federal New England restoration facilities. The pathogen, which originated from the Connecticut, Penobscot, Machias, East Machias, Dennys, Narraguagus, and Sheepscot rivers, was obtained from these eggs at concentrations...
Infectious hematopoietic necrosis virus: Monophyletic origin of European isolates from North American Genogroup M
P.-J. Enzmann, Gael Kurath, D. Fichtner, S.M. Bergmann
2005, Diseases of Aquatic Organisms (66) 187-195
Infectious hematopoietic necrosis virus (IHNV) was first detected in Europe in 1987 in France and Italy, and later, in 1992, in Germany. The source of the virus and the route of introduction are unknown. The present study investigates the molecular epidemiology of IHNV outbreaks in Germany since its first introduction....
Cold compaction of water ice
W.B. Durham, W.B. McKinnon, L.A. Stern
2005, Geophysical Research Letters (32) 1-5
Hydrostatic compaction of granulated water ice was measured in laboratory experiments at temperatures 77 K to 120 K. We performed step-wise hydrostatic pressurization tests on 5 samples to maximum pressures P of 150 MPa, using relatively tight (0.18-0.25 mm) and broad (0.25-2.0 mm) starting grain-size distributions. Compaction change of volume...
One estuary, one invasion, two responses: phytoplankton and benthic community dynamics determine the effect of an estuarine invasive suspension-feeder
Janet K. Thompson
Richard F. Dame, Sergej Olenin, editor(s)
2005, Book chapter, The comparative roles of suspension-feeders in ecosystems: Nato Science Series: IV
No abstract available....
Potential degradation of water quality by bird feces in and around managed wetlands
G.G. Shellenbarger, A.B. Boehm
2005, Conference Paper, Proceedings of the 7th biennial State-of-the-Estuary Conference
No abstract available....
The Conservation Reserve Program: Planting for the future. Proceedings of a National Conference, Fort Collins, Colorado, June 6-9, 2004
Arthur W. Allen, Mark W. Vandever, editor(s)
2005, Scientific Investigations Report 2005-5145
In June 2004 the U.S. Department of Agriculture’s Farm Service Agency (FSA), with support from the U.S. Geological Survey (USGS), held a three-day symposium on the Conservation Reserve Program (CRP) in Fort Collins, Colorado. These proceedings contain papers by most of those who made presentations at the symposium, but some...
Seasonal changes in spatial patterns of two annual plants in the Chihuahuan Desert, USA
Z.-Y. Yin, Q. Guo, H. Ren, S.-L. Peng
2005, Plant Ecology (178) 189-199
Spatial pattern of a biotic population may change over time as its component individuals grow or die out, but whether this is the case for desert annual plants is largely unknown. Here we examined seasonal changes in spatial patterns of two annuals, Eriogonum abertianum and Haplopappus gracilis, in initial...
Taking apart the Big Pine fault: Redefining a major structural feature in southern California
N.W. Onderdonk, S.A. Minor, K.S. Kellogg
2005, Tectonics (24)
New mapping along the Big Pine fault trend in southern California indicates that this structural alignment is actually three separate faults, which exhibit different geometries, slip histories, and senses of offset since Miocene time. The easternmost fault, along the north side of Lockwood Valley, exhibits left-lateral reverse Quaternary displacement but...
Volcanic-ash hazard to aviation during the 2003-2004 eruptive activity of Anatahan volcano, Commonwealth of the Northern Mariana Islands
M. Guffanti, J.W. Ewert, G.M. Gallina, G.J.S. Bluth, G.L. Swanson
2005, Journal of Volcanology and Geothermal Research (146) 241-255
Within the Commonwealth of the Northern Mariana Islands (CNMI), Anatahan is one of nine active subaerial volcanoes that pose hazards to major air-traffic routes from airborne volcanic ash. The 2003-2004 eruptive activity of Anatahan volcano affected the region's aviation operations for 3 days in May 2003. On the first day...
Improved prediction of octanol-water partition coefficients from liquid-solute water solubilities and molar volumes
C. T. Chiou, D.W. Schmedding, M. Manes
2005, Environmental Science & Technology (39) 8840-8846
A volume-fraction-based solvent−water partition model for dilute solutes, in which the partition coefficient shows a dependence on solute molar volume ( ), is adapted to predict the octanol−water partition coefficient (Kow) from the liquid or supercooled-liquid solute water solubility (Sw), or vice versa. The established correlation is...
The Coso EGS project - Recent developments
P. Rose, J. Sheridan, J. McCulloch, J.N. Moore, K. Kovac, R. Weidler, S. Hickman
2005, Conference Paper, Geothermal Energy--The World's Buried Treasure
An Enhanced Geothermal System (EGS) field experiment will be conducted to hydraulically stimulate injection well 34-9RD2, located on the east flank of the Coso geothermal reservoir, with the objective of increasing the injection rate of this well to 750 gpm at a wellhead pressure of 100 psi or less. The...
Frustules to fragments, diatoms to dust: How degradation of microfossil shape and microstructures can teach us how ice sheets work
R.P. Scherer, C.M. Sjunneskog, M.R. Iverson, T.S. Hooyer
2005, Conference Paper, Journal of Nanoscience and Nanotechnology
In a laboratory experiment we investigated micro- and nanoscale changes in fossil diatom valves and in the texture of diatomaceous sediments that result from ice sheet overburden and subglacial shearing. Our experiment included compression and shearing of Antarctic diatom-rich sediments in a ring shear device and comparison of experimental samples...
Trend analysis of time-series phenology derived from satellite data
B. C. Reed, Jesslyn F. Brown
2005, Conference Paper, Proceedings of the Third International Workshop on the Analysis of Multi-Temporal Remote Sensing Images 2005
Remote sensing information has been used in studies of the seasonal dynamics (phenology) of the land surface for the past 15 years. While our understanding of remote sensing phenology is still in development, it is regarded as a key to understanding land surface processes over large areas. Repeat observations from...
Electron donor preference of a reductive dechlorinating consortium
M.M. Lorah, E. Majcher, E. Jones, G. Driedger, S. Dworatzek, D. Graves
2005, Conference Paper, Proceedings of the 8th International In Situ and On-Site Bioremediation Symposium
A wetland sediment-derived microbial consortium was developed by the USGS and propagated in vitro to large quantities by SiREM Laboratory for use in bioaugmentation applications. The consortium had the capacity to completely dechlorinate 1,1,2,2-tetrachloroethene, tetrachloroethylene, trichloroethylene, 1,1,2-trichloroethane, cis- and trans-1,2-dichoroethylene, 1.1-dichloroethylene, 1,2-dichloroethane, vinyl chloride, carbon tetrachloride and chloroform. A suite...
Limited genetic differentiation among breeding, molting, and wintering groups of the threatened Steller's eider: The role of historic and contemporary factors
John M. Pearce, Sandra L. Talbot, Margaret R. Petersen, Jolene R. Rearick
2005, Conservation Genetics (6) 743-757
Due to declines in the Alaska breeding population, the Steller's eider (Polysticta stelleri) was listed as threatened in North America in 1997. Periodic non-breeding in Russia and Alaska has hampered field-based assessments of behavioral patterns critical to recovery plans, such as levels of breeding site fidelity and movements among three...
Longer-term effects of selective thinning on carabid beetles and spiders in the Cascade Mountains of southern Oregon
R. Peck, C. G. Niwa
2005, Northwest Science (78) 267-277
Within late-successional forests of the Cascade Mountains of southern Oregon, abundances of carabid beetles (Carabidae) and spiders (Araneae) from pitfall traps were compared between stands thinned 16-41 years prior and nearby unthinned stands. Species richness of both taxa were moderate for coniferous forests of this region, with 12 carabid beetle...
Aqueous stability of gadolinium in surface waters receiving sewage treatment plant effluent Boulder Creek, Colorado
P. L. Verplanck, Howard E. Taylor, D. Kirk Nordstrom, L. B. Barber
2005, Environmental Science & Technology (39) 6923-6929
In many surface waters, sewage treatment plant (STP) effluent is a substantial source of both regulated and unregulated contaminants, including a suite of complex organic compounds derived from household chemicals, pharmaceutical, and industrial and medical byproducts. In addition, STP effluents in some urban areas have also been shown to have...
2004 annual progress report: Stratton Sagebrush Hydrology Study Area: Establishment of a long-term research site in a high-elevation sagebrush steppe
Kate Schoenecker, Bob Lange, Mike Calton
2005, Open-File Report 2005-1426
In 2004 the U.S. Geological Survey, Fort Collins Science Center (FORT) and the Bureau of Land Management (BLM), Rawlins Field Office (RFO), began a cooperative effort to reestablish the Stratton Sagebrush Hydrology Study Area (Stratton) as a research location, with the goal of making it a site for long-term research...
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,...
Structure and variability of the Western Maine Coastal Current
J.H. Churchill, N.R. Pettigrew, R. P. Signell
2005, Deep-Sea Research Part II: Topical Studies in Oceanography (52) 2392-2410
Analyses of CTD and moored current meter data from 1998 and 2000 reveal a number of mechanisms influencing the flow along the western coast of Maine. On occasions, the Eastern Maine Coastal Current extends into the western Gulf of Maine where it takes the form of a deep (order 100...
Breeding ecology of Caspian terns at colonies on the Columbia Plateau
Michelle Antolos, D.D. Roby, K. Collis
2005, Northwest Science (78) 303-312
We investigated the breeding ecology and diet of Caspian terns on the Columbia Plateau in southeastern Washington and northeastern Oregon. We examined trends in colony size and area during 1996-2001, and estimated number of breeding pairs, nesting density, fledging success, and diet composition at selected colony sites in 2000 and...