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Page 2638, results 65926 - 65950

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Not all publications have extents, not all extents are completely accurate
Invaders eating invaders: Exploitation of novel alien prey by the alien shimofuri goby in the San Francisco Estuary, California
S.A. Matern, L. R. Brown
2005, Biological Invasions (7) 497-507
The shimofuri goby (Tridentiger bifasciatus), which is native to Asian estuaries, was recently introduced to the San Francisco Estuary, California, USA. We conducted gut content analyses to examine the goby's feeding ecology in this highly invaded estuary. Shimofuri gobies were generalist predators on benthic invertebrates, consuming seasonally abundant prey, especially...
Prevalence and spatial distribution of intraerythrocytic parasite(s) in Puget Sound rockfish (Sebastes emphaeus) from the San Juan Archipelago, Washington (USA)
N. Van Der Straaten, A. Jacobson, D. Halos, P. Hershberger, A.A. Kocan, R. Kocan
2005, Journal of Parasitology (91) 980-982
Two morphologically distinct forms of an intraerythrocytic parasite(s) were detected by microscopic observation of Giemsa-stained blood films in 45.7% of 119 rockfish (Sebastes emphaeus) from the San Juan Archipelago (Washington State, U.S.A.). Infection prevalence for both forms was 53% in males, 44% in females, and 33% in fish of undetermined...
The seismic project of the National Tsunami Hazard Mitigation Program
D. H. Oppenheimer, A.N. Bittenbinder, B.M. Bogaert, R.P. Buland, L.D. Dietz, R.A. Hansen, S. D. Malone, C.S. McCreery, T.J. Sokolowski, P.M. Whitmore, C.S. Weaver
2005, Natural Hazards (35) 59-72
In 1997, the Federal Emergency Management Agency (FEMA), National Oceanic and Atmospheric Administration (NOAA), U.S. Geological Survey (USGS), and the five western States of Alaska, California, Hawaii, Oregon, and Washington joined in a partnership called the National Tsunami Hazard Mitigation Program (NTHMP) to enhance the quality and quantity of seismic...
The distribution of phosphorus in Popes Creek, VA, and in the Pocomoke River, MD: Two watersheds with different land management practices in the Chesapeake Bay Basin
N.S. Simon, O.P. Bricker, W. Newell, J. McCoy, R. Morawe
2005, Water, Air, & Soil Pollution (164) 189-204
This paper compares phosphorus (P) concentrations in sediments from two watersheds, one with, and one without, intensive animal agriculture. The watersheds are in the coastal plain of the Chesapeake Bay and have similar physiographic characteristics. Agriculture in the Pocomoke River, MD, watershed supplied 2.7 percent of all broiler chickens produced...
Characterizing the spatial structure of endangered species habitat using geostatistical analysis of IKONOS imagery
C.S.A. Wallace, S.E. Marsh
2005, International Journal of Remote Sensing (26) 2607-2629
Our study used geostatistics to extract measures that characterize the spatial structure of vegetated landscapes from satellite imagery for mapping endangered Sonoran pronghorn habitat. Fine spatial resolution IKONOS data provided information at the scale of individual trees or shrubs that permitted analysis of vegetation structure and pattern. We derived images...
Significance of stress transfer in time-dependent earthquake probability calculations
T. Parsons
2005, Journal of Geophysical Research B: Solid Earth (110) 1-20
A sudden change in stress is seen to modify earthquake rates, but should it also revise earthquake probability? Data used to derive input parameters permits an array of forecasts; so how large a static stress change is require to cause a statistically significant earthquake probability change? To answer that question,...
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R. T. Faill
2005, Geological Society of America Bulletin (117) 829-832
In summary, the rift model as presented by Schlische and Withjack (2005) is related only to the Doylestown subbasin - they do not discuss the lithosome relationships throughout the remainder of the basin. But, even in the Doylestown subbasin, their model raises more questions than it answers. They have not...
Using the risk-disturbance hypothesis to assess the relative effects of human disturbance and predation risk on foraging American Oystercatchers
K. A. Peters, David L Otis
2005, Condor (107) 716-725
The risk-disturbance hypothesis asserts that animals perceive human disturbance similar to nonlethal predation stimuli, and exhibit comparable responses in the form of optimization tradeoffs. However, few studies have examined how natural predation risk factors interact with human-disturbance stimuli to elicit such responses. We observed American Oystercatcher (Haematopus palliatus) vigilance behavior...
Streamflow properties from time series of surface velocity and stage
W.J. Plant, W.C. Keller, K. Hayes, K. Spicer
2005, Journal of Hydraulic Engineering (131) 657-664
Time series of surface velocity and stage have been collected simultaneously. Surface velocity was measured using an array of newly developed continuous-wave microwave sensors. Stage was obtained from the standard U.S. Geological Survey (USGS) measurements. The depth of the river was measured several times during our experiments using sounding weights....
Effects of selected polybrominated diphenyl ether flame retardants on lake trout (Salvelinus namaycush) thymocyte viability, apoptosis, and necrosis
Kelly L. Birchmeier, Kimberly A. Smith, Dora R. Passino-Reader, Leonard I. Sweet, Sergei M. Chernyak, Jean V. Adams, Geneva M. Omann
2005, Environmental Toxicology and Chemistry (24) 1518-1522
Polybrominated diphenyl ether (PBDE) flame-retardants have been identified as an emergent contaminants issue in many parts of the world. In vitro analyses were conducted to test the hypothesis that selected PBDEs congeners affect viability, apoptosis, and necrosis of thymocytes from laboratory-reared lake trout (Salvelinus namaycush). At current environmental levels (<1...
Ca cycling and isotopic fluxes in forested ecosystems in Hawaii
B.A. Wiegand, O.A. Chadwick, P.M. Vitousek, J. L. Wooden
2005, Geophysical Research Letters (32) 1-4
Biogeochemical processes fractionate Ca isotopes in plants and soils along a 4 million year developmental sequence in the Hawaiian Islands. We observed that plants preferentially take up 40Ca relative to 44Ca, and that biological fractionation and changes in the relative contributions from volcanic and marine sources produce a significant increase...
Ecology of the Lake Huron fish community, 1970-1999
Norine E. Dobiesz, David A. McLeish, Randy L. Eshenroder, James R. Bence, Lloyd C. Mohr, Mark P. Ebener, Thomas F. Nalepa, Aaron P. Woldt, James E. Johnson, Ray L. Argyle, Joseph C. Makarewicz
2005, Canadian Journal of Fisheries and Aquatic Sciences (62) 1432-1451
We review the status of the Lake Huron fish community between 1970 and 1999 and explore the effects of key stressors. Offshore waters changed little in terms of nutrient enrichment, while phosphorus levels declined in inner Saginaw Bay. Introduced mussels (Dreissena spp.) proliferated and may have caused a decline in Diporeia spp. This...
Late Pleistocene granodiorite source for recycled zircon and phenocrysts in rhyodacite lava at Crater Lake, Oregon
C. R. Bacon, J. B. Lowenstern
2005, Earth and Planetary Science Letters (233) 277-293
Rhyodacite tephra and three lavas erupted ∼27 ka, interpreted to be early leaks from the climactic magma chamber of Mount Mazama, contain ubiquitous resorbed crystals (antecrysts) that were recycled from young granodiorite and related plutonic rocks of the same magmatic system. The shallow composite pluton is represented by blocks ejected...
Mineral resources and consumption in the twenty-first century
W. David Menzie, Donald A. Singer, DeYoung Jr.
R.D. Simpson, M.A. Toman, R.U. Ayres, editor(s)
2005, Book chapter, Scarcity and growth revisited: natural resources and the environment in the new millennium
Modern societies are highly dependent upon energy and mineral resources to produce and deliver the material goods and even the services of everyday life. Although societies' dependence upon fossil fuels is evident and understood by much of the population, few people are as well informed about their dependence upon a...
Teleseismic body waves from dynamically rupturing shallow thrust faults: Are they opaque for surface-reflected phases?
D.E. Smith, Brad T. Aagaard, T. H. Heaton
2005, Bulletin of the Seismological Society of America (95) 800-817
We investigate whether a shallow-dipping thrust fault is prone to waveslip interactions via surface-reflected waves affecting the dynamic slip. If so, can these interactions create faults that are opaque to radiated energy? Furthermore, in this case of a shallow-dipping thrust fault, can incorrectly assuming a transparent fault while using dislocation...
Albino mutation rates in red mangroves (Rhizophora mangle L.) as a bioassay of contamination history in Tampa Bay, Florida, USA
C.E. Proffitt, S.E. Travis
2005, Wetlands (25) 326-334
We assessed the sensitivity of a viviparous estuarine tree species, Rhizophora mangle, to historic sublethal mutagenic stress across a fine spatial scale by comparing the frequency of trees producing albino propagules in historically contaminated (n=4) and uncontaminated (n=11) forests in Tampa Bay, Florida, USA. Data from uncontaminated forests were used...
Tsunami history of an Oregon coastal lake reveals a 4600 yr record of great earthquakes on the Cascadia subduction zone
H.M. Kelsey, A.R. Nelson, E. Hemphill-Haley, Robert C. Witter
2005, Geological Society of America Bulletin (117) 1009-1032
Bradley Lake, on the southern Oregon coastal plain, records local tsunamis and seismic shaking on the Cascadia subduction zone over the last 7000 yr. Thirteen marine incursions delivered landward-thinning sheets of sand to the lake from nearshore, beach, and dune environments to the west. Following each incursion, a slug of...
Hydrogeomorphic classification for Great Lakes coastal wetlands
Dennis A. Albert, Douglas A. Wilcox, Joel W. Ingram, Todd A. Thompson
2005, Journal of Great Lakes Research (31) 129-146
A hydrogeomorphic classification scheme for Great Lakes coastal wetlands is presented. The classification is hierarchical and first divides the wetlands into three broad hydrogeomorphic systems, lacustrine, riverine, and barrier-protected, each with unique hydrologic flow characteristics and residence time. These systems are further subdivided into finer geomorphic types based on physical...
Occurrence of Cyathocephalus truncatus (Cestoda) in fishes of the Great Lakes with emphasis on its occurrence in round gobies (Neogobius melanostomus) from Lake Huron
John R. P. French III, Patrick M. Muzzall, Jean V. Adams, Kendra L. Johnson, Angela E. Flores, Andrea M. Winkel
2005, Journal of Great Lakes Research (31) 405-413
Cyathocephalus truncatus is a pathogenic cestode that is common in many Laurentian Great Lakes fish species, but the depth distribution of this cestode has not been studied. Cyathocephalus truncatus has been reported from 21 fish species and one hybrid representing seven orders and nine families in Lakes Superior, Michigan, Huron, and Ontario. We...
Population genetic structure in migratory sandhill cranes and the role of Pleistocene glaciations
Kenneth L. Jones, Gary Krapu, David A. Brandt, Mary V. Ashley
2005, Molecular Ecology (14) 2645-2657
Previous studies of migratory sandhill cranes (Grus canadensis) have made significant progress explaining evolution of this group at the species scale, but have been unsuccessful in explaining the geographically partitioned variation in morphology seen on the population scale. The objectives of this study were to assess the population structure and...
Effects of biodiversity on ecosystem functioning: a consensus of current knowledge
D.U. Hooper, F. S. Chapin III, J.J. Ewel, A. Hector, P. Inchausti, S. Lavorel, J.H. Lawton, D.M. Lodge, M. Loreau, S. Naeem, B. Schmid, H. SetSlS, A.J. Symstad, J. Vandermeer, D.A. Wardle
2005, Ecological Monographs (75) 3-35
Humans are altering the composition of biological communities through a variety of activities that increase rates of species invasions and species extinctions, at all scales, from local to global. These changes in components of the Earth's biodiversity cause concern for ethical and aesthetic reasons, but they also have a strong...
Mercury concentrations in water from an unconfined aquifer system, New Jersey coastal plain
J. L. Barringer, Zoltan Szabo, L. J. Kauffman, T. H. Barringer, P. E. Stackelberg, T. Ivahnenko, S. Rajagopalan, D. P. Krabbenhoft
2005, Science of the Total Environment (346) 169-183
Concentrations of total mercury (Hg) from 2 μg/L (the USEPA maximum contaminant level) to 72 μg/L in water from about 600 domestic wells in residential parts of eight counties in southern New Jersey have been reported by State and county agencies. The wells draw water from the areally extensive (7770...
Estimating hydrodynamic roughness in a wave-dominated environment with a high-resolution acoustic Doppler profiler
J.R. Lacy, C. R. Sherwood, D.J. Wilson, T.A. Chisholm, G.R. Gelfenbaum
2005, Journal of Geophysical Research C: Oceans (110) 1-15
Hydrodynamic roughness is a critical parameter for characterizing bottom drag in boundary layers, and it varies both spatially and temporally due to variation in grain size, bedforms, and saltating sediment. In this paper we investigate temporal variability in hydrodynamic roughness using velocity profiles in the bottom boundary layer measured with...
Embryonic developmental progression in lake trout (Salvelinus namaycush) (Walbaum, 1792) and its relation to lake temperature
Jeffrey D. Allen, Glenn K. Walker, Jean V. Adams, S. Jerrine Nichols, Carol C. Edsall
2005, Journal of Great Lakes Research (31) 187-209
Developmental progression of lake trout (Salvelinus namaycush) embryos was examined with light and scanning electron microscopy. From this examination, key developmental stages were described in detail. The key developmental stages were then applied to individual lake trout egg lots incubated in constant temperatures of 2, 4, 6, 8, and 10°C....
Field determination of optimal dates for the discrimination of invasive wetland plant species using derivative spectral analysis
M. Laba, F. Tsai, Danielle Ogurcak, S. Smith, M. E. Richmond
2005, Photogrammetric Engineering and Remote Sensing (71) 603-611
Mapping invasive plant species in aquatic and terrestrial ecosystems helps to understand the causes of their progression, manage some of their negative consequences, and control them. In recent years, a variety of new remote-sensing techniques, like Derivative Spectral Analysis (DSA) of hyperspectral data, have been developed to facilitate this mapping....