Host social behavior and parasitic infection: A multifactorial approach
V.O. Ezenwa
2004, Behavioral Ecology (15) 446-454
I examined associations between several components of host social organization, including group size and gregariousness, group stability, territoriality and social class, and gastrointestinal parasite load in African bovids. At an intraspecific level, group size was positively correlated with parasite prevalence, but only when the parasite was relatively host specific and...
Relations among habitat characteristics, exotic species, and turbid-river cyprinids in the Missouri River drainage of Wyoming
M.C. Quist, W.A. Hubert, F.J. Rahel
2004, Transactions of the American Fisheries Society (133) 727-742
We used data from 91 stream reaches in the Missouri River drainage of Wyoming to determine whether abiotic and biotic factors were related to the abundance of four cyprinid species associated with turbid-river environments: flathead chub Platygobio gracilis, sturgeon chub Macrhybopsis gelida, plains minnow Hybognathus placitus, and western silvery minnow...
A review of models and micrometeorological methods used to estimate wetland evapotranspiration
J.Z. Drexler, R.L. Snyder, D. Spano, U.K.T. Paw
2004, Hydrological Processes (18) 2071-2101
Within the past decade or so, the accuracy of evapotranspiration (ET) estimates has improved due to new and increasingly sophisticated methods. Yet despite a plethora of choices concerning methods, estimation of wetland ET remains insufficiently characterized due to the complexity of surface characteristics and the diversity of wetland types. In...
Holocene loess deposition and soil formation as competing processes, Matanuska Valley, southern Alaska
D.R. Muhs, J. P. McGeehin, J. Beann, E. Fisher
2004, Quaternary Research (61) 265-276
Although loess-paleosol sequences are among the most important records of Quaternary climate change and past dust deposition cycles, few modern examples of such sedimentation systems have been studied. Stratigraphic studies and 22 new accelerator mass spectrometry radiocarbon ages from the Matanuska Valley in southern Alaska show that loess deposition there...
Temporal changes in water quality at a childhood leukemia cluster
R. L. Seiler
2004, Ground Water (42) 446-455
Since 1997, 15 cases of acute lymphocytic leukemia and one case of acute myelocytic leukemia have been diagnosed in children and teenagers who live, or have lived, in an area centered on the town of Fallon, Nevada. The expected rate for the population is about one case every five years....
A hierarchical spatial model of avian abundance with application to Cerulean Warblers
Wayne E. Thogmartin, John R. Sauer, Melinda G. Knutson
2004, Ecological Applications (14) 1766-1779
Surveys collecting count data are the primary means by which abundance is indexed for birds. These counts are confounded, however, by nuisance effects including observer effects and spatial correlation between counts. Current methods poorly accommodate both observer and spatial effects because modeling these spatially autocorrelated counts within a hierarchical framework...
Structural and spectral features of selenium nanospheres produced by Se-respiring bacteria
R.S. Oremland, M.J. Herbel, J.S. Blum, S. Langley, T.J. Beveridge, P.M. Ajayan, T. Sutto, A.V. Ellis, S. Curran
2004, Applied and Environmental Microbiology (70) 52-60
Certain anaerobic bacteria respire toxic selenium oxyanions and in doing so produce extracellular accumulations of elemental selenium [Se(0)]. We examined three physiologically and phylogenetically diverse species of selenate- and selenite-respiring bacteria, Sulfurospirillum barnesii, Bacillus selenitireducens, and Selenihalanaerobacter shriftii, for the occurrence of this phenomenon. When grown with selenium oxyanions as...
Discovery of Sphaeroma terebrans, a wood-boring isopod, in the red mangrove, Rhizophora mangle, habitat of northern Florida Bay
R. A. Brooks
2004, Ambio (33) 171-173
No abstract available....
Monitoring suspended sediment and associated trace element and nutrient fluxes in large river basins in the USA
A. J. Horowitz
2004, Conference Paper, IAHS-AISH Publication
In 1996, the US Geological Survey converted its occurrence and distribution-based National Stream Quality Accounting Network (NASQAN) to a national, flux-based water-quality monitoring programme. The main objective of the revised programme is to characterize large USA river basins by measuring the fluxes of selected constituents at critical nodes in various...
Effects of lowhead dams on riffle-dwelling fishes and macroinvertebrates in a Midwestern river
J.S. Tiemann, D.P. Gillette, M. L. Wildhaber, D.R. Edds
2004, Transactions of the American Fisheries Society (133) 705-717
Many studies have assessed the effects of large dams on fishes and macroinvertebrates, but few have examined the effects of lowhead dams. We sampled fishes, macroinvertebrates, habitat, and physicochemistry monthly from November 2000 to October 2001 at eight gravel bar sites centered around two lowhead dams on the Neosho River,...
Characterizing thermogenic coalbed gas from Polish coals of different ranks by hydrous pyrolysis
M.J. Kotarba, M. D. Lewan
2004, Organic Geochemistry (35) 615-646
To provide a better characterization of origin and volume of thermogenic gas generation from coals, hydrous pyrolysis experiments were conducted at 360??C for 72 h on Polish coals ranging in rank from lignite (0.3% R r) to semi-anthracite (2.0% Rr). Under these conditions, the lignites attained a medium-volatile bituminous rank...
Purification of triolein for use in semipermeable membrane devices (SPMDs)
J.A. Lebo, F.V. Almeida, W.L. Cranor, J. D. Petty, J.N. Huckins, A. Rastall, D.A. Alvarez, B.B. Mogensen, B. Thomas Johnson
2004, Chemosphere (54) 1217-1224
Analyses of triolein-containing semipermeable membrane devices (SPMDs) have sometimes been impeded by interferences caused by impurities endemic to triolein that codialyze with the analytes. Oleic acid and methyl oleate have been the most troublesome of these impurities because of their relatively high concentrations in triolein and because significant residues of...
Geochemical cycles in sediments deposited on the slopes of the Guaymas and Carmen Basins of the Gulf of California over the last 180 years
W. Dean, C. Pride, R. Thunell
2004, Quaternary Science Reviews (23) 1817-1833
Sediments deposited on the slopes of the Guaymas and Carmen Basins in the central Gulf of California were recovered in two box cores. Q-mode factor analyses identified detrital-clastic, carbonate, and redox associations in the elemental composition of these sediments. The detrital-clastic fraction appears to contain two source components, a more...
Field and laboratory arsenic speciation methods and their application to natural-water analysis
A.J. Bednar, J.R. Garbarino, M.R. Burkhardt, J. F. Ranville, T.R. Wildeman
2004, Water Research (38) 355-364
The toxic and carcinogenic properties of inorganic and organic arsenic species make their determination in natural water vitally important. Determination of individual inorganic and organic arsenic species is critical because the toxicology, mobility, and adsorptivity vary substantially. Several methods for the speciation of arsenic in groundwater, surface-water, and acid mine...
Water table fluctuations near an incised stream, Walnut Creek, Iowa
K. E. Schilling, Y.-K. Zhang, P. Drobney
2004, Journal of Hydrology (286) 236-248
Incised channels are common features in many agricultural watersheds, but the effects of channel incision on riparian water table conditions have been poorly documented. In this study, we evaluate the water table fluctuations in the floodplain near an incised stream (Walnut Creek, Iowa) and investigate the roles that channel incision...
Fast ground-water mixing and basal recharge in an unconfined, alluvial aquifer, Konza LTER Site, Northeastern Kansas
G.L. Macpherson, M. Sophocleous
2004, Journal of Hydrology (286) 271-299
Ground-water chemistry and water levels at three levels in a well nest were monitored biweekly for two and a half years in a shallow unconfined floodplain aquifer in order to study the dynamics of such shallow aquifers. The aquifer, in northeastern Kansas, consists of high porosity, low hydraulic conductivity fine-grained...
Near-field ground motion of the 2002 Denali fault, Alaska, earthquake recorded at pump station 10
W.L. Ellsworth, M. Çelebi, J.R. Evans, E.G. Jensen, R. Kayen, M.C. Metz, D.J. Nyman, J.W. Roddick, P. Spudich, C.D. Stephens
2004, Earthquake Spectra (20) 597-615
A free-field recording of the Denali fault earthquake was obtained by the Alyeska Pipeline Service Company 3 km from the surface rupture of the Denali fault. The instrument, part of the monitoring and control system for the trans-Alaska pipeline, was located at Pump Station 10, approximately 85 km east of...
Relative abundance, distribution, and demographics of fishes on Stillwater National Wildlife Refuge, focusing on potential prey base for American white pelicans
P.H. Rissler, G.G. Scoppettone
2004, Report
No abstract available ...
Monitoring salt-marsh responses to open marsh water management at U.S. Fish and Wildlife coastal refuges
M.J. James-Pirri, R.M. Erwin, D.J. Prosser, J. Taylor
2004, Ecological Restoration (22) 55-56
No abstract available....
Family Rhabdoviridae
N. Tordo, A. Benmansour, C. Calisher, R.G. Dietzgen, R.-X. Fang, A.O. Jackson, G. Kurath, S. Nadin-Davis, R.B. Tesh, P.J. Walker
2004, Report
No abstract available ...
Molecular methods for discriminating taxa, monitoring species, and assessing fungal diversity
Russell J. Rodriguez, Daniel Cullen, Cletus P. Kurtzman, George G. Khachatourians, Dwayne D. Hegedus
2004, Book chapter, Biodiversity of fungi: Inventory and monitoring methods
Exiting new molecular approaches that allow investigators to assess fungal biodiversity directly are being developed. These approaches are still in their infancies, but they are developing rapidly. The following papers provide an introduction to this burgeoning field of study: Bohannan and Hughes (2003), Cooksey (1997), Jumpponen (2003), Landeweert et al....
Natural selection after release from a hatchery leads to domestication in steelhead, Oncorhynchus mykiss
K.M. Leber, S. Kitada, H.L. Blankenship, T. Svasand
2004, Book chapter, Stock enhancement and sea ranching: Developments, pitfalls and opportunities
Genetic theory and data suggest that sea ranching of anadromous salmonids (Oncorhynchus spp. and Salmo spp.) results in domestication (increased fitness in the hatchery program) accompanied by a loss of fitness for natural production. We tested for genetic differences in growth, survival, and downstream migration of hatchery and wild steelhead...
Water temperature effects on fall Chinook salmon in the Snake and Columbia Rivers
C. A. Haskell, K.T. Tiffan, R.C. Koch, J.A. Heinz, M.G. Mesa, D.W. Rondorf
2004, Report
Abstract not available ...
Estimates of fish, spill, and sluiceway passage efficiencies of radio-tagged juvenile salmonids relative to spring and summer spill treatments at John Day Dam in 2003
B. Hausmann, J. Beeman, H. Hansel, S. Juhnke, P. Haner
2004, Report
No abstract available ...
Site fidelity, habitat associations, and behavior during dredging operations of white sturgeon at Three Tree Point in the Lower Columbia River
M.J. Parsley, N.D. Popoff
2004, Report
No abstract available ...