Recreation conflict, coping, and satisfaction: Minnesota grouse hunters’ conflicts and coping response related to all-terrain vehicle users, hikers, and other hunters
David C. Fulton, Susan A. Schroeder, Louis Cornicelli, Leslie McInenly
2020, Journal of Outdoor Recreation and Tourism (30)
Studying conflict and coping in recreation is important because some coping strategies may provoke distress, while others may lead to positive emotional changes. Building on applications of the transactional stress coping model to park visitors, anglers, and other recreation participants, we...
Factors affecting sampling strategies for design of an effects‐directed analysis for endocrine‐active chemicals
Jennifer Brennan, Robert W. Gale, David A. Alvarez, Jason P. Berninger, Jessica Kristin Leet, Yan Li, Tyler Wagner, Donald E. Tillitt
2020, Environmental Toxicology and Chemistry (39) 1309-1324
Effects‐directed analysis (EDA) is an important tool for identifying unknown bioactive components in a complex mixture. Such an analysis of endocrine‐active chemicals (EACs) from water sources has promising regulatory implications but also unique logistical challenges. We propose a conceptual EDA (framework) based on a critical review of EDA literature and...
Effect of spatial resolution of satellite images on estimating the greenness and evapotranspiration of urban green spaces
Hamideh Nouri, Pamela L. Nagler, Sattar Chavoshi Borujeni, Armando Barreto Munez, Sina Alaghmand, Behnaz Noori, Alejandro Galindo, Kamel Didan
2020, Hydrological Processes (34) 3183-3199
Urban green spaces (UGS), like most managed land covers, are getting progressively affected by water scarcity and drought. Preserving, restoring and expanding UGS require sustainable management of green and blue water resources to fulfil evapotranspiration (ET) demand for green plant cover. The heterogeneity of UGS with high variation in their...
Sources of variation in maternal allocation in a long-lived mammal
Kaitlin R. Macdonald, Jay J. Rotella, Robert A. Garrott, William A. Link
2020, Journal of Animal Ecology (89) 1927-1940
1.Life history theory predicts allocation of energy to reproduction varies with maternal age, but additional maternal features may be important to the allocation of energy to reproduction.We aimed to characterize age‐specific variation in maternal allocation and assess the relationship between maternal allocation and other static and dynamic maternal features.Mass...
Reserve network design for prairie-dependent taxa in South Puget Sound
Sarah J. Converse, Beth Gardner, Steve Morey
Michael C. Runge, Sarah J. Converse, James E. Lyons, David R. Smith, editor(s)
2020, Book chapter, Structured decision making: Case studies in natural resource management
Conserving species requires managing threats, including habitat loss. One approach to managing habitat loss is to identify and protect habitat in networks of reserves. Reserve network design is a type of resource allocation problem: how can we choose the most effective reserve network design given available resources? We undertook development...
Climate-induced abrupt shifts in structural states trigger delayed transitions in functional states
Yanbin Hao, Wenjun Liu, Xingliang Xu, Seth M. Munson, Xiaoyong Cui, Xiaoming Kang, Nianpeng He, Yan Wang
2020, Ecological Indicators (115)
Theoretical models suggest that ecosystems can be found in one of several possible alternative stable states, and a shift in structural stable state (SSS) can trigger a change in functional stable state (FSS). But we still lack the empirical evidence to confirm these states and transitions, and to inform the...
The relationship between biodiversity and wetland cover varies across regions of the conterminous United States
Jeremy S. Dertien, Stella Self, Beth Ross, Kyle Barrett, Robert F. Baldwin
Daehyun Kim, editor(s)
2020, PLoS ONE (15) 1-18
Identifying the factors that determine the spatial distribution of biodiversity is a major focus of ecological research. These factors vary with scale from interspecific interactions to global climatic cycles. Wetlands are important biodiversity hotspots and contributors of ecosystem services, but the association between proportional wetland cover and species richness has...
Using the Delphi process to gather information from a Bald Eagle expert panel
Rebecca Kolstrom, Tammy L. Wilson, Larry M. Gigliotti
2020, Natural Resource Report NPS/SWAN.NRR-2020/2128
Bald eagle (Haliaeetus leucocephalus) populations are classified by the Southwest Alaska Network (SWAN) of the National Park Service as a vital sign of biological integrity, largely because of their importance as an indicator species for environmental contaminants and human disturbance. Though Bald Eagles are plentiful in Alaska, it is still...
Individual and population fitness consequences associated with large carnivore use of residential development
Heather E. Johnson, David Bruce Lewis, Stewart Breck
2020, Ecosphere (11)
Large carnivores are negotiating increasingly developed landscapes, but little is known about how such behavioral plasticity influences their demographic rates and population trends. Some investigators have suggested that the ability of carnivores to behaviorally adapt to human development will enable their persistence, and yet, others have suggested that such landscapes...
Risk-targeted alternatives to deterministic ground motion caps in U.S. seismic provisions
Jonathan P. Stewart, Nico Luco, John D Hooper, C. B. Crouse
2020, Earthquake Spectra (36) 904-923
Since their inception over 20 years ago, the maximum considered earthquake ground motion maps in U.S. building codes have capped probabilistic values with deterministic ground motions from characteristic earthquakes on known active faults. This practice has increasingly been called into question both because of spatially non-uniform risk levels...
Forecasting water demand across a rapidly urbanizing region
Georgina M. Sanchez, Adam J. Terando, Jordan W. Smith, Ana Maria Garcia, Chad R. Wagner, Ross K. Meentemeyer
2020, Science of the Total Environment (730)
Urban growth and climate change together complicate planning efforts meant to adapt to increasingly scarce water supplies. Several studies have independently examined the impacts of urban planning and climate change on water demand, but little attention has been given to their combined impact. Here we forecast urban water demand using...
Effects of flow diversion on Snake Creek and its riparian cottonwood forest, Great Basin National Park
Derek M. Schook, David J. Cooper, Jonathan M. Friedman, Steven E. Rice, Jamie D. Hoover, Richard D. Thaxton
2020, Natural Resource Report NPS/GRBA/NRR-2020/2104
Snake Creek flows east from the southern Snake Range in Nevada over complex lithology before leaving Great Basin National Park. The river travels over a section of karst limestone where some surface water naturally recharges the groundwater flow system. In 1961 a water diversion pipeline was constructed by downstream water...
7700-year persistence of an isolated, free-living coral assemblage in the Galápagos Islands: A model for coral refugia?
Joshua Feingold, Bernhard Reigl, Katie Hendrickson, Lauren T. Toth, Hai Cheng, R. Lawrence Edwards, Richard B. Aronson
2020, Coral Reefs (39) 639-647
In an eastern-Pacific coral assemblage at Devil’s Crown, Galápagos Islands, Ecuador, two coral species, Psammocora stellata and Cycloseris (Diaseris) distorta, form dense populations of unattached colonies on sand and rubble substrata. In the Galápagos, living C. (D.) distorta is found only at this single site, whereas populations of P. stellata...
Fisheries research and monitoring activities of the Lake Erie Biological Station, 2019
Kevin R. Keretz, Patrick Kocovsky, Richard Kraus, Joseph Schmitt
2020, Report
A comprehensive understanding of fish populations and their interactions is the cornerstone of modern fishery management and the basis for Fish Community Goals and Objectives for Lake Erie (Ryan et al. 2003). This report is responsive to U.S. Geological Survey (USGS) obligations via Memorandum of Understanding (MOU) with the Great...
Parsing complex terrain controls on mountain glacier response to climate forcing
Caitlyn Elizabeth Florentine, Joel T. Harper, Daniel B. Fagre
2020, Global and Planetary Change (191)
Glaciers are a key indicator of changing climate in the high mountain landscape. Glacier variations across a mountain range are ultimately driven by regional climate forcing. However, changes also reflect local, topographically driven processes such as snow avalanching, snow wind-drifting, and radiation shading as well as the initial glacier conditions such as hypsometry and...
Automated location correction and spot height generation for named summits in the coterminous United States
Samantha T. Arundel, Gaurav Sinha
2020, International Journal of Digital Earth (13) 1570-1584
Spot elevations published on historical U.S. Geological Survey topographic maps were established as needed to enhance information imparted by the quadrangle’s contours. In addition to other features, labels were routinely placed on mountain summits. While some elevations were established through field survey triangulation, many were computed during...
Use of strong habitat–abundance relationships in assessing population status of cryptic fishes: An example using the Harlequin Darter
Kathryn M Holcomb, Paul Schueller, Howard L. Jelks, John R Knight, Micheal S Allen
2020, Transactions of the American Fisheries Society (149) 320-334
Understanding trends in abundance is important to fisheries conservation, but techniques for estimating streamwide abundance of cryptic fishes with strong habitat–abundance relationships are not well established and need further development. We developed techniques for addressing this need using the Harlequin Darter Etheostoma histrio, a small, cryptic freshwater fish associated with submerged...
Quantifying drought’s influence on moist soil seed vegetation in California’s Central Valley through time-series remote sensing
Kristin B. Byrd, Austen Lorenz, James Anderson, Cynthia Wallace, Kara Moore-O'Leary, Jennifer Isola, Ricardo Ortega, Matt Reiter
2020, Ecological Applications (30)
Californias Central Valley, USA is a critical component of the Pacific Flyway despite loss of more than 90% of its wetlands. Moist soil seed (MSS) wetland plants are now produced by mimicking seasonal flooding in managed wetlands to provide an essential food resource for waterfowl. Managers need MSS plant area...
Bayesian modeling of non-stationary, univariate, spatial data for the Earth sciences
Karl J. Ellefsen, Bradley S. Van Gosen
2020, Techniques and Methods 7-C24
Some Earth science data, such as geochemical measurements of element concentrations, are non-stationary—the mean and the standard deviation vary spatially. It is important to estimate the spatial variations in both statistics because such information is indicative of geological and other Earth processes. To this end, an estimation method is formulated...
User guide to the bayesian modeling of non-stationary, univariate, spatial data using R language package BMNUS
Karl J. Ellefsen, Margaret A. Goldman, Bradley S. Van Gosen
2020, Techniques and Methods 7-C20
Bayesian modeling of non-stationary, univariate, spatial data is performed using the R-language package BMNUS. A unique advantage of this package is that it can map the mean, standard deviation, quantiles, and probability of exceeding a specified value. The package includes several R-language classes that prepare the data for the modeling,...
Stormwater control impacts on runoff volume and peak flow: A meta-analysis of watershed modelling studies
Colin D. Bell, Jordyn M. Wolfand, Chelsea L. Panos, Aditi S. Bhaskar, Ryan L. Gilliom, Terri S. Hogue, Kristina G. Hopkins, Anne J. Jefferson
2020, Hydrological Processes (34) 3134-3152
Decades of research has concluded that the percent of impervious surface cover in a watershed is strongly linked to negative impacts on urban stream health. Recently, there has been a push by municipalities to offset these effects by installing structural stormwater control measures (SCMs), which are landscape features designed to...
Polymeric nanofiber-carbon nanotube composite mats as fast-equilibrium passive samplers for polar organic pollutants
Jiajie Qian, Andres Martinez, Rachel F Marek, Matthew R. Nagorzanski, Hui Zhi, Edward Furlong, Dana W. Kolpin, Gregory H. LeFevre, David M. Cwiertny
2020, Environmental Science & Technology (54) 6703-6712
To improve the performance of polymeric electrospun nanofiber mats (ENMs) for equilibrium passive sampling applications in water, we integrated two types of multiwalled carbon nanotubes (CNTs; with and without surface carboxyl groups) into polyacrylonitrile (PAN) and polystyrene (PS) ENMs. For 11 polar and moderately hydrophobic compounds (−0.07 ≤ logKOW ≤ 3.13),...
Economic, land use, and ecosystem services impacts of Rwanda's Green Growth Strategy: An application of the IEEM+ESM platform
Onil Banerjee, Kenneth J. Bagstad, Martin Cicowiecz, Sebastian Dudek, Mark Horridge, Janaki Alavalapati, Michel K. Masozera, Emmanuel Rukundo, Evariste Rutebuka
2020, Science of the Total Environment (729)
We develop and link the Integrated Economic-Environmental Modeling (IEEM) Platform to ecosystem services modeling (ESM). The IEEM+ESM Platform is an innovative decision-making framework for exploring complex public policy goals and elucidating synergies and trade-offs between alternative policy portfolios. The IEEM+ESM approach is powerful in its ability to shed light on...
Longitudinal, lateral, vertical, and temporal thermal heterogeneity in a large impounded river: Implications for cold-water refuges
Francine H. Mejia, Christian E. Torgersen, Eric K Berntsen, Joseph R Maroney, J M Connor, Aimee H. Fullerton, Joseph L. Ebersole, Mark L Lorang
2020, Remote Sensing (12)
Dam operations can affect mixing of the water column, thereby influencing thermal heterogeneity spatially and temporally. This occurs by restricting or eliminating connectivity in longitudinal, lateral, vertical, and temporal dimensions. We examined thermal heterogeneity across space and time and identified potential cold-water refuges for salmonids in a large impounded river...
Time-dependent accumulation of Cd, Co, Cu, Ni, and Zn in mayfly and caddisfly larvae in experimental streams: Metal sensitivity, uptake pathways, and mixture toxicity
Laurie S. Balistrieri, Christopher A. Mebane, Travis S. Schmidt
2020, Science of the Total Environment (732)
Conceptual and quantitative models were developed to assess time-dependent processes in four sequential experimental stream studies that determined abundances of natural communities of mayfly and caddisfly larvae dosed with single metals (Cd, Co, Cu, Ni, Zn) or multiple metals (Cd+Zn, Co+Cu, Cu+Ni, Cu+Zn, Ni+Zn, Cd+Cu+Zn, Co+Cu+Ni, Cu+Ni+Zn). Metal mixtures...