Delineation of spatial extent, depth, thickness, and potential volume of aquifers used for domestic and public water-supply in the Central Valley, California
Stefan Voss, Bryant C. Jurgens, Miranda S. Fram, George L. Bennett V
2019, Scientific Investigations Report 2019-5076
Identification of the groundwater resources used for drinking-water supplies is essential for the design of strategies to manage those resources. In this study, the spatial extent, depths, thicknesses, and volumes of groundwater aquifers used for domestic and public drinking-water supply were estimated from locations and well-construction data from 11,725 domestic-supply...
Tritium as an indicator of modern, mixed, and premodern groundwater age
Bruce D. Lindsey, Bryant C. Jurgens, Kenneth Belitz
2019, Scientific Investigations Report 2019-5090
Categorical classification of groundwater age is often used for the assessment and understanding of groundwater resources. This report presents a tritium-based age classification system for the conterminous United States based on tritium (3H) thresholds that vary in space and time: modern (recharged in 1953 or later), if the measured value...
Evaluation of groundwater-flow models for estimating drawdown from proposed groundwater development in Tule Desert, Nevada
Keith J. Halford
2019, Open-File Report 2019-1091
At the request of the Bureau of Land Management (BLM), the U.S. Geological Survey (USGS) is releasing with this open-file report (OFR) a previously unpublished review and comparison of two numerical models for Tule Desert, Nevada. The original review was performed in spring 2013, and only minor editorial revisions were...
Rapid adoption of nestboxes by Prothonotary Warblers (Protonotaria citrea) in mesic deciduous forest
Alexander J Mueller, Daniel J. Twedt, E Keith Bowers
2019, Canadian Journal of Zoology (97) 1109-1115
Breeding territory selection in Prothonotary Warblers (Protonotaria citrea (Boddaert, 1783)) is thought to hinge on standing water, with a strong preference for low-lying areas prone to seasonal flooding. However, we have observed this species nesting in much drier areas than previously reported. We recently initiated a study of the Carolina Wren...
A river is born: Highlights of the geologic evolution of the Colorado River extensional corridor and its river: A field guide honoring the life and legacy of Warren Hamilton
Keith A. Howard, Kyle House, Barbara E John, Ryan S. Crow, Philip A Pearthree
2019, Book chapter, Geologic excursions in Southwestern North America
The Colorado River extensional corridor, which stretched by a factor of 2 in the Miocene, left a series of lowland basins and intervening bedrock ranges that, at the dawn of the Pliocene, were flooded by Colorado River water newly diverted from the Colorado Plateau through Grand...
Streamflow gains and losses in New Fork and Green Rivers, upstream from Fontenelle Reservoir, Wyoming, October 2015
Cheryl A. Eddy-Miller, Seth L. Davidson, Jerrod D. Wheeler, Sarah J. Davis, J. Brooks Stephens, James Campbell
2019, Scientific Investigations Report 2019-5081
The Wyoming Landscape Conservation Initiative is a program created to implement a long-term, science-based program of assessing natural resources while facilitating responsible energy and other development and does studies in much of southwestern Wyoming, including all or parts of Lincoln, Sublette, Fremont, Sweetwater, and Carbon Counties. A synoptic study was...
Benthic algal (Periphyton) growth rates in response to nitrogen and phosphorus: Parameter estimation for water quality models
Travis S. Schmidt, Christopher Konrad, Janet L. Miller, Stephen D. Whitlock, Craig A. Stricker
2019, Journal of the American Water Resources Association (55) 1479-1491
Nitrogen (N) and phosphorus (P) are important pollutants that can stimulate nuisance blooms of algae. Water-quality models (e.g., WASP, CE-QUAL-R1, CE-QUAL-ICM, QUAL2k) are valuable and widely used management tools for algal accrual because of excess nutrients in the presence of other limiting factors. These models utilize the Monod and Droop...
Stratigraphic analysis of Corte Madera Creek flood control channel deposits
Daniel N. Livsey, Paul A. Work, Maureen A. Downing-Kunz
2019, Scientific Investigations Report 2019-5070
Sedimentation in a channel can reduce flood conveyance capability and potentially place nearby property and life at risk from flooding. In 1998, Marin County Public Works dredged the concrete-lined segment of Corte Madera Creek, which drains a hilly and largely urbanized watershed that terminates in San Francisco Bay, California. From...
Phosphorus and nitrogen transport in the binational Great Lakes Basin estimated using SPARROW watershed models
Dale M. Robertson, David A. Saad, Glenn A. Benoy, Ivana Vouk, Gregory E. Schwarz, Michael T Laitta
2019, Journal of the American Water Resources Association (55) 1401-1424
Eutrophication problems in the Great Lakes are caused by excessive nutrient inputs (primarily phosphorus, P, and nitrogen, N) from various sources throughout its basin. In developing protection and restoration plans, it is important to know where and from what sources the nutrients originate. As part of a binational effort, Midcontinent...
Evaluating the factors responsible for post-fire water quality response in forests of the western USA
Ashley J. Rust, Samuel Saxe, John E. McCray, Charles C. Rhoades, Terri S. Hogue
2019, International Journal of Wildland Fire (28) 769-784
Wildfires commonly increase nutrient, carbon, sediment, and metal inputs to streams yet the factors responsible for the type, magnitude and duration of water quality effects are poorly understood. Prior work by the current authors found increased nitrogen, phosphorus and cation exports were common the first five post-fire years from a...
Updating estimates of low-streamflow statistics to account for possible trends
Annalise G. Blum, Stacey A. Archfield, Robert M. Hirsch, Richard M Vogel, Julie E. Kiang, Robert W. Dudley
2019, Hydrologic Sciences Journal (6) 1404-1414
Accurate estimators of streamflow statistics are critical to the design, planning, and management of water resources. Given increasing evidence of trends in low-streamflow, new approaches to estimating low-streamflow statistics are needed. Here we investigate simple approaches to select a recent subset of the low-flow record to update...
Estimating annual Ceratonova shasta mortality rates in juvenile Scott and Shasta River coho salmon that enter the Klamath River mainstem
Nicholas A. Som, Nicholas J. Hetrick, Russell Perry, Julie D Alexander
2019, Report, Arcata fisheries technical report number TR 2019-38
The impacts of Ceratonova shasta on Klamath River salmonids have been the focus of tremendous research and monitoring over the past decade. Knowledge gained from the various studies has resulted in a growing suite of decision support tools that can be used to predict the prevalence of infection and mortality...
Chemically enhanced treatment wetland to improve water quality and mitigate land subsidence in the Sacramento-San Joaquin Delta: Cost and design considerations
Philip A. M. Bachand, Tamara E. C. Kraus, William R. Horwath, Nathan R. Hatch, Sandra M. Bachand
2019, San Francisco Estuary and Watershed Science (17)
Water quality impairment and land surface subsidence threaten the viability of the Sacramento-San Joaquin Delta (Delta), a critical component of California’s water conveyance system. Current day irrigation drainage through Delta island peat soils impacts drinking water treatment and is linked to mercury transport, potentially posing both ecological and public health...
Evaluation of an acoustic fish deterrent system in shallow water application at the Emiquon Preserve, Lewistown, IL.
James J. Wamboldt, Kelsie A. Murchy, Jessica C. Stanton, K. Douglas Blodgett, Marybeth K. Brey
2019, Management of Biological Invasions (10) 536-558
Expansion of non-native fish have caused ecological and economic damage and can negatively impact native fish populations. Current research on deterrent technologies for bighead Hypophthalmichthys nobilis and silver carp H. molitrix have primarily focused on reducing upstream movement in large river lock approaches. However, there is also interest in excluding carp from smaller-scale locations....
Clarifying how hunt-specific experiences affect satisfaction among more avid and less avid waterfowl hunters
David C. Fulton, Susan A. Schroeder, Louis Cornicelli, Steven D. Cordts, Jeffrey S. Lawrence
2019, Wildlife Society Bulletin (43) 455-467
Marketing research methods could enhance understanding of hunter satisfaction, a key metric for state wildlife management agencies. We use three marketing research approaches—revised importance-performance, importance-grid, and penalty-reward-contrast analysis—to examine the determinants of waterfowl hunter satisfaction. These methods have seen limited application in research on hunting and other outdoor recreation activities....
Back to the future: Rebuilding the Everglades
Fred H. Sklar, James M. Beerens, Laura A. Brandt, Carlos A. Coronado-Molina, Steven M Davis, Tom Frankovich, Christopher Madden, Agnes McLean, Joel C. Trexler, Walter Wilcox
2019, Book chapter, The Coastal Everglades: The Dynamics of Social-Ecological Transformation in the South Florida Landscape
Society values landscapes that are engrained in cultural tradition and have a rich connection with human history. As such, there has been a concerted effort to look at the pristine past and develop plans to move the past into the future. However, bringing the past back is constrained by hysteretic...
Effects of air exposure on survival of Yellowstone Cutthroat Trout angled from a stream with warm water temperatures
Darcy K. McCarrick, Curtis J. Roth, Daniel J. Schill, Brett High, Michael C. Quist
2019, Journal of Fish and Wildlife Management (10) 509-516
We evaluated the effects of air exposure on Yellowstone Cutthroat Trout Oncorhynchus clarkii bouvieri caught and released in a cold-water stream with elevated water temperatures (i.e., > 14°C) in southeastern Idaho. Anglers caught fish in a 2.3-km section of Fall Creek, Idaho, during August 2018. Sampled fish...
Drought in the U.S. Affiliated Pacific Islands: Impacts to water resources
Stephen Anthony
2019, Report
No abstract available....
Developing a precision irrigation framework to facilitate smallholder dry-season farming in developing countries: A case study in northern Ghana
Jeremy M Fontaine, Joseph Fentzke, Erasmus K Oware, Eric Doe, Samuel Guug, John W. Lane Jr.
2019, Conference Paper, SEG Technical Program Expanded Abstracts 2019
Changing climate has resulted in increasingly unreliable weather patterns with prolonged dry-seasons in some parts of Sub-Saharan Africa. Food production in these areas is under threat because the people depend mostly on rain-fed farming. Enabling dry-season farming, in light of the prolonged dry-seasons, is central to sustainable food production and...
An importance–satisfaction analysis of trout license holders in Georgia
H. J. TenHarmsel, B. B. Boley, Brian J. Irwin, Cecil A. Jennings
2019, North American Journal of Fisheries Management (39) 1227-1241
As anglers become increasingly diverse, fisheries managers are challenged to find ways to satisfy users with divergent preferences while conserving a limited resource on a limited budget. With this management challenge in mind, this study combines previous angler specialization research with an importance–satisfaction analysis (ISA) to aid fisheries managers in...
Sequestration and transformation in chemically enhanced treatment wetlands: DOC, DBPPs and Nutrients
Philip A. M. Bachand, Sandra M. Bachand, Tamara E. C. Kraus, Dylan Stern, Yan Ling Liang, William R. Horwath
2019, Journal of Environmental Engineering (145)
We examined the effectiveness of chemically enhanced treatment wetlands (CETWs), wetlands that received water treated with coagulants, to remove dissolved organic carbon (DOC), disinfection byproduct precursors (DBPPs), nutrients and metals from agricultural drain water. Wetlands consisted of controls with no coagulant addition, ferric sulfate dosed and polyaluminum chloride dosed treatments....
Black Carp in North America: A description of range, habitats, time of year, and methods of reported captures
Patrick Kroboth, Cortney Cox, Duane Chapman, Gregory W. Whitledge
2019, North American Journal of Fisheries Management (39) 1046-1055
Black Carp Mylopharyngodon piceus are considered invasive in North America. Since the first wild capture in 2003, collection records have increased, yet information summarizing successful collection methods is lacking. Reported capture methods throughout the Black Carp's native and introduced ranges vary providing minimal aid for determining control and monitoring methods. Here, we...
Water velocity regulates macro-consumer herbivory on the benthic macrophyte Podostemum ceratophyllum Michx.
James L Wood, Jon W Skaggs, Caitlin C Conn, Mary Freeman
2019, Freshwater Biology (64) 2037-2045
1) Macrophytes influence aquatic ecosystems by increasing habitat complexity and providing trophic resources for aquatic fauna. While herbivory on freshwater macrophytes is widely documented in lakes, low-velocity riverine habitats, the influence of herbivory on macrophytes in higher-velocity habitats has rarely been examined. 2) We investigated the hypothesis that high...
Non-native marine fishes in Florida: Updated checklist, population status and early detection/rapid response
Pamela J. Schofield, Lad Akins
2019, BioInvasions Records (8) 898-910
It has been ten years since the last comprehensive assessment of non-native marine fishes in Florida. Herein, we report sightings of 41 species from Florida coastal waters since the earliest reported sighting in 1984. Information is provided on the population status of each species (e.g., established, eradicated, unknown), and our...
Arsenic, antimony, mercury, and water temperature in streams near Stibnite mining area, central Idaho, 2011–17
Austin K. Baldwin, Alexandra B. Etheridge
2019, Scientific Investigations Report 2019-5072
Mineralization and historical mining of stibnite (antimony sulfide), tungsten, gold, silver, and mercury in the headwaters of the East Fork of the South Fork Salmon River (EFSFSR) near the former town of Stibnite in central Idaho resulted in water-quality impairments related to mercury, antimony, and arsenic. Additionally, mining-related disturbances and...