Swimming performance and physiological responses to exhaustive exercise in radio-tagged and untagged Pacific lampreys
M.G. Mesa, J.M. Bayer, J.G. Seelye
2003, Transactions of the American Fisheries Society (132) 483-492
Populations of Pacific lamprey Lampetra tridentata have declined in the Columbia River basin. One factor that may have contributed to this reduction in population size is an excessive use of energy by adult lampreys as they negotiate fishways at dams during spawning migrations. To gain an understanding of the performance...
Bayesian Estimations of Peak Ground Acceleration and 5% Damped Spectral Acceleration from Modified Mercalli Intensity Data
J.E. Ebel, D.J. Wald
2003, Earthquake Spectra (19) 511-529
We describe a new probabilistic method that uses observations of modified Mercalli intensity (MMI) from past earthquakes to make quantitative estimates of ground shaking parameters (i.e., peak ground acceleration, peak ground velocity, 5% damped spectral acceleration values, etc.). The method uses a Bayesian approach to make quantitative estimates of the...
Mass spectrometric identification of an azobenzene derivative produced by smectite-catalyzed conversion of 3-amino-4-hydroxyphenylarsonic acid
Robert L. Wershaw, David W. Rutherford, Colleen E. Rostad, John R. Garbarino, I. Ferrer, K. R. Kennedy, G.-M. Momplaisir, A. Grange
2003, Talanta (59) 1219-1226
The compound 3-amino-4-hydroxyphenylarsonic acid (3-amino-HPAA) reacts with smectite to form a soluble azobenzene arsonic acid compound. This reaction is of particular interest because it provides a possible mechanism for the formation of a new type of arsenic compound in natural water systems. 3-Amino-HPAA is a degradation product excreted by chickens...
Evaporation determined by the energy-budget method for Mirror Lake, New Hampshire
T. C. Winter, D.C. Buso, D.O. Rosenberry, G.E. Likens, A.M. Sturrock Jr., D.P. Mau
2003, Limnology and Oceanography (48) 995-1009
Evaporation was determined by the energy-budget method for Mirror Lake during the open water periods of 1982-1987. For all years, evaporation rates were low in spring and fall and highest during the summer. However, the times of highest evaporation rates varied during the 6 yr. Evaporation reached maximum rates in July for three of the years, in June for two of the years, and in...
Environmental fate of roxarsone in poultry litter. Part II. Mobility of arsenic in soils amended with poultry litter
D.W. Rutherford, A.J. Bednar, J.R. Garbarino, R. Needham, K.W. Staver, R.L. Wershaw
2003, Environmental Science & Technology (37) 1515-1520
Poultry litter often contains arsenic as a result of organo-arsenical feed additives. When the poultry litter is applied to agricultural fields, the arsenic is released to the environment and may result in increased arsenic in surface and groundwater and increased uptake by plants. The release of arsenic from poultry litter,...
Effects of ammonium perchlorate on the reproductive performance and thyroid follicle histology of zebrafish
R. Patino, M. R. Wainscott, E. I. Cruz-Li, S. Balakrishnan, C. McMurry, V. S. Blazer, T.A. Anderson
2003, Conference Paper, Environmental Toxicology and Chemistry
Adult zebrafish were reared up to eight weeks in control water or in water containing ammonium perchlorate (AP) at measured perchlorate concentrations of 18 (environmentally relevant, high) and 677 ppm. Groups of eight females were paired with four males on a weekly basis to assess AP effects on spawned egg...
Impacts of the Columbia River hydroelectric system on main-stem habitats of fall chinook salmon
D.D. Dauble, T.P. Hanrahan, D.R. Geist, M.J. Parsley
2003, North American Journal of Fisheries Management (23) 641-659
Salmonid habitats in main-stem reaches of the Columbia and Snake rivers have changed dramatically during the past 60 years because of hydroelectric development and operation. Only about 13% and 58% of riverine habitats in the Columbia and Snake rivers, respectively, remain. Most riverine habitat is found in the upper Snake...
Mantle fault zone beneath Kilauea Volcano, Hawaii
C.J. Wolfe, P. G. Okubo, P.M. Shearer
2003, Science (300) 478-480
Relocations and focal mechanism analyses of deep earthquakes (???13 kilometers) at Kilauea volcano demonstrate that seismicity is focused on an active fault zone at 30-kilometer depth, with seaward slip on a low-angle plane, and other smaller, distinct fault zones. The earthquakes we have analyzed predominantly reflect tectonic faulting in the...
Liquefaction potential index: Field assessment
S. Toprak, T.L. Holzer
2003, Journal of Geotechnical and Geoenvironmental Engineering (129) 315-322
Cone penetration test (CPT) soundings at historic liquefaction sites in California were used to evaluate the predictive capability of the liquefaction potential index (LPI), which was defined by Iwasaki et al. in 1978. LPI combines depth, thickness, and factor of safety of liquefiable material inferred from a CPT sounding into...
The role of microbial reductive dechlorination of TCE at a phytoremediation site
E.M. Godsy, E. Warren, V.V. Paganelli
2003, International Journal of Phytoremediation (5) 73-87
In April 1996, a phytoremediation field demonstration site at the Naval Air Station, Fort Worth, Texas, was developed to remediate shallow oxic ground water (<3.7 m deep) contaminated with chlorinated ethenes. Microbial populations were sampled in February and June 1998. The populations under the newly planted cottonwood...
High plant diversity in Eocene South America: Evidence from Patagonia
P. Wilf, N.R. Cuneo, K.R. Johnson, J.F. Hicks, S.L. Wing, J. D. Obradovich
2003, Science (300) 122-125
Tropical South America has the highest plant diversity of any region today, but this richness is usually characterized as a geologically recent development (Neogene or Pleistocene). From caldera-lake beds exposed at Laguna del Hunco in Patagonia, Argentina, paleolatitude ~47oS, we report 102 leaf species. Radioisotopic and paleomagnetic analyses indicate that...
An approach for mapping large-area impervious surfaces: Synergistic use of Landsat-7 ETM+ and high spatial resolution imagery
Limin Yang, Chengquan Huang, Collin G. Homer, Bruce K. Wylie, Michael Coan
2003, Canadian Journal of Remote Sensing (29) 230-240
A wide range of urban ecosystem studies, including urban hydrology, urban climate, land use planning, and resource management, require current and accurate geospatial data of urban impervious surfaces. We developed an approach to quantify urban impervious surfaces as a continuous variable by using multisensor and multisource datasets. Subpixel percent impervious...
Surgical implantation of transmitters into fish
Daniel M. Mulcahy
2003, ILAR Journal (44) 295-306
Although the Animal Welfare Act does not cover poikilotherms, individual institutions and policies and legal requirements other than the Animal Welfare Act (e.g., the US Public Health Service and the Interagency Research Animal Committee's Principles for the Utilization and Care of Vertebrate Animals Used in Testing, Research, and Training) require...
Identification of linear and threshold responses in streams along a gradient of urbanization in Anchorage, Alaska
Robert T. Ourso, S.A. Frenzel
2003, Hydrobiologia (501) 117-131
We examined biotic and physiochemical responses in urbanized Anchorage, Alaska, to the percent of impervious area within stream basins, as determined by high-resolution IKONOS satellite imagery and aerial photography. Eighteen of the 86 variables examined, including riparian and instream habitat, macroinvertebrate communities, and water/sediment chemistry, were significantly correlated with percent...
Geostatistics and the representative elementary volume of gamma ray tomography attenuation in rocks cores
J. R. Vogel, G.O. Brown
2003, Geological Society Special Publication (215) 81-93
Semivariograms of samples of Culebra Dolomite have been determined at two different resolutions for gamma ray computed tomography images. By fitting models to semivariograms, small-scale and large-scale correlation lengths are determined for four samples. Different semivariogram parameters were found for adjacent cores at both resolutions. Relative elementary volume (REV) concepts are related to the stationarity of the sample. A scale...
Assessing water quality at large geographic scales: Relations among land use, water physicochemistry, riparian condition, and fish community structure
M. R. Meador, R. M. Goldstein
2003, Environmental Management (31) 504-517
Data collected from 172 sites in 20 major river basins between 1993 and 1995 as part of the US Geological Survey's National Water-Quality Assessment Program were analyzed to assess relations among basinwide land use (agriculture, forest, urban, range), water physicochemistry, riparian condition, and fish community structure. A multimetric approach was...
Physical and hydraulic properties of volcanic rocks from Yucca Mountain, Nevada
Lorraine E. Flint
2003, Water Resources Research (39) 1-1-1-13
A database of physical and hydraulic properties was developed for rocks in the unsaturated zone at Yucca Mountain, Nevada, a site under consideration as a geologic repository for high‐level radioactive waste. The 5320 core samples were collected from 23 shallow (<100 m) and 10 deep (500–1000 m) vertical boreholes. Hydrogeologic...
Using 1-Hz GPS data to measure deformations caused by the denali fault earthquake
K.M. Larson, P. Bodin, J. Gomberg
2003, Science (300) 1421-1424
The 3 November 2002 moment magnitude 7.9 Denali fault earthquake generated large, permanent surface displacements in Alaska and large-amplitude surface waves throughout western North America. We find good agreement between strong ground-motion records integrated to displacement and 1-hertz Global Positioning System (GPS) position estimates collected ??? 140 kilometers from the...
A vegetation history from the arid prepuna of northern Chile (22-23°S) over the last 13,500 years
Claudio Latorre, Julio L. Betancourt, Kate A. Rylander, Jay Quade, Oscar Matthei
2003, Palaeogeography, Palaeoclimatology, Palaeoecology (194) 223-246
The Quaternary paleoclimate of the central Andes is poorly understood due to numerous discrepancies among the diverse proxy records that span this geographically and climatically complex region. The exact timing, duration and magnitude of wet and dry phases are seldom duplicated from one proxy type to another, and there have...
Ecology of selected marine communities in Glacier Bay: Zooplankton, forage fish, seabirds and marine mammals
Martin D. Robards, Gary S. Drew, John F. Piatt, Jennifer Marie Anson, Alisa A. Abookire, James L. Bodkin, Philip N. Hooge, Suzann G. Speckman
2003, Report
We studied oceanography (including primary production), secondary production, small schooling fish (SSF), and marine bird and mammal predators in Glacier Bay during 1999 and 2000. Results from these field efforts were combined with a review of current literature relating to the Glacier Bay environment. Since the conceptual model developed by...
Response of sphagnum fuscum to nitrogen deposition: A case study of mbrogenous peatlands in Alberta, Canada
D.H. Vitt, K. Wieder, L.A. Halsey, M. Turetsky
2003, Bryologist (106) 235-245
Peatlands cover about 30% of northeastern Alberta and are ecosystems that are sensitive to nitrogen deposition. In polluted areas of the UK, high atmospheric N deposition (as a component of acid deposition) has been considered among the causes of Sphagnum decline in bogs (ombrogenous peatlands). In relatively unpolluted areas of western...
Hilbert-Huang transform analysis of dynamic and earthquake motion recordings
R.R. Zhang, S. Ma, E. Safak, S. Hartzell
2003, Journal of Engineering Mechanics (129) 861-875
This study examines the rationale of Hilbert-Huang transform (HHT) for analyzing dynamic and earthquake motion recordings in studies of seismology and engineering. In particular, this paper first provides the fundamentals of the HHT method, which consist of the empirical mode decomposition (EMD) and the Hilbert spectral analysis. It then uses...
The Impact of Turtle Excluder Devices and Fisheries Closures on Loggerhead and Kemp's Ridley Strandings in the Western Gulf of Mexico
R.L. Lewison, L.B. Crowder, D.J. Shaver
2003, Conservation Biology (17) 1089-1097
The Sea Turtle Stranding and Salvage Network has been monitoring turtle strandings for more than 20 years in the United States. High numbers of strandings in the early to mid-1980s prompted regulations to require turtle excluder devices (TEDs) on shrimping vessels (trawlers). Following year-round TED implementation in 1991, however, stranding...
Western crevice and cavity-roosting bats
Michael A. Bogan, Paul M. Cryan, Ernest W. Valdez, Laura E. Ellison, Thomas J. O’Shea
2003, Report, Monitoring trends in bat populations of the United States and territories: Problems and prospects (Information and Technology Report 2003-0003)
Among the 45 species of bats that occur in the United States (U.S.), 34 species regularly occur in western regions of the country. Many of these “western” species choose roost sites in crevices or cavities. Herein we provide an introduction to the biology of bats that roost in cavities and...
Elevated lateral stress in unlithified sediment, Midcontinent, United States - geotechnical and geophysical indicators for a tectonic origin
E.W. Woolery, J.A. Schaefer, Z. Wang
2003, Tectonophysics (368) 139-153
Indirect and direct geotechnical measurements revealed the presence of high lateral earth pressure (Ko) in shallow, unlithified sediment at a site in the northernmost Mississippi embayment region of the central United States. Results from pile-load and pressuremeter tests showed maximum Ko values greater than 10; however, the complex geologic environment...