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Ground motion selection for nonlinear response history analyses of concrete dams
N. Simon Kwong
2022, Conference Paper, 2022 USSD annual conference & exhibition
Evaluating the seismic performance of a 3D concrete dam using nonlinear response history analysis (NLRHA) requires three orthogonal components of ground acceleration histories, or ground motions (GMs) for brevity. Although much progress has been made for the topic of ground motion selection and modification (GMSM) in the context of multistory...
Three-decades of Rocky Intertidal Photo Series Documenting interannual variability in western Prince William Sound
Alan Mearns, Dave Janka, Scott Pegau, Robert Campbell, Brian H. Robinson
2022, Conference Paper, Proceedings of the forty-forth AMOP technical seminar
During summer 2021 we re-visited and re-photographed intertidal community scenes at seven rocky intertidal sites in Western Prince William Sound, adding another year of photos to a 32-year monitoring effort. The sites include both previously-oiled and un-oiled locations that were the subject of repeated annual photos beginning in 1990, one...
Assessing the efficacy of oblique bubble screens for control of aquatic invasive species
Vindhyawasini Prasad, C.D. Suski, P. Ryan Jackson, Amy E. George, Duane Chapman, Jesse Robert Fischer, Rafael O. Tinoco
2022, Conference Paper, Proceedings of the 39th IAHR World Congress, Granada, Spain
Non-physical barriers, such as bubble screens (or curtains), are promising low-impact strategies to deter the spread of Aquatic Invasive Species (AIS) in streams. Bubble screens have been successfully implemented to redirect and/or deter adult fish and to capture plastics in some rivers, but their efficacy on invasive fish at multiple...
Status and trends in the Lake Superior fish community, 2021
Mark Vinson, Daniel L. Yule, Lori M. Evrard, Owen T. Gorman, Sydney B Phillips
2022, Report
The Lake Superior nearshore fish community was sampled in May-June 2021 with daytime bottom trawl tows at 45 stations located in USA waters. The 45 locations sampled were long-term monitoring sites that had been annually sampled since 1978. All comparisons to 2021 results were limited to past collections from USA...
Status and trends in the Lake Superior fish community, 2020
Mark Vinson, Lori M. Evrard, Owen Gorman, Daniel L. Yule
2022, Report
The Lake Superior fish community within Management Unit WI-2 was sampled in July 2020 with daytime bottom trawls at 11 nearshore stations. The 11 locations sampled were long-term monitoring sites that had been annually sampled since 1974. In 2020, the number of species collected at each site ranged from 0...
Nuclear magnetic resonance logging of a deep test well for estimation of aquifer and confining-unit hydraulic properties, Long Island, New York
Frederick Stumm, John Williams
2022, Conference Paper
A 1,200-foot deep well in southwestern Nassau County, Long Island, N.Y. was selected to evaluate the application of a nuclear magnetic resonance (NMR) logging tool. Technological advances in NMR borehole systems have allowed for reduced probe length and diameter, and focused measurement at specific diameters beyond the disturbed zone surrounding...
Environmental geochemistry of an epigenetic Pb-Zn-Ag deposit at the abandoned Cecilia mine, Puno region, Peru
S. Palomino, Robert R. Seal, II, F. Garcia, M. Ochoa, D. Machaca, A. Condorhuaman, M. Valencia
2022, Conference Paper, Proceedings of the 12th international conference on acid rock drainage
The abandoned Cecilia Pb-Zn-Ag mine is located at the headwaters of the Lake Titicaca watershed in the Altiplano of Peru. The site is characterized by three months of high precipitation and nine months of limited precipitation. The environmental geochemical characterization of the abandoned mine was done to evaluate environmental risks...
A review of Arctomecon californica (Papaveraceae) with a focus on the species’ potential for propagation and reintroduction and conservation needs
Alexander Stosich, Lesley A. DeFalco, Sara J. Scoles-Sciulla
2022, Monographs of the Western North American Naturalist (14) 1-22
Las Vegas bearpoppy (Arctomecon californica) occurrences have fluctuated during the past several decades, in part due to interannual variability in rainfall that influences recruitment and mortality events; yet, development in the Las Vegas Valley continues to threaten habitat supporting this species. Arctomecon californica was petitioned for listing under the Endangered Species Act...
Utilization of genetic data to inform native Brook Trout conservation in North Carolina
Jacob Rash, David C. Kazyak, Shannon L. White, Barbara A. Lubinski
2022, Conference Paper, Proceedings of Wild Trout XIII
As North Carolina’s only native salmonid, Brook Trout Salvelinus fontinalis is a fish of considerable ecological and cultural significance in the state, but anthropogenic alterations to the landscape and introductions of nonnative salmonids have fragmented and reduced its native range. As a result, the North Carolina Wildlife Resources Commission (NCWRC)...
Effect of repeated fire on annual brome invasion at Badlands National Park
Amy Symstad
2022, Report
Prescribed fire is used to combat exotic plant species in mixed-grass prairie of Northern Great Plains parks. However, prescribed fires rarely occur at a frequency likely to maintain any gains against exotic species. The unusual circumstance of experimental plots being burned twice in 2 years provides a unique opportunity to...
Characterization of subsurface conditions and recharge at the irrigated four-plex baseball field, Fort Irwin National Training Center, California, 2018–20
Jill N. Densmore, Meghan C. Dick, Krishangi D. Groover, Christopher P. Ely, Anthony A. Brown
2022, Open-File Report 2022-1118
The U.S. Geological Survey performed subsurface and geophysical site characterization of the irrigated four-plex baseball field in the Langford Valley–Irwin Groundwater Subbasin, as part of a research study in cooperation with the U.S. Environmental Protection Agency, the Agricultural Research Service, and the Fort Irwin National Training Center, California. To help...
Range-wide population trend analysis for greater sage-grouse (Centrocercus urophasianus)—Updated 1960–2021
Peter S. Coates, Brian G. Prochazka, Cameron L. Aldridge, Michael S. O’Donnell, David R. Edmunds, Adrian P. Monroe, Steve E. Hanser, Lief A. Wiechman, Michael P. Chenaille
2022, Data Report 1165
Greater sage-grouse (Centrocercus urophasianus) are at the center of state and national land use policies largely because of their unique life-history traits as an ecological indicator for health of sagebrush ecosystems. This updated population trend analysis provides state and federal land and wildlife managers with best-available science to help guide...
Bureau of Reclamation: Visitor satisfaction survey instructions
Emily J. Wilkins, Nicholas W. Cole, Rudy Schuster
2022, Report
The purpose of the Bureau of Reclamation (BOR) Visitor Satisfaction Survey is to measure visitors’ opinions about BOR facilities, services, and recreational opportunities. This effort helps BOR meet requirements of the Government Performance and Results Act of 1993 (GPRA) and other BOR and Department of the Interior (DOI) strategic planning...
Perspectives on premetamorphic stratabound tourmalinites
John F. Slack
2022, Journal of Geosciences (67) 73-102
Stratabound tourmalinites are metallogenically important rocks that locally show a close spatial association with diverse types of mineralization, especially volcanogenic massive sulfides (VMS) and clastic-dominated (CD) Zn-Pb deposits. These tourmalinite occurrences pan the geologic record from Eoarchean to Jurassic. Host lithologies are dominated by clastic metasedimentary rocks but in some areas...
Red knot stopover population size and migration ecology at Delaware Bay, USA, 2022
James E. Lyons
2022, Report
Red Knots (Calidris canutus rufa) stop at Delaware Bay on the mid-Atlantic coast of North America during northward migration to feed on eggs of horseshoe crabs (Limulus polyphemus). In the late 1990s and early 2000s, the number of Red Knots found at Delaware Bay declined from ~50,000 to ~13,000. Horseshoe...
Opportunities to improve water quality during abandoned mine-tunnel reclamation
Katherine Walton-Day, James J. Gusek, Connor P. Newman
2022, Conference Paper, IMWA – Reconnect
In the western United States, bulkheads are constructed to limit drainage from abandoned, draining mine adits and to protect downstream resources from uncontrolled releases of degraded adit water. Although bulkheads improve safety and water-quality conditions at the mouth of the adit, elevated hydraulic pressure behind the bulkhead often causes continuing...
Crocodylus acutus (American crocodile). Diet
Sidney T. Godfrey, Michael Cherkiss, Jeffrey S. Beauchamp, Michiko A. Squires, Frank J. Mazzotti, Lindsey Hord, William Billings
2022, Herpetological Review (53) 493-494
Reported prey items of Crocodylus acutus include insects, crustaceans, fish, and large reptiles (Medem 1981. Los Crocodylia de Sur America. Volumen I. Los Crocodylia de Colombia. Colciencias. Bogota, Colombia. 398 pp.; Platt et al. 2002. Herpetol. Rev. 33:202–203; Platt et al. 2013. J. Herpetol. 47:1–10; Balaguera-Reina et al. 2018. Ecosphere...
Continuous water-quality and suspended-sediment transport monitoring in San Francisco Bay, California, water years 2020–21
Danielle L. Palm, Darin C. Einhell, Selina M. Davila Olivera
2022, Fact Sheet 2022-3087
The U.S. Geological Survey (USGS) has continuously monitored real-time water quality and suspended-sediment transport in San Francisco Bay (the Bay) since 1989 as part of a multi-agency effort (see “Acknowledgments” section) to address estuary management, water supply, and ecological concerns. The San Francisco Bay area is home to millions of...
Environmental drivers of demography and potential factors limiting the recovery of an endangered marine top predator
Amanda J. Warlick, Devin S. Johnson, Tom S. Gelatt, Sarah J. Converse
2022, Ecosphere (13)
Understanding what drives changes in wildlife demography is fundamental to the conservation and management of depleted or declining populations, though making inference about the intrinsic and extrinsic factors that influence survival and reproduction remains challenging. Here we use mark–resight data from 2000 to 2018...
Hidden in plain sight: Integrated population models to resolve partially observable latent population structure
Abigail Jean Lawson, Patrick G.R. Jodice, Thomas R. Rainwater, Kylee Denise Dunham, Morgan Hart, Joseph W. Butfiloski, Philip M. Wilkinson, Clinton Moore
2022, Ecosphere (13)
Population models often require detailed information on sex-, age-, or size-specific abundances, but population monitoring programs cannot always acquire data at the desired resolution. Thus, state uncertainty in monitoring data can potentially limit the demographic resolution of management decisions, which may be particularly problematic for stage- or size-structured species subject...
Critical ShakeCast lifeline users and their response protocols
Kuo-wan Lin, David J. Wald, Daniel Slosky, Sterling Strait, Justin Smith, Sharon Yen, Nick Burmas
2022, Conference Paper, Lifelines 2022
ShakeCast is a US Geological Survey (USGS) software application that automatically retrieves ShakeMap shaking estimates and performs analyses using fragility functions for buildings and lifelines. The ShakeCast system aims to identify which facilities or lifeline segments are most likely impacted by an earthquake—and thus which ones should...
Spatial scale selection for informing species conservation in a changing landscape
Adrian P. Monroe, Julie A. Heinrichs, Ashley L. Whipple, Michael S. O’Donnell, David R. Edmunds, Cameron L. Aldridge
2022, Ecosphere (13)
Identifying the relevant spatial scale at which species respond to features in a landscape (scale of effect) is a pressing research need as managers work to reduce biodiversity loss amid a variety of environmental challenges. Until recently, researchers often evaluated a subset of potential scales of...
Hydrologic effects of leakage from the Catskill Aqueduct on the bedrock-aquifer system near High Falls, New York, November 2019–January 2020
Anthony Chu, Michael L. Noll, William D. Capurso
2022, Open-File Report 2022-1119
Historical observations by the New York City Department of Environmental Protection (NYCDEP) indicate that the Rondout pressure tunnel has been leaking in the vicinity of the hamlet of High Falls, New York. In the 74 days from November 11, 2019, to January 23, 2020, NYCDEP shut down and partially dewatered...
Technical note—Performance evaluation of the PhytoFind, an in-place phytoplankton classification tool
Brett D. Johnston, Jennifer L. Graham, Guy M. Foster, Bryan D. Downing
2022, Scientific Investigations Report 2022-5103
In 2019, the U.S. Geological Survey evaluated the performance of the Turner Designs, Inc. PhytoFind, an in-place phytoplankton classification tool. The sensor was tested with sample blanks, monoculture and mixed phytoplankton cultures, and turbidity challenges in a laboratory, and was tested on a 120-mile survey of the Caloosahatchee and St....