Extension of EMA to address regional skew and low outliers
V.W. Griffis, J.R. Stedinger, T.A. Cohn
P. Bizier, P. DeBarry, editor(s)
2003, Conference Paper, World Water and Environmental Resources Congress
The recently developed expected moments algorithm [EMA] (Cohn et al. 1997) does as well as MLEs at estimating LP3 flood quantiles using systematic and historical information. Needed extensions include use of a regional skewness estimator and its precision to be consistent with Bulletin 17B and to make use of such...
A rehabilitation plan for walleye populations and habitats in Lake Superior
Michael H. Hoff
2003, Miscellaneous Publication 2003-01
The walleye (Stizostedion vitreum vitreum) has been historically important in regional fisheries and fish communities in large bays, estuaries, and rivers of Lake Superior. Significant negative impacts on the species caused by overharvesting, habitat degradation, and pollution during the late 1800s and early 1900s have led to the preparation of...
Conjunctive-management models for sustained yield of stream-aquifer systems
P. M. Barlow, D.P. Ahlfeld, D.C. Dickerman
2003, Journal of Water Resources Planning and Management (129) 35-48
Conjunctive-management models that couple numerical simulation with linear optimization were developed to evaluate trade-offs between groundwater withdrawals and streamflow depletions for alluvial-valley stream-aquifer systems representative of those of the northeastern United States. A conjunctive-management model developed for a hypothetical stream-aquifer system was used to assess the effect of interannual hydrologic...
Gold deposits in metamorphic belts: Overview of current understanding, outstanding problems, future research, and exploration significance
D.I. Groves, R.J. Goldfarb, F. Robert, C.J.R. Hart
2003, Economic Geology (98) 1-29
Metamorphic belts are complex regions where accretion or collision has added to, or thickened, continental crust. Gold-rich deposits can be formed at all stages of orogen evolution, so that evolving metamorphic belts contain diverse gold deposit types that may be juxtaposed or overprint each other. This partly explains the high...
Left-Right Asymmetric Morphogenesis in the Xenopus Digestive System
Jennifer K. Muller, D.R. Prather, N. M. Nascone-Yoder
2003, Developmental Dynamics (228) 672-682
The morphogenetic mechanisms by which developing organs become left-right asymmetric entities are unknown. To investigate this issue, we compared the roles of the left and right sides of the Xenopus embryo during the development of anatomic asymmetries in the digestive system. Although both sides contribute equivalently to each of the...
Global carbon sequestration in tidal, saline wetland soils
G.L. Chmura, S.C. Anisfeld, Donald R. Cahoon, J.C. Lynch
2003, Global Biogeochemical Cycles (17)
Wetlands represent the largest component of the terrestrial biological carbon pool and thus play an important role in global carbon cycles. Most global carbon budgets, however, have focused on dry land ecosystems that extend over large areas and have not accounted for the many small, scattered carbon-storing ecosystems such as tidal saline wetlands. We compiled data for 154 sites in mangroves and salt marshes from...
Debris-flow deposits and watershed erosion rates near southern Death Valley, CA, United States
K. M. Schmidt, C.M. Menges
D. Rickenmann, Chiu-Lan Chen, editor(s)
2003, Conference Paper, International conference on debris-flow hazards mitigation: Mechanics, prediction, and assessment, proceedings
No abstract available....
Safety of Aquaflor (florfenicol, 50% Type A Medicated Article), administered in feed to channel catfish, Ictalurus punctatus
Mark P. Gaikowski, Jeffrey C. Wolf, Richard G. Endris, William H. Gingerich
2003, Toxicologic Pathology (31) 689-697
Aquaflor, a feed premix containing the broad spectrum antibacterial agent florfenicol (50% w/w), is being developed for use to control enteric septicemia (ESC) in channel catfish Ictalurus punctatus caused by the gram-negative enterobacterium Edwardsiella ictaluri. The recommended dose of Aquaflor to control ESC is 10 mg/kg body weight (BW)/day for 10 days. The...
Regional forest land cover characterisation using medium spatial resolution satellite data
Chengquan Huang, Collin G. Homer, Limin Yang
Michael A. Wulder, Steven E. Franklin, editor(s)
2003, Book chapter, Remote sensing of forest environments: Concepts and case studies
Increasing demands on forest resources require comprehensive, consistent and up-to-date information on those resources at spatial scales appropriate for management decision-making and for scientific analysis. While such information can be derived using coarse spatial resolution satellite data (e.g. Tucker et al. 1984; Zhu and Evans 1994; Cihlar et al. 1996;...
Phylogeny of the owlet-nightjars (Aves: Aegothelidae) based on mitochondrial DNA sequence
J.P. Dumbacher, T.K. Pratt, R.C. Fleischer
2003, Molecular Phylogenetics and Evolution (29) 540-549
The avian family Aegothelidae (Owlet-nightjars) comprises nine extant species and one extinct species, all of which are currently classified in a single genus, Aegotheles. Owlet-nightjars are secretive nocturnal birds of the South Pacific. They are relatively poorly studied and some species are known from only a few specimens. Furthermore, their...
Entropy and generalized least square methods in assessment of the regional value of streamgages
M. Markus, Knapp H. Vernon, Gary D. Tasker
2003, Journal of Hydrology (283) 107-121
The Illinois State Water Survey performed a study to assess the streamgaging network in the State of Illinois. One of the important aspects of the study was to assess the regional value of each station through an assessment of the information transfer among gaging records for low, average, and high...
Volcanic debris flows in developing countries - The extreme need for public education and awareness of debris-flow hazards
J. J. Major, S. P. Schilling, C.R. Pullinger
Rickenmann D.Chen C.L., editor(s)
2003, Conference Paper, International Conference on Debris-Flow Hazards Mitigation: Mechanics, Prediction, and Assessment, Proceedings
In many developing countries, volcanic debris flows pose a significant societal risk owing to the distribution of dense populations that commonly live on or near a volcano. At many volcanoes, modest volume (up to 500,000 m 3) debris flows are relatively common (multiple times per century) and typically flow at...
Weathering of sulfidic shale and copper mine waste: Secondary minerals and metal cycling in Great Smoky Mountains National Park, Tennessee, and North Carolina, USA
J. M. Hammarstrom, R.R. Seal II, A. L. Meier, J.C. Jackson
2003, Environmental Geology (45) 35-57
Metal cycling via physical and chemical weathering of discrete sources (copper mines) and regional (non-point) sources (sulfide-rich shale) is evaluated by examining the mineralogy and chemistry of weathering products in Great Smoky Mountains National Park, Tennessee, and North Carolina, USA. The elements in copper mine waste, secondary minerals, stream sediments,...
Multiple oxygen and sulfur isotopic analyses on water-soluble sulfate in bulk atmospheric deposition from the southwestern United States
H. Bao, M.C. Reheis
2003, Journal of Geophysical Research D: Atmospheres (108)
Sulfate is a major component of bulk atmospheric deposition (including dust, aerosol, fog, and rain). We analyzed sulfur and oxygen isotopic compositions of water-soluble sulfate from 40 sites where year-round dust traps collect bulk atmospheric deposition in the southwestern United States. Average sulfur and oxygen isotopic compositions (δ34S and δ18O)...
Forest pathology in Hawaii
D.E. Gardner
2003, New Zealand Journal of Forestry Science (33) 343-361
Native Hawaiian forests are characterised by a high degree of endemism, including pathogens as well as their hosts. With the exceptions of koa (Acacia koa Gray), possibly maile (Alyxia oliviformis Gaud.), and, in the past, sandalwood (Santalum spp.), forest species are of little commercial value. On the other hand, these...
Seismic response analysis of an instrumented building structure
H.-J. Li, S.-Y. Zhu, M. Çelebi
2003, Earthquake Engineering and Engineering Vibration (23) 31-36
The Sheraton - Universal hotel, an instrumented building lying in North Hollywood, USA is selected for case study in this paper. The finite element method is used to produce a linear time - invariant structural model, and the SAP2000 program is employed for the time history analysis of the instrumented...
Benefits and costs of increased levels of corticosterone in seabird chicks
A.S. Kitaysky, E.V. Kitaiskaia, John F. Piatt, J.C. Wingfield
2003, Hormones and Behavior (43) 140-149
Seabird chicks respond to food shortages by increasing corticosterone (cort) secretion, which is probably associated with fitness benefits and costs. To examine this, we experimentally increased levels of circulating cort in captive black-legged kittiwake chicks fed ad libitum. We found that cort-implanted chicks begged more frequently and were more aggressive...
Use of similar habitat by cutthroat trout and brown trout in a regulated river during winter
M.R. Dare, W.A. Hubert
2003, Northwest Science (77) 36-45
Few differences in habitat use were observed between cutthroat trout and brown trout during winter in the Shoshone River, a regulated river in northwestern Wyoming. Radio-tagged fish of 20-30 cm total length were found in pool habitat five to six times more frequently than would be expected if they were...
A new pterosaur tracksite from the Jurassic Summerville formation, near Ferron, Utah
Debra L. Mickelson, Martin G. Lockley, John Bishop, James I. Kirkland
2003, Ichnos: An International Journal for Plant and Animal Traces (11) 125-142
Pterosaur tracks (cf. Pteraichnus) from the Summerville Formation of the Ferron area of central Utah add to the growing record of Pteraichnus tracksites in the Late Jurassic Summerville Formation and time-equivalent, or near time-equivalent, deposits. The site is typical in revealing high pterosaur track densities, but low ichnodiversity suggesting congregations or “flocks” of...
Microbial cycling of mercury in contaminated pelagic and wetland sediments of San Pablo Bay, California
M. C. Marvin-DiPasquale, J.L. Agee, R. M. Bouse, B. E. Jaffe
2003, Environmental Geology (43) 260-267
San Pablo Bay is an estuary, within northern San Francisco Bay, containing elevated sediment mercury (Hg) levels because of historic loading of hydraulic mining debris during the California gold-rush of the late 1800s. A preliminary investigation of benthic microbial Hg cycling was conducted in surface sediment (0–4 cm) collected from...
Control of predacious flatworms Macrostomum sp. in culturing juvenile freshwater mussels
L.L. Zimmerman, R. J. Neves, D.G. Smith
2003, North American Journal of Aquaculture (65) 28-32
Flatworms of the genus Macrostomum are voracious predators on newly metamorphosed juvenile freshwater mussels (Unionidae), which require a fish host to transform mussel larvae into free-living juveniles. Toxicity tests were performed with formalin (paracide-F, 37% formaldehyde) to determine the appropriate levels of treatment for eradicating these flatworms from host fish...
Escherichia Coli monitoring in the Spring Mill Lake watershed in south-central Indiana
N.R. Hasenmueller, J.B. Comer, D.D. Zamani
Beck B.F., editor(s)
2003, Conference Paper, Geotechnical Special Publication
The escherichila (E) coli monitoring in the Spring Mill lake watershed in South-Central Indiana was presented. Water flowing from the springs in the park were analyzed to determine potential nonpoint-source contaminants entering Spring Mill Lake. E. Coli concentrations from the monitoring sites within the Spring Mill Lake watersheds varied greatly...
Individual variation in prey selection by sea otters: Patterns, causes and implications
J. A. Estes, Marianne L. Riedman, M. M. Staedler, M. T. Tinker, B.E. Lyon
2003, Journal of Animal Ecology (72) 144-155
1. Longitudinal records of prey selection by 10 adult female sea otters on the Monterey Peninsula, California, from 1983 to 1990 demonstrate extreme inter-individual variation in diet. Variation in prey availability cannot explain these differences as the data were obtained from a common spatial-temporal area. 2. Individual dietary patterns persisted...
Contribution of climate-driven change in continental water storage to recent sea-level rise
P. C. D. Milly, A. Cazenave, M.C. Gennero
2003, Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences of the United States of America (100) 13158-13161
Using a global model of continental water balance, forced by interannual variations in precipitation and near-surface atmospheric temperature for the period 1981-1998, we estimate the sea-level changes associated with climate-driven changes in storage of water as snowpack, soil water, and ground water; storage in ice sheets and large lakes is...
Effects of CRP field age and cover type on ring-necked pheasants in eastern South Dakota
S.L. Eggebo, K.F. Higgins, D.E. Naugle, F.R. Quamen
2003, Wildlife Society Bulletin (31) 779-785
Loss of native grasslands to tillage has increased the importance of Conservation Reserve Program (CRP) grasslands to maintain ring-necked pheasant (Phasianus colchicus) populations. Despite the importance of CRP to pheasants, little is known about the effects of CRP field age and cover type on pheasant abundance and productivity in the...