Remediation of acid mine drainage at the friendship hill national historic site with a pulsed limestone bed process
P.L. Sibrell, B. Watten, T. Boone
Young C.Alfantazi A.Anderson C.James A., editor(s)
2003, Conference Paper, Proceedings of the TMS Fall Extraction and Processing Conference
A new process utilizing pulsed fluidized limestone beds was tested for the remediation of acid mine drainage at the Friendship Hill National Historic Site, in southwestern Pennsylvania. A 230 liter-per-minute treatment system was constructed and operated over a fourteen-month period from June 2000 through September 2001. Over this period of...
The economics of protecting tiger populations: Linking household behavior to poaching and prey depletion
R. Damania, R. Stringer, K. U. Karanth, B. Stith
2003, Land Economics (79) 198-216
The tiger (Panthera tigris) is classified as endangered and populations continue to decline. This paper presents a formal economic analysis of the two most imminent threats to the survival of wild tigers: poaching tigers and hunting their prey. A model is developed to examine interactions between tigers and farm households...
Photographic techniques for characterizing streambed particle sizes
Matthew S. Whitman, Edward H. Moran, Robert T. Ourso
2003, Transactions of the American Fisheries Society (132) 605-610
We developed photographic techniques to characterize coarse (>2-mm) and fine (≤2-mm) streambed particle sizes in 12 streams in Anchorage, Alaska. Results were compared with current sampling techniques to assess which provided greater sampling efficiency and accuracy. The streams sampled were wadeable and contained gravel—cobble streambeds. Gradients ranged from about 5%...
Paleoseismicity of two historically quiescent faults in Australia: Implications for fault behavior in stable continental regions
A. J. Crone, P. M. De Martini, M.M. Machette, K. Okumura, J.R. Prescott
2003, Bulletin of the Seismological Society of America (93) 1913-1934
Paleoseismic studies of two historically aseismic Quaternary faults in Australia confirm that cratonic faults in stable continental regions (SCR) typically have a long-term behavior characterized by episodes of activity separated by quiescent intervals of at least 10,000 and commonly 100,000 years or more. Studies of the approximately 30-km-long Roopena fault in South Australia and the approximately 30-km-long Hyden fault in Western Australia document multiple Quaternary surface-faulting events that are unevenly...
Application of geographic information systems and remote sensing for quantifying patterns of erosion and water quality
J.C. Ritchie, D.E. Walling, J. Peters
2003, Hydrological Processes (17) 885-886
[No abstract available]...
Fish faunal resurgence in Lake Nabugabo, East Africa
L.J. Chapman, Colin A. Chapman, P. J. Schofield, J.P. Olowo, L.S. Kaufman, O. Seehausen, R. Ogutu-Ohwayo.
2003, Conservation Biology (17) 500-511
In Lake Nabugabo, Uganda, a small satellite of the equatorial Lake Victoria, approximately 50% of the indigenous fish species disappeared from the open waters subsequent to establishment of the introduced predatory Nile perch ( Lates niloticus ). However, several of these species persisted in wetland refugia. Over the past decade, Nile perch...
Use of radio telemetry in studies of shorebirds: past contributions and future directions
N. Warnock, John Y. Takekawa
2003, Wader Study Group Bulletin (100) 138-150
Migration of precocious male hatchery chinook salmon in the Umatilla River, Oregon
Christian E. Zimmerman, R.W. Stonecypher Jr., M.C. Hayes
2003, North American Journal of Fisheries Management (23) 1006-1014
Between 1993 and 2000, precocious yearling males of hatchery-produced fall and spring chinook salmon Oncorhynchus tshawytscha composed 3.6-82.1% of chinook salmon runs to the Umatilla River, Oregon. These yearling males are smaller than typical jack salmon, which spend a full winter in the ocean, and are commonly referred to as...
Natural history notes: Terrapene carolina bauri (Florida Box Turtle). Rehydration
C.K. Dodd Jr., Marian L. Griffey
2003, Herpetological Review (34) 58-59
Abstract not supplied at this time...
Effects of backpack radiotags on female northern pintails wintering in California
Joseph P. Fleskes
2003, Wildlife Society Bulletin (31) 212-219
To test whether backpack radiotags impacted the wintering biology of northern pintails (Anas acuta), I attached spear-suture (SSU, n=82 in 1993) or harness (HAR, n=337 in 1991-1993) backpack radiotags to female Hatch-Year (HY) and After-Hatch-Year (AHY) pintails after their autumn arrival in California. I evaluated impacts of radiotags on...
Effects of stormwater infiltration on quality of groundwater beneath retention and detention basins
D. Fischer, Emmanuel G. Charles, Arthur L. Baehr
2003, Journal of Environmental Engineering (129) 464-471
Infiltration of storm water through detention and retention basins may increase the risk of groundwater contamination, especially in areas where the soil is sandy and the water table shallow, and contaminants may not have a chance to degrade or sorb onto soil particles before reaching the saturated zone. Groundwater from...
A special issue devoted to gold deposits in Northern Nevada: Part 1. Regional studies and epitherrmal deposits
D. A. John, A. H. Hofstra, T. G. Theodore
2003, Economic Geology (98) 225-234
No abstract available....
Temperature-pressure conditions in coalbed methane reservoirs of the Black Warrior basin: Implications for carbon sequestration and enhanced coalbed methane recovery
J.C. Pashin, M.R. McIntyre
2003, International Journal of Coal Geology (54) 167-183
Sorption of gas onto coal is sensitive to pressure and temperature, and carbon dioxide can be a potentially volatile supercritical fluid in coalbed methane reservoirs. More than 5000 wells have been drilled in the coalbed methane fields of the Black Warrior basin in west-central Alabama, and the hydrologic and geothermic...
A genetic survey of Salvinia minima in the southern United States
Paul T. Madeira, Colette C. Jacono, Phil Tipping, Thai K. Van, Ted D. Center
2003, Aquatic Botany (76) 127-139
No abstract available....
Structural patterns and tectonic history of the Bauer microplate, Eastern Tropical Pacific
B.W. Eakins, P. F. Lonsdale
2003, Marine Geophysical Research (24) 171-205
The Bauer microplate was an independent slab of oceanic lithosphere that from 17 Ma to 6 Ma grew from 1.4 ?? 105 km2 to 1.2 ?? 106 km2 between the rapidly diverging Pacific and Nazca plates. Growth was by accretion at the lengthening and overlapping axes of the (Bauer-Nazca) Galapagos...
Statistical power for detecting trends with applications to seabird monitoring
Scott A. Hatch
2003, Biological Conservation (111) 317-329
Power analysis is helpful in defining goals for ecological monitoring and evaluating the performance of ongoing efforts. I examined detection standards proposed for population monitoring of seabirds using two programs (MONITOR and TRENDS) specially designed for power analysis of trend data. Neither program models within- and among-years components of variance...
The usefulness of GPS telemetry to study wolf circadian and social activity
S.B. Merrill, Mech L. David
2003, Wildlife Society Bulletin (31) 947-960
This study describes circadian and social movement patterns of 9 wolves and illustrates capabilities and limitations of Global Positioning System (GPS) telemetry for analysis of animal activity patterns. Wolves were studied at the Camp Ripley National Guard Training Site in Little Falls, Minnesota, and were captured via helicopter net-gunning. All...
Mass tree mortality leads to mangrove peat collapse at Bay Islands, Honduras after Hurricane Mitch
Donald R. Cahoon, P. Hensel, J. Rybczyk, K.L. McKee, C.E. Proffitt, B.C. Perez
2003, Journal of Ecology (91) 1093-1105
We measured sediment elevation and accretion dynamics in mangrove forests on the islands of Guanaja and Roatan, Honduras, impacted by Hurricane Mitch in 1998 to determine if collapse of underlying peat was occurring as a result of mass tree mortality. Little is known about the balance between production and decomposition...
Movement and habitat use by radio-tagged paddlefish in the upper Mississippi River and tributaries
S. J. Zigler, M. R. Dewey, B.C. Knights, A.L. Runstrom, M.T. Steingraeber
2003, North American Journal of Fisheries Management (23) 189-205
We used radio telemetry to evaluate the movement and habitat use of paddlefish Polyodon spathula in the upper Mississippi River and two tributary rivers. Radio transmitters were surgically implanted into 71 paddlefish in Navigation Pools 5A and 8 of the upper Mississippi River, the Chippewa River, and the Wisconsin River...
Tidal truncation and barotropic convergence in a channel network tidally driven from opposing entrances
J.C. Warner, D. Schoellhamer, G. Schladow
2003, Estuarine, Coastal and Shelf Science (56) 629-639
Residual circulation patterns in a channel network that is tidally driven from entrances on opposite sides are controlled by the temporal phasing and spatial asymmetry of the two forcing tides. The Napa/Sonoma Marsh Complex in San Francisco Bay, CA, is such a system. A sill on the west entrance to...
Evaluation of relocation of unionid mussels to in situ refugia
W.G. Cope, M.C. Hove, D. L. Waller, D.J. Hornbach, M.R. Bartsch, L.A. Cunningham, H.L. Dunn, A.R. Kapuscinski
2003, Journal of Molluscan Studies (69) 27-34
The aim of this study was to evaluate the recovery and survival of four species of unionid mussles [pimpleback, Quadrula pustulosa pustulosa (I. Lea, 1831); spike, Elliptio dilatata (Rafinesque, 1820); Higgins eye, Lampsilis higginsii (I. Lea, 1857); and pocketbook, Lampsilis cardium (Rafinesque, 1820)] that were experimentally relocated to in situ...
Effects of subcutaneous transmitter implants on behavior, growth, energetics, and survival of common loon chicks
K.P. Kenow, M.W. Meyer, F. Fournier, W. H. Karasov, A. Elfessi, S. Gutreuter
2003, Journal of Field Ornithology (74) 179-186
High rates of Common Loon (Gavia immer) chick mortality have been documented in Wisconsin, especially on acidic lakes, but causes and timing of chick mortality are poorly understood. We modified and evaluated a subcutaneous transmitter implant technique for Common Loon chicks using wild and captive reared chicks. Results indicated that...
A survey of estuarine submerged aquatic vegetation in the northern Gulf coast
J. Carter
2003, National Wetlands Newsletter (25) 9-10, 26
The status of submerged aquatic vegetation along the northern Gulf of Mexico is of concern because of its role in the ecology and economy of the coast. Recent studies by U.S. Geological Survey scientists help assess the factors that contribute to SAV distribution and health....
Growth and secondary production of aquatic insects along a gradient of Zn contamination in Rocky Mountain streams
D.M. Carlisle, W.H. Clements
2003, Journal of the North American Benthological Society (22) 582-597
Secondary production estimates from several Rocky Mountain streams were used to test hypotheses about the effects of chronic metal contamination on insect populations and ecosystem processes. Quantitative samples of chemistry, habitat, and benthic insects were collected monthly during the ice-free period (May–November) from five 2nd- to 3rd-order streams that varied...
Estimated ground motion from the 1994 Northridge, California, earthquake at the site of interstate 10 and La Cienega Boulevard bridge collapse, West Los Angeles, California
D.M. Boore, J. F. Gibbs, W. B. Joyner, J. C. Tinsley, D.J. Ponti
2003, Bulletin of the Seismological Society of America (93) 2737-2751
We have estimated ground motions at the site of a bridge collapse during the 1994 Northridge, California, earthquake. The estimated motions are based on correcting motions recorded during the mainshock 2.3 km from the collapse site for the relative site response of the two sites. Shear-wave slownesses and damping based...