Impact of competitor species composition on predicting diameter growth and survival rates of Douglas-fir trees in southwestern Oregon
Felipe Bravo, D.W. Hann, Douglas A. Maguire
2001, Canadian Journal of Forest Research (31) 2237-2247
Mixed conifer and hardwood stands in southwestern Oregon were studied to explore the hypothesis that competition effects on individual-tree growth and survival will differ according to the species comprising the competition measure. Likewise, it was hypothesized that competition measures should extrapolate best if crown-based surrogates are given preference over diameter-based...
Raptor electrocution on power lines: Current issues and outlook
Robert N. Lehman
2001, Wildlife Society Bulletin (29) 804-813
Electrocution on power lines is one of many human-caused mortality factors that affect raptors. Cost-effective and relatively simple raptor-safe standards for power line modification and construction have been available for over 25 years. During the 1970s and early 1980s, electric industry efforts to reduce raptor electrocutions were very coordinated and...
Space-time modelling of lightning-caused ignitions in the Blue Mountains, Oregon
Carlos Diaz-Avalos, D. L. Peterson, Ernesto Alvarado, Sue A. Ferguson, Julian E. Besag
2001, Canadian Journal of Forest Research (31) 1579-1593
Generalized linear mixed models (GLMM) were used to study the effect of vegetation cover, elevation, slope, and precipitation on the probability of ignition in the Blue Mountains, Oregon, and to estimate the probability of ignition occurrence at different locations in space and in time. Data on starting location of lightning-caused...
Physiological variation among native and exotic winter annuals associated with microphytic soil crusts in the Mojave Desert
Lesley DeFalco, James K. Detling, C. Richard Tracy, Steven D. Warren
2001, Plant and Soil (234) 1-14
Microbiotic crusts are important components of many aridland soils. Research on crusts typically focuses on the increase in soil fertility due to N-fixing micro-organisms, the stabilization of soils against water and wind erosion and the impact of disturbance on N-cycling. The effect of microbiotic crusts on the associated plant community...
Duck populations as indicators of landscape condition in the Prairie Pothole Region
Jane E. Austin, Thomas K. Buhl, Glenn R. Guntenspergen, Wayne Norling, H. Thomas Sklebar
2001, Environmental Monitoring and Assessment (69) 29-48
The Prairie Pothole Region of the northern Great Plains is an important region for waterfowl production because of the abundance of shallow wetlands. The ecological significance of the region and impacts from intensive agriculture prompted the U.S. Environmental Protection Agency to select it as one of the first areas for...
Field soil aggregate stability kit for soil quality and rangeland health evaluations
J. E. Herrick, W. G. Whitford, A. G. de Soyza, J. W. Van Zee, K. M. Havstad, C. A. Seybold, M. Walton
2001, Catena (44) 27-35
Soil aggregate stability is widely recognized as a key indicator of soil quality and rangeland health. However, few standard methods exist for quantifying soil stability in the field. A stability kit is described which can be inexpensively and easily assembled with minimal tools. It permits up to 18 samples to...
Use of 17O/16O to trace atmospherically-deposited sulfate in surface waters: A case study in alpine watersheds in the Rocky Mountains
C. A. Johnson, M.A. Mast, C.L. Kester
2001, Geophysical Research Letters (28) 4483-4486
Building on the discovery of excess 17O in atmospheric sulfate by Lee et al. (2001), we have carried out a case study to determine whether 17O might provide a new tool for quantifying the impact of atmospheric deposition on surface-water sulfate loads. In Rocky Mountain alpine regions, excess 17O was...
Changes in the Onset of Spring in the Western United States
D.R. Cayan, Susan A. Kammerdiener, M. D. Dettinger, Joseph M. Caprio, D. H. Peterson
2001, Bulletin of the American Meteorological Society (82) 399-415
Fluctuations in spring climate in the western United States over the last 4-5 decades are described by examining changes in the blooming of plants and the timing of snowmelt-runoff pulses. The two measures of spring's onset that are employed are the timing of first bloom of lilac and honeysuckle bushes...
Use of electrical barriers to deter movement of round goby
Jacqueline F. Savino, David J. Jude, Melissa J. Kostich
Charles C. Coutant, editor(s)
2001, Conference Paper, Behavioral technologies for fish guidance: Proceedings of the American Fisheries Society Symposium 26
An electrical barrier was chosen as a possible means to deter movement of round goby Neogobius melanostomus. Feasibility studies in a 2.1-m donut-shaped tank determined the electrical parameters necessary to inhibit round goby from crossing the 1-m stretch of the benthic, electrical barrier. Increasing electrical pulse duration and voltage increased...
The importance of defining technical issues in interagency environmental negotiations
B. L. Lamb, N. Burkardt, J. G. Taylor
2001, Public Works Management and Policy (5) 220-232
The role of technical clarity in successful multiparty negotiations was studied. Investigations involved in-depth interviews with the principal participants in six consultations conducted under the U.S. Federal Energy Regulatory Commission’s hydroelectric power project licensing procedures. Technical clarity was especially important in these cases because they concerned science-based questions. The principal...
Droughts, epic droughts and droughty centuries - lessons from a California paleoclimatic record: a PACLIM 2001 meeting report
M. D. Dettinger
2001, Interagency Ecological Program Newsletter (14) 51-53
During the early 1990s (but echoing studies by S.T. Harding at the University of California, from as early as the 1930s), several lines of paleoclimate evidence in and around the Sierra Nevada Range have provided the water community in California with some real horror stories. By studying ancient tree stumps...
Estimation of brood and nest survival: Comparative methods in the presence of heterogeneity
Bryan F.J. Manly, Joel A. Schmutz
2001, Journal of Wildlife Management (65) 258-270
The Mayfield method has been widely used for estimating survival of nests and young animals, especially when data are collected at irregular observation intervals. However, this method assumes survival is constant throughout the study period, which often ignores biologically relevant variation and may lead to biased survival estimates. We examined...
Ancient blue oaks reveal human impact on San Francisco Bay salinity
David W. Stahle, Matthew D. Therrell, Malcolm K. Cleaveland, Daniel R. Cayan, Michael D. Dettinger, Noah Knowles
2001, Eos, Transactions, American Geophysical Union (82) 141-145
San Francisco Bay is one of the most important estuaries on the west coast of the Americas. Its water quality is controlled primarily by streamflow from the Sacramento and San Joaquin rivers. In fact, freshwater inflow from the Sacramento-San Joaquin Delta explains 86% of the salinity variability at the mouth...
Comparison of methods used to estimate numbers of walruses on sea ice
Mark S. Udevitz, James R. Gilbert, Gennadii A. Fedoseev
2001, Marine Mammal Science (17) 601-616
The US and former USSR conducted joint surveys of Pacific walruses on sea ice and at land haul-outs in 1975, 1980, 1985, and 1990. One of the difficulties in interpreting results of these surveys has been that, except for the 1990 survey, the Americans and Soviets used different methods for...
Length changes in white sturgeon larvae preserved in ethanol or formaldehyde
J.M. Bayer, T.D. Counihan
2001, Collection Forum (15) 57-64
We examined the effects of two preservatives on the notochord and total lengths of white sturgeon (Acipenser transmontanus) larvae. White sturgeon larvae that were one, seven, and 14 days old were measured live and then preserved in 95% ethanol or 10% formaldehyde. Length changes were then determined at 20 and...
The Hawai'i rare bird search 1994-1996
Michelle H. Reynolds, Thomas J. Snetsinger
2001, Studies in Avian Biology (22) 133-143
We compiled the recent history of sightings and searched for 13 rare and missing Hawaiian forest birds to update status and distribution information. We made 23 expeditions between August 1994 and April 1996 on the islands of Hawai‘i, Maui, Moloka‘i, and Kaua‘i totaling 1,685 search hours, 146 field days, and...
Landsat 7 thermal-IR image sharpening using an artificial neural network and sensor model
G.P. Lemeshewsky, R.A. Schowengerdt
Park S.K.Rahman Z.Schowengerdt R.A., editor(s)
2001, Conference Paper, Proceedings of SPIE - The International Society for Optical Engineering
The enhanced thematic mapper (plus) (ETM+) instrument on Landsat 7 shares the same basic design as the TM sensors on Landsats 4 and 5, with some significant improvements. In common are six multispectral bands with a 30-m ground-projected instantaneous field of view (GIFOV). However, the thermaL-IR (TIR) band now has...
New constraints on the pyroclastic eruptive history of the Campanian volcanic Plain (Italy)
B. de Vivo, G. Rolandi, P. B. Gans, A. Calvert, W.A. Bohrson, F. J. Spera, H. E. Belkin
2001, Mineralogy and Petrology (73) 47-65
The ∼ 150 km3 (DRE) trachytic Campanian Ignimbrite, which is situated north-west of Naples, Italy, is one of the largest eruptions in the Mediterranean region in the last 200 ky. Despite centuries of investigation, the age and eruptive history of the Campanian Ignimbrite is still debated, as is the chronology of other significant volcanic...
Interparticle migration of metal cations in stream sediments as a factor in toxics transport
A. P. Jackman, V. C. Kennedy, N. Bhatia
2001, Journal of Hazardous Materials (82) 27-41
Sorption of metal cations by stream sediments is an important process affecting the movement of released contaminants in the environment. The ability of cations to desorb from one sediment particle and subsequently sorb to another can greatly affect metal transport rates but rates for this process have not been reported....
Juxtaposition of Neoproterozoic units along the Baruda - Tulu Dimtu shear-belt in the East African Orogen of western Ethiopia
A. Braathen, Tor Grenne, M.G. Selassie, T. Worku
2001, Precambrian Research (107) 215-234
Amalgamation of East and West Gondwanaland during the Neoproterozoic East African Orogen is recorded by several shear-belts or 'suture zones', some of which are associated with ultramafic and mafic complexes that have been interpreted as ophiolite fragments. The Baruda shear-belt is a major structure of this type that belongs to...
Debris-flow generation from recently burned watersheds
S.H. Cannon
2001, Environmental & Engineering Geoscience (7) 321-341
Evaluation of the erosional response of 95 recently burned drainage basins in Colorado, New Mexico and southern California to storm rainfall provides information on the conditions that result in fire-related debris flows. Debris flows were produced from only 37 of 95 (~40 percent) basins examined; the remaining basins produced either...
Geology, coal quality, and resources of the Antaramut-Kurtan-Dzoragukh coal field, north-central Armenia
B.S. Pierce, A. Martirosyan, G. Malkhasian, S. Harutunian, G. Harutunian
2001, International Journal of Coal Geology (45) 267-279
The Antaramut-Kurta-Dzoragukh (AKD) coal deposit is a previously unrecognized coal field in north-central Armenia. Coal has been known to exist in the general vicinity since the turn of the century, but coal was thought to be restricted to a small (1 km2) area only near the village of Antaramut. However,...
Spectroscopic evidence for ternary surface complexes in the lead(II)-malonic acid-hematite system
J.J. Lenhart, J.R. Bargar, J.A. Davis
2001, Journal of Colloid and Interface Science (234) 448-452
Using extended X-ray absorption fine structure (EXAFS) and attenuated total reflectance Fourier-transform infrared (ATR-FTIR) measurements, we examined the sorption of Pb(II) to hematite in the presence of malonic acid. Pb LIII-edge EXAFS measurements performed in the presence of malonate indicate the presence of...
Bioavailability of metals in stream food webs and hazards to brook trout (Salvelinus fontinalis) in the upper Animas River watershed, Colorado
J.M. Besser, W. G. Brumbaugh, T.W. May, S. E. Church, B. A. Kimball
2001, Archives of Environmental Contamination and Toxicology (40) 48-59
The water quality, habitats, and biota of streams in the upper Animas River watershed of Colorado, USA, are affected by metal contamination associated with acid drainage. We determined metal concentrations in components of the food web of the Animas River and its tributaries - periphyton (aufwuchs), benthic invertebrates, and livers...
Contaminant sensitivity of threatened and endangered fishes compared to standard surrogate species
L.C. Sappington, F.L. Mayer, F.J. Dwyer, D.R. Buckler, J.R. Jones, Mark R. Ellersieck
2001, Environmental Toxicology and Chemistry (20) 2869-2876
Standard environmental assessment procedures are designed to protect terrestrial and aquatic species. However, it is not known if endangered species are adequately protected by these procedures. At present, toxicological data obtained from studies with surrogate test fishes are assumed to be applicable to endangered fish species, but this assumption has...