Context-dependent effects of livestock grazing in deserts of western North America
Kari E. Veblen, Erik A. Beever, David A. Pyke
2020, Book chapter, Disturbance ecology and biological diversity: Scale, context, and nature
This chapter provides a general review of grazing disturbance by large mammalian grazers and the role of ecological context in moderating its effects, with emphasis on North American deserts. It discusses the ecological consequences of cessation of livestock grazing and present a case study from the Mojave Desert, United States...
Pleistocene glacial cycles drove lineage diversification and fusion in the Yosemite toad (Anaxyrus canorus)
Paul A. Maier, Amy G. Vandergast, Steven M Ostoja, Andres Aguilar, Andrew J. Bohonak
2020, Evolution 2476-2496
Species endemic to alpine environments can evolve via steep ecological selection gradients between lowland and upland environments. Additionally, many alpine environments have faced repeated glacial episodes over the past two million years, fracturing these endemics into isolated populations. In this “glacial pulse” model of alpine diversification, cycles of allopatry and...
Push and pull of downstream moving juvenile sea lamprey (Petromyzon marinus) exposed to chemosensory and light cues
Nicholas S. Johnson, Scott M. Miehls, Alexander J. Haro, C. Michael Wagner
2020, Conservation Physiology (7)
Visual and olfactory stimuli induce behavioural responses in fishes when applied independently, but little is known about how simultaneous exposure influences behaviour, especially in downstream migrating fishes. Here, downstream moving juvenile sea lamprey (Petromyzon marinus) were exposed to light and a conspecific chemosensory alarm cue in a flume and movement...
Occupancy Patterns of Breeding American Black Ducks
Anthony J. Roberts, J. Andrew Royle, Paul I. Padding, Patrick K. Devers, Christine Lepage, Daniel Bordage
2020, Journal of Wildlife Management (84) 150-160
Occupancy patterns can assist with the determination of habitat limitation during breeding or wintering periods and can help guide population and habitat management efforts. American black ducks (Anas rubripes; black ducks) are thought to be limited by habitat and food availability during the winter, but breeding sites may also limit...
Population ecology and evaluation of suppression scenarios for an introduced Utah Chub population
Curtis J. Roth, Zachary S. Beard, Jonathan M Flinders, Michael C. Quist
2020, North American Journal of Fisheries Management (40) 133-144
Introduced Utah Chub Gila atraria were first sampled in Henrys Lake, Idaho, in 1993, and their presence in the system is a concern given possible interactions with sport fishes. Our objective was to describe the population dynamics of Utah Chub in Henrys Lake. A total of 362 Utah Chub was sampled via...
Near-fault velocity spectra from laboratory failures and their relation to natural ground motion
Nicholas M. Beeler, David A. Lockner, Brian D. Kilgore, Greg McClaskey
2020, Journal of Geophysical Research (125)
We compared near-fault velocity spectra recorded during laboratory experiments to that of natural earthquakes. We fractured crystalline rock samples at room temperature and intermediate confining pressure (50 MPa). Subsequent slip events were generated on the fracture surfaces under higher confinement (300 MPa). Velocity spectra from rock...
Plate boundary localization, slip-rates and rupture segmentation of the Queen Charlotte Fault based on submarine tectonic geomorphology
Daniel S. Brothers, Nathaniel C. Miller, Vaughn Barrie, Peter J. Haeussler, H. Gary Greene, Brian D. Andrews, Olaf Zielke, Peter Dartnell
2020, Earth and Planetary Science Letters
Linking fault behavior over many earthquake cycles to individual earthquake behavior is a primary goal in tectonic geomorphology, particularly across an entire plate boundary. Here, we examine the 1150-km-long, right-lateral Queen Charlotte-Fairweather fault system using comprehensive multibeam bathymetry data acquired along the Queen Charlotte Fault (QCF) offshore southeastern Alaska and...
Assessment of uncertainty in multi-model means of downscaled south Florida precipitation for projected (2019-2099) climate
Johnna Infanti, Ben P. Kirtman, Nicholas Aumen, John F. Stamm, Colin Polsky
2020, International Journal of Climatology (40) 2764-2777
South Florida resource management, particularly the Everglades restoration effort, is beginning to consider projections of precipitation from multiple climate models for decision-making. Because precipitation changes can significantly affect the Everglades ecosystem, characterization of precipitation projection uncertainty is important for resource management decisions, and reduction of uncertainty is desired for...
Predictive multi-scale occupancy models at range-wide extents: Effects of habitat and human disturbance on distributions of wetland birds
Bryan S. Stevens, Courtney J. Conway
2020, Diversity and Distributions (26) 34-48
AimPredicting distributions is fundamental to ecology, yet hindered by spatially restricted sampling, scale-dependent relationships and detection error associated with field surveys. Predictive species distribution models (SDMs) are nonetheless vital for conservation of many species. We developed a framework for building predictive SDMs with multi-scale data and used...
Late Quaternary evolution and stratigraphic framework influence on coastal systems along the north-central Gulf of Mexico, USA
Robert S Hollis, Davin J Wallace, Michael D Miner, Nina S Gal, Clayton H Dike, James Flocks
2020, Quaternary Science Reviews (223)
Coastal systems in the Gulf of Mexico are threatened by reduced sediment supply, storm impacts and relative sea-level rise (RSLR). The geologic record provides insight into geomorphic evolution thresholds to these forcing mechanisms to help predict future barrier evolution in response to climate change. This study synthesizes ∼2100 km of...
Identifying important military installations for continental-scale conservation of marsh bird breeding habitat
Bryan S. Stevens, Courtney J. Conway
2020, Journal of Environmental Management (252)
Degradation of wetland ecosystems has negatively impacted many species, perhaps none more so than marsh birds that breed in vegetative emergent wetlands throughout North America. The U.S. Department of Defense manages approximately 29 million acres of land within the continental U.S., and many military installations contain wetland complexes that may...
PFHydro: A new watershed-scale model for post-fire runoff simulation
Jun Wang, Michelle A. Stern, Vanessa M. King, Charles N. Alpers, Nigel W. T. Quinn, Alan L. Flint, Lorraine E. Flint
2020, Environmental Modelling and Software (123)
Runoff increases after wildfires that burn vegetation and create a condition of soil-water repellence (SWR). A new post-fire watershed hydrological model, PFHydro, was created to explicitly simulate vegetation interception and SWR effects for four burn severity categories: high, medium, low severity...
Assessing the hydrologic impact of historical railroad embankments on wetland vegetation response in Canaan Valley, WV (USA): The value of high-resolution data
John A. Young, Daniel Welsch, Sarah Deacon
2020, Restoration Ecology (28) 51-62
The recovery of natural ecological processes after disturbance is poorly understood. Some disturbances may be so severe as to set ecosystems onto a new trajectory. The Canaan Valley National Wildlife Refuge in West Virginia protects a unique high-altitude wetland that was heavily disturbed by logging 100 years BP and...
Quaternary displacement on the Joiner Ridge Fault, eastern Arkansas
Audrey C. Price, Edward W Woolery, Ron Counts, Roy Van Arsdale, Daniel Larsen, Shannon A. Mahan, Glynn Beck
2020, Seismological Research Letters (90) 2250-2261
The New Madrid seismic zone of the central United States is an intraplate seismic zone with blind structures that are not seismically active but may pose seismic hazards. The Joiner Ridge fault is the 35 km long east-bounding fault of the Joiner Ridge blind horst located in eastern Arkansas approximately...
Influence of land use and hydrologic variability on seasonal dissolved organic carbon and nitrate export: Insights from a multi-year regional analysis for the northeastern USA
Erin Seybold, Arthur J. Gold, Shreeram P. Inamdar, Carol Adair, W.B. Bowden, Matthew Vaughan, Soni M. Pradhanang, Kelly Addy, James B. Shanley, Andrew W. Vermilyea, Delphis F. Levia, Beverley Wemple, Andrew W. Schroth
2020, Biogeochemistry (146) 31-49
Land use/land cover (LULC) change has significant impacts on nutrient loading to aquatic systems and has been linked to deteriorating water quality globally. While many relationships between LULC and nutrient loading have been identified, characterization of the interaction between LULC, climate (specifically variable hydrologic forcing) and solute export across seasonal...
Alignment of surface water ontologies: A comparison of manual and automated approaches
Michelle Cheatham, Dalia E. Varanka, Fatima Arauz, Lu Zhou
2020, Journal of Geographical Systems (22) 267-289
More data are being collected about the world around us than ever before, but effectively using this information requires different data stores to be integrated in such a way that they can be seamlessly queried and analyzed. Automated alignment algorithms exist to facilitate this data integration challenge. In this paper...
Dissolved oxygen controls summer habitat of Clear Lake Hitch (Lavinia exilicauda chi), an imperilled potamodromous cyprinid
Frederick V. Feyrer, Matt Young, Oliver Patton, David E. Ayers
2020, Ecology of Freshwater Fish (29) 188-196
The Clear Lake Hitch is an imperiled minnow endemic to Clear Lake, Lake County, California, USA that is listed as threatened under the California Endangered Species Act (ESA) and is a candidate for listing under the United States ESA. It exhibits a potamodromous life cycle whereby adults, which reach...
Stock-recruitment dynamics of a freshwater clupeid
Leandro E. Miranda, D. M. Norris, V.R. Strarnes, Nicky M. Faucheux, T. Holman
2020, Fisheries Research (221)
The clupeid gizzard shad Dorosoma cepedianum is often the most abundant fish species in North American reservoirs, and this dominance can have cascading trophic effects on entire fish assemblages. Accordingly, a key aspect of managing reservoir fish assemblages involves controlling gizzard shad densities. We used a...
Designing flows to enhance ecosystem functioning in heavily altered rivers
Kevin R. Bestgen, N. LeRoy Poff, Daniel W Baker, Brian P. Bledsoe, David M. Merritt, Mark Lorie, Gregor T. Auble, John S. Sanderson, Boris C. Kondratieff
2020, Ecological Applications (30)
More than a century of dam construction and water development in the western United States has led to extensive ecological alteration of rivers. Growing interest in improving river function is compelling practitioners to consider ecological restoration when managing dams and water extraction. We developed an Ecological Response Model (ERM) for...
Apatite trace element geochemistry and cathodoluminescent textures—Acomparison between regional magmatism and the Pea Ridge IOA-REE andBoss IOCG deposits, southeastern Missouri iron metallogenic province, USA
Celestine N. Mercer, Kathryn E. Watts, Juliane Gross
2020, Ore Geology Reviews (116)
The southeast Missouri iron metallogenic province contains a remarkable wealth of historically important Fe, Cu, Au, and rare earth element (REE) deposits including the Pea Ridge iron oxide-apatite-rare earth element (IOA-REE) deposit and the Boss iron oxide-copper-gold (IOCG) deposit. These deposits are coeval with silicic and intermediate composition magmatism in...
Late Quaternary sea-level history of Saipan, Commonwealth of the Northern Mariana Islands, USA: A test of tectonic uplift and glacial isostatic adjustment models
Daniel R. Muhs, Eugene S. Schweig, Kathleen R. Simmons
2020, Geological Society of America Bulletin (132) 863-883
In 1979, S. Uyeda and H. Kanamori proposed a tectonic model with two end members of a subduction-boundary continuum: the “Chilean” type (shallow dip of the subducting plate, great thrust events, compression, and uplift of the overriding plate) and a “Mariana” type (steep dip of the subducting plate, no great...
Local abundance of Ixodes scapularis in forests: Effects of environmental moisture, vegetation characteristics, and host abundance
Howard S. Ginsberg, Eric L. Rulison, Jasmine L. Miller, Genevieve Pang, Isis M. Arsnoe, Graham J. Hickling, Nicholas H. Ogden, Roger A. LeBrun, Jean I. Tsao
2020, Ticks and Tick-borne Diseases (11)
Ixodes scapularis is the primary vector of Lyme disease spirochetes in eastern and central North America, and local densities of this tick can affect human disease risk. We sampled larvae and nymphs from sites in Massachusetts and Wisconsin, USA, using flag/drag devices and by collecting ticks from hosts, and measured environmental...
Geoacoustic inversion for a New England mud patch sediment using the silt-suspension theory of marine mud
Elisabeth M. Brown, Ying-Tsong Lin, Jason Chaytor, William L. Siegmann
2020, IEEE Journal of Oceanic Engineering (45) 144-160
This article provides an application of the silt-suspension theory to a Bayesian-inference inversion for the geo-acoustic parameters in marine mud. The theory, with consequences that have been developed recently, postulates a suspension of water and clay mineral card-houses that supports moderately dilute concentrations of silt particles. The approach is an...
Modeling strategies and evaluating success during repatriations of elusive and endangered species
Brian Folt, Conor P. McGowan, D.A. Steen, S. Picolomini, M. Hoffman, J.C. Godwin, C. Guyer
2020, Animal Conservation (23) 273-285
Wildlife repatriation is an important tool to decrease extinction risk for imperiled species, but successful repatriations require significant time, resources and planning. Because repatriations can be long and expensive processes, clear release strategies and monitoring programs are essential to efficiently use resources and evaluate success. However,...
Effects of climate-related variability in storage on streamwater solute concentrations and fluxes in a small forested watershed in the Southeastern United States
Brent T. Aulenbach
2020, Hydrological Processes (34) 189-208
Streamwater quality can be affected by climate-related variability in hydrologic state, which controls flow paths and affects biogeochemical processes. Thirty-one years of input/output solute fluxes at Panola Mountain Research Watershed, a small, forested, seasonally water-limited watershed near Atlanta, Georgia, were used to quantify the effects of climatic-related variability in storage...