Skip to main content
U.S. flag

An official website of the United States government

Dot gov

Official websites use .gov
A .gov website belongs to an official government organization in the United States.

Https

Secure .gov websites use HTTPS
A lock ( ) or https:// means you’ve safely connected to the .gov website. Share sensitive information only on official, secure websites.

Search Results

68838 results.

Alternate formats: RIS file of the first 3000 search results  |  Download all results as CSV | TSV | Excel  |  RSS feed based on this search  |  JSON version of this page of results

Page 309, results 7701 - 7725

Show results on a map

Publication Extents

Not all publications have extents, not all extents are completely accurate
Yellowstone’s birds are vital
Robert H. Diehl, Douglas W. Smith
2019, Yellowstone Science (27) 46-48
Traveling through Yellowstone National Park (YNP), visitors frequently stop to enjoy the park’s birds: small songbirds flitting about the willows, sandhill cranes engaged in their ritual mating dances, or myriad species of waterfowl loafing in one of the park's many wetlands. Typically while driving the roads of YNP, a majority...
Movement and diel habitat use of juvenile Neosho Smallmouth Bass in an Ozark stream
Andrew D. Miller, Robert Mollenhauer, Shannon K. Brewer
2019, North American Journal of Fisheries Management (39) 240-253
Documenting fish movement patterns and examining relationships with both fish and habitat characteristics are essential aspects of sound conservation and management. Stream fish movement and habitat use have been associated with a myriad of factors, and variability among individuals is common. Movement and habitat use patterns...
The development of a GIS methodology to identify oxbows and former stream meanders from LiDAR-derived digital elevation models
Courtney L. Zambory, Harvest Ellis, Clay Pierce, Kevin J. Roe, Michael J. Weber, Keith E. Schilling, Nathan C. Young
2019, Remote Sensing (11)
Anthropogenic development of floodplains and alteration to natural hydrological regimes have resulted in extensive loss of off-channel habitat. Interest has grown in restoring these habitats as an effective conservation strategy for numerous aquatic species. This study developed a process to reproducibly identify areas of former stream meanders to assist future...
Global sea-level contribution from Arctic land ice: 1971 to 2017
Jason E. Box, William T. Colgan, Bert Wouters, David Burgess, Shad O’Neel, Laura Thomson, Sebastian H Mernild
2019, Environmental Research Letters (13)
The Arctic Monitoring and Assessment Program (AMAP) (AMAP, 2017) identifies the Arctic as the largest regional source of land ice to global sea-level rise in the 2003 to 2014 period. Yet, this contextualization ignores the longer perspective from in-situ records of glacier mass balance. Here, using 18 (> 55 °N latitude) glacier and...
Long-term soil-water tension measurements in semi-arid environments: A method for automated tensiometer refilling
Joel B. Smith, Jason W. Kean
2019, Vadose Zone Journal (17)
Tensiometer-equipped data acquisition systems measure and record positive and negative soil-water pressures. These data contribute to studies in hillslope hydrology, including analyses of rainfall runoff, near-surface hydrologic response, and slope stability. However, the unique ability of a tensiometer to rapidly and accurately measure pre- and post-saturation subsurface pressures requires maintenance...
UZIG research: Measurement and characterization of unsaturated zone processes under wide-ranging climates and changing conditions
Jared J. Trost, Benjamin B. Mirus, Kimberlie Perkins, Wesley R. Henson, John R. Nimmo, Rafael Munoz-Carpena
2019, Vadose Zone Journal (17)
Unsaturated zone properties and processes are central to understanding the interacting effects of land-use change, contamination, and hydroclimate on our ability to grow food, sustain clean water supplies, and minimize loss of life and property. Advances in unsaturated zone science are being achieved through collaborations across traditional boundaries where information...
Efficient hydrogeological characterization of remote stream corridors using drones
Martin A. Briggs, Cian B. Dawson, Christopher Holmquist-Johnson, Kenneth H. Williams, John W. Lane Jr.
2019, Hydrological Processes (33) 316-319
This project demonstrates the successful use of small unoccupied aircraft system (sUASs) for hydrogeological characterization of a remote stream reach in a rugged mountain terrain. Thermal infrared, visual imagery, and derived digital surface models are used to inform conceptual models of groundwater/surface‐water exchange and efficiently geolocate zones of preferential groundwater...
The planktonic foraminiferal response to the Paleocene-Eocene thermal maximum on the Atlantic coastal plain
Caitlin M. Livsey, Tali Babila, Marci M. Robinson, Timothy J. Bralower
2019, Marine Micropaleontology (146) 39-50
Planktonic foraminiferal assemblages in two cores from Maryland and New Jersey show evidence for significant changes in surface ocean habitats on the continental shelf during the Paleocene-Eocene Thermal Maximum (PETM). At both sites, significant assemblage shifts occur immediately before the onset of the event. These changes include the appearance of abundant triserial/biserial species as...
On the contribution of waves to total coastal water level changes in the context of sea level rise: a response to Melet, et al. (2018)
Jerome Aucan, Ron Hoeke, Curt D. Storlazzi, Justin Stopa, Moritz Wandres, Ryan J. Lowe
2019, Climate Change (9)
Response to Melet, A., Meyssignac, B., Almar, R. & Le Cozannet, G. Under-estimated wave contribution to coastal sea-level rise. Nat. Clim. Change 8, 234–239 (2018). In a recent paper, Melet et al.1 claim that the contribution of wind-waves to coastal sea-level rise has been under-estimated. Although we agree with the overall...
A preliminary assessment of hyperspectral remote sensing technology for mapping submerged aquatic vegetation in the Upper Delaware River National Parks
E. Terrence Slonecker, Siddiq Kalaly, John A. Young, Mary Ann Furedi, Kelly O. Maloney, Don Hamilton, Richard Evans, Elizabeth Zinecker
2019, Advances in Remote Sensing (7)
Hyperspectral remote sensing of submerged aquatic vegetation is a complex and difficult process that is affected by unique constraints on the energy flow profile near and below the water surface. In addition, shallow, winding, lotic systems, such as the Upper Delaware River, present additional remote sensing problems in the...
Characterization and occurrence of confined and unconfined aquifers in Quaternary sediments in the glaciated conterminous United States
Richard M. Yager, Leon J. Kauffman, David R. Soller, Adel E. Haj, Paul M. Heisig, Cheryl A. Buchwald, Stephen, M. Westenbroek, James E. Reddy
2019, Scientific Investigations Report 2018-5091
The glacial aquifer system, which is a collection of aquifers within Quaternary sediments in the glaciated conterminous United States, is a principal aquifer that supplies groundwater that serves about 42 million people and accounts for about 5 percent of the Nation’s drinking water. This aquifer system (the area of maximum...
Changes in microbial communities and associated water and gas geochemistry across a sulfate gradient in coal beds: Powder River Basin, USA
Hannah Schweitzer, Daniel Ritter, Jennifer McIntosh, Elliott P. Barnhart, Alfred B. Cunningham, David Vinson, William H. Orem, Matthew W. Fields
2019, Geochimica et Cosmochimica Acta (245) 495-513
Competition between microbial sulfate reduction and methanogenesis drives cycling of fossil carbon and generation of CH4 in sedimentary basins. However, little is understood about the fundamental relationship between subsurface aqueous geochemistry and microbiology that drives these processes. Here we relate elemental and isotopic geochemistry of coal-associated water and gas to the microbial community composition from wells in two different coal beds across CH4 and SO42− gradients...
Delineation of selected lithologic units using airborne electromagnetic data near Cedar Rapids, Iowa
Joshua F. Valder, Adel E. Haj, Emilia L. Bristow, Kristen J. Valseth
2019, Scientific Investigations Map 3423
The U.S. Geological Survey, in cooperation with the City of Cedar Rapids, began a study in 2013 to better understand the effects of drought stress on the Cedar River alluvial aquifer. After an evaluation of the existing groundwater-flow models for the alluvial aquifer, a plan was begun to construct an...
A 50-year Sr/Ca time series from an enclosed, shallow-water Guam coral: In situ monitoring and extraction of a temperature trend, annual cycle, and ENSO and PDO signals
Tomoko Bell, Mark Lander, John Jenson, Richard Randall, Judson W. Partin, Nancy G. Prouty
2019, Journal of Coastal Research (35) 269-286
Located on the northern edge of the West Pacific Warm Pool and having a developed economy and modern infrastructure, Guam is well positioned and equipped for obtaining natural records of the west Pacific maritime paleoclimate. This study was a proof of concept to explore whether useful climate proxy records might...
Food‐web structure and ecosystem function in the Laurentian Great Lakes—Toward a conceptual model
Jessica T. Ives, Bailey C. McMeans, Kevin S. McCann, Aaron T. Fisk, Timothy B. Johnson, David B. Bunnell, Kenneth T. Frank, Andrew M. Muir
2019, Freshwater Biology (64) 1-29
The relationship between food‐web structure (i.e., trophic connections, including diet, trophic position, and habitat use, and the strength of these connections) and ecosystem functions (i.e., biological, geochemical, and physical processes in an ecosystem, including decomposition, production, nutrient cycling, and nutrient and energy flows among community members) determines how an...
Beta diversity response to stress severity and heterogeneity in sensitive versus tolerant stream diatoms
Katrina L Pound, Gregory B. Lawrence, Sophia Passy
2019, Diversity and Distributions (25) 374-384
AimSeverity and heterogeneity of stress are major constraints of beta diversity, but their relative influence is poorly understood. Here, we addressed this question by examining the patterns of beta diversity in stress‐sensitive versus stress‐tolerant stream diatoms and their response to local versus regional factors along gradients of...
Coastal wetlands: A synthesis
Charles S. Hopkinson, Eric Wolanski, Donald R. Cahoon, Gerardo M. E. Perillo, Mark M. Brinson
Gerardo M. E. Perillo, Eric Wolanski, Donald R. Cahoon, Charles S. Hopkinson, editor(s)
2019, Book chapter, Coastal wetlands: An integrated ecosystem approach
This book and this synthesis address the pressing need for better management of coastal wetlands worldwide because these wetlands are disappearing at an alarming rate; in some countries the loss is 70%–80% in the last 50 years. Managing requires understanding. Although our understanding of the functioning of coastal wetland ecosystems has grown rapidly over the...
Evaluating restored tidal freshwater wetlands
Andrew H. Baldwin, Richard S. Hammerschlag, Donald R. Cahoon
Gerardo M. E. Perillo, Eric Wolanski, Donald R. Cahoon, Charles S. Hopkinson, editor(s)
2019, Book chapter, Coastal wetlands: An integrated ecosystem approach
As restoration of tidal freshwater wetlands has progressed in North America and Eurasia, research findings have continued to emerge on the postrestoration success of these ecosystems. The most common approaches used to restore tidal freshwater wetlands involve excavation or placement of dredged sediment to restore tidal hydrology compatible with vegetation establishment and managed realignment or diversion,...
Acidification impacts and goals for gauging recovery of Brook Trout populations and fish communities in streams of the Western Adirondack Mountains, New York, USA
Barry Baldigo, Scott George, Gregory B. Lawrence, Eric Paul
2019, Transactions of the American Fisheries Society (148) 373-392
Results from several long‐term monitoring programs in the western Adirondack Mountains, New York, indicate that acid–base chemistry of headwater streams has remained unchanged or improved only marginally since the 1990s. A paucity of quantitative fishery data, however, limits our understanding of the pre‐acidified communities as well as present‐day impacts of...
Seasonality of nitrate sources and isotopic composition in the Upper Illinois River
Jiajia Lin, J.K. Bohlke, Sheng Huang, Miquel Gonzalez-Meler, Neil C. Sturchio
2019, Journal of Hydrology (568) 849-861
To improve understanding of spatial, seasonal, and inter-annual variations in nitrate sources and in-stream processes in the Illinois River system, nitrate concentrations and isotopic compositions were measured in 445 water samples collected over a four-year period (2004–2008) from the Upper Illinois River Basin (UIRB). Samples included surface water in the...
When ignimbrite meets water: Megascale gas-escape structures formed during welding
Peter W. Lipman
2019, Geology (47) 63-66
Diverse welding, crystallization, and structural features develop when a hot ignimbrite encounters external water, depending largely on volatile-rock ratios. Such processes are spectacularly documented by a regional ignimbrite, where ponded within an older caldera in the San Juan Mountains, Colorado. Interaction of hot pyroclastic flows with moist underlying sediments or...
Mixed-chemical exposure and predicted effects potential in wadeable southeastern USA streams
Paul M. Bradley, Celeste A. Journey, Jason P. Berninger, Daniel T. Button, Jimmy M. Clark, Steven R. Corsi, Laura A. DeCicco, Kristina G. Hopkins, Bradley J. Huffman, Naomi Nakagaki, Julia E. Norman, Lisa H. Nowell, Sharon L. Qi, Peter C. Van Metre, Ian R. Waite
2019, Science of the Total Environment (655) 70-83
Complex chemical mixtures have been widely reported in larger streams but relatively little work has been done to characterize them and assess their potential effects in headwaterstreams. In 2014, the United States Geological Survey (USGS) sampled 54 Piedmont streams over ten weeks and measured 475 unique organic compounds using five analytical methods. Maximum and median...
Probability of streamflow permanence model (PROSPER): A spatially continuous model of annual streamflow permanence throughout the Pacific Northwest
Kristin Jaeger, Roy Sando, Ryan R. McShane, Jason B. Dunham, David Hockman-Wert, Kendra E. Kaiser, Konrad Hafen, John Risley, Kyle W. Blasch
2019, Journal of Hydrology X (2)
The U.S. Geological Survey (USGS) has developed the PRObability of Streamflow PERmanence (PROSPER) model, a GIS raster-based empirical model that provides streamflow permanence probabilities (probabilistic predictions) of a stream channel having year-round flow for any unregulated and minimally-impaired stream channel in the Pacific Northwest region, U.S. The model provides annual...