Decreased atmospheric nitrogen deposition in eastern North America: Predicted responses of forest ecosystems
Frank S. Gilliam, Douglas A. Burns, Charles T. Driscoll, Serita D. Frey, Gary M. Lovett, Shaun A. Watmough
2019, Environmental Pollution (244) 560-574
Historical increases in emissions and atmospheric deposition of oxidized and reduced nitrogen (N) provided the impetus for extensive, global-scale research investigating the effects of excess N in terrestrial and aquatic ecosystems, with several regions within the Eastern Deciduous Forest of the United States found to be susceptible to negative effects...
On the development of a magnetic susceptibility‐based tracer for aeolian sediment transport research
Sujith Ravi, Howell B. Gonzales, Ilya V. Buynevich, Junran Li, Joel B. Sankey, David Dukes, Guan Wang
2019, Earth Surface Processes and Landforms (44) 672-678
Aeolian processes — the erosion, transport, and deposition of sediment by wind — play important geomorphological and ecological roles in drylands. These processes are known to impact the spatial patterns of soil, nutrients, plant‐available water, and vegetation in many dryland ecosystems. Tracers, such as rare earth elements and stable isotopes...
Behavior and survival of stocked trout in southern Appalachian Mountain streams
H.J. Flowers, Thomas J. Kwak, J.R. Fischer, W. G. Cope, J.M. Rash, D.A. Besler
2019, Transactions of the American Fisheries Society (148) 3-20
Stocking of trout to support recreational fisheries is a common practice among state and federal agencies to meet angling and harvest demands. Success of stocking efforts relies upon fish behavior and survival to maximize the availability of fish to anglers. We quantitatively described the movement behavior...
Changing station coverage impacts temperature trends in the Upper Colorado River Basin
Stephanie A. McAfee, Gregory J. McCabe, Stephen T. Gray, Gregory T. Pederson
2019, International Journal of Climatology (39) 1517-1538
Over the Upper Colorado River Basin (UCRB), temperatures in widely used gridded data products do not warm as much as mean temperatures from a stable set of U.S. Historical Climatology Network (USHCN) stations, located at generally lower elevations, in most months of the year. This is contrary to expectations of...
Conservation challenges emerging from free-roaming horse management: a vexing social-ecological mismatch
Erik A. Beever, Lynn Huntsinger, Steven L. Petersen
2019, Conservation Letters (226) 321-328
Horses have been associated with human societies for millennia, and for many have come to symbolize wildness, power, resilience, and freedom. Although equids were extirpated from North America 10 000-12 000 years ago, descendants of domestic horses now roam freely in the USA and 17 other countries across six continents....
Tropical cyclone projections: Changing climate threats for Pacific Island defense installations
Matthew J. Widlansky, Hariharasubramanian Annamalai, Stephen B. Gingerich, Curt D. Storlazzi, John J. Marra, Kevin I. Hodges, Barry Choy, Akio Kitoh
2019, Weather, Climate, and Society (11)
Potential changing climate threats in the tropical and subtropical North Pacific Ocean were assessed, using coupled ocean-atmosphere and atmosphere-only general circulation models, to explore their response to projected increasing greenhouse gas emissions. Tropical cyclone occurrence, described by their frequency and intensity, near islands housing major U.S. defense installations was the...
Water-quality trends in U.S. rivers, 2002 to 2012: Relations to levels of concern
Megan E. Shoda, Lori A. Sprague, Jennifer C. Murphy, Melissa L. Riskin
2019, Science of the Total Environment (650) 2314-2324
Effective management and protection of water resources relies upon understanding how water-quality conditions are changing over time. Water-quality trends for ammonia, chloride, nitrate, sulfate, total dissolved solids (TDS), total nitrogen (TN) and total phosphorus (TP) were assessed at 762 sites located in the conterminous United States between 2002 and 2012. Annual mean concentrations...
How hydrologic connectivity regulates water quality in river corridors
Judson Harvey, Jesus Gomez-Velez, Noah Schmadel, Durelle Scott, Elizabeth W. Boyer, Richard Alexander, Ken Eng, Heather E. Golden, Albert Kettner, Christopher Konrad, Richard Moore, Jim Pizzuto, Gregory E. Schwarz, Chris Soulsby, Jay Choi
2019, Journal of the American Water Resources Association (55) 369-381
Downstream flow in rivers is repeatedly delayed by hydrologic exchange with off‐channel storage zones where biogeochemical processing occurs. We present a dimensionless metric that quantifies river connectivity as the balance between downstream flow and the exchange of water with the bed, banks, and floodplains. The degree of connectivity directly influences...
Mineralization at oceanic transform faults and fracture zones
Amy Gartman, James R. Hein
Joao C. Duarte, editor(s)
2019, Book chapter, Transform plate boundaries and fracture zones
Mineral formation in the modern oceans can take place over millions of years as a result precipitation from ambient ocean water, or orders of magnitude more rapidly from hydrothermal activity related to magmatic and tectonic processes. Here, we review associations between transform faults and related fracture zones and marine minerals. We define marine transform faults as strike-slip or...
Assessment of chronic low‐dose elemental and radiological exposures of biota at the Kanab North uranium mine site in the Grand Canyon watershed
Danielle M. Cleveland, Jo Ellen Hinck, Julia S. Lankton
2019, Integrated Environmental Assessment and Management (15) 112-125
High‐grade U ore deposits are in various stages of exploitation across the Grand Canyon watershed, yet the effects of U mining on ecological and cultural resources are largely unknown. We characterized the concentrations of Al, As, Bi, Cd, Co, Cu, Fe, Pb, Hg, Mo, Ni, Se, Ag, Tl, Th, U,...
Point sources and agricultural practices control spatial-temporal patterns of orthophosphate in tributaries to Chesapeake Bay
Rosemary M. Fanelli, Joel D. Blomquist, Robert M. Hirsch
2019, Science of the Total Environment (652) 422-433
Orthophosphate (PO4) is the most bioavailable form of phosphorus (P). Excess PO4 may cause harmful algal blooms in aquatic ecosystems. A major restoration effort is underway for Chesapeake Bay (CB) to reduce P, nitrogen, and sediment loading to CB. Although PO4 cycling and delivery to streams has been characterized in small-scale studies, regional drivers of PO4 patterns...
Microhabitat use of native fishes in the Kootenai River: A fine‐scale evaluation of large‐scale habitat rehabilitation efforts
Philip R. Branigan, Michael C. Quist, Bradley B. Shepard, Susan C. Ireland
2019, River Research and Applications (34) 1267-1277
Fish and microhabitat data were collected at 542 prepositioned electrofishing sites (surface area of each site = 4 m2) in the Kootenai River, Idaho, during 2014 and 2015 to evaluate small‐scale habitat use by fishes, as it relates to large‐scale habitat rehabilitation efforts. Samples were collected from a 12‐km braided segment of river...
Fate and transport of nitrapyrin in agroecosystems: Occurrence in agricultural soils, subsurface drains, and receiving streams in the Midwestern US
Emily E. Woodward, Dana W. Kolpin, Wei Zheng, Nancy L Holm, Shannon M. Meppelink, Paul J. Terrio, Michelle L. Hladik
2019, Science of the Total Environment (650) 2830-2841
Nitrapyrin is a nitrification inhibitor that is co-applied with nitrogen fertilizer in agroecosystems. There is limited information on the fate of nitrapyrin after it is applied to agricultural soils. Over the course of one year (March 2016 to June 2017), 192 water samples from seven streams across Iowa and Illinois were analyzed...
Mortality of little brown bats (Myotis lucifugus carissima) naturally exposed to microcystin-LR
Marcos Isidoro Ayza, Lee C. Jones, Robert J. Dusek, Jeffrey M. Lorch, Jan H. Landsberg, Patrick Wilson, Stephanie Graham
2019, Journal of Wildlife Diseases (55) 266-270
We describe a die-off of little brown bats (Myotis lucifugus carissima) associated with acute intoxication with microcystin-LR in 2016 at Scofield Reservoir in Utah. High levels of this cyanotoxin in water from the reservoir and gastrointestinal content of bats supported this diagnosis....
In vivo effects of 17α-ethinylestradiol, 17B-estradiol and 4-nonylphenol on insulin-like growth-factor binding proteins (igfbps) in Atlantic salmon
Jason P. Breves, Tara A. Duffy, Ingibjorg E. Einarsdottir, Bjorn Thrandur Bjornsson, Stephen D. McCormick
2019, Aquatic Toxicology (203) 28-39
Feminizing endocrine disrupting compounds (EDCs) affect the growth and development of teleost fishes. The major regulator of growth performance, the growth hormone (Gh)/insulin-like growth-factor (Igf) system, is sensitive to estrogenic compounds and mediates certain physiological and potentially behavioral consequences of EDC exposure. Igf binding proteins (Igfbps) are key modulators of...
Toxicity assessment of groundwater contaminated by petroleum hydrocarbons at a well-characterized, aged, crude oil release site
Jennifer T. McGuire, Isabelle M. Cozzarelli, Barbara A. Bekins, Hannah Link, Dalma Martinović-Weigelt
2019, Environmental Science & Technology (52) 12172-12178
Management of petroleum-impacted waters by monitored natural attenuation requires an understanding of the toxicology of both the original compounds released and the transformation products formed during natural breakdown. Here, we report data from a groundwater plume consisting of a mixture of crude oil compounds and transformation products in an effort...
Wind River subbasin restoration annual report of USGS activities January 2017 through December 2017
Ian Jezorek
2019, Report
We used Passive Integrated Transponder (PIT)-tagging and a series of instream PIT-tag interrogation systems (PTISs) to investigate life-histories, populations, and efficacy of habitat restoration actions for wild Steelhead Oncorhynchus mykiss in the Wind River subbasin, WA. No hatchery Steelhead have been planted in the Wind River subbasin since 1997, and hatchery adults are estimated...
Groundwater salinity mapping using geophysical log analysis within the Fruitvale and Rosedale Ranch oil fields, Kern County, California, USA
Michael J. Stephens, David H. Shimabukuro, Janice M. Gillespie, Will Chang
2019, Hydrogeology Journal (27) 731-746
A method is presented for deriving a volume model of groundwater total dissolved solids (TDS) from borehole geophysical and aqueous geochemical measurements. While previous TDS mapping techniques have proved useful in the hydrogeologic setting in which they were developed, they may yield poor results in settings with lithological heterogeneity, complex...
Drivers of chaparral type conversion to herbaceous vegetation in coastal Southern California
Alexandra D. Syphard, Teresa J. Brennan, Jon E. Keeley
2019, Diversity and Distributions (25) 90-101
AimIn Southern California, native woody shrublands known as chaparral support exceptional biodiversity. However, large‐scale conversion of chaparral into largely exotic herbaceous cover is a major ecological threat and serious conservation concern. Due to substantial uncertainty regarding the causes and extent of this vegetation change, we aimed...
Toward a resilience-based conservation strategy for wetlands in Puerto Rico: Meeting challenges posed by environmental change
Jaime A. Collazo, Adam J. Terando, Augustin C. Engman, P. F. Fackler, Thomas J. Kwak
2019, Wetlands (39) 1255-1269
Designing conservation strategies in human-dominated landscapes is challenging, owing to complex human-natural systems and evolving societal values. To meet this challenge, a robust, adaptive strategy should have a process for flexible implementation of incremental actions. We describe a hypothetical example for the Rio Grande de Arecibo watershed and coastal wetlands...
Predicting the occurrence of chemicals of emerging concern in surface water and sediment across the U.S. portion of the Great Lakes Basin
Richard L. Kiesling, Sarah M. Elliott, Leah E. Kammel, Steven J. Choy, Stephanie E. Hummel
2019, Science of the Total Environment (651) 838-850
Chemicals of emerging concern (CECs) are introduced into the aquatic environment via various sources, posing a potential risk to aquatic organisms. Previous studies have identified relationships between the presence of CECs in water and broad-scale watershed characteristics. However, relationships between the presence of CECs and source-related watershed characteristics have not...
El Niño increases high‐tide flooding in tidal wetlands along the U.S. Pacific coast.
Arianna Goodman, Karen M. Thorne, Kevin J. Buffington, Chase M. Freeman, Christopher N. Janousek
2019, Journal of Geophysical Research (123) 3162-3177
Periodic oscillations between El Niño and La Niña conditions in the Pacific Basin affect oceanographic and meteorological phenomena globally, with impacts on the abundance and distribution of marine species. However, El Niño effects on estuarine hydrology and tidal wetland processes have seldom been examined rigorously. We used detailed wetland elevation...
Selected trace-elements in alluvium and rocks, western Mojave Desert, southern California
Krishangi D. Groover, John A. Izbicki
2019, Journal of Geochemical Exploration (200) 234-248
Concentrations of twenty-seven elements, including naturally-occurring water-quality contaminants arsenic, chromium, and uranium, were measured in 217 samples of alluvium and rock from the western Mojave Desert, southern California, using portable (pXRF) and laboratory (LXRF) X-ray fluorescence. Comparison of measurements with NIST-traceable standards was good, although pXRF overestimated iron compared to...
Genetic analyses reveal cryptic introgression in secretive marsh bird populations
Stephanie S Costner, Amy B. Welsh, Gary R. Costanzo, Sergio R. Harding, James T. Anderson, Susan B. McRae, Todd E. Katzner
2019, Ecology and Evolution (8) 9870-9879
Hybridization is common in bird populations but can be challenging for management, especially if one of the two parent species is of greater conservation concern than the other. King rails (Rallus elegans) and clapper rails (R. crepitans) are two marsh bird species with similar morphologies, behaviors, and overlapping distributions. The...
Geochemical sourcing of runoff from a young volcanic watershed to an impacted coral reef in Pelekane Bay, Hawaii
Renee K. Takesue, Curt D. Storlazzi
2019, Science of the Total Environment (649) 353-363
Runoff of sediment and other contaminants from developed watersheds threatens coastal ecosystems and services. A sediment geochemical sourcing study was undertaken on a sediment-impacted coral reef flat to identify terrestrial sediment sources and how these changed over time. Geochemical signatures...