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Page 3139, results 78451 - 78475

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Erosion and sediment delivery following removal of forest roads
Mary Ann Madej
2001, Earth Surface Processes and Landforms (26) 175-190
Erosion control treatments were applied to abandoned logging roads in California, with the goal of reducing road-related sediment input to streams and restoring natural hydrologic patterns on the landscape. Treatment of stream crossings involved excavating culverts and associated road fill and reshaping streambanks. A variety of techniques were applied to...
Mining overview
R.F. Balazik, L. McCartan, D.E. Morse, S.F. Sibley
2001, Mining Engineering (53) 33-41
[No abstract available]...
Development of channel organization and roughness following sediment pulses in single‐thread, gravel bed rivers
Mary Ann Madej
2001, Water Resources Research (37) 2259-2272
Large, episodic inputs of coarse sediment (sediment pulses) in forested, mountain streams may result in changes in the size and arrangement of bed forms and in channel roughness. A conceptual model of channel organization delineates trajectories of response to sediment pulses for many types of gravel bed channels. Channels exhibited...
The status of the macroinvertebrate community in the St. Croix River, Minnesota and Wisconsin: An examination of ecological health using techniques of multivariate analysis
T.P. Boyle, M.S. Strand
2001, Aquatic Ecosystem Health & Management (4) 311-325
A statistical procedure that integrates physical, chemical and biological data is used to operationally define and analyze ecological health. Benthic macroinvertebrates collected from May through September from eight locations along the St. Croix River in Minnesota and Wisconsin were analyzed by canonical correspondence analyses. A sequential multivariate analysis procedure was...
Endocrine control of osmoregulation teleost fish
Stephen D. McCormick
2001, American Zoologist (41) 781-794
As the primary link between environmental change and physiological response, the neuroendocrine system is a critical part of osmoregulatory adaptations. Cortisol has been viewed as ‘the’ seawater-adapting hormone in fish and prolactin as ‘the’ fresh water adapting hormone. Recent evidence indicates that the growth hormone/insulin-like growth factor I axis is...
Diapause in copepods (Crustacea) from ephemeral habitats with different hydroperiods in Everglades National Park (Florida, U.S.A.)
M.C. Bruno, W.F. Loftus, J.W. Reid, S.A. Perry
2001, Conference Paper, Hydrobiologia
Water management practices in the Everglades have severely stressed the natural system, particularly by reducing the hydroperiods of much of the region. During the dry season of 1999, we investigated the influence of hydroperiod on the species composition and dormancy patterns of freshwater copepod communities in seasonal wetlands of Everglades...
Cost considerations for long-term ecological monitoring
L. Caughlan, K.L. Oakley
2001, Ecological Indicators (1) 123-134
For an ecological monitoring program to be successful over the long-term, the perceived benefits of the information must justify the cost. Financial limitations will always restrict the scope of a monitoring program, hence the program’s focus must be carefully prioritized. Clearly identifying the costs and benefits of a program will...
Effects of urbanization on streamflow in the Atlanta area (Georgia, USA): A comparative hydrological approach
S. Rose, N.E. Peters
2001, Hydrological Processes (15) 1441-1457
For the period from 1958 to 1996, streamflow characteristics of a highly urbanized watershed were compared with less-urbanized and non-urbanized watersheds within a 20 000 km2 region in the vicinity of Atlanta, Georgia: In the Piedmont and Blue Ridge physiographic provinces of the southeastern USA. Water levels in several wells...
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...
New approaches for sampling and modeling native and exotic plant species richness
G.W. Chong, R.M. Reich, M. A. Kalkhan, T.J. Stohlgren
2001, Western North American Naturalist (61) 328-335
We demonstrate new multi-phase, multi-scale approaches for sampling and modeling native and exotic plant species to predict the spread of invasive species and aid in control efforts. Our test site is a 54,000-ha portion of Rocky Mountain National Park, Colorado, USA. This work is based on previous research wherein we...
Geologic coal assessment: The interface with economics
E. D. Attanasi
2001, Natural Resources Research (10) 189-195
Geologic resource assessments describe the location, general characteristics, and estimated volumes of resources, whether in situ or technically recoverable. Such compilations are only an initial step in economic resource evaluation. This paper identifies, by examples from the Illinois and Appalachian basins, the salient features of a geologic assessment that assure...
Sexual segregation in Roosevelt Elk: Cropping rates and aggression in mixed sex groups
Floyd F. Weckerly, Mark A. Ricca, Katherin P. Meyer
2001, Journal of Mammalogy (82) 825-835
Few studies of sexual segregation in ruminants have tested widely invoked mechanisms of segregation in mixed-sex groups. In a sexually segregated population of Roosevelt elk (Cervus elaphus roosevelti), we examined if adult males had reduced intake of forage when in mixed-sex groups and if intersexual differences in aggression caused females...
Recent growth of conifer species of western North America: Assessing spatial patterns of radial growth trends
D. McKenzie, Amy E. Hessl, D. L. Peterson
2001, Canadian Journal of Forest Research (31) 526-538
We explored spatial patterns of low-frequency variability in radial tree growth among western North American conifer species and identified predictors of the variability in these patterns. Using 185 sites from the International Tree-Ring Data Bank, each of which contained 10a??60 raw ring-width series, we rebuilt two chronologies for each site,...
PCR-based assays for the fish pathogen Aeromonas salmonicida: Further evaluation and validation of three PCR primer sets with infected fish
H.K. Byers, R. C. Cipriano, N. Gudkovs, J Crane . St
2001, Diseases of Aquatic Organisms (49) 139-144
Two Aeromonas salmonicida-specific polymerase chain reaction (PCR) tests and 1 A. salmonicida subsp. salmonicida-specific PCR test were used to screen salmonid populations that were either overtly or covertly infected with A. salmonicida subsp. salmonicida. It was demonstrated that these PCR assays could be used to replace the biochemical testing currently employed to confirm the identity of A. salmonicida isolates...
Long-term monitoring of creep rate along the Hayward fault and evidence for a lasting creep response to 1989 Loma Prieta earthquake
J. J. Lienkaemper, J.S. Galehouse, R.W. Simpson
2001, Geophysical Research Letters (28) 2265-2268
We present results from over 30 yr of precise surveys of creep along the Hayward fault. Along most of the fault, spatial variability in long-term creep rates is well determined by these data and can help constrain 3D-models of the depth of the creeping zone. However, creep at the south...
Bat use of a high-plains urban wildlife refuge
A. L. Everette, T. J. O'Shea, L.E. Ellison, L.A. Stone, J.L. McCance
2001, Wildlife Society Bulletin (29) 967-973
Bats are significant components of mammalian diversity and in many areas are of management concern. However, little attention has been given to bats in urban or prairie landscapes. In 1997 and 1998, we determined species richness, relative abundance, roosting habits, and echolocation activity of bats at Rocky Mountain Arsenal National...
Does habitat fragmentation influence nest predation in the shortgrass prairie?
M.N. Howard, S. K. Skagen, P.L. Kennedy
2001, The Condor (103) 530-536
We examined the effects of habitat fragmentation and vegetation structure of shortgrass prairie and Conservation Reserve Program (CRP) lands on predation rates of artificial and natural nests in northeastern Colorado. The CRP provides federal payments to landowners to take highly erodible cropland out of agricultural production. In our study area,...
Water-quality trends for a stream draining the Southern Anthracite Field, Pennsylvania
C.A. Cravotta III, Michael D. Bilger
2001, Geochemistry: Exploration, Environment, Analysis (1) 33-50
Stream flow, chemical and biological data for the northern part of Swatara Creek, which drains a 112 km2 area in the Southern Anthracite Field of eastern Pennsylvania, indicate progressive improvement in water quality since 1959, after which most mines in the watershed had been flooded. Drainage from the flooded mines contributes substantially...
Mapping crustal heterogeneity using Lg propagation efficiency throughout the Middle East, Mediterranean, Southern Europe and Northern Africa
D.E. McNamara, W.R. Walter
2001, Pure and Applied Geophysics (158) 1165-1188
In this paper we describe a technique for mapping the lateral variation of Lg characteristics such as Lg blockage, efficient Lg propagation, and regions of very high attenuation in the Middle East, North Africa, Europe and the Mediterranean regions. Lg is used in a variety of seismological applications from magnitude...
The geology of a part of Acadia and the nature of the Acadian orogeny across Central and Eastern Maine
R. D. Tucker, P. H. Osberg, H. N. Berry IV
2001, American Journal of Science (301) 205-260
The zone of Acadian collision between the Medial New England and Composite Avalon terranes is well preserved in Maine. A transect from northwest (Rome) to southeast (Camden) crosses the eastern part of Medial New England comprising the Central Maine basin, Liberty-Orrington thrust sheet, and Fredericton trough, and the western...
Evaluation of commercially prepared transport systems for nonlethal detection of Aeromonas salmonicida salmonid fish
R. C. Cipriano, G. L. Bullock
2001, Journal of Aquatic Animal Health (13) 96-104
In vitro studies indicated that commercially prepared transport systems containing Amies, Stuart's, and Cary–Blair media worked equally well in sustaining the viability of the fish pathogen Aeromonas salmonicida, which causes furunculosis. The bacterium remained viable without significant increase or decrease in cell numbers for as long as 48 h of incubation...
Mourning dove productivity in California during 1992-95: Was it sufficient to balance mortality?
M. R. Miller, C.L. Stemler, S.D. Blankenship
2001, Journal of Wildlife Management (65) 300-311
Mourning dove (Zenaida macroura) populations have declined steadily in the western United States since 1966. We investigated the role of recruitment in this long-term problem by studying nesting ecology of mourning doves from March to September 1992-95, in the northern Central Valley, California, USA. We studied nesting doves in blue...
A comparison of U.S. geological survey seamless elevation models with shuttle radar topography mission data
D. Gesch, J. Williams, W. Miller
2001, Conference Paper, International Geoscience and Remote Sensing Symposium (IGARSS)
Elevation models produced from Shuttle Radar Topography Mission (SRTM) data will be the most comprehensive, consistently processed, highest resolution topographic dataset ever produced for the Earth's land surface. Many applications that currently use elevation data will benefit from the increased availability of data with higher accuracy, quality, and resolution, especially...