Longitudinal water-temperature profiles in Mill Creek, Mason County, Washington
Andrew S. Gendaszek, Richard W. Sheibley, Erica Marbet, Joe Puhn, Catherine Seguin
2022, Scientific Investigations Report 2022-5063
In streams supporting Pacific salmon (Oncorhynchus spp.) within the southern Puget Lowland, high water temperatures during late summer are a primary water-quality concern. The metabolic rates of fish and other ectothermic (in other words, cold-blooded) species are regulated by water temperature; salmon and other cold-water fish have specific thermal...
Element concentrations and grain size of sediment from the Similkameen River above Enloe Dam (Enloe Reservoir) near Oroville, Washington, 2019
Stephen E. Cox, Christopher A. Curran, Andrew R. Spanjer, Chad C. Opatz, Renee K. Takesue, J. Lynn Bell
2022, Scientific Investigations Report 2022-5073
In 2019, the U.S. Geological Survey conducted a reconnaissance survey of concentrations of 41 trace elements present in bed sediment in the reservoir on the Similkameen River upstream from Enloe Dam, near Oroville, Washington. The Similkameen River drains a watershed containing highly mineralized geologic deposits with current (2019) and...
Documenting the multiple facets of a subsiding landscape from coastal cities and wetlands to the continental shelf
James G. Flocks, Eileen McGraw, John Barras, Julie Bernier, Mike Bradley, Devin L. Galloway, James Landmeyer, W. Scott McBride, Christopher Smith, Kathryn Smith, Christopher Swarzenski, Lauren Toth
2022, Open-File Report 2022-1064
Land subsidence is a settling, sinking, or collapse of the land surface. In the southeastern United States, subsidence is frequently observed as sinkhole collapse in karst environments, wetland degradation and loss in coastal and other low-lying areas, and inundation of coastal urban communities. Human activities such as fluid extraction, mining,...
Management of diseases in free-ranging wildlife populations
Mark L. Drew, Jonathan M. Sleeman
Eric Miller, Nadine Lamberski, Paul Calle, editor(s)
2022, Book chapter, Fowler's zoo and wild animal medicine current therapy, volume 10
Diseases are increasingly threatening the conservation of wildlife species. Spillover of pathogens into humans and domestic animals may negatively impact public health and the economy, requiring increased proactive management actions. The North American Wildlife Management Model provides the philosophical basis for managing wildlife and underpins all management options....
Future directions to manage wildlife health in a changing climate
Erik K. Hofmeister, Emily Cornelius Ruhs, Lucas Fortini, M. Camille Hopkins, Lee C. Jones, Kevin D. Lafferty, Jonathan M. Sleeman, Olivia E. LeDee
2022, EcoHealth (19) 329-334
In September 2019 The Economist wrote an obituary to Okjökull, a glacier in western Iceland that was declared “dead” in 2014, a victim of climate change. Although a few wildlife species have already incurred such a fate (e.g., the Bramble Cay melomys [Melomys rubicola]) (Fulton 2017), many more are on the path to...
Predation thresholds for reintroduction of native avifauna following suppression of invasive brown treesnakes on Guam
Robert McElderry, Eben H. Paxton, Andre Van Nguyen, Shane R. Siers
2022, Ecological Applications (32)
The brown treesnake (BTS) (Boiga irregularis) invasion on Guåhan (in English, Guam) led to the extirpation of nearly all native forest birds. In recent years, methods have been developed to reduce BTS abundance on a landscape scale. To help assess the prospects for the successful reintroduction of native birds to...
Reproducibility and variability of earthquake subsidence estimates from saltmarshes of a Cascadia estuary
Jason Scott Padgett, Simon E. Engelhart, Harvey M. Kelsey, Robert C. Witter, Niamh Cahill
2022, Journal of Quaternary Science (37) 1294-1312
We examine fossil foraminiferal assemblages from 20 sediment cores to assess sudden relative sea-level (RSL) changes across three mud-over-peat contacts at three salt marshes in northern Humboldt Bay, California (~44.8°N, -124.2°W). We use a validated foraminiferal-based Bayesian transfer function to evaluate the variability of subsidence stratigraphy at a range of...
Hydrological and lock operation conditions associated with paddlefish and bigheaded carp dam passage on a large and small scale in the Upper Mississippi River (Pools 14–18)
Dominique D. Turney, Andrea K. Fritts, Brent C. Knights, Jonathan M. Vallazza, Douglas Appel, James T. Lamar
2022, PeerJ (10)
Movement and dispersal of migratory fish species is an important life-history characteristics that can be impeded by navigation dams. Although habitat fragmentation may be detrimental to native fish species, it might act as an effective and economical barrier for controlling the spread of invasive species in riverine systems. Various technologies...
Sclerochronological records of environmental variability and bivalve growth in the Pacific Arctic
David J. Reynolds, Vanessa R. von Biela, Kenneth H. Dunton, David C. Douglas, Bryan A. Black
2022, Progress in Oceanography (206)
The Pacific Arctic region has experienced, and is projected to continue experiencing, rapid climate change. Large uncertainties exist in our understanding of the impact these physical changes have on the region’s ecology. This is, in part, due to the lack of long-term...
The 2018 eruption of Mount Veniaminof, Alaska
Christopher F. Waythomas, Hannah R. Dietterich, Gabrielle Tepp, Taryn M. Lopez, Matthew W. Loewen
2022, Scientific Investigations Report 2022-5075
The 2018 eruption of Mount Veniaminof occurred from September 3–4 to December 27, lasting about 114 days. This report summarizes the types of volcanic unrest that accompanied the eruption and provides a chronology of events and observations. Information about the 2018 eruption was derived from geophysical instrumentation on or near...
Physics-guided graph meta learning for predicting water temperature and streamflow in stream networks
Shengyu Chen, Jacob Aaron Zwart, Xiaowei Jia
2022, Conference Paper, Proceedings of the 28th ACM SIGKDD conference on knowledge discovery and data mining
This paper proposes a graph-based meta learning approach to separately predict water quantity and quality variables for river segments in stream networks. Given the heterogeneous water dynamic patterns in large-scale basins, we introduce an additional meta-learning condition based on physical characteristics of stream segments, which allows learning different sets of...
Floodplains and climate change
Annika Keeley, Shruti Khanna, Nicole Kwan, Bryan G. Matthias, Catarina Pien, Marissa L. Wulff
Samuel M. Bashevkin, Larry R. Brown, Eva Bush, Gonzalo Castillo, Denise Colombano, Rosemary Hartman, Bruce Herbold, Shruti Khanna, Annika Keeley, Nicole Kwan, Peggy W. Lehman, Brian Mahardja, Timothy D. Malinich, Ryan McKenzie, Bryan G. Matthias, Catarina Pien, Marissa L. Wulff, editor(s)
2022, IEP Technical Report 99-4
Floodplains are landscape features that are periodically inundated by water from adjacent rivers (Opperman et al. 2010). Ecologically, functional floodplains are characterized by three primary elements: connectivity, flow regime, and spatial scale. Water quantity flowing over floodplains can vary greatly. Based on a flood’s effects on the floodplain, three flood...
Chapter 1: General conceptual model for climate change in the Upper San Francisco Estuary
Eva Bush, Bruce Herbold, Larry R. Brown
Samuel M. Bashevkin, Larry R. Brown, Eva Bush, Gonzalo Castillo, Denise Colombano, Rosemary Hartman, Bruce Herbold, Shruti Khanna, Annika Keeley, Nicole Kwan, Peggy W. Lehman, Brian Mahardja, Bryan G. Matthias, Catarina Pien, Marissa L. Wulff, Timothy D. Malinich, Ryan McKenzie, editor(s)
2022, IEP Technical Report 99-1
This report is a collaboration by many state and federal agencies working in the Upper San Francisco Estuary to analyze the potential impacts of climate change to different ecosystems found here. Management stategies for ecological values in the face of climate change require reliable and focused information. In this technical...
Examining industry vulnerability: A focus on mineral commodities used in the automotive and electronics industries
Ross Manley, Elisa Alonso, Nedal T. Nassar
2022, Resources Policy (78)
Automotive manufacturing is material-intensive and dependent on a broad range of mineral commodities. Moreover, the automotive manufacturing industries are reliant on complex and sometimes opaque multi-tiered global supply chains. Among the many industries on which automotive supply chains depend are the electronics and semiconductor industries, which are themselves material-intensive and reliant on...
Influence of surface- and ground-water hydrology on riparian tree growth and mortality in the Limitrophe segment of the Colorado River
Patrick B. Shafroth
2022, Report, Minute 323, first biennial report 2018, of monitoring of environmental flows in the Limitrophe and delta of the Colorado River
Branch sections and cores of cottonwood and willow trees were collected from two sites in the Limitrophe. Tree-ring analyses may reveal the relationships among tree growth, streamflow and groundwater....
Watershed processes as amplifiers of climate change and the impact on the future of fine-sediment delivery in the Humboldt Bay-Eel River region, California
Jennifer Curtis
2022, Conference Paper, Friends of the Pleistocene. Pacific cell 2022. Triangle of doom V2.0 guidebook
No abstract available....
Vegetation monitoring
Karen Schlatter, Martha Gomez-Sapiens, Helen Salazar, Alejandra Calvo-Fonseca, Patrick B. Shafroth, Eduardo Gonzalez
2022, Report, Minute 323, first biennial report 2018, of monitoring of environmental flows in the Limitrophe and delta of the Colorado River
Sonoran Institute, Pronatura Noroeste, and University of Arizona conducted vegetation monitoring in riparian restoration sites and control sites along the Colorado River corridor in Mexico during the fall (end of the growing season) of 2018. The overall goal of the vegetation monitoring program was to quantify impacts of restoration actions...
Living with wildfire in Grand County, Colorado: 2021 data report
Hannah Brenkert-Smith, Abby Elizabeth McConnell, Schelly K. Olson, Adam C. Gosey, James Meldrum, Patricia A. Champ, Jamie Gomez, Christopher M. Barth, Colleen Donovan, Carolyn Wagner, Julia Goolsby
2022, Research Note RMRS-RN-94
Wildfire affects hundreds of wildland-urban interface communities each year, and yet most communities lack data reflecting the conditions before an event. This study was conducted before the devastating 2020 East Troublesome Fire1, which spread across 193,812 acres and resulted in two lives lost and 366 homes and 214 other structures...
Crowd-sourced SfM: Best practices for high resolution monitoring of coastal cliffs and bluffs
Phillipe Alan Wernette, Ian M. Miller, Andrew C. Ritchie, Jonathan A. Warrick
2022, Continental Shelf Research (245)
Structure from motion (SfM) photogrammetry is an increasingly common technique for measuring landscape change over time by deriving 3D point clouds and surface models from overlapping photographs. Traditional change detection approaches require photos that are geotagged with a differential GPS (DGPS) location, which requires expensive equipment that can limit the ability of communities and...
Section 5: Remote sensing of vegetation in the riparian corridor of the Colorado River’s delta 2013-2018
Pamela L. Nagler, Armando Barreto-Munoz, Christopher J. Jarchow, Kamel Didan
2022, Report, Minute 323: Colorado River limitrophe and delta environmental flows monitoring interim report for 2018
This remote sensing section is based on Nagler et al. (in preparation for the journal Hydrological Processes) and is a summary of the USGS preliminary findings to date. This report documents the changes in green foliage density (greenness) as measured by satellite vegetation index (VI) data and corresponding evapotranspiration (ET)...
Editorial: Fire regimes in desert ecosystems: Drivers, impacts and changes
Eddie J. B. van Etten, Matthew L. Brooks, Aaron C. Greenville, Glenda M. Wardel
2022, Frontiers in Ecology and Evolution (10)
Although not commonly associated with fire, many desert ecosystems across the globe do occasionally burn, and there is evidence that fire incidences are increasing, leading to altered fire regimes in this biome. The increased prevalence of megafires (wildfires >10,000 ha in size and typically damaging) in most global biomes is...
Defining fine-scaled population structure among continuously distributed populations
Michael S. O’Donnell, David R. Edmunds, Cameron L. Aldridge, Julie A. Heinrichs, Adrian P. Monroe, Peter S. Coates, Brian G. Prochazka, Steve E. Hanser, Lief A. Wiechman
2022, Methods in Ecology and Evolution (13) 2222-2235
Understanding wildlife population structure and connectivity can help managers identify conservation strategies, as structure can facilitate the study of population changes and habitat connectivity can provide information on dispersal and biodiversity. To facilitate the use of wildlife monitoring data for improved adaptive management, we developed a novel approach to...
Analysis of provisioning ecosystem services and perceptions of climate change for indigenous communities in the Western Himalayan Gurez Valley, Pakistan
Uzma Saeed, Muhammad Arshad, Shakeel Hayat, Toni Lyn Morelli, Muhammad Ali Nawaz
2022, Ecosystem Services (56)
Climate change is a significant threat to people living in mountainous regions. It is essential to understand how montane communities currently depend especially on the provisioning ecosystem services (ES) and the ways in which climate change will impact these services, so that people can develop relevant adaptation strategies. The ES...
Volcano, earthquake, and tsunami hazards of the Cascadia Subduction Zone
Elizabeth G. Westby, Andrew J Meigs, Chris Goldfinger
2022, Elements (18) 251-256
Subduction zones produce some of Earth’s most devastating geological events. Recent eruptions of Mount St. Helens and great earthquakes and tsunamis in Japan and Sumatra provide stark examples of the destructive power of subduction-related hazards. In the Cascadia subduction zone, large earthquakes, tsunamis, and volcanic eruptions have occurred in the...
Rural turtles: Estimating the occupancy of Northwestern Pond Turtles and non-native red-eared sliders in agricultural habitats in California's Sacramento Valley and Sacramento-San Joaquin River Delta
Jonathan P. Rose, Brian J. Halstead, Alexandria M. Fulton
2022, Northwestern Naturalist (103) 97-109
The Northwestern Pond Turtle (Actinemys marmorata; WPT) was once widespread throughout the Sacramento Valley and the Sacramento-San Joaquin River Delta. Much of its historical range has been converted into agricultural land, reducing and altering aquatic habitat and surrounding uplands. Red-eared Sliders (Trachemys scripta elegans; RES)...