Hydrogeomorphic factors and ecosystem responses in coastal wetlands of the Great Lakes
Janet R. Keough, Todd A. Thompson, Glenn R. Guntenspergen, Douglas A. Wilcox
1999, Wetlands (19) 821-834
Gauging the impact of manipulative activities, such as rehabilitation or management, on wetlands requires having a notion of the unmanipulated condition as a reference. And understanding of the reference condition requires knowledge of dominant factors influencing ecosystem processes and biological communities. In this paper, we focus on natural physical factors...
Guatemala jadeitites and albitites were formed by deuterium-rich serpentinizing fluids deep within a subduction zone
C. A. Johnson, G.E. Harlow
1999, Geology (27) 629-632
Jadeitites and albitites from the Motagua Valley, Guatemala, are high-pressure–low-temperature metasomatic rocks that occur as tectonic inclusions in serpentinite-matrix melange. Metasomatism was driven by a fluid with a δ18OH2O value of 6‰, and a δDH2O value that is high in comparison with metamorphic fluids at...
Sidescan-sonar mapping of benthic trawl marks on the shelf and slope off Eureka, California
A. M. Friedlander, G.W. Boehlert, M.E. Field, J.E. Mason, J.V. Gardner, P. Dartnell
1999, Fishery Bulletin (97) 786-801
The abundance and orientation of trawl marks was quantified over an extensive portion (>2700 km2) of the Eureka, California, outer shelf and slope, an important commercial bottom trawling ground for such high-value species as rockfish, sole, and sablefish. Fishing logbook data indicate that the entire reporting area was trawled about...
Sulfurospirillum barnesii sp. nov. and Sulfurospirillum arsenophilum sp. nov., new members of the Sulfurospirillum clade of the ε-Proteobacteria
J.F. Stolz, D.J. Ellis, J.S. Blum, D. Ahmann, Derek R. Lovley, R.S. Oremland
1999, International Journal of Systematic Bacteriology (49) 1177-1180
Two strains of dissimilatory arsenate-reducing vibrio-shaped bacteria are assigned to the genus Sulfurospirillum. These two new species, Sulfurospirillum barnesii strain SES-3(T) and Sulfurospirillum arsenophilum strain MIT-13(T), in addition to Sulfurospirillum sp. SM-5, two strains of Sulfurospirillum deleyianum, and Sulfurospirillum arcachonense, form a distinct clade within the ?? subclass of the...
Processes governing phytoplankton blooms in estuaries. II: The role of horizontal transport
L.V. Lucas, Jeffrey R. Koseff, Stephen G. Monismith, J. E. Cloern, J.K. Thompson
1999, Marine Ecology Progress Series (187) 17-30
The development and distribution of phytoplankton blooms in estuaries are functions of both local conditions (i.e. the production-loss balance for a water column at a particular spatial location) and large-scale horizontal transport. In this study, the second of a 2-paper series, we use a depth-averaged hydrodynamic-biological model to identify transport-related...
Source processes of industrially-induced earthquakes at the Geysers geothermal area, California
A. Ross, G.R. Foulger, B.R. Julian
1999, Geophysics (64) 1877-1889
Microearthquake activity at The Geysers geothermal area, California, mirrors the steam production rate, suggesting that the earthquakes are industrially induced. A 15-station network of digital, three-component seismic stations was operated for one month in 1991, and 3,900 earthquakes were recorded. Highly-accurate moment tensors were derived for 30 of the best...
Lower Turonian (Upper Cretaceous) Watinoceras devonense Zone ammonite fauna in Colorado, USA
W. J. Kennedy, W. A. Cobban, W.P. Elder, J.I. Kirkland
1999, Cretaceous Research (20) 629-639
The basal Turonian Watinoceras devonense Zone fauna from the Bridge Creek Member of the Greenhorn Limestone in southeastern Colorado is described and illustrated, including material from the Rock Canyon area near Pueblo, where the base of bed 86, which corresponds to the first appearance of W. devonense Wright and Kennedy,...
Funnel traps capture a higher proportion of juvenile Great Tits parus major than automatic traps
J.C. Senar, J. Domenech, M.J. Conroy
1999, Ringing and Migration (19) 257-259
We compared capture rates of Great Tits at funnel traps, where several birds can be captured at once so that some decoy effect may appear, to those obtained at automatic traps, where only one bird can be trapped at a time, at trapping stations in northeastern Spain. Juvenile birds were...
Liquid chromatographic determination of benzocaine and N-acetylbenzocaine in the edible fillet tissue from rainbow trout
J.R. Meinertz, G. R. Stehly, T.D. Hubert, J.A. Bernardy
1999, Journal of Chromatography A (855) 255-260
A method was developed for determining benzocaine and N-acetylbenzocaine concentrations in fillet tissue of rainbow trout. The method involves extracting the analytes with acetonitrile, removing lipids or hydrophobic compounds from the extract with hexane, and providing additional clean-up with solid-phase extraction techniques. Analyte concentrations are determined using reversed-phase high-performance liquid...
Growth, smoltification, and smolt-to-adult return of spring chinook salmon from hatcheries on the Deschutes river, Oregon
B.R. Beckman, Walton W. Dickhoff, W.S. Zaugg, C. Sharpe, S. Hirtzel, R. Schrock, Donald A. Larsen, R.D. Ewing, A. Palmisano, C.B. Schreck, C.V.W. Mahnken
1999, Transactions of the American Fisheries Society (128) 1125-1150
The relationship between smoltification and smolt-to-adult return (SAR) of spring chinook salmon Oncorhynchus tshawytscha from the Deschutes River, Oregon, was examined for four release groups in each of three successive years. Fish were reared, marked with coded wire tags, and released from Round Butte Hatchery, Pelton Ladder rearing facility, and...
Observations on preferential flow and horizontal transport of nitrogen fertilizer in the unsaturated zone
D.H. Wilkison, D. W. Blevins
1999, Journal of Environmental Quality (28) 1568-1580
A study site underlain by a claypan soil was instrumented to examine the transport of fertilizer nitrogen (N) under corn (Zea mays L.) cultivation. The study was designed to examine N transport within the unsaturated zone and in intedlow (the saturated flow of water on top of...
Effects of saline drinking water on early gosling development
D. S. Stolley, J.A. Bissonette, J.A. Kadlec, D. Coster
1999, Journal of Wildlife Management (63) 990-996
Relatively high levels of saline drinking water may adversely affect the growth, development, and survival of young waterfowl. Saline drinking water was suspect in the low survival rate of Canada goose (Branta canadensis) goslings at Fish Springs National Wildlife Refuge (FSNWR) in western Utah. Hence, we investigated the effects of...
Debris-flow deposition: Effects of pore-fluid pressure and friction concentrated at flow margins
J. J. Major, R.M. Iverson
1999, Geological Society of America Bulletin (111) 1424-1434
Measurements of pore-fluid pressure and total bed-normal stress at the base of several ∼10 m3 experimental debris flows provide new insight into the process of debris-flow deposition. Pore-fluid pressures nearly sufficient to cause liquefaction were developed and maintained during flow mobilization and acceleration, persisted...
Anatomy of the Dead Sea transform: Does it reflect continuous changes in plate motion?
Uri S. ten Brink, M. Rybakov, A. S. Al-Zoubi, M. Hassouneh, U. Frieslander, A.T. Batayneh, V. Goldschmidt, M.N. Daoud, Y. Rotstein, J.K. Hall
1999, Geology (27) 887-890
A new gravity map of the southern half of the Dead Sea transform offers the first regional view of the anatomy of this plate boundary. Interpreted together with auxiliary seismic and well data, the map reveals a string of subsurface basins of widely...
Transformations of snow chemistry in the boreal forest: Accumulation and volatilization
J.W. Pomeroy, T.D. Davies, H.G. Jones, P. Marsh, N.E. Peters, M. Tranter
1999, Hydrological Processes (13) 2257-2273
This paper examines the processes and dynamics of ecologically-important inorganic chemical (primarily NO3-N) accumulation and loss in boreal forest snow during the cold winter period at a northern and southern location in the boreal forest of western Canada. Field observations from Inuvik, Northwest Territories and Waskesiu, Saskatchewan, Canada were used...
Double-survey estimates of bald eagle populations in Oregon
R.G. Anthony, Monte G. Garrett, F.B. Isaacs
1999, Journal of Wildlife Management (63) 794-802
The literature on abundance of birds of prey is almost devoid of population estimates with statistical rigor. Therefore, we surveyed bald eagle (Haliaeetus leucocephalus) populations on the Crooked and lower Columbia rivers of Oregon and used the double-survey method to estimate populations and sighting probabilities for different survey methods (aerial,...
The types of data needed for assessing the environmental and human health impacts of coal
R. B. Finkelman, P.M.K. Gross
1999, International Journal of Coal Geology (40) 91-101
Coal is one of the most important sources of energy. Its worldwide use will continue to expand during the next several decades, particularly in rapidly developing countries such as China and India. Unfortunately, coal use may bring with it environmental and human health costs. Many of the environmental and health...
Clathrate eustasy: Methane hydrate melting as a mechanism for geologically rapid sea-level fall
J.F. Bratton
1999, Geology (27) 915-918
Although submarine methane hydrates or clathrates have been highlighted as potential amplifiers of modern global climate change and associated glacio-eustatic sea-level rise, their potential role in sea-level fall has not been appreciated. Recent estimates of the total volume occupied by gas hydrates in marine sediments vary 20-fold, from 1.2 ×...
Temporal and geographic variation in fish communities of lower Cook Inlet, Alaska
Martin D. Robards, John F. Piatt, Arthur B. Kettle, Alisa A. Abookire
1999, Fishery Bulletin (97) 962-977
Nearshore and shelf fish communities were studied in three areas of lower Cook Inlet, Alaska: the Barren Islands (oceanic and well-mixed waters), Kachemak Bay (mixed oceanic waters with significant freshwater runoff), and Chisik Island (estuarine waters). Fish were sampled with beach seines (n=413 sets) and midwater trawls (n=39 sets). We...
An integrated environmental assessment of the US mid-atlantic region
James D. Wickham, K. Bruce Jones, Kurt H. Riitters, Robert V. O’Neill, R.D. Tankersley, Elizabeth R. Smith, Anne Neale, D.J. Chaloud
1999, Environmental Management (24) 553-560
Many of today's environmental problems are regional in scope and their effects overlap and interact. We developed a simple method to provide an integrated assessment of environmental conditions and estimate cumulative impacts across a large region, by combining data on land-cover, population, roads, streams, air pollution, and topography. The integrated...
Interspecific competition in tributaries: Prospectus for restoring Atlantic salmon in Lake Ontario
James H. Johnson, Leslie R. Wedge
1999, Great Lakes Research Review (4) 11-17
Historically, Lake Ontario may have supported the world's largest freshwater population of Atlantic salmon (Salmo salar). However, by the late 1800's, salmon were virtually extinct in the lake due to the damming of tributaries, overharvest, deforestation, and pollution. Of these factors, the building of dams on tributaries, which...
Recent advances in life history of Gulf of Mexico sturgeon, Acipenser oxyrinchus desotoi, in the Suwannee River, Florida, USA: A synopsis
K. J. Sulak, James P. Clugston
1999, Conference Paper, Journal of Applied Ichthyology
Gulf sturgeon spawn on portions of three sites in the upper Suwannee River, which may appropriately be described as spawning reefs. The same areas are utilized from year to year. Habitat factors important in spawning site determination include gravel/cobble substrate, the presence of eddy fields, a neutral to slightly alkaline...
Fluid budgets at convergent plate margins: Implications for the extent and duration of fault-zone dilation
D.M. Saffer, B.A. Bekins
1999, Geology (27) 1095-1098
Faults at convergent plate boundaries are important conduits for fluid escape, and recent evidence suggests that fluid expulsion along them is both transient and heterogeneous. For the Nankai and Barbados convergent margins, we have used numerical models to investigate the long-term partitioning of...
Middle Miocene paleotemperature anomalies within the Franciscan Complex of northern California: Thermo-tectonic responses near the Mendocino triple junction
M.B. Underwood, K.L. Shelton, R. J. McLaughlin, M.M. Laughland, R.M. Solomon
1999, Geological Society of America Bulletin (111) 1448-1467
This study documents three localities in the Franciscan accretionary complex of northern California, now adjacent to the San Andreas fault, that were overprinted thermally between 13.9 and 12.2 Ma: Point Delgada-Shelter Cove (King Range terrane); Bolinas Ridge (San Bruno Mountain terrane); and Mount San Bruno (San Bruno Mountain terrane). Vein...
Structure and function of fish communities in the southern Lake Michigan basin with emphasis on restoration of native fish communities
Thomas P. Simon, Paul M. Stewart
1999, Natural Areas Journal (19) 142-154
The southern Lake Michigan basin in northwest Indiana possesses a variety of aquatic habitats including riverine, palustrine, and lacustrine systems. The watershed draining this area is a remnant of glacial Lake Chicago and supports fish communities that are typically low in species richness. Composition of the presettlement Lake Michigan fish...