Algal toxins
Lynn H. Creekmore
1999, Report, Field manual of wildlife diseases: General field procedures and diseases of birds
Periodic blooms of algae, including true algae, dinoflagellates, and cyanobacteria or blue-green algae have been reported in marine and freshwater bodies throughout the world. Although many blooms are merely an aesthetic nuisance, some species of algae produce toxins that kill fish, shellfish, humans, livestock and wildlife. Pigmented blooms of toxinproducing...
On the superfamily Darwinuloidacea, the type species of Darwinuloidea Mandelstam, 1956, and on the status of Cheikella Sohn and Morris, 1963 (Ostracoda)
I. G. Sohn, F.M. Swain
1999, Journal of Paleontology (73) 159-160
Molostovskaja (1979, p. 54) described without illustrations the family Darwinuloididae Molostovskaja, 1979. The following year, Molostovskaja (1980, p. 33) described the family again as new [Darwinuloididae fam. nov.]. She included the genus Whipplella Holland, 1934, in the family and illustrated Darwinuloides svijazhicus (Sharapova 1948) (Molostovskaja, 1980, p. 28, figs....
Photogrammetric analysis of horizon panoramas: The Pathfinder landing site in Viking orbiter images
J. Oberst, R. Jaumann, W. Zeitler, E. Hauber, M. Kuschel, T. Parker, M. Golombek, M. Malin, L. Soderblom
1999, Journal of Geophysical Research E: Planets (104) 8927-8933
Tiepoint measurements, block adjustment techniques, and sunrise/sunset pictures were used to obtain precise pointing data with respect to north for a set of 33 IMP horizon images. Azimuth angles for five prominent topographic features seen at the horizon were measured and correlated with locations of these features in Viking orbiter...
Practical Scheffe‐type credibility intervals for variables of a groundwater model
Richard L. Cooley
1999, Water Resources Research (35) 113-126
Simultaneous Scheffé‐type credibility intervals (the Bayesian version of confidence intervals) for variables of a groundwater flow model calibrated using a Bayesian maximum a posteriori procedure were derived by Cooley [1993b]. It was assumed that variances reflecting the expected differences between observed and model‐computed quantities used to calibrate the model are known, whereas...
Subsurface gas offshore of northern California and its link to submarine geomorphology
J.W. Yun, D.L. Orange, M.E. Field
1999, Marine Geology (154) 357-368
The northern California continental margin contains evidence of abundant subsurface gas and numerous seafloor features that suggest a causative link between gas expulsion and geomorphology. Analyses of seismic reflection, sidescan sonar, and high-resolution multibeam bathymetric data show that the occurrence of subbottom gas and the migration processes beneath the shelf...
Wild turkey poult survival in southcentral Iowa
Michael W. Hubbard, D.L. Garner, Erwin E. Klaas
1999, Journal of Wildlife Management (63) 199-203
Poult survival is key to understanding annual change in wild turkey (Meleagris gallopavo) populations. Survival of eastern wild turkey poults (M. g. silvestris) 0-4 weeks posthatch was studied in southcentral Iowa during 1994-97. Survival estimates of poults were calculated based on biweekly flush counts and daily locations acquired via radiotelemetry....
Effects of wind turbines on upland nesting birds in Conservation Reserve Program grasslands
K.L. Leddy, K.F. Higgins, D.E. Naugle
1999, The Wilson Bulletin (111) 100-104
Grassland passerines were surveyed during summer 1995 on the Buffalo Ridge Wind Resource Area in southwestern Minnesota to determine the relative influence of wind turbines on overall densities of upland nesting birds in Conservation Reserve Program (CRP) grasslands. Birds were surveyed along 40 m fixed width transects that were placed...
Time-budgets of Common Murres at a declining and increasing colony in Alaska
Stephani Zador, John F. Piatt
1999, Condor (101) 149-152
We observed Common Murres (Uria aalge) at two breeding sites in lower Cook Inlet, Alaska, to determine whether food availability was reflected in their time-budgets at each colony. Catches of forage fish in nets and relative biomass were greater around a murre colony that has been increasing for the past...
Bioremediation of petroleum hydrocarbon-contaminated ground water: The perspectives of history and hydrology
F. H. Chapelle
1999, Ground Water (37) 122-132
Bioremediation, the use of microbial degradation processes to detoxify environmental contamination, was first applied to petroleum hydrocarbon-contaminated ground water systems in the early 1970s. Since that time, these technologies have evolved in some ways that were clearly anticipated early investigators, and in other ways that were not foreseen. The expectation...
A record of hydrocarbon input to San Francisco Bay as traced by biomarker profiles in surface sediment and sediment cores
F. D. Hostettler, W. E. Pereira, K.A. Kvenvolden, A. VanGeen, S. N. Luoma, C. C. Fuller, R. Anima
1999, Marine Chemistry (64) 115-127
San Francisco Bay is one of the world's largest urbanized estuarine systems. Its water and sediment receive organic input from a wide variety of sources; much of this organic material is anthropogenically derived. To document the spatial and historical record of the organic contaminant input, surficial sediment from 17 sites...
Test of two methods for faulting on finite-difference calculations
D.J. Andrews
1999, Bulletin of the Seismological Society of America (89) 931-937
Tests of two fault boundary conditions show that each converges with second order accuracy as the finite-difference grid is refined. The first method uses split nodes so that there are disjoint grids that interact via surface traction. The 3D version described here is...
Stock origins of Dolly Varden collected from Beaufort Sea coastal sites of Arctic Alaska and Canada
C.C. Krueger, R.L. Wilmot, R.J. Everett
1999, Transactions of the American Fisheries Society (128) 49-57
Anadromous northern Dolly Varden Salvelinus malma support a summer subsistence fishery in Beaufort Sea coastal waters. These same waters coincide with areas of oil and gas exploration and development. The purpose of this study was to assess variation in stock origins of Dolly Varden collected from sites along 400...
Denitrification in marine shales in northeastern Colorado
Peter B. McMahon, J.K. Böhlke, Breton W. Bruce
1999, Water Resources Research (35) 1629-1642
Parts of the South Platte River alluvial aquifer in northeastern Colorado are underlain by the Pierre Shale, a marine deposit of Late Cretaceous age that is <1000 m thick. Ground water in the aquifer is contaminated with NO3‐, and the shale contains abundant potential electron donors for denitrification in the...
Evaluating the use of “goodness‐of‐fit” measures in hydrologic and hydroclimatic model validation
David R. Legates, Gregory J. McCabe Jr.
1999, Water Resources Research (35) 233-241
Correlation and correlation‐based measures (e.g., the coefficient of determination) have been widely used to evaluate the “goodness‐of‐fit” of hydrologic and hydroclimatic models. These measures are oversensitive to extreme values (outliers) and are insensitive to additive and proportional differences between model predictions and observations. Because of these limitations, correlation‐based measures can...
D/H isotope ratios of kerogen, bitumen, oil, and water in hydrous pyrolysis of source rocks containing kerogen types I, II, IIS, and III
A. Schimmelmann, M. D. Lewan, R. P. Wintsch
1999, Geochimica et Cosmochimica Acta (63) 3751-3766
Immature source rock chips containing different types of kerogen (I, II, IIS, III) were artificially matured in isotopically distinct waters by hydrous pyrolysis and by pyrolysis in supercritical water. Converging isotopic trends of inorganic (water) and organic (kerogen, bitumen, oil) hydrogen with...
Stochastic analysis of virus transport in aquifers
Linda L. Campbell Rehmann, Claire Welty, Ronald W. Harvey
1999, Water Resources Research (35) 1987-2006
A large-scale model of virus transport in aquifers is derived using spectral perturbation analysis. The effects of spatial variability in aquifer hydraulic conductivity and virus transport (attachment, detachment, and inactivation) parameters on large-scale virus transport are evaluated. A stochastic mean model of virus transport is developed by linking a simple...
Sulfur-bearing coatings on fly ash from a coal-fired power plant: Composition, origin, and influence on ash alteration
N.S. Fishman, C. A. Rice, G. N. Breit, R.D. Johnson
1999, Fuel (78) 187-196
Fly ash samples collected from two locations in the exhaust stream of a coal-fired power plant differ markedly with respect to the abundance of thin (≈0.1 μm) sulfur-rich surface coatings that are observable by scanning electron microscopy. The coatings, tentatively identified as an aluminum-potassium-sulfate phase, probably form upon reaction between condensed...
Effects of hydraulic roughness on surface textures of gravel‐bed rivers
John M. Buffington, David R. Montgomery
1999, Water Resources Research (35) 3507-3521
Field studies of forest gravel‐bed rivers in northwestern Washington and southeastern Alaska demonstrate that bed‐surface grain size is responsive to hydraulic roughness caused by bank irregularities, bars, and wood debris. We evaluate textural response by comparing reach‐average median grain size (D50) to that predicted from the total...
At-sea distribution of Spectacled Eiders: A 120-year-old mystery resolved
Margaret R. Petersen, William W. Larned, David C. Douglas
1999, The Auk (116) 1009-1020
The at-sea distribution of the threatened Spectacled Eider (Somateria fischeri) has remained largely undocumented. We identified migration corridors, staging and molting areas, and wintering areas of adult Spectacled Eiders using implanted satellite-transmitters in birds from each of the three extant breeding grounds (North Slope and Yukon-Kuskokwim Delta in Alaska and...
Covariance of lichen and vascular plant floras
J. P. Bennett, C. M. Wetmore
1999, Rhodora (101) 277-297
The geographic relationships among taxonomic groups are important to study to determine patterns of biodiversity and whether or not associations occur between large groups, e.g., birds and vascular plants. This study was undertaken to determine relationships between higher plants and lower plants, specifically vascular plant and lichen floras in nine...
Avian cholera mortality in lesser snow geese nesting on Banks Island, Northwest Territories
M.D. Samuel, John Y. Takekawa, G. Samelius, Diana R. Goldberg
1999, Wildlife Society Bulletin (27) 780-787
Avian cholera is one of the most important diseases affecting waterfowl in North America, but little is known about its ecology and its impact on waterfowl populations. We documented avian cholera mortality in breeding lesser snow geese (Chen c. caerulescens) at the Egg River colony on Banks Island, Northwest Territories,...
The record of global change in mid-Cretaceous (Barremian-Albian) sections from the Sierra Madre, Northeastern Mexico
T.J. Bralower, E. Cobabe, B. Clement, W.V. Sliter, C.L. Osburn, J. Longoria
1999, Journal of Foraminiferal Research (29) 418-437
Our current understanding of mid-Cretaceous global change is largely based on investigations of pelagic sections from southern Europe and deep sea drilling sites. Much less information exists from other continents and from hemipelagic sections deposited on continental margins. This investigation seeks to broaden our understanding of mid-Cretaceous global change by...
Cutaneous mastocytomas in the neotenic caudate amphibians Ambystoma mexicanum (axolotl) and Ambystoma tigrinum (tiger salamander)
J.C. Harshbarger, S.C. Chang, L.E. DeLanney, F.L. Rose, D. E. Green
1999, Journal of Cancer Research and Clinical Oncology (125) 187-192
Spontaneous mastocytomas studied in 18 axolotls (Ambystoma mexicanum) and six tiger salamanders (Ambystoma tigrinum) were gray-white, uni- to multilobular cutaneous protrusions from 2 mm to 2 cm in diameter. Tumors were moderately cellular unencapsulated masses that usually infiltrated the dermis and hypodermis with the destruction of intervening tissues. Some tumors were invading...
Relating tumor score to hematology in green turtles with fibropapillomatosis in Hawaii
Thierry M. Work, George H. Balazs
1999, Journal of Wildlife Diseases (35) 804-807
The relationship between hematologic status and severity of tumor affliction in green turtles (Chelonia mydas) with fibropapillomatosis (FP) was examined. During 1 wk periods in July 1997 and July 1998, we bled 108 free-ranging green turtles from Pala'au (Molokai, Hawaii, USA) where FP is endemic. Blood was analyzed for hematocrit,...
Poisoning of wild birds from exposure to anticholinesterase compounds and lead: diagnostic methods and selected cases
J. Christian Franson, Milton R. Smith
1999, Seminars in Avian and Exotic Pet Medicine (8) 3-11
Organophosphorus and carbamate compounds have largely replaced chlorinated hydrocarbons for pesticidal use in the United States, and many cases of poisoning resulting from exposure to these anticholinesterase agents have occurred in free-living birds. Although lead shot has been prohibited for waterfowl hunting throughout the United States since 1991, lead poisoning...