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Page 346, results 8626 - 8650

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Not all publications have extents, not all extents are completely accurate
Coastal estuaries and lagoons: The delicate balance at the edge of the sea
Paul A. Conrads, Kirk D. Rodgers, Davina Passeri, Scott T. Prinos, Christopher Smith, Christopher M. Swarzenski, Beth A. Middleton
2018, Fact Sheet 2018-3022
Coastal communities are increasingly concerned about the dynamic balance between freshwater and saltwater because of its implications for societal, economic, and ecological resources. While the mixing of freshwater and saltwater sources defines coastal estuaries and lagoons, sudden changes in this balance can have a large effect on critical ecosystems and...
Surveys of environmental DNA (eDNA): a new approach to estimate occurrence in Vulnerable manatee populations
Margaret Hunter, Gaia Meigs-Friend, Jason A. Ferrante, Aristide Takoukam Kamla, Robert Dorazio, Lucy Keith Diagne, Fabia Luna, Janet M. Lanyon, James P. Reid
2018, Endangered Species Research (35) 101-111
Environmental DNA (eDNA) detection is a technique used to non-invasively detect cryptic, low density, or logistically difficult-to-study species, such as imperiled manatees. For eDNA measurement, genetic material shed into the environment is concentrated from water samples and analyzed for the presence of target species. Cytochrome bquantitative PCR and droplet digital PCR...
Uranium concentrations in groundwater, northeastern Washington
Sue C. Kahle, Wendy B. Welch, Alison E. Tecca, Devin M. Eliason
2018, Scientific Investigations Map 3401
A study of uranium in groundwater in northeastern Washington was conducted to make a preliminary assessment of naturally occurring uranium in groundwater relying on existing information and limited reconnaissance sampling. Naturally occurring uranium is associated with granitic and metasedimentary rocks, as well as younger sedimentary deposits, that occur in this...
Does what go up also come down? Using a recruitment model to balance alewife nutrient import and export
Betsy L. Barber, A. Jamie Gibson, Andrew O’Malley, Joseph D. Zydlewski
2018, Marine and Coastal Fisheries: Dynamics, Management, and Ecosystem Science (10) 236-254
Migrating adult Alewives Alosa pseudoharengus are a source of marine-derived nutrients on the East Coast of North America, importing nitrogen and phosphorus into freshwater habitats. Juvenile migrants subsequently transport freshwater-derived nutrients into the ocean. We developed a deterministic model to explore the theoretical nutrient dynamics of Alewife migrations at differing...
Thinning, tree-growth, and resistance to multi-year drought in a mixed-conifer forest of northern California
Michael J. Vernon, Rosemary L. Sherriff, Phillip J. van Mantgem, Jeffrey M. Kane
2018, Forest Ecology and Management (422) 190-198
Drought is an important stressor in forest ecosystems that can influence tree vigor and survival. In the U.S., forest managers use two primary management techniques to promote resistance and resilience to drought: prescribed fire and mechanical thinning. Generally applied to reduce fuels and fire hazard, treatments may also reduce competition...
Cyclic heliothermal behaviour of the shallow, hypersaline Lake Hayward, Western Australia
Jeffrey V. Turner, Michael R. Rosen, Lee Coshell, Robert J. Woodbury
2018, Journal of Hydrology (560) 495-511
Lake Hayward is one of only about 30 hypersaline lakes worldwide that is meromictic and heliothermal and as such behaves as a natural salt gradient solar pond. Lake Hayward acts as a local groundwater sink, resulting in seasonally variable hypersaline lake water with...
Brown trout in the Lees Ferry reach of the Colorado River—Evaluation of causal hypotheses and potential interventions
Michael C. Runge, Charles B. Yackulic, Lucas S. Bair, Theodore A. Kennedy, Richard A. Valdez, Craig Ellsworth, Jeffrey L. Kershner, R. Scott Rogers, Melissa A. Trammell, Kirk L. Young
2018, Open-File Report 2018-1069
Over the period 2014–2016, the number of nonnative brown trout (Salmo trutta) captured during routine monitoring in the Lees Ferry reach of the Colorado River, downstream of Glen Canyon Dam, began increasing. Management agencies and stakeholders have questioned whether the increase in brown trout in the Lees Ferry reach represents...
The influence of episodic shallow magma degassing on heat and chemical transport in volcanic hydrothermal systems
Kewei Chen, Hongbin Zhan, Erick R. Burns, Steven E. Ingebritsen, Pierre Agrinier
2018, Geophysical Research Letters (45) 3068-3076
Springs at La Soufrière of Guadeloupe have been monitored for nearly four decades since the phreatic eruption and associated seismic activity in 1976. We conceptualize degassing vapor/gas mixtures as square‐wave sources of chloride and heat and apply a new semianalytic solution to demonstrate that chloride and heat pulses with the...
The Midwest Stream Quality Assessment—Influences of human activities on streams
Peter C. Van Metre, Barbara Mahler, Daren M. Carlisle, James F. Coles
2018, Fact Sheet 2017-3087
Healthy streams and the fish and other organisms that live in them contribute to our quality of life. Extensive modification of the landscape in the Midwestern United States, however, has profoundly affected the condition of streams. Row crops and pavement have replaced grasslands and woodlands, streams have been straightened, and...
Evaluating the potential for near-shore bathymetry on the Majuro Atoll, Republic of the Marshall Islands, using Landsat 8 and WorldView-3 imagery
Sandra K. Poppenga, Monica Palaseanu-Lovejoy, Dean B. Gesch, Jeffrey J. Danielson, Dean J. Tyler
2018, Scientific Investigations Report 2018-5024
Satellite-derived near-shore bathymetry (SDB) is becoming an increasingly important method for assessing vulnerability to climate change and natural hazards in low-lying atolls of the northern tropical Pacific Ocean. Satellite imagery has become a cost-effective means for mapping near-shore bathymetry because ships cannot collect soundings safely while operating close to the...
Relative importance of water-quality stressors in predicting fish community responses in midwestern streams
Michael R. Meador, Jeffrey W. Frey
2018, Journal of the American Water Resources Association (54) 708-723
Fish, habitat, and water chemistry data were collected from 98 streams in the midwestern United States, an area dominated by intense cultivation of row crops, in order to identify important water‐quality stressors to fish communities. We focused on 10 stressors including riparian disturbance, riparian vegetative cover, instream fish cover, streambed...
Nearshore coastal bathymetry data collected in 2016 from West Ship Island to Horn Island, Gulf Islands National Seashore, Mississippi
Nancy T. DeWitt, Chelsea A. Stalk, Jake J. Fredericks, James G. Flocks, Kyle W. Kelso, Andrew S. Farmer, Thomas M. Tuten, Noreen A. Buster
2018, Data Series 1081
The U.S. Geological Survey (USGS) St. Petersburg Coastal and Marine Science Center, in cooperation with the U.S. Army Corps of Engineers, Mobile District, conducted bathymetric surveys of the nearshore waters surrounding Ship and Horn Islands, Gulf Islands National Seashore, Mississippi. The objective of this study was to establish base-level elevation...
Climate stability in Central Anatolia during the Messinian Salinity Crisis
Maud J.M. Meijers, Ahmet A Peynircioglu, Michael A. Cosca, Gilles Y. Brocard, Donna L. Whitney, Cor G. Langereis, Andreas Mulch
2018, Palaeogeography, Palaeoclimatology, Palaeoecology (498) 53-67
Deposition of large amounts of evaporites and erosion of deep canyons within the Mediterranean Basin as a result of reduced basin connectivity with the Atlantic Ocean and the epicontinental Paratethys Sea characterized the Messinian Salinity Crisis (MSC, 5.97–5.33 Ma). The influence of the MSC on Mediterranean environmental conditions within the basin itself...
Less fine particle retention in a restored versus unrestored urban stream: Balance between hyporheic exchange, resuspension, and immobilization
J. D. Drummond, L. G. Larsen, R. Gonzalez-Pinzon, A. I. Packman, J. W. Harvey
2018, JGR Biogeosciences (123) 1425-1439
Stream restoration goals include reducing erosion and increasing hyporheic exchange to promote biogeochemical processing and improve water quality. Little is known, however, about fine particle dynamics in response to stream restoration. Fine particles (<100 μm) are exchanged with transient storage areas near and within streambeds and banks. Fine particle retention directly...
Dam Removal and Fish Passage Improvement Influence Fish Assemblages in the Penobscot River, Maine
Jonathan M. Watson, Stephen M. Coghlan Jr., Joseph D. Zydlewski, Daniel B. Hayes, Ian A. Kiraly
2018, Transactions of the American Fisheries Society (147) 525-540
Dams and their impoundments disrupt river habitat connectivity to the detriment of migratory fishes. Removal of dams improves riverine connectivity and lotic habitat, which benefits not only these fishes but also resident fluvial specialist species. Restoration efforts on the Penobscot River, Maine, are among the largest recently completed in the...
Modeled de facto reuse and contaminants of emerging concern in drinking water source waters
Thuy Nguyen, Paul Westerhoff, Edward T. Furlong, Dana W. Kolpin, Angela L. Batt, Heath E. Mash, Kathleen M. Schenck, J. Scott Boone, Jacelyn Rice, Susan T. Glassmeyer
2018, Journal - American Water Works Association (110) E2-E18
De facto reuse is the percentage of drinking water treatment plant (DWTP) intake potentially composed of effluent discharged from upstream wastewater treatment plants (WWTPs). Results from grab samples and a De Facto Reuse in our Nation's Consumable Supply (DRINCS) geospatial watershed model were used to quantify contaminants of emerging concern...
Quality-control design for surface-water sampling in the National Water-Quality Network
Melissa L. Riskin, David C. Reutter, Jeffrey D. Martin, David K. Mueller
2018, Open-File Report 2018-1018
The data-quality objectives for samples collected at surface-water sites in the National Water-Quality Network include estimating the extent to which contamination, matrix effects, and measurement variability affect interpretation of environmental conditions. Quality-control samples provide insight into how well the samples collected at surface-water sites represent the true environmental conditions. Quality-control...
Water resources science of the U.S. Geological Survey in New York
Anna N. Glover
2018, General Information Product 185
The U.S. Geological Survey studies the effects of weather, climate, and man-made influences on groundwater levels, streamflow, and reservoir and lake levels, as well as on the ecological health of rivers, lakes, reservoirs, watersheds, estuaries, aquifers, soils, beaches, and wildlife. From these studies, the USGS produces high-quality, timely, and unbiased...
Postwildfire measurement of soil physical and hydraulic properties at selected sampling sites in the 2011 Las Conchas wildfire burn scar, Jemez Mountains, north-central New Mexico
Orlando C. Romero, Brian A. Ebel, Deborah A. Martin, Katie W. Buchan, Alanna D. Jornigan
2018, Scientific Investigations Report 2018-5028
The generation of runoff and the resultant flash flooding can be substantially larger following wildfire than for similar rainstorms that precede wildfire disturbance. Flash flooding after the 2011 Las Conchas Fire in New Mexico provided the motivation for this investigation to assess postwildfire effects on soil-hydraulic properties (SHPs) and soil-physical...
Methane in groundwater from a leaking gas well, Piceance Basin, Colorado, USA
Peter B. McMahon, Judith C. Thomas, John T. Crawford, Mark M. Dornblaser, Andrew G. Hunt
2018, Science of the Total Environment (634) 791-801
Site-specific and regional analysis of time-series hydrologic and geochemical data collected from 15 monitoring wells in the Piceance Basin indicated that a leaking gas well contaminated shallow groundwater with thermogenic methane. The gas well was drilled in 1956 and plugged and abandoned in 1990. Chemical and isotopic data showed the...
Simulating selenium and nitrogen fate and transport in coupled stream-aquifer systems of irrigated regions
Christopher D. Shultz, Ryan T. Bailey, Timothy K. Gates, Brent E. Heesemann, Eric D. Morway
2018, Journal of Hydrology (560) 512-529
Elevated levels of selenium (Se) in aqueous environments can harm aquatic life and endanger livestock and human health. Although Se occurs naturally in the rocks and soils of many alluvial aquifers, mining and agricultural activities can increase its rate of mobilization and transport...
Effects of groundwater withdrawals from the Hurricane Fault zone on discharge of saline water from Pah Tempe Springs, Washington County, Utah
Philip M. Gardner
2018, Scientific Investigations Report 2018-5040
Pah Tempe Springs, located in Washington County, Utah, contribute about 95,000 tons of dissolved solids annually along a 1,500-foot gaining reach of the Virgin River. The river gains more than 10 cubic feet per second along the reach as thermal, saline springwater discharges from dozens of orifices located along the...
Effects of hillslope gully stabilization on erosion and sediment production in the Torreon Wash watershed, New Mexico, 2009–12
Anne Marie Matherne, Anne C. Tillery, Kyle R. Douglas-Mankin
2018, Scientific Investigations Report 2018-5026
Sediment erosion and deposition in two sets of paired (treated and untreated) upland drainages in the Torreon Wash watershed, upper Rio Puerco Basin, New Mexico, were examined over a 3 1/2-year period from spring 2009 through fall 2012. The objective was to evaluate the effectiveness of shallow, loose-stone check dams,...
Early growth interactions between a mangrove and an herbaceous salt marsh species are not affected by elevated CO2 or drought
Rebecca J. Howard, Camille L. Stagg, Herry S. Utomo
2018, Estuarine, Coastal and Shelf Science (207) 74-81
Increasing atmospheric carbon dioxide (CO2) concentrations are likely to influence future distributions of plants and plant community structure in many regions of the world through effects on photosynthetic rates. In recent decades the encroachment of woody mangrove species into herbaceous marshes has been documented along the U.S. northern Gulf of...