Four-band image mosaic of the Colorado River Corridor downstream of Glen Canyon Dam in Arizona, derived from the May 2021 airborne image acquisition
Joel B. Sankey, Nathaniel Bransky, Lori M. Pigue, Keith Kohl, Thomas M. Gushue
2025, Data Report 1202
In May 2021, the U.S. Geological Survey’s Grand Canyon Monitoring and Research Center acquired airborne multispectral high-resolution data for the Colorado River in the Grand Canyon, Arizona. The image data, which consist of four spectral bands (red, band 1; green, band 2; blue, band 3; and near infrared, band 4)...
Reconstruction of Holocene and Last Interglacial vegetation dynamics and wildfire activity in Southern Siberia
Jade Margerum, Julia Homann, Stuart Umbo, Gernot Nehrke, Thorsten Hoffmann, Anton Vaks, Aleksandr Kononov, Alexander Osintsev, Alena Maria Giesche, Andrew Mason, Franziska A. Lechleitner, Gideon M. Henderson, Ola Kwiecien, Sebastian F.M. Breitenbach
2025, Climate of the Past (21) 661-677
Wildfires are a rapidly increasing threat to boreal forests. While our understanding of the drivers behind wildfires and their environmental impact is growing, it is mostly limited to the observational period. Here we focus on the boreal forests of southern Siberia and exploit a U–Th-dated stalagmite from Botovskaya Cave, located...
A novel method for estimating pathogen presence, prevalence, load, and dynamics at multiple scales
John F. Gridder, Bradley James Udell, Brian E. Reichert, Jeffery T. Foster, William Louis Kendall, Tina L. Cheng, Winifred F. Frick
2025, Scientific Reports (15)
The use of quantitative real-time PCR (qPCR) to monitor pathogens is common; however, quantitative frameworks that consider the observation process, dynamics in pathogen presence, and pathogen load are lacking. This can be problematic in the early stages of disease progression, where low level detections may be treated as ‘inconclusive’ and...
Deterministic physics-based earthquake sequence simulators match empirical ground-motion models and enable extrapolation to data poor regimes: Application to multifault multimechanism ruptures
Bruce E. Shaw, Kevin Ross Milner, Christine A Goulet
2025, Seismological Research Letters (96) 2431-2444
We use the deterministic earthquake simulator RSQSim to generate complex sequences of ruptures on fault systems used for hazard assessment. We show that the source motions combined with a wave propagation code create surface ground motions that fall within the range of epistemic uncertainties for the Next Generation Attenuation‐West2 set...
Decadal stability in stream fish communities and contemporary ecological drivers of species occupancy in two Appalachian U.S. National Parks
Morgan B. Stum, Caleb J. Tzilkowski, Matthew R. Marshall, Frances E. Buderman, Tyler Wagner
2025, Transactions of the American Fisheries Society (154) 17-34
Objective Although conserving fish biodiversity in lotic systems is challenging, protected areas can provide refuge from certain environmental stressors. In the Appalachian region, USA, the National Park Service manages Delaware Water Gap National Recreation Area (DEWA) and New River Gorge National Park & Preserve (NERI), which contain abundant and diverse...
Atypical winter coat coloration of snowshoe hares near the southern extent of their range
Laura Christine Gigliotti, Emily S. Boyd, Duane R. Diefenbach
2025, Ecosphere (16)
Many species have a variety of adaptations to winter weather, but these adaptations could become maladaptive if winter snowfall and temperatures are more variable. Snowshoe hares (Lepus americanus) molt from a brown summer coat to a white winter coat, but reductions in snow cover could result in phenotypic mismatch, which...
A model uncertainty quantification protocol for evaluating the value of observation data
Michael N. Fienen, Laura A. Schachter, Randall J. Hunt
2025, Scientific Investigations Report 2025-5007
The history-matching approach to parameter estimation with models enables a powerful offshoot analysis of data worth—using the uncertainty of a model forecast as a metric for the worth of data. Adding observation data will either have no impact on forecast uncertainty or will reduce it. Removing existing data will either...
Predicting pup-rearing habitat for Mexican wolves
Sarah B. Bassing, John K. Oakleaf, James W. Cain III, Allison R. Greenleaf, Colby M. Gardner, David Edward Ausband
2025, Journal of Wildlife Management (89)
Population monitoring is essential to document recovery efforts for threatened and endangered species. Mexican wolves (Canis lupus baileyi) are an endangered subspecies of gray wolves that historically occupied large portions of the American Southwest and Mexico. Recently, the Mexican wolf population in the United States has been growing rapidly and...
Climate and dispersal ability limit future habitats for Gila monsters in the Mojave Desert
Steven J. Hromada, Jason L. Jones, Jocelyn B. Stalker, Dustin A. Wood, Amy G. Vandergast, C. Richard Tracy, C.M. Gienger, Kenneth E. Nussear
2025, Ecology and Evolution (15)
Describing future habitat for sensitive species can be helpful in planning conservation efforts to ensure species persistence under new climatic conditions. The Gila monster (Heloderma suspectum) is an iconic lizard of the southwestern United States. The northernmost range of Gila monsters is the Mojave Desert, an area experiencing rapid human...
Optimizing sampling across transect-based methods improves the power of agroecological monitoring data
Sarah E. McCord, Nicholas P. Webb, Justin W. Van Zee, Ericha M. Courtright, Benjamin J Billings, Michael C. Duniway, Brandon L. Edwards, Emily Kachergis, Daniel N Moriasi, Brian Morra, Aleta Nafus, Beth A. Newingham, Drew A. Scott, David Toledo
2025, Journal of Environmental Quality (54) 706-719
Transect-based monitoring has long been a valuable tool in ecosystem monitoring to measure multiple ecosystem attributes. The line-point intercept (LPI), vegetation height, and canopy gap intercept methods comprise a set of core methods, which provide indicators of ecosystem condition. However, users often struggle to design a sampling strategy that optimizes...
Stratigraphy, structure, and geomorphology of the central Appalachians across the North Mountain fault zone near Harrisonburg, Virginia, USA
Daniel H. Doctor, Alexander Addison Gray, William Elijah Odom
2025, Book chapter, From the Ozark Plateaus and Arkansas River Valley to the Shenandoah Valley: Field guides for the 2025 GSA south-central and southeastern section meetings
This field trip focuses on the geology of the central Appalachian Valley and Ridge province near Harrisonburg, Virginia, USA. Recent geologic mapping utilizing 1-m resolution lidar data has revealed new insights into the Paleozoic stratigraphy, structural geology, and Neogene landscape evolution of the region. The detailed mapping reveals the presence...
Evaluating the potential to quantify salmon habitat via UAS-based particle image velocimetry
Lee R. Harrison, Carl J. Legleiter, Brandon Overstreet, James White
2025, Water Resources Research (3)
Continuous, high-resolution data for characterizing freshwater habitat conditions can support successful management of endangered salmonids. Uncrewed aircraft systems (UAS) make acquiring such fine-scale data along river channels more feasible, but workflows for quantifying reach-scale salmon habitats are lacking. We evaluated the potential for UAS-based mapping of hydraulic habitats using spectrally...
Comparison of hydrologic data and water budgets between 2003–08 and 2018–23 for the eastern part of the Arbuckle-Simpson aquifer, south-central Oklahoma
Shana L. Mashburn, Evin J. Fetkovich, Hayden A. Lockmiller, Chloe Codner, Ethan Allen Kirby, Isaac A. Dale, Colin A. Baciocco
2025, Scientific Investigations Report 2025-5011
The Arbuckle-Simpson aquifer is divided spatially into three parts (eastern, central, and western). The largest groundwater withdrawals are from the eastern part of the Arbuckle-Simpson aquifer, which provides water to approximately 39,000 people in Ada and Sulphur, Oklahoma, and surrounding areas. The Arbuckle-Simpson aquifer, including the eastern part, is designated...
Methods for peak-flow frequency analysis for streamgages in or near Montana, North Dakota, South Dakota, and Wyoming
Seth A. Siefken, Tara Williams-Sether, Nancy A. Barth, Katherine J. Chase, Mark A. Cedar Face
2025, Scientific Investigations Report 2025-5019
The U.S. Geological Survey, in cooperation with the Montana Department of Natural Resources and Conservation, North Dakota Department of Water Resources, South Dakota Department of Transportation, and the Wyoming Water Development Office, has developed standard methods of peak-flow frequency analysis for studies in Montana, North Dakota, South Dakota, and Wyoming....
The abandoned mine inventory of the United States—A brief summary
Jeffrey L. Mauk, Nick A Karl, Justin S. Pierson, Carma A. San Juan
2025, Fact Sheet 2025-3003
The Infrastructure Investment and Jobs Act of 2021 required the Secretary of the Interior to establish a program to inventory abandoned hard-rock mines in the United States. The Department of the Interior’s Office of Environmental Policy and Compliance asked the U.S. Geological Survey’s Mineral Deposit Database project (USMIN) to use...
Geologic framework and Holocene sand thickness offshore of Seven Mile Island, New Jersey
Emily A. Wei, Jennifer L. Miselis, Noreen A. Buster, Arnell S. Forde
2025, Scientific Investigations Report 2024-5131
The U.S. Geological Survey assessed the Quaternary evolution of Seven Mile Island, New Jersey, to quantify coastal sediment availability, which is crucial for establishing sediment budgets, understanding sediment dispersal, and managing coastlines. This report presents preliminary interpretations of seismic profiles, maps of Holocene sand thickness from the shoreline to 2...
Analysis of aquifer framework and properties, Alvahs Lane well field, Cutchogue, New York
Paul E. Misut
2025, Scientific Investigations Report 2024-5128
The U.S. Geological Survey, in cooperation with the Suffolk County Water Authority, evaluated the aquifer transmissivity and storage properties at the Alvahs Lane well field north of the village of Cutchogue, New York. This analysis of aquifer properties provides the Suffolk County Water Authority with hydrogeologic information needed to develop...
Base-flow sampling to enhance understanding of the groundwater flow component of nitrogen loading in small watersheds draining into Long Island Sound
Kaitlin L. Laabs, Janet R. Barclay, John R. Mullaney
2025, Data Report 1206
Excessive nitrogen discharge is a major concern for the Long Island Sound. Programs have been implemented to reduce point sources of nitrogen to the sound, but little is known about the nonpoint sources. This study aims to better understand the current groundwater contributions of nitrogen from nonpoint sources in the...
Overwinter survival of an estuarine resident fish (Fundulus heteroclitus) in North Carolina salt marsh creeks
P. J. Rudershausen, Matthew J. O'Donnell
2025, Journal of Fish of Biology (107) 188-200
The mummichog Fundulus heteroclitus is a trophically important fish inhabiting Atlantic coastal salt marshes, with few in situ estimates of overwinter survival throughout the species range. We estimated overwinter apparent survival rates of F. heteroclitus at the approximate mid-latitudinal species range [coastal North Carolina (USA)] in four tidal creeks that experience variable winter water...
Temporal and spatial equivalence in demographic responses of emperor penguins (Aptenodytes forsteri) to environmental change
Bilgecan Şen, Christian Joseph Che-Castaldo, Michelle A. LaRue, Kristen M. Krumhardt, Laura Landrum, Marika M. Holland, Heather J. Lynch, Karine Delord, Christophe Barbraud, Stéphanie Jenouvrier
2025, Journal of Animal Ecology (94) 932-942
1. Population ecology and biogeography applications often necessitate the transfer of models across spatial and/or temporal dimensions to make predictions outside the bounds of the data used for model fitting. However, ecological data are often spatiotemporally unbalanced such that the spatial or the temporal dimension tends to contain more data...
MTAB 111, March 2025
Kyra Harvey, Jennifer L. McKay
2025, Newsletter
This Memo to All Banders (MTAB 111) was released in March 2025. Subjects in this this memo are 1. The Chief’s Chirp; 2. Alerts – Highly Pathogenic Avian Influenza; 3. Staff updates – celebrating Karen Jone’s remarkable career and retirement, meeting reports and a field trip; 4. News – BandIt...
Evaluating drought risk of the Red River of the North Basin using historical and stochastic streamflow upstream from Emerson, Manitoba
Fleford Santos Redoloza, Robin L. Glas, Rochelle A. Nustad, Karen R. Ryberg
2025, Scientific Investigations Report 2025-5002
Drought and its effect on streamflow are important to understand because of the potential to adversely affect water supply, agricultural production, and ecological conditions. The Red River of the North Basin in north-central United States and central Canada is susceptible to dry conditions. During an extended drought, streamflow conditions in...
System characterization report on the Environmental Mapping and Analysis Program (EnMAP)
Minsu Kim, Seonkyung Park, Cody Anderson
2025, Open-File Report 2021-1030-S
This report addresses system characterization of the Environmental Mapping and Analysis Program hyperspectral sensor by the DLR (German Aerospace Center, ground segment project management), GFZ (Deutsches Geoforschungszentrum, science lead) and is part of a series of system characterization reports produced and delivered by the U.S. Geological Survey Earth Resources Observation...
Delineating ecologically-distinct groups for annual cycle management of a declining shorebird
Elly C. Knight, J. D. Carlisle, Andy J. Boyce, D.C. Bradley, Paula Cimprich, Stephanie Coates, Stephen J. Dinsmore, Cory J. Gregory, Joel G. Jorgensen, Jeffrey F. Kelly, David Newstead, Alina Olalla, Larkin A. Powell, Amy L. Scarpignato, T. Lee Tibbitts, Nils Warnock, Walter Wehtje, Peter P. Marra, Autumn-Lynn Harrison
2025, Journal of Applied Ecology (62) 1152-1165
1. Patterns of migratory connectivity are increasingly used to understand and manage threats throughout the annual cycle of migratory species. Strong migratory connectivity refers to when individuals from different populations remain spatially separated across the annual cycle, which may expose populations to unique sets of threats and conditions that cause...
Assessing decadal-scale coastal change likelihood to define the accuracy and application of scientific information
Elizabeth A. Pendleton, Erika E. Lentz, Rachel E. Henderson, Julia L. Heslin, Marie Kathleen Bartlett, Travis K. Sterne
2025, Journal of Coastal Research (41) 770-785
Defining the accuracy and uncertainties of scientific data products is critical to the usability and trustworthiness of scientific information for environmental management and conservation purposes, such as coastal resource prioritization, design, adaptation, and mitigation. The U.S. Geological Survey has a new decadal-scale coastal change assessment product that synthesizes nearly two...