Hydrodynamic Characteristics and Salinity Patterns in Estero Bay, Lee County, Florida
Michael J. Byrne, Jessica N. Gabaldon
2008, Scientific Investigations Report 2007-5217
Estero Bay is an estuary (about 12 miles long and 3 miles wide) on the southwestern Florida coast, with several inlets connecting the bay to the Gulf of Mexico and numerous freshwater tributaries. Continuous stage and salinity data were recorded at eight gaging stations in Estero Bay estuary from October...
A Vegetation Database for the Colorado River Ecosystem from Glen Canyon Dam to the Western Boundary of Grand Canyon National Park, Arizona
Barbara E. Ralston, Philip A. Davis, Robert M. Weber, Jill M. Rundall
2008, Open-File Report 2008-1216
A vegetation database of the riparian vegetation located within the Colorado River ecosystem (CRE), a subsection of the Colorado River between Glen Canyon Dam and the western boundary of Grand Canyon National Park, was constructed using four-band image mosaics acquired in May 2002. A digital line scanner was flown over...
Estimated Flood-Inundation Mapping for the Upper Blue River, Indian Creek, and Dyke Branch in Kansas City, Missouri, 2006-08
Brian P. Kelly, Richard J. Huizinga
2008, Scientific Investigations Report 2008-5068
In the interest of improved public safety during flooding, the U.S. Geological Survey, in cooperation with the city of Kansas City, Missouri, completed a flood-inundation study of the Blue River in Kansas City, Missouri, from the U.S. Geological Survey streamflow gage at Kenneth Road to 63rd Street, of Indian Creek...
Simulation of Flow, Sediment Transport, and Sediment Mobility of the Lower Coeur d'Alene River, Idaho
Charles Berenbrock, Andrew W. Tranmer
2008, Scientific Investigations Report 2008-5093
A one-dimensional sediment-transport model and a multi-dimensional hydraulic and bed shear stress model were developed to investigate the hydraulic, sediment transport, and sediment mobility characteristics of the lower Coeur d?Alene River in northern Idaho. This report documents the development and calibration of those models, as well as the results of...
Estuarine River Data for the Ten Thousand Islands Area, Florida, Water Year 2005
Michael J. Byrne, Eduardo Patino
2008, Data Series 322
The U.S. Geological Survey collected stream discharge, stage, salinity, and water-temperature data near the mouths of 11 tributaries flowing into the Ten Thousand Islands area of Florida from October 2004 to June 2005. Maximum positive discharge from Barron River and Faka Union River was 6,000 and 3,200 ft3/s, respectively; no...
Modeling Water-Surface Elevations and Virtual Shorelines for the Colorado River in Grand Canyon, Arizona
Christopher S. Magirl, Michael J. Breedlove, Robert H. Webb, Peter G. Griffiths
2008, Scientific Investigations Report 2008-5075
Using widely-available software intended for modeling rivers, a new one-dimensional hydraulic model was developed for the Colorado River through Grand Canyon from Lees Ferry to Diamond Creek. Solving one-dimensional equations of energy and continuity, the model predicts stage for a known steady-state discharge at specific locations, or cross sections, along...
Hemlock ecosystem monitoring in southern West Virginia
Petra Bohall Wood, John H. Perez, John M. Wood
2008, Conference Paper, Fourth symposium on hemlock woolly adelgid in the eastern United States
We initiated a long-term hemlock ecosystem monitoring study in 1998 on the New River Gorge National River (NERI) and Gauley River National Recreation Area (GARI), in Nicholas, Fayette, and Raleigh counties, West Virginia, to quantify ecosystem response to invasion by the hemlock woolly adelgid (HWA). Hemlock vigor and degree of...
Geomorphic characterization of the Middle Fork Saline River: Garland, Perry, and Saline Counties, Arkansas
Aaron L. Pugh, Thomas J. Garday, Ronald Redman
2008, Scientific Investigations Report 2007-5152
This report was prepared to help address concerns raised by local residents, State, and Federal agencies about the current geomorphic conditions of the Middle Fork Saline River. Over the past 30 years the Middle Fork Saline River Basin has experienced a marked increase in urbanization. The report summarizes the Middle...
Near-shore and off-shore habitat use by endangered juvenile Lost River and Shortnose Suckers in Upper Klamath Lake, Oregon: 2006 data summary
Summer M. Burdick, Alexander X. Wilkens, Scott P. VanderKooi
2008, Open-File Report 2007-1356
Lost River suckers Deltistes luxatus and shortnose suckers Chasmistes brevirostris , listed as endangered in 1988 under the Endangered Species Act, have shown infrequent recruitment into adult populations in Upper Klamath Lake (NRC 2004). In an effort to understand the causes behind and provide management solutions to apparent recruitment failure,...
Reproductive ecology of Actinonaias ligamentina (Bivalvia:Unionidae) in a regulated river
K.R. Moles, J.B. Layzer
2008, Journal of the North American Benthological Society (27) 212-222
Factors affecting the reproductive success of freshwater mussels in lotic systems are poorly understood. Gravidity, fecundity, and fertilization success of Actinonaias ligamentina were examined at 4 sites along a 63-km reach of the Green River immediately below the Green River Dam, Kentucky. No gravid females were collected at the site...
Assessment of crop growth and soil water modules in SWAT2000 using extensive field experiment data in an irrigation district of the Yellow River Basin
Y. Luo, C. He, M. Sophocleous, Z. Yin, R. Hongrui, Z. Ouyang
2008, Journal of Hydrology (352) 139-156
SWAT, a physically-based, hydrological model simulates crop growth, soil water and groundwater movement, and transport of sediment and nutrients at both the process and watershed scales. While the different versions of SWAT have been widely used throughout the world for agricultural and water resources applications, little has been done to...
Using heat to characterize streambed water flux variability in four stream reaches
H.I. Essaid, C.M. Zamora, K. A. McCarthy, J. R. Vogel, J.T. Wilson
2008, Journal of Environmental Quality (37) 1010-1023
Estimates of streambed water flux are needed for the interpretation of streambed chemistry and reactions. Continuous temperature and head monitoring in stream reaches within four agricultural watersheds (Leary Weber Ditch, IN; Maple Creek, NE; DR2 Drain, WA; and Merced River, CA) allowed heat to be used as a tracer to...
Measuring gravity currents in the Chicago River, Chicago, Illinois
K. A. Oberg, J. A. Czuba, K. K. Johnson
2008, Conference Paper, Proceedings of the IEEE working conference on current measurement technology
Recent studies of the Chicago River have determined that gravity currents are responsible for persistent bidirectional flows that have been observed in the river. A gravity current is the flow of one fluid within another caused by a density difference between the fluids. These studies demonstrated how acoustic Doppler current...
Cosmogenic exposure-age chronologies of Pinedale and Bull Lake glaciations in greater Yellowstone and the Teton Range, USA
J. M. Licciardi, K. L. Pierce
2008, Quaternary Science Reviews (27) 814-831
We have obtained 69 new cosmogenic 10Be surface exposure ages from boulders on moraines deposited by glaciers of the greater Yellowstone glacial system and Teton Range during the middle and late Pleistocene. These new data, combined with 43 previously obtained 3He and 10Be ages from deposits of the northern Yellowstone...
Comparing histology and gonadosomatic index for determining spawning condition of small-bodied riverine fishes
S.K. Brewer, C.F. Rabeni, D. M. Papoulias
2008, Ecology of Freshwater Fish (17) 54-58
We compared gonadosomatic index (GSI) and histological analysis of ovaries for identifying reproductive periods of fishes to determine the validity of using GSI in future studies. Four small-bodied riverine species were examined in our comparison of the two methods. Mean GSI was significantly different between all histological stages for suckermouth...
Development and Application of a Decision Support System for Water Management Investigations in the Upper Yakima River, Washington
Ken D. Bovee, Terry J. Waddle, Colin Talbert, James R. Hatten, Thomas R. Batt
2008, Open-File Report 2008-1251
The Yakima River Decision Support System (YRDSS) was designed to quantify and display the consequences of different water management scenarios for a variety of state variables in the upper Yakima River Basin, located in central Washington. The impetus for the YRDSS was the Yakima River Basin Water Storage Feasibility Study,...
Assessing the feasibility of native fish reintroductions: a framework and example applied to bull trout in the Clackamas River, Oregon
Jason B. Dunham, Kirsten Gallo
2008, Open-File Report 2008-1007
In a species conservation context, translocations can be an important tool, but they frequently fail to successfully establish new populations. We consider the case of reintroductions for bull trout (Salvelinus confluentus), a federally-listed threatened species with a widespread but declining distribution in western North America. Our specific objectives in this...
Influences of body size and environmental factors on autumn downstream migration of bull trout in the Boise River, Idaho
L. Monnot, J. B. Dunham, T. Hoem, P. Koetsier
2008, North American Journal of Fisheries Management (28) 231-240
Many fishes migrate extensively through stream networks, yet patterns are commonly described only in terms of the origin and destination of migration (e.g., between natal and feeding habitats). To better understand patterns of migration in bull trout,Salvelinus confluentus we studied the influences of body size (total length [TL]) and environmental...
Track of the Yellowstone hotspot: Young and ongoing geologic processes from the Snake River Plain to the Yellowstone Plateau and Tetons
Lisa A. Morgan, Kenneth L. Pierce, Pat Shanks
Robert G.H. Raynolds, editor(s)
2008, Book chapter, Roaming the Rocky Mountains and environs: Geological field trips
This field trip highlights various stages in the evolution of the Snake River Plain–Yellowstone Plateau bimodal volcanic province, and associated faulting and uplift, also known as the track of the Yellowstone hotspot. The 16 Ma Yellowstone hotspot track is one of the few places on Earth where time-transgressive processes on...
Impacts of short-term acid and aluminum exposure on Atlantic salmon (Salmo salar) physiology: A direct comparison of parr and smolts
M.Y. Monette, S. D. McCormick
2008, Aquatic Toxicology (86) 216-226
Episodic acidification resulting in increased acidity and inorganic aluminum (Ali) is known to impact anadromous salmonids and has been identified as a possible cause of Atlantic salmon population decline. Sensitive life-stages such as smolts may be particularly vulnerable to impacts of short-term (days–week) acid/Al exposure, however the extent and mechanism(s)...
Application of a geomorphic and temporal perspective to wetland management in North America
L.M. Smith, N.H. Euliss Jr., D.A. Wilcox, M.M. Brinson
2008, Wetlands (28) 563-577
The failure of managed wetlands to provide a broad suite of ecosystem services (e.g., carbon storage, wildlife habitat, ground-water recharge, storm-water retention) valuable to society is primarily the result of a lack of consideration of ecosystem processes that maintain productive wetland ecosystems or physical and social forces that restrict a...
Influences of the unsaturated, saturated, and riparian zones on the transport of nitrate near the Merced River, California, USA
Joseph L. Domagalski, S.P. Phillips, E.R. Bayless, C. Zamora, C. Kendall, R.A. Wildman, J. G. Hering
2008, Hydrogeology Journal (16) 675-690
Transport and transformation of nitrate was evaluated along a 1-km groundwater transect from an almond orchard to the Merced River, California, USA, within an irrigated agricultural setting. As indicated by measurements of pore-water nitrate and modeling using the root zone water quality model, about 63% of the applied nitrogen was...
Anatomy and dynamics of a floodplain, Powder River, Montana, U.S.A.
J.E. Pizzuto, J. A. Moody, R.H. Meade
2008, Journal of Sedimentary Research (78) 16-28
Centimeter-scale measurements on several Powder River floodplains provide insights into the nature of overbank depositional processes that created the floodplains; during a 20-year period after a major flood in 1978. Rising stages initially entered across a sill at the downriver end of the floodplains. Later, as stages continued to rise,...
Effects of urbanization on stream ecosystems in the Willamette River basin and surrounding area, Oregon and Washington
Ian R. Waite, Steven Sobieszczyk, Kurt D. Carpenter, Andrew J. Arnsberg, Henry M. Johnson, Curt A. Hughes, Michael J. Sarantou, Frank A. Rinella
2008, Scientific Investigations Report 2006-5101-D
This report describes the effects of urbanization on physical, chemical, and biological characteristics of stream ecosystems in 28 watersheds along a gradient of urbanization in the Willamette River basin and surrounding area, Oregon and Washington, from 2003 through 2005. The study that generated the report is one of several urban-effects...
Hydrologic connectivity and the contribution of stream headwaters to ecological integrity at regional scales
Mary C. Freeman, C. M. Pringle, C.R. Jackson
2007, Journal of the American Water Resources Association (43) 5-14
Cumulatively, headwater streams contribute to maintaining hydrologic connectivity and ecosystem integrity at regional scales. Hydrologic connectivity is the water-mediated transport of matter, energy and organisms within or between elements of the hydrologic cycle. Headwater streams compose over two-thirds of total stream length in a typical river drainage and...