Skip to main content
U.S. flag

An official website of the United States government

Dot gov

Official websites use .gov
A .gov website belongs to an official government organization in the United States.

Https

Secure .gov websites use HTTPS
A lock ( ) or https:// means you’ve safely connected to the .gov website. Share sensitive information only on official, secure websites.

Search Results

183839 results.

Alternate formats: RIS file of the first 3000 search results  |  Download all results as CSV | TSV | Excel  |  RSS feed based on this search  |  JSON version of this page of results

Page 38, results 926 - 950

Show results on a map

Publication Extents

Not all publications have extents, not all extents are completely accurate
Population genomics of recovery and extinction in Hawaiian honeycreepers
Christopher Kyriazis, Madhvi Venkatraman, Bryce Masuda, Cynthia Steiner, Loren Cassin-Sackett, Lisa H. Crampton, Alison Flanagan, Jeffrey T. Foster, Marlys Houck, Ann Misuraca, Eben H. Paxton, Jacqueline Robinson, Robert C. Fleischer, Oliver A. Ryder, Michael G. Campana, Aryn P. Wilder
2025, Current Biology (35) 2697-2708
Native Hawaiian forest birds are experiencing an unprecedented extinction crisis. In particular, the iconic Hawaiian honeycreeper radiation has declined to just 17 out of ∼60 species remaining, most threatened with extinction due to avian malaria. Here, we investigate the genomic signatures of these declines in three honeycreeper species: the critically...
Wake Atoll: Evaluation of plant biosecurity
Corie Yanger, James D. Jacobi, Stephanie G. Yelenik, Stacie A. Hathaway
2025, Report
Introduced organisms can cause substantial effects across most landscapes. Island ecosystems, especially tropical islands, are at elevated risk from introduced organisms. The risks are even higher for tropical islands with moderate or high levels of transit, yet this can be minimized by application of appropriate biosecurity requirements. In this study,...
Outwash events inhibit vegetation recovery and prolong coastal vulnerability
Jin-Si R. Over, Christopher R. Sherwood
2025, JGR Earth Surface (130)
Overwash, when high ocean water levels and waves flood a coastline, is a common phenomenon that can lead to washover deposits and barrier rollover. Outwash, by contrast, involves seaward flow, often driven by high back-barrier water levels, and can produce washout channels and nearshore deposition. Our observations show that washout...
Waterline responses to climate forcing along the North American West Coast
Marcan Graffin, Rafael Almar, Erwin W.J. Bergsma, Julien Boucharel, Sean Vitousek, Mohsen Taherkhani, Peter Ruggiero
2025, Communications Earth & Environment (6)
Understanding waterline variability at seasonal to interannual timescales is crucial for predicting coastal responses to climate forcing. However, relationships between large-scale climate variability and coastal morphodynamics remain underexplored beyond intensively monitored sites. This study leverages a newly developed 25-year (1997–2022) satellite-derived waterline dataset along the North American West Coast. Our...
Rainfall thresholds for postfire debris-flow initiation vary with short-duration rainfall climatology
David B. Cavagnaro, Scott W. McCoy, Donald N. Lindsay, Luke A. McGuire, Jason W. Kean, Daniel T. Trugman
2025, JGR Earth Surface (130)
The size, frequency, and geographic scope of severe wildfires are expanding across the globe, including in the Western United States. Recently burned steeplands have an increased likelihood of debris flows, which pose hazards to downstream communities. The conditions for postfire debris-flow initiation are commonly expressed as rainfall intensity-duration thresholds, which...
The δ13C signature of dissolved organic and inorganic carbon reveals complex carbon transformations within a salt marsh
Meagan J. Eagle, Kevin D. Kroeger, John Pohlman, J.J. Tamborski, Z.A. Wang, Thomas W. Brooks, Jennifer A. O’Keefe Suttles, Adrian G. Mann
2025, JGR Biogeosciences (130)
Coastal wetlands have high rates of atmospheric CO2 uptake, which is subsequently respired back to the atmosphere, stored as organic matter within flooded, anoxic soils, or exported to the coastal ocean. Transformation of fixed carbon occurs through a variety of subsurface aerobic and anaerobic microbial processes, and results in a large...
Understanding the evolution of scoria cone morphology using multivariate models
Gabor Kereszturi, Pablo Grosse, Melody Whitehead, Marie-Noëlle Guilbaud, Drew T. Downs, Rina Noguchi, Matthieu Kervyn
2025, Communications Earth & Environment (6)
Scoria cones are the most abundant type of volcano in the Solar System. They occur in every tectonic setting and often overlap with human populations, yet our ability to provide complete geochronology within volcanic fields remains limited. Appropriate geochronology underpins the reconstruction of size-frequency distribution and is a key input...
Resiliency of land change monitoring efforts to input data resampling
Nathan C. Healey, Christopher Barber, Kelcy Smith, Rohan Mital, Jesslyn F. Brown, Charles Robison
2025, Frontiers in Remote Sensing (6)
The geometric transformation of remotely sensed imagery from one map projection to another necessitates a data resampling operation which alters the recorded values. The global Landsat archive is made available in the Universal Transverse Mercator (UTM) projection system which preserves geographic shape across small area but introduces small errors in...
Autumn as an overlooked opportunity for limnology
Faith R Ferrato, Sapna Sharma, Joshua A. Culpepper, Ceara J Talbot, Michael Frederick Meyer, Stephanie E. Hampton
2025, PLOS Climate (4)
Ecological disciplines, from forestry to soil sciences and ornithology, recognize the critical role of autumn in an array of physical and biological processes. Terrestrial studies categorize autumn as the end of the growing season. Autumn weather conditions can disrupt plant-soil interactions, affecting nutrient cycling and soil fertility [1]; determine dormancy...
An empirical Green’s function approach for isolating directivity effects in earthquake ground-motion amplitudes
Grace Alexandra Parker, Annemarie S. Baltay Sundstrom, Evan Tyler Hirakawa
2025, Bulletin of the Seismological Society of America (115) 2336-2354
In this study, we apply an empirical Green’s function (eGf) method within a ground‐motion modeling framework to mitigate trade‐offs between source, path, and site effects. Many physical processes contribute to spatial variations in observed ground motions, including earthquake radiation pattern, directivity, variable path attenuation, and site effects. Current nonergodic ground‐motion...
The first instrumentally detected hydrothermal explosion in Yellowstone National Park
Michael Poland, Alexandra M. Iezzi, Jamie Farrell, R. Greg Vaughan
2025, Geophysical Research Letters (52)
Hydrothermal explosions are one of the geological hazards most likely to impact people in Yellowstone National Park, but their frequency is poorly known. Infrasound and seismic sensors identified an explosion in Norris Geyser Basin on 15 April 2024, at 14:56 MDT (20:56 UTC)—the first instrumentally detected hydrothermal explosion in the...
A metadata checklist and data formatting guidelines to make eDNA FAIR (Findable, Accessible, Interoperable and Reusable)
Miwa Takahashi, Tobias Frøslev Guldberg, Joana Pauperio, Bettina Thalinger, Katy E. Klymus, Caren C. Helbing, Cecilia Villacorta-Rath, Katherine Silliman, Luke R. Thompson, Sean Jungbluth, Suk Yee Yong, Stephen Killfoile Formel, Gareth Jenkins, Martin Laporte, Bruce Deagle, Sachit Rajbhandari, Thomas Jeppesen Stjernegaard, Andrew Bissett, Christopher L. Jerde, Erin E. Hahn, Lynn M. Schriml, Christopher Hunter, Peggy Newman, Peter Woollard, Lynsey R. Harper, Nicholas Dunn, Katrina West, Rachel Haderlé, Shaun Wilkinson, Neha Acharya-Patel, Mark Louie D. Lopez, Guy Cochrane, Oliver Berry
2025, Environmental DNA (7)
The success of environmental DNA (eDNA) approaches for species detection has revolutionized biodiversity monitoring and distribution mapping. Targeted eDNA amplification approaches, such as quantitative PCR, have improved our understanding of species distribution, and metabarcoding-based approaches have enabled biodiversity assessment at unprecedented scales and taxonomic resolution. eDNA datasets, however, are often...
Experimental drought suppresses amphibian pathogen yet intensifies transmission and disrupts protective skin microbiome
Shannon Buttimer, Daniel Medina, Renato A. Martins, Ana Gabrielle Morais da Silva, Wesley J. Neely, Célio F.B. Haddad, Graziella Vittoria DiRenzo, Alessandro Catenazzi, Rayna C. Bell, C. Guilherme Becker
2025, Global Change Biology (31)
Shifting precipitation regimes driven by global climate change can alter vertebrate behavior and host-symbiont relationships, potentially compromising host resistance to pathogen invasion. In Brazil's Atlantic Forest, a biodiversity hotspot, prior research identified drought as a key factor disrupting the skin microbiome, contributing to a die-off of pumpkin toadlets due to...
Reevaluation of an adaptive management framework for invasive Grass Carp within Lake Erie
Justin Bopp, Kelly Filer Robinson, Lucas Nathan, Seth Herbst, Travis O. Brenden, Christine M. Mayer, John M. Dettmers
2025, Transactions of the American Fisheries Society (154) 490-504
ObjectiveResponse efforts to control invasive species frequently require making decisions in the face of substantial uncertainty. Adaptive management, which emphasizes learning during the process of managing, can be useful in cases where uncertainty impedes the decision-making process. Here, we describe how technical and institutional learning led to reformulating decision-making elements,...
The Grouse & Grazing Project: Effects of cattle grazing on demographic traits of greater sage-grouse
Courtney J. Conway, Cody A. Tisdale, Karen L. Launchbaugh, Bryan S. Stevens, Grace E. Overlie, Sanford D. Eigenbrode, Paul D. Makela, Shane B. Roberts
2025, Cooperator Science Series 170-2025
Greater sage-grouse (Centrocercus urophasianus) were once widespread within <span class="glossify-tooltip-link glossify-tooltip-popup" aria-label="The western United States’ sagebrush country encompasses over 175 million acres of public and private lands. The sagebrush landscape provides many benefits to our rural economies and communities, and it serves as crucial habitat for a diversity of wildlife, including...
Dead giveaway: Rising mortality rates suggest effectiveness of Lake Erie grass carp (Ctenopharyngodon idella) response
Kaitlen Lang, Christine M Mayer, Mark Richard Dufour, Song S. Qian, William D. Hintz, Patrick M. Kocovsky, Ryan Young, Matthew Ross Acre, Eric Weimer, Tammy L. Wilson, Chris M. Kemp, John M. Dettmers, Lucas Nathan, Ryan Brown
2025, Journal of Great Lakes Research (51)
Grass carp (Ctenopharyngodon idella) are large, invasive fish that threaten Lake Erie’s economy and ecosystem. Incidental catches of grass carp have occurred since the 1980s in Lake Erie, while multi-day removal events were carried out in 2014 and 2017. To mitigate ecosystem impacts, a large-scale, multi-agency response to remove as many...
Ecological factors decouple Great Lakes fish mercury concentrations trends decadal declines in mercury emissions
Ryan F. Lepak, Joel C. Hoffman, Sarah E. Janssen, Michael T. Tate, Morgann B Gordon, Michael B. Mahon, Samantha L. Rumschlag, Christopher T. Yarnes, Brian A. Lennel, David P. Krabbenhoft, Jacob M. Ogorek, James P. Hurley
2025, Environmental Science and Technology (59) 11799-11808
Atmospheric mercury (Hg) deposition has been declining in North America but remains the dominant delivery mechanism to the Great Lakes. The Lakes are highly efficient at bioaccumulating methylmercury, making the fish excellent sentinels for tracking shifts in atmospheric Hg deposition. Invasive mussels have altered biogeochemical processes, prey populations and fish...
Countdown to Apophis close approach—Cascading hazards from asteroid impacts
Tim Titus, Lori Pigue, Lucienne Morton
2025, Fact Sheet 2025-3028
IntroductionApophis (officially 99942 Apophis, pronounced “uh-PAW-fiss”) is a Near-Earth Object. Primarily composed of the materials that make up the leftover building blocks of the solar system, Near-Earth Objects are small solar system bodies in an orbit around the Sun that brings them close to the Earth. Apophis has been classified...
Paleomagnetic correlation of surface and subsurface basalt flows in the central and southwestern part of the Idaho National Laboratory, Idaho
Mary Hodges, Allison R. Trcka, Duane E. Champion
2025, Scientific Investigations Report 2025-5020
The U.S. Geological Survey, in cooperation with the U.S. Department of Energy, used paleomagnetic data from 22 coreholes to construct 3 fence diagrams of subsurface basalt flows in the southern part of the Idaho National Laboratory. These diagrams provide comprehensive descriptions of the horizontal and vertical distribution of basalt flows...
Evaluation of 6PPD-quinone lethal toxicity and sublethal effects on disease resistance and swimming fitness in coastal cutthroat trout (Oncorhynchus clarkii clarkii)
Prarthana Shankar, Ellie Maureen Dalsky, Joanne Salzer, Rachael F. Lane, Sophie Elizabeth Hammond, William N. Batts, Jacob L. Gregg, Justin Blaine Greer, Gael Kurath, Paul Hershberger, John Hansen
2025, Environmental Science and Technology (59) 11505-11514
6PPD-quinone (6PPDQ), derived from the tire-protectant 6PPD reacting with ozone, is an emerging contaminant of concern owing to its role in coho salmon (Oncorhynchus kisutch) deaths via urban runoff mortality syndrome (URMS). Given the impact of 6PPDQ on aquatic life in urban streams, we addressed the acute toxicity of 6PPDQ...
Using angler-submitted records to interpret the spatial seasonality of a large predator (Black bass, Micropterus spp.)
Leandro E. Miranda, Frank Griffin, J. Wesley Neal, Thomas J. Lang, Natalie Goldstrohm, Michael Mehlmanne
2025, Fisheries Research (287)
In addition to having cultural, social, and economic significance, large predatory fish affect aquatic communities from the top down and serve as markers of ecosystem health. A focus on large predators is critical for managing ecosystems, conserving species, and guaranteeing the sustainability<a class="topic-link" title="Learn more about sustainability from ScienceDirect's AI-generated...
Do Graviquakes exist?
L. Malagnini, Dreger D.., Thomas E. Parsons, G. Valensise, A. Michelini, G. De Natale
2025, Bulletin of the Seismological Society of America (115) 2073-2095
The “Graviquake” model, proposed in 2015 as an alternative to the elastic dislocation model, posits that normal faults are passive features dominated by coseismic gravitational collapse into a dilated crustal wedge, and that normal faulting is fundamentally distinct from strike‐slip and reverse faulting. Developed using finite‐element modeling before the 2016...
"Snow to Flow" postcard
Andrea L. Creighton
2025, General Information Product 250
The U.S. Geological Survey has ongoing snowpack monitoring initiatives to help improve water availability estimates and predictions of streamflow....
A multistate capture-recapture model to estimate reproduction of North Atlantic right whales
Daniel W. Linden, Richard M Pace III, Lance P. Garrison, Jeffrey A. Hostetler, Amy R. Knowlton, Veronique Lesage, Robert A. Williams, Michael C. Runge
2025, Endangered Species Research (57) 91-102
The recent steep decline of the endangered North Atlantic right whale Eubalaena glacialis can be attributed to high mortality combined with low reproduction. While the former is a clear result of anthropogenic activity, the latter involves more complexity. Evidence suggests that both short-term fluctuations in prey availability and long-term decline in health...