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4047 results.

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Page 38, results 926 - 950

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Publication Extents

Not all publications have extents, not all extents are completely accurate
Dynamic N-mixture models with temporal variability in detection probability
Qing Zhao, J. Andrew Royle
2019, Ecological Modelling (393) 20-24
In theory parameters of dynamic N-mixture models can be estimated with multiple years of data without the robust design under the assumption of constant detection probability. However, such an assumption can rarely be met in long-term studies, and the consequences of violating this assumption in the inferences of dynamic N-mixture...
Factors affecting the occurrence of lead and manganese in untreated drinking water from Atlantic and Gulf Coastal Plain aquifers, eastern United States—Dissolved oxygen and pH framework for evaluating risk of elevated concentrations
Craig J. Brown, Jeannie R. B. Barlow, Charles A. Cravotta III, Bruce D. Lindsey
2019, Applied Geochemistry (101) 88-102
Groundwater samples collected during 2012 and 2013 from public-supply wells screened in the Atlantic and Gulf Coastal Plain aquifers of the eastern and southeastern U.S. rarely contained lead or manganese concentrations that exceeded drinking-water limits, despite having corrosive characteristics. Data indicate that the occurrence of dissolved lead and manganese in sampled groundwater, prior to...
Adaptive management assists reintroduction as higher tides threaten an endangered salt marsh plant
Gregory E. Noe, Meghan Fellows, Lorraine Parsons, Janelle West, John C. Callaway, Sally Trnka, Mark Wegener, Joy Zedler
2019, Restoration Ecology (27) 750-757
In theory, extirpated plant species can be reintroduced and managed to restore sustainable populations. However, few reintroduced plants are known to persist for more than a few years. Our adaptive‐management case study illustrates how we restored the endangered hemiparasitic annual plant, Chloropyron maritimum subsp. maritimum (salt marsh bird's beak), to Sweetwater Marsh, San Diego...
Enhancement of primary production during drought in a temperate watershed is greater in larger rivers than headwater streams
Jacob D. Hosen, Kelly S. Aho, Alison P. Appling, E.C. Creech, Jennifer H Fair, Robert O Hall, Ethan Kyzivat, Rachel Lowenthal, Serena Matt, Jonathan Morrison, James E. Saiers, James B. Shanley, Lisa Weber, Bryan Yoon, Peter A. Raymond
2019, Limnology & Oceanography (64) 1458-1472
Drought is common in rivers, yet how this disturbance regulates metabolic activity across network scales is largely unknown. Drought often lowers gross primary production (GPP) and ecosystem respiration (ER) in small headwaters but by contrast can enhance GPP and cause algal blooms in downstream estuaries. We estimated ecosystem metabolism across...
Financing agricultural drought risk through ex-ante cash transfers
Gabriela Guimaraes Nobre, Frank Davenport, Konstantinos Bischiniotis, Ted Veldcamp, Brenden Jongman, Chris Funk, Gregory Husak, Philip J. Ward, Jeroen C.J.H. Aerts
2019, Science of the Total Environment (653) 523-535
Despite advances in drought early warning systems, forecast information is rarely used for triggering and financing early actions, such as cash transfer. Scaling up cash transfer pay-outs , and overcoming the barriers to actions based on forecasts, requires an understanding of costs resulting from False Alarms, and the potential benefits...
Implications of introgression for wildlife translocations: the case of North American martens
Jocelyn P. Colella, Robert E. Wilson, Sandra L. Talbot, Joseph A. Cook
2019, Conservation Genetics (20) 153-166
The evolutionary consequences of natural introgression provide a rare opportunity to retrospectively evaluate how the introduction of exotics or genetic rescue efforts may impact endemic faunas. Phylogeographic structure among mainland, endemic insular, and introduced North American marten (Martes americana and M. caurina) populations have been shaped by a...
Evidence for interactions among environmental stressors in the Laurentian Great Lakes
Sigrid D. P. Smith, David B. Bunnell, G.A. Burton Jr., Jan J. H. Ciborowski, Alisha D. Davidson, Caitlin E. Dickinson, Lauren A. Eaton, Peter C. Esselman, Mary Anne Evans, Donna R. Kashian, Nathan F. Manning, Peter B. McIntyre, Thomas F. Nalepa, Alicia Perez-Fuentetaja, Alan D. Steinman, Donald G. Uzarski, J. David Allan
2019, Ecological Indicators (101) 203-211
Co-occurrence of environmental stressors is ubiquitous in ecosystems, but cumulative effects are difficult to predict for effective indicator development. Individual stressors can amplify (synergies) or lessen (antagonisms) each other's impacts or have fully independent effects (additive). Here we use the Laurentian Great Lakes, where a multitude of stressors have been...
Interspecific aggression among parapatric and sympatric songbirds on a tropical elevational gradient
Andy J. Boyce, Thomas E. Martin
2019, Behavioral Ecology (30) 541-547
Interspecific competition is hypothesized to be a strong force that sets species range limits and drives parapatric distributions of closely related species on tropical mountains. Yet, experimental evidence that competition drives spatial segregation of closely related species on elevational gradients is rare. To test whether competition limits elevational ranges...
Forecasting for dry and wet avalanches during mixed rain and snow storm events
Scott Savage, Erich H. Peitzsch, Simon Trautman, Benjamin VandenBos
2019, The Avalanche Review 30-33
Professionals in coastal and some inland mountain ranges regularly face mixed rain-snow events. Professionals in inland ranges frequently deal with persistent slab avalanches failing on old faceted layers buried deep within the snowpack. What happens when you combine these snowpack and weather events? Widespread avalanching involving faceted layers during mixed...
The Miocene Atastra Creek sinter (Bodie Hills volcanic field, California and Nevada): 4D evolution of a geomorphically intact siliceous hot spring deposit
Kathleen A. Campbell, Diego M. Guido, David A. John, Peter Vikre, David Rhys, Ayrton Hamilton
2019, Journal of Volcanology and Geothermal Research (370) 65-81
The Atastra Creek siliceous hot spring deposit, or sinter, occurs in the Paramount-Bald Peak alteration zone, due north of the Bodie precious metals mining district in the Miocene Bodie Hills volcanic field, California and Nevada, U.S.A. Distinctive features include its geomorphically intact geyser vent mounds, the presence of growth-fault-stepped sinter...
Improving estimates and forecasts of lake carbon dynamics using data assimilation
Jacob Aaron Zwart, Oleksandra Hararuk, Yves Prairie, Stuart E. Jones, Christopher T. Solomon
2019, Limnology and Oceanography: Methods (17) 97-111
Lakes are biogeochemical hotspots on the landscape, contributing significantly to the global carbon cycle despite their small areal coverage. Observations and models of lake carbon pools and fluxes are rarely explicitly combined through data assimilation despite successful use of this technique in other fields. Data assimilation...
Scientific integrity issues in environmental toxicology and chemistry: Improving research transparency, reproducibility, and credibility
Christopher A. Mebane, Anne Fairbrother, Thomas Augspurger, Timothy J. Canfield, William Goodfellow, Patrick Guiney, Anne LeHuray, Lorraine Maltby, David Mayfield, Michael McLaughlin, Lisa Ortego, Tamar Schlekat, Richard P. Scroggins, John Sumpter, Tim Verslycke
2019, Integrated Environmental Assessment and Management (15) 320-344
High‐profile reports of detrimental scientific practices leading to retractions in the scientific literature contribute to lack of trust in scientific experts. Although the bulk of these have been in the literature of other disciplines, environmental toxicology and chemistry are not free from problems. While we believe that egregious misconduct such...
Thermal, deformation, and degassing remote sensing time-series (A.D. 2000-2017) at the 47 most active volcanoes in Latin America: Implications for volcanic systems
Kevin Reath, Matthew Pritchard, Michael P. Poland, F. Delgado, S. Carn, D. Coppola, B. J. Andrews, S.K. Ebmeier, M. Elise Rumpf, S. Henderson, S. Baker, P. Lundgren, R. Erik Wright, J. Biggs, T. Lopez, C. Wauthier, S. Moruzzi, A. Alcott, Rick Wessels, Julia P. Griswold, Sarah E. Ogburn, S. C. Loughlin, F. Meyer, R. Greg Vaughan, M. Bagnardi
2019, Journal of Geophysical Research (124) 195-218
Volcanoes are hazardous to local and global populations, but only a fraction are continuously monitored by ground-based sensors. For example, in Latin America, more than 60% of Holocene volcanoes are unmonitored, meaning long-term multi-parameter datasets of volcanic activity are rare and sparse. We use satellite observations of degassing, thermal anomalies,...
Subterranean invasion by gapped ringed crayfish: Effectiveness of a removal effort and barrier installation
J.B. Mouser, D.C. Ashley, T. Aley, Shannon K. Brewer
2019, Diversity (11)
Non-native crayfish invasion is a major threat to many stream fauna; however, invasions in subterranean habitats are rarely documented. Our study objectives were to examine demographics and morphological and life-history traits of a gapped ringed crayfish Faxonius neglectus chaenodactylus population that invaded Tumbling Creek Cave and determine the...
The planktonic foraminiferal response to the Paleocene-Eocene thermal maximum on the Atlantic coastal plain
Caitlin M. Livsey, Tali Babila, Marci M. Robinson, Timothy J. Bralower
2019, Marine Micropaleontology (146) 39-50
Planktonic foraminiferal assemblages in two cores from Maryland and New Jersey show evidence for significant changes in surface ocean habitats on the continental shelf during the Paleocene-Eocene Thermal Maximum (PETM). At both sites, significant assemblage shifts occur immediately before the onset of the event. These changes include the appearance of abundant triserial/biserial species as...
Congruent population genetic structure but differing depths of divergence for three alpine stoneflies with similar ecology and geographic distributions
Scott Hotaling, J. Joseph Giersch, Debra S. Finn, Lusha M. Tronstad, Steve Jordan, Larry Serpa, Ronald Call, Clint C. Muhlfeld, David W. Weisrock
2019, Freshwater Biology (64) 335-347
Comparative population genetic studies provide a powerful means for assessing the degree to which evolutionary histories may be congruent among taxa while also highlighting the potential for cryptic diversity within existing species.In the Rocky Mountains, three confamilial stoneflies (Zapada glacier , Lednia tumana , and Lednia tetonica ; Plecoptera, Nemouridae) occupy cold alpine streams...
Spatial organization of fish diversity in a species-rich basin
Leandro E. Miranda, Kenneth J. Kilgore, William T. Slack
2019, River Research and Applications (35) 188-196
Many abiotic and biotic environmental characteristics in river basins show spatial gradients from river source to main stem. We examined the spatial organization of fish within the Duck River Basin to document patterns in diversity that could help guide conservation strategies relevant to controlling the detrimental effects of basin development....
Bioclimatic envelopes for individual demographic events driven by extremes: Plant mortality from drought and warming
Darin J. Law, Henry D. Adams, David D. Breshears, Neil S. Cobb, John B. Bradford, Chris B. Zou, Jason P. Field, Alfonso A. Gardea, A. Park Williams, Travis E. Huxman
2019, International Journal of Plant Sciences (80) 53-62
The occurrence of plant species across the globe is largely constrained by climate. Ecologists use plant-climate relationships such as bioclimatic envelopes and related niche models to determine potential environmental conditions promoting probable species occurrence. Traditionally bioclimatic envelopes either exclude disturbance explicitly, or only include disturbance as infrequent and smaller scale...
On the development of a magnetic susceptibility‐based tracer for aeolian sediment transport research
Sujith Ravi, Howell B. Gonzales, Ilya V. Buynevich, Junran Li, Joel B. Sankey, David Dukes, Guan Wang
2019, Earth Surface Processes and Landforms (44) 672-678
Aeolian processes — the erosion, transport, and deposition of sediment by wind — play important geomorphological and ecological roles in drylands. These processes are known to impact the spatial patterns of soil, nutrients, plant‐available water, and vegetation in many dryland ecosystems. Tracers, such as rare earth elements and stable isotopes...
Whooping Cranes past and present
John B. French Jr., Sarah J. Converse, Jane E. Austin
2019, Book chapter, Whooping Cranes: Biology and conservation
The Whooping Crane (Grus americana), endemic to North America, is the rarest of all crane species. It is believed that in the early 1800s, the Whooping Crane was widespread in North America, though it was never very abundant. Whooping Crane numbers decreased precipitously as westward migration of Euro-American settlers converted prairie to cropland and...
Evidence for shelf acidification during the onset of the Paleocene-Eocene Thermal Maximum
Timothy J. Bralower, Lee R. Kump, Marci M. Robinson, Jean Self-Trail, Shelby L. Lyons, Tali Babila, Edward Ballaron, Katherine H. Freeman, Elizabeth A. Hajek, William Rush, James C. Zachos
2019, Paleoceanography and Paleoclimatology (33) 1408-1426
A transect of paleoshelf cores from Maryland and New Jersey contains a ~0.19 m to 1.61 m thick interval with reduced percentages of carbonate during the onset of the Paleocene-Eocene Thermal Maximum (PETM). Outer paleoshelf cores are barren of nannofossils and correspond to two minor disconformities. Middle paleoshelf...
Formation and occurrence of ferromanganese crusts: Earth’s storehouse for critical metals
Paul A. Lusty, James R. Hein, Pierre Josso
Samantha Whisman, editor(s)
2019, Elements (14) 313-318
Marine ferromanganese oxide crusts (Fe–Mn crusts) are potentially important metal resources formed on the seafloor by precipitation of dissolved and colloidal components from ambient seawater onto rocky surfaces. The unique properties and slow growth rates of the crusts promote adsorption of numerous elements from seawater: some, such as Te and...