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Publication Extents

Not all publications have extents, not all extents are completely accurate
Why let the dogs out? Exploring variables associated with dog confinement and general characteristics of the free-ranging owned-dog population in a peri-urban area
Francisca Astorga, Daniela Alejandra Poo-Munoz, John F. Organ, Gonzalo Medina-Vogel
2022, Journal of Applied Animal Welfare Science (25) 311-325
Free-ranging dogs (FRDs), are a problem in several countries, with impacts on humans, domestic animals, and wildlife, although increasing evidence suggests that most FRDs are owned. Therefore, understanding dog ownership on a fine scale is critical. The main objectives of this study were to explore dog...
Spatial and temporal variability in lake trout diets in Lake Ontario as revealed by stomach contents and stable isotopes
Brent M. Nawrocki, Brent W. Metcalfe, Jeremy P. Holden, Brian F. Lantry, Timothy B. Johnson
2022, Journal of Great Lakes Research (48) 392-403
Lake trout (Salvelinus namaycush) are an ecologically and economically important piscivore with reported differences in diet and feeding behaviour throughout its range. Eleven stomach content and stable isotope-based metrics were used to describe diets of 349 lake trout between two years (2013 and 2018) and among geographic zones (west, central,...
Diversity of diatoms, benthic macroinvertebrates, and fish varies in response to different environmental correlates in Arctic rivers across North America
Jennifer Lento, Sarah M. Laske, Isabelle Lavoie, Daniel Bogan, Bob Brua, Stephane Campeau, Krista Chin, Joseph M. Culp, Brianna Levenstein, Michael Power, Emilie Saulnier-Talbot, Rebecca Shaftel, Heidi K. Swanson, Matthew Whitman, Christian E. Zimmerman
2022, Freshwater Biology (67) 95-115
Climate change poses a significant threat to Arctic freshwater biodiversity, but impacts depend upon the strength of organism response to climate‐related drivers. Currently, there is insufficient knowledge about Arctic freshwater biodiversity patterns to guide assessment, prediction, and management of biodiversity change.As part of the Circumpolar Biodiversity Monitoring Program's first...
Comparative genomic analyses and a novel linkage map for cisco (Coregonus artedi) provides insight into chromosomal evolution and rediploidization across salmonids
Danielle M. Blumstein, Matthew A. Campbell, Matthew C. Hale, Ben J.G. Sutherland, Garrett J. McKinney, Wendylee Stott, Wesley Larson
2022, G3 Genes, Genomes, Genetics (10) 2863-2878
Whole-genome duplication (WGD) is hypothesized to be an important evolutionary mechanism that can facilitate adaptation and speciation. Genomes that exist in states of both diploidy and residual tetraploidy are of particular interest, as mechanisms that maintain the ploidy mosaic after WGD may provide important insights into evolutionary processes. The Salmonidae...
Environmental evolution of peat in the Sacramento – San Joaquin Delta (California) during the Middle and Late Holocene as deduced from pollen, diatoms and magnetism
Irina Delusina, Scott W. Starratt, Kenneth L Verosub
2022, Quaternary International (621) 50-61
We studied the sequence of climatic and hydrological events associated with the formation of peat during the Holocene, using pollen, diatoms and environmental magnetism from peat cores at three locations in the Sacramento-San Joaquin Delta of California: Browns Island, Franks Wetland and Webb Track Levee. Our data show that peat...
Understanding rates of change: A case study using fossil pollen records from California to assess the potential for and challenges to a regional data synthesis
Lysanna Anderson, David Wahl, T. Bhattacharya
2022, Quaternary International (621) 26-36
Insights into the rates at which ecosystems and vegetation respond to a changing climate is fundamental to anticipating impacts of projected climate change. Characterization of vegetation change over millennia to centuries has potential to make an important contribution toward this goal, and regional scale syntheses of fossil pollen data can...
Mapping the extent and methods of small-scale emerald mining in the Panjshir Valley, Afghanistan
Jessica D. DeWitt, Peter G. Chirico, Kelsey L. O’Pry, Sarah E. Bergstresser
2022, Geocarto International (37) 246-267
Emerald mining in the Panjshir Valley, Afghanistan, has occurred for thousands of years, yet few records exist documenting the detailed spatial extent, techniques, or productivity of small-scale miners. This study proposes new methods to map and monitor the extent and changes in small-scale mining in remote and inaccessible terrain by...
An 11,300 yr record of paleoclimatology and paleoceanography of the central California coast in a gravity core from Pioneer Seamount
John A. Barron, Jason A. Addison, Linda E. Heusser, David Bukry, Valerie Evelyn Schwartz, Amy Wagner
2022, Quaternary International (621) 74-83
Diatom, pollen, silicoflagellate, and biogenic opal analyses from a 155 cm-long gravity core from Pioneer Seamount, offshore Santa Cruz, California (PS1410-06 GC, latitude 37.3°N, longitude 123.4°W, water depth 2165 m) are compiled for the last ~11,300 years and compared with those of ODP 1019 and TN062-O550 from northern California. The relative abundance record of the subtropical diatom Fragilariopsis doliolus has...
The use of dye-tracing studies to delineate the recharge area for Manitou Cave in northwestern Alabama
Benjamin Miller
2022, Conference Paper, 2019 National Cave and Karst Management Symposium Proceedings
In 2010 the U.S. Fish and Wildlife (USFWS) was petitioned to federally list the Manitou Cave Snail, (Antrorbis breweri ), a stygobiont endemic to Manitou Cave in northwestern Alabama. When an agency is tasked with determining whether to add a species to the Endangered Species List, one of the components...
Long-term annual aerial surveys of submersed aquatic vegetation (SAV) support science, management, and restoration
Robert J. Orth, William C. Dennison, Cassie Gurbisz, Michael P. Hannam, Jennifer L. Keisman, J. Brooke Landry, Jonathan S. Lefcheck, Kenneth A. Moore, Rebecca Murphy, Christopher J. Patrick, Jeremy Testa, Donald E. Weller, David J. Wilcox, Richard A. Batiuk
2022, Estuaries and Coasts (45) 1012-1027
Aerial surveys of coastal habitats can uniquely inform the science and management of shallow, coastal zones, and when repeated annually, they reveal changes that are otherwise difficult to assess from ground-based surveys. This paper reviews the utility of a long-term (1984-present) annual aerial monitoring program for submersed aquatic vegetation (SAV)...
Circumpolar patterns of Arctic freshwater fish biodiversity: A baseline for monitoring
Sarah M. Laske, Per-Arne Amundsen, Kirsten Christoffersen, Jaakko Erkinaro, Gudni Gudbergsson, Brian Hayden, Jani Heino, Kerstin Holmgren, Kimmo K. Kahilainen, Jennifer Lento, Panu Orell, Johan Ostergren, Michael Power, Ruslan Rafikov, Atso Romakkaniemi, Martin-A. Svenning, Heidi K. Swanson, Matthew Whitman, Christian E. Zimmerman
2022, Freshwater Biology (67) 176-193
Climate change, biological invasions, and anthropogenic disturbance pose a threat to the biodiversity and function of Arctic freshwater ecosystems. Understanding potential changes in fish species distribution and richness is necessary, given the great importance of fish to the function of freshwater ecosystems and as a resource to humans. However,...
Zoning Verification in Mexico City Using Strong Motions of the M7.1 Puebla-Morelos Earthquake of September 19, 2017
Mehmet Celebi, Valerie J. Sahakian, Diego Melgar, Luis Quintanar
2022, Conference Paper, Applied Technology Council workshop Nov 2018
Mexico City suffers extensive damage from large earthquakes that originate at far distances due mainly to densely built areas on a filled lakebed. Seismic design codes in Mexico recognize the site-specific issues in Mexico City by acknowledging zones that represent lakebed as being riskier compared to other Mexico City areas....
Preliminary study of correlation of natural periods and damping percentages of tall buildings in several countries
Mehmet Celebi
2022, Conference Paper, Eleventh U.S. National Conference on Earthquake Engineering
Fundamental periods (T) and critical damping percentages (ζ) of 41 tall buildings in several countries form the basis of this preliminary study. Correlation between building height and fundamental period for steel and reinforced concrete buildings clearly shows a linear variation but with a large standard deviation, most likely due to...
Responses of the Carquinez, California suspension bridge during the MW6.0 South Napa earthquake of August 24, 2014
Mehmet Celebi, S. F. Ghahari, E. Taciroglu
2022, Conference Paper, Proceedings of the sixteenth World Conference on Earthquake Engineering
The behavior of the suspension bridge in Carquinez, CA, during the Mw6.0 24 August 2014 South Napa, CA earthquake is studied using data recorded by an extensive array of accelerometers. Modes, corresponding frequencies and damping are identified and compared with previous studies that used ambient data of the deck only...
Three-dimensional electrical resistivity characterization of Mountain Pass, California and surrounding region
Jared R. Peacock, Kevin Denton, David A. Ponce
2021, Geochemistry, Geophysics, Geosystems (22)
The Sulphide Queen carbonatite deposit at Mountain Pass in southeast California is a world class rare earth element (REE) resource. This study images electrical resistivity structure of the REE deposit and surrounding area to characterize resources under cover. An east-west elongated grid (35 × 15 km) of 65 wideband magnetotelluric stations spanning from...
Projected change in rangeland fractional component cover across the sagebrush biome under climate change through 2085
Matthew B. Rigge, Hua Shi, Kory Postma
2021, Ecosphere (12)
Climate change over the past century has altered vegetation community composition and species distributions across rangelands in the western United States. The scale and magnitude of climatic influences are unknown. While many studies have projected the effects of climate change using several modeling approaches, none has evaluated the impacts to...
Developing a set of indicators to identify, monitor, and track impacts and change in forests of the United States
Sarah M. Anderson, Linda S. Heath, Marla R. Emery, Jeffrey A. Hicke, Jeremy Littell, Alan Lucier, Jeffrey G. Masek, David L. Peterson, Richard Pouyat, Kevin M. Potter, Guy Robertson, Jinelle Sperry
2021, Climatic Change (165)
United States forestland is an important ecosystem type, land cover, land use, and economic resource that is facing several drivers of change including climatic. Because of its significance, forestland was identified through the National Climate Assessment (NCA) as a key sector and system of concern to...
Partial differential equation driven dynamic graph networks for predicting stream water temperature
Tianshu Bao, Xiaowei Jia, Jacob Aaron Zwart, Jeffrey Michael Sadler, Alison P. Appling, Samantha K. Oliver, Taylor T. Johnson
2021, Conference Paper, 2021 IEEE International Conference on Data Mining (ICDM)
This paper presents a physics-guided machine learning approach that incorporates partial differential equations (PDEs) in a graph neural network model to improve the prediction of water temperature in river networks. The standard graph neural network model often uses pre-defined edge weights based on distance or...
Fine-scale weather patterns drive reproductive success in the Brown Pelican
R.A. Streker, J.S. Lamb, J. Dindo, Patrick G.R. Jodice
2021, Waterbirds (44) 153-166
In the northern Gulf of Mexico, island restoration and creation have been used to mitigate potential negative effects of anthropogenic and environmental stressors to breeding seabirds. The long-term success of such projects can be enhanced when data are available to elucidate how site-specific and larger-scale factors may contribute to reproductive...
Genetic and morphological characterization of the freshwater mussel clubshell species complex (Pleurobema clava and Pleurobema oviforme) to inform conservation planning
Cheryl Morrison, Nathan A. Johnson, Jess W Jones, Michael S. Eackles, Aaron Aunins, Daniel Bruce Fitzgerald, Eric M. Hallerman, Timothy L. King
2021, Ecology & Evolution (11) 15325-15350
The shell morphologies of the freshwater mussel species Pleurobema clava (federally endangered) and Pleurobema oviforme (species of concern) are similar, causing considerable taxonomic confusion between the two species over the last 100 years. While P. clava was historically widespread throughout the Ohio River basin and tributaries to the lower Laurentian Great Lakes, P. oviforme was confined to the Tennessee and the...
Eelgrass (Zostera marina) and seaweed assessment Alaska Peninsula-Becharof National Wildlife Refuges, 2010
David H. Ward, Kyle R. Hogrefe, Tyronne F. Donnelly, Lucretia L. Fairchild, Ron Britton
2021, Open-File Report 2020-1144
We conducted the first assessment of eelgrass and seaweed distribution and abundance along the coast of the Alaska Peninsula-Becharof National Wildlife Refuges in Chignik Lagoon and Mud Bay. Areal extent of eelgrass, as determined from remote-sensing techniques, was estimated to be 2,414 hectares in Chignik Lagoon and 188 hectares...
Process-based models and studies of coastal change to inform habitat restoration and climate change adaptation
Eric E. Grossman
2021, Conference Paper, The 2021 Puget Sound nearshore restoration summit proceedings
Puget Sound salmon and estuary recovery strategies identify tens of thousands of acres of floodplain and estuary habitat restoration needed to re-establish ecosystem functions lost or degraded from western land use (Simenstad et al., 2011); the extent for nearshore habitat remains uncertain. Sediment is critical for shaping the structure and...
Bat activity patterns relative to temporal and weather effects in a temperate coastal environment
Katherine M. Gorman, Elaine L. Barr, Lindsay Ries, Tomas Nocera, W. Mark Ford
2021, Global Ecology and Conservation (30)
The northeastern and mid-Atlantic coasts of the United States are important summer maternity habitat and seasonal migratory corridors for many species of bats. Additionally, the effects of weather on bat activity are relatively unknown beyond coarse nightly scales. Using acoustic detectors, we...
Hydrogeologic framework, water levels, and selected contaminant concentrations at Valmont TCE Superfund Site, Luzerne County, Pennsylvania, 2020
Lisa A. Senior, Alex R. Fiore, Philip H. Bird
2021, Open-File Report 2021-1093
The Valmont TCE Superfund Site, Luzerne County, Pennsylvania is underlain by fractured and folded sandstones and shales of the Pottsville and Mauch Chunk Formations, which form a fractured-rock aquifer recharged locally by precipitation. Industrial activities at the former Chromatex Plant resulted in trichloroethene (TCE) contamination of groundwater at and near...
Methods of data collection and analysis for an assessment of karst aquifer systems between Albany and Buffalo, New York
Bradley A. Sporleder, Benjamin N. Fisher, Douglas S. Keto, William M. Kappel, James E. Reddy, Laura M. DeMott
2021, Scientific Investigations Report 2021-5094
The U.S. Geological Survey, in cooperation with the New York State Department of Environmental Conservation, catalogued aquifers and closed depressions in a karst-prone area between Albany and Buffalo, New York to provide resource managers information to more efficiently manage and protect groundwater resources. The New York State Department of Environmental...