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Page 402, results 10026 - 10050

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Publication Extents

Not all publications have extents, not all extents are completely accurate
Fishing activities
Ferdinand K. J. Oberle, Pere Puig, Jacobo Martin
Aaron Micallef, Sebastian Krastel, Alessandra Savini, editor(s)
2018, Book chapter, Submarine geomorphology
Unlike the major anthropogenic changes that terrestrial and coastal habitats underwent during the last centuries such as deforestation, river engineering, agricultural practices or urbanism, those occurring underwater are veiled from our eyes and have continued nearly unnoticed. Only recent advances in remote sensing and deep marine sampling technologies have revealed...
Seed origin and warming constrain lodgepole pine recruitment, slowing the pace of population range shifts
Erin Conlisk, Cristina Castanha, Matthew J. Germino, Thomas T. Veblen, Jeremy M. Smith, Andrew B. Moyes, Lara M. Kueppers
2018, Global Change Biology (24) 197-211
Understanding how climate warming will affect the demographic rates of different ecotypes is critical to predicting shifts in species distributions. Here we present results from a common garden, climate change experiment in which we measured seedling recruitment of lodgepole pine, a widespread North American conifer that is also planted globally....
Growth strategies and threshold responses to water deficit modulate effects of warming on tree seedlings from forest to alpine
Brynne E. Lazarus, Cristina Castanha, Matthew J. Germino, Lara M. Kueppers, Andrew B. Moyes
2018, Journal of Ecology (106) 571-585
1.Predictions of upslope range shifts for tree species with warming are based on assumptions of moisture stress at lower elevation limits and low temperature stress at high elevation limits. However, recent studies have shown that warming can reduce tree seedling establishment across the entire gradient from subalpine forest to alpine...
An empirical perspective for understanding climate change impacts in Switzerland
Paul D. Henne, Moritz Bigalke, Ulf Buntgen, Daniele Colombaroli, Marco Conedera, Urs Feller, David Frank, Jurg Fuhrer, Martin Grosjean, Oliver Heiri, Jurg Luterbacher, Adrien Mestrot, Andreas Rigling, Ole Rossler, Christian Rohr, This Rutishauser, Margit Schwikowski, Andreas Stampfli, Sonke Szidat, Jean-Paul Theurillat, Rolf Weingartner, Wolfgan Wilcke, Willy Tinner
2018, Regional Environmental Change (18) 205-221
Planning for the future requires a detailed understanding of how climate change affects a wide range of systems at spatial scales that are relevant to humans. Understanding of climate change impacts can be gained from observational and reconstruction approaches and from numerical models that apply existing knowledge to climate change...
Used-habitat calibration plots: A new procedure for validating species distribution, resource selection, and step-selection models
John R. Fieberg, James D. Forester, Garrett M. Street, Douglas H. Johnson, Althea A. ArchMiller, Jason Matthiopoulos
2018, Ecography (41) 737-752
“Species distribution modeling” was recently ranked as one of the top five “research fronts” in ecology and the environmental sciences by ISI's Essential Science Indicators (Renner and Warton 2013), reflecting the importance of predicting how species distributions will respond to anthropogenic change. Unfortunately, species distribution models (SDMs) often perform poorly...
Evaluating stocking efficacy in an ecosystem undergoing oligotrophication
Yu-Chun Kao, Mark W. Rogers, David B. Bunnell
2018, Ecosystems (21) 600-618
Oligotrophication has negatively affected fisheries production in many freshwater ecosystems and could conceivably reduce the efficacy of stockings used to enhance fisheries. In Lake Michigan, offshore oligotrophication has occurred since the 1970s, owing to reductions in total phosphorus (TP) inputs and nearshore sequestration of TP by nonindigenous dreissenid mussels. We...
The influence of data characteristics on detecting wetland/stream surface-water connections in the Delmarva Peninsula, Maryland and Delaware
Melanie K. Vanderhoof, Hayley Distler, Megan W. Lang, Laurie C. Alexander
2018, Wetlands Ecology and Management (26) 63-86
The dependence of downstream waters on upstream ecosystems necessitates an improved understanding of watershed-scale hydrological interactions including connections between wetlands and streams. An evaluation of such connections is challenging when, (1) accurate and complete datasets of wetland and stream locations are often not available and (2) natural variability in surface-water...
Defining and classifying migratory habitats as sources and sinks: The migratory pathway approach
Richard A. Erickson, James E. Diffendorfer, Ryan Norris, Joanna A. Bieri, Julia Earl, Paula Federico, John Fryxell, Kevin Long, Brady J. Mattsson, Christine Sample, Ruscena Wiederholt, Wayne E. Thogmartin
2018, Journal of Applied Ecology (55) 108-117
Understanding and conserving migratory species requires a method for characterizing the seasonal flow of animals among habitats. Source-sink theory describes the metapopulation dynamics of species by classifying habitats as population sources (i.e. net contributors) or sinks (i.e. net substractors). Migratory species may have non-breeding habitats important to the species...
Depletion mapping and constrained optimization to support managing groundwater extraction
Michael N. Fienen, Kenneth R. Bradbury, Maribeth Kniffin, Paul M. Barlow
2018, Groundwater (56) 18-31
Groundwater models often serve as management tools to evaluate competing water uses including ecosystems, irrigated agriculture, industry, municipal supply, and others. Depletion potential mapping—showing the model-calculated potential impacts that wells have on stream baseflow—can form the basis for multiple potential management approaches in an oversubscribed basin. Specific management approaches can...
Spawning site fidelity and apparent annual survival of walleye (Sander vitreus) differ between a Lake Huron and Lake Erie tributary
Todd A. Hayden, Thomas Binder, Christopher M. Holbrook, Christopher Vandergoot, David G. Fielder, Steven J. Cooke, John M. Dettmers, Charles C. Krueger
2018, Ecology of Freshwater Fish (27) 339-349
Fidelity to spawning habitats can maximise reproductive success of fish by synchronising movements to sites of previous recruitment. To determine the role of reproductive fidelity in structuring walleye Sander vitreus populations in the Laurentian Great Lakes, we used acoustic telemetry combined with Cormack–Jolly–Seber capture–recapture models to estimate spawning site fidelity...
Interoperability in planetary research for geospatial data analysis
Trent M. Hare, Angelo P. Rossi, Alessandro Frigeri, Chiara Marmo
2018, Planetary and Space Science (150) 36-42
For more than a decade there has been a push in the planetary science community to support interoperable methods for accessing and working with geospatial data. Common geospatial data products for planetary research include image mosaics, digital elevation or terrain models, geologic maps,...
Diet of the Antillean manatee (Trichechus manatus manatus) in Belize, Central America
Aarin Conrad Allen, Cathy A. Beck, Robert K. Bonde, James A. Powell, Nicole Auil Gomez
2018, Journal of the Marine Biological Association of the United Kingdom (98) 1831-1840
Belize contains important habitat for Antillean manatees (Trichechus manatus manatus) and provides refuge for the highest known population density of this subspecies. As these animals face impending threats, knowledge of their dietary habits can be used to interpret resource utilization. The contents of 13 mouth, 6 digestive tract (stomach, duodenum...
Shallow bedrock limits groundwater seepage-based headwater climate refugia
Martin A. Briggs, John W. Lane Jr., Craig D. Snyder, Eric A. White, Zachary Johnson, David L. Nelms, Nathaniel P. Hitt
2018, Limnologica - Ecology and Management of Inland Waters (68) 142-156
Groundwater/surface-water exchanges in streams are inexorably linked to adjacent aquifer dynamics. As surface-water temperatures continue to increase with climate warming, refugia created by groundwater connectivity is expected to enable cold water fish species to survive. The shallow alluvial aquifers that source groundwater seepage to headwater streams, however, may also be...
Pore-types and pore-network evolution in Upper Devonian-Lower Mississippian Woodford and Mississippian Barnett mudstones: Insights from laboratory thermal maturation and organic petrology
Lucy T. Ko, Stephen C. Ruppel, Robert G. Loucks, Paul C. Hackley, Tongwei Zhang, Deyong Shao
2018, International Journal of Coal Geology (190) 3-28
Pore-evolution models from immature organic-matter (OM) -rich Barnett (0.42%Ro) and Woodford (0.49%Ro) mudstones were compared with models previously developed from low-maturity OM-lean Boquillas (Eagle Ford-equivalent) mudstones to investigate whether (1) different mineralogy (siliceous vs. calcareous) exerts different catalytic and sorption effects and influences OM-pore origin and evolution;...
Focused seismicity triggered by flank instability on Kīlauea's Southwest Rift Zone
Josiah Judson, Weston Thelen, Tim Greenfield, Robert G. White
2018, Journal of Volcanology and Geothermal Research (353) 95-101
Swarms of earthquakes at the head of the Southwest Rift Zone on Kīlauea Volcano, Hawaiʻi, reveal an interaction of normal and strike-slip faulting associated with movement of Kīlauea's south flank. A relocated subset of earthquakes between January 2012 and August 2014...
High-resolution climate of the past ∼7300 years of coastal northernmost California: Results from diatoms, silicoflagellates, and pollen
John A. Barron, David Bukry, Linda E. Heusser, Jason A. Addison, Clark R. Alexander Jr.
2018, Quaternary International (469) 109-119
Piston core TN062-O550, collected about 33 km offshore of Eureka, California, contains a high-resolution record of the climate and oceanography of coastal northernmost California during the past ∼7.34 kyr. Chronology established by nine AMS ages on a combination of planktic foraminifers, bivalve shell fragments, and wood yields a mean sedimentation rate of...
Direct and indirect controls on organic matter decomposition in four coastal wetland communities along a landscape salinity gradient
Camille L. Stagg, Melissa M. Baustian, Carey L. Perry, Tim J. B. Carruthers, Courtney T. Hall
2018, Journal of Ecology (106) 655-670
Coastal wetlands store more carbon than most ecosystems globally. As sea level rises, changes in flooding and salinity will potentially impact ecological functions, such as organic matter decomposition, that influence carbon storage. However, little is known about the mechanisms that control organic matter loss in coastal wetlands...
Bioenergetic evaluation of diel vertical migration by bull trout (Salvelinus confluentus) in a thermally stratified reservoir
Madeleine Eckmann, Jason B. Dunham, Edward J. Connor, Carmen A. Welch
2018, Ecology of Freshwater Fish (27) 30-43
Many species living in deeper lentic ecosystems exhibit daily movements that cycle through the water column, generally referred to as diel vertical migration (DVM). In this study, we applied bioenergetics modelling to evaluate growth as a hypothesis to explain DVM by bull trout (Salvelinus confluentus) in a thermally stratified reservoir...
Climate-induced seasonal changes in smallmouth bass growth rate potential at the southern range extent
Christopher R. Middaugh, Brin Kessinger, Daniel D. Magoulick
2018, Ecology of Freshwater Fish (27) 19-29
Temperature increases due to climate change over the coming century will likely affect smallmouth bass (Micropterus dolomieu) growth in lotic systems at the southern extent of their native range. However, the thermal response of a stream to warming climate conditions could be affected by the flow regime of...
Hydrogeology and simulation of groundwater flow in the Central Oklahoma (Garber-Wellington) Aquifer, Oklahoma, 1987 to 2009, and simulation of available water in storage, 2010–2059
Shana L. Mashburn, Derek W. Ryter, Christopher R. Neel, S. Jerrod Smith, Jessica S. Correll
2018, Scientific Investigations Report 2013-5219
The Central Oklahoma (Garber-Wellington) aquifer underlies about 3,000 square miles of central Oklahoma. The study area for this investigation was the extent of the Central Oklahoma aquifer. Water from the Central Oklahoma aquifer is used for public, industrial, commercial, agricultural, and domestic supply. With the exception of Oklahoma City, all...
Managing forest habitat for conservation-reliant species in a changing climate: The case of the endangered Kirtland’s Warbler
Deahn M. Donner, Donald J. Brown, Christine Ribic, Mark Nelson, Tim Greco
2018, Forest Ecology and Management (430) 265-279
Conservation and recovery of species of concern necessitates evaluating forest habitat conditions under changing climate conditions, especially in the early stages of the delisting process. Managers must weigh implications of near-term habitat management activities within the context of changing environmental conditions and a species’ biological traits that may influence their...
Evaluation of the Source and Transport of High Nitrate Concentrations in Ground Water, Warren Subbasin, California
Tracy Nishikawa, Jill N. Densmore, Peter Martin, Jonathan C. Matti
2018, Water-Resources Investigations Report 2003-4009
Ground water historically has been the sole source of water supply for the Town of Yucca Valley in the Warren subbasin of the Morongo ground-water basin, California. An imbalance between ground-water recharge and pumpage caused ground-water levels in the subbasin to decline by as much as 300 feet from the...
Child health outcomes in sub-Saharan Africa: A comparison of changes in climate and socio-economic factors
Frank Davenport, Karthryn Grace, Chris Funk, Shraddhanand Shukla
2017, Global Environmental Change (46) 72-87
We compare changes in low birth weight and child malnutrition in 13 African countries under projected climate change versus socio-economic development scenarios. Climate scenarios are created by linking surface temperature gradients with declines in seasonal rainfall sea along with warming values of 1 °C and 2 °C. Socio-economic scenarios are developed by...
Habitat suitability models for groundfish in the Gulf of Alaska
Jodi L. Pirtle, S. Kalei Shotwell, Mark Zimmermann, Jane A. Reid, Nadine E. Golden
2017, Deep Sea Research Part II: Topical Studies in Oceanography (165) 303-321
Identifying and quantifying the major ecosystem processes that regulate recruitment strength of commercially and ecologically important fish species is a central goal of fisheries management research. In the Gulf of Alaska (GOA) five groundfish species are of particular interest: sablefish (Anoplopoma fimbria), Pacific cod (Gadus macrocephalus), walleye pollock (Gadus chalcogrammus), arrowtooth flounder (Atheresthes stomias), and Pacific ocean perch (Sebastes alutus). Habitat suitability models (HSM) were developed for the...
Application of paleoflood surveys for the southern Black Hills of South Dakota
Daniel G. Driscoll
2017, South Dakota Department of Transportation Office of Research Study 2010-04
Flood-frequency analyses for the Black Hills area have especially large uncertainties and are especially important for planning purposes because of a history of extremely large and damaging floods, such as the extreme floods of June 9–10, 1972. Geology, topography, and climatology are additional complicating factors for flood-frequency characterization for the...