Constraints on triple oxygen isotope kinetics
Justin A. Hayles, Bryan Alan Killingsworth
2022, Chemical Geology (589)
Isotopic disequilibrium is not as well constrained as equilibrium, hindering interpretation of isotopic variations. Kinetic isotope effects, a subset of disequilibrium, are common in nature and have been assumed to be distinct from equilibrium and mass independent isotope effects based on underdeveloped criteria. Using basic physical principles, we provide needed mechanistic constraints on...
Bedrock gorge incision via anthropogenic meander cutoff
Adrian Bender
2022, Geology (50) 321-325
Bedrock river-gorge incision represents a fundamental landscape-shaping process, but a dearth of observational data at >10 yr timescales impedes understanding of gorge formation. I quantify 102 yr rates and processes of gorge incision using historical records, field observations, and topographic and image analysis of a human-caused...
Correspondence analysis for mineral commodity research: An example workflow for mineralized calderas, southwest United States
Joshua Mark Rosera, Drew S Coleman
2022, Natural Resources Research (31) 9-36
Historical mine and mineral deposit datasets are routinely used to inform quantitative mineral assessment models, but they also can contain a wealth of supplementary qualitative information that is generally underutilized. We present a workflow that uses correspondence analysis, an exploratory tool commonly applied to multivariate abundance...
Identifying factors that affect mountain lake sensitivity to atmospheric nitrogen deposition across multiple scales
Benjamin Burpee, Jasmine Saros, Leora Nanus, Jill S. Baron, Janice Brahney, Kyle Christianson, Taylor Gantz, Andi Heard, Beth Hundey, Karin Koinig, Jiri Kopacek, Katrina Moser, Koren Nydick, Isabella A. Oleksy, Steven Sadro, Ruben Sommaruga, Rolf Vinebrooke, Jason Williams
2022, Water Research (209)
Increased nitrogen (N) deposition rates over the past century have affected both North American and European mountain lake ecosystems. Ecological sensitivity of mountain lakes to N deposition varies, however, because chemical and biological responses are modulated by local watershed and lake properties. We evaluated predictors of...
Downhill from Austin and Ely to Las Vegas: U-Pb detrital zircon suites from the Eocene–Oligocene Titus Canyon Formation and associated strata, Death Valley, California
Elizabeth L. Miller, Mark Raftrey, Jens-Erik Lundstern
2022, GSA Special Papers (555)
In a reconnaissance investigation aimed at interrogating the changing topography and paleogeography of the western United States prior to Basin and Range faulting, a preliminary study made use of U-Pb ages of...
Predicting coastal impacts by wave farms: A comparison of wave-averaged and wave-resolving models
Daniel R. David, Dirk P. Rijnsdorp, Jeff E. Hansen, Ryan J. Lowe, Mark L. Buckley
2022, Renewable Energy (183) 764-780
Wave energy converters (WECs) will have to be arranged into arrays of many devices to extract commercially viable amounts of energy. To understand the potential coastal impacts of WEC arrays, most research to date has relied on wave-averaged models given their...
Tallgrass prairie wildlife exposure to spray drift from commonly used soybean insecticides in Midwestern USA
Katelin M. Goebel, Nicole M. Davros, David E. Andersen, Pamela J. Rice
2022, Science of the Total Environment (818)
Insecticides are widely used in the Midwestern USA to combat soybean aphids (Aphis glycines), a globally important crop pest. Broad-spectrum foliar insecticides such as chlorpyrifos, lambda-cyhalothrin, and bifenthrin (hereafter, “target insecticides”) are toxic to wildlife in laboratory settings; however, little information exists regarding drift and deposition of these insecticides in fragmented tallgrass...
Combining fixed-location count data and movement data to estimate abundance of a lake sturgeon spawning run
Lisa K. Izzo, Gayle Barbin Zydlewski, Donna L. Parrish
2022, Canadian Journal of Fisheries and Aquatic Sciences (79) 925-935
Estimating abundance of migrating fishes is challenging. While sonars can be deployed continuously, improper assumptions about unidirectional migration and complete spatial coverage can lead to inaccurate estimates. To address these challenges, we present a framework for combining fixed-location count data from a dual-frequency identification sonar (DIDSON) with movement data from...
Native fish need a natural flow regime
Casey A. Pennock, Phaedra E. Budy, William W. Macfarlane, Matthew J. Breen, Justin Jimenez, John C. Schmidt
2022, Fisheries Magazine (47) 118-123
Water development has threatened the ecological integrity of riverine ecosystems. Increasing water demand, persistent drought, and climate change exacerbate the effects of habitat degradation and loss in altered systems such as the Colorado River basin. Today, biologists are challenged to identify management actions that benefit native fishes while not hindering...
Aquatic vegetation dynamics in the Upper Mississippi River over 2 decades spanning vegetation recovery
Kristen L. Bouska, Danelle M. Larson, Deanne C. Drake, Eric M. Lund, Alicia M. Carhart, Kyle R. Bales
2022, Freshwater Science (41) 33-44
Macrophytes have recovered in rivers across the world, but long-term data and studies are lacking regarding community assembly and diversity changes coincident with macrophyte recovery. We investigated patterns of aquatic vegetation species composition and diversity in thousands of sites in the Upper Mississippi River, USA, spanning 21...
A science agenda to inform natural resource management decisions in an era of ecological transformation
Shelley Crausbay, Helen Sofaer, Amanda E. Cravens, Brian C. Chaffin, Katherine R. Clifford, John E. Gross, Corrine N. Knapp, David J Lawrence, Dawn Magness, Abraham J. Miller-Rushing, Gregor W. Schuurman, Camille S. Stevens-Rumann
2022, BioScience (72) 71-90
Earth is experiencing widespread ecological transformation in terrestrial, freshwater, and marine ecosystems that is attributable to directional environmental changes, especially intensifying climate change. To better steward ecosystems facing unprecedented and lasting change, a new management paradigm is forming, supported by a decision-oriented framework that presents three distinct management choices:...
RAD adaptive management for transforming ecosystems
Abigail J. Lynch, Laura Thompson, John M. Morton, Erik A. Beever, Michael Clifford, Douglas Limpinsel, Robert T. Magill, Dawn R. Magness, Tracy A. Melvin, Robert A. Newman, Mark T. Porath, Frank J. Rahel, Joel H. Reynolds, Gregor W. Schuurman, Suresh Sethi, Jennifer L. Wilkening
2022, BioScience (1) 45-56
Intensifying global change is propelling many ecosystems toward irreversible transformations. Natural resource managers face the complex task of conserving these important resources under unprecedented conditions and expanding uncertainty. As once familiar ecological conditions disappear, traditional management approaches that assume the future will reflect the past are becoming increasingly untenable....
Mercury exposure of tidal marsh songbirds in the northeastern United States and its association with nest survival
Katherine J Ruskin, Garth Herring, Collin A. Eagles-Smith, Alyssa B. Eiklor, Chris S Elphick, Matthew A. Etterson, Chrisopher B. Field, Rebecca A. Longnecker, Adrienne I. Kovach, W Greg Shriver, James F. Walsh, Brian J. Olsen
2022, Ecotoxicology (31) 208-220
The biogeochemistry of tidal marsh sediments facilitates the transformation of mercury (Hg) into the biologically available form methylmercury (MeHg), resulting in elevated Hg exposures to tidal marsh wildlife. Saltmarsh and Acadian Nelson’s sparrows (Ammospiza caudacutua and A. nelsoni subvirgatus, respectively) exclusively inhabit tidal marshes, potentially experiencing elevated risk to Hg exposure, and...
Apparent age dependence of the fault weakening distance in rock friction
Nicholas M. Beeler, Allan Rubin, Path Bhattacharya, Brian D. Kilgore, Terry Tullis
2022, Journal of Geophysical Research (127)
During rock friction experiments at large displacement, room temperature and humidity, and following a hold test, the fracture energy increases approximately as the square of the logarithm of hold duration. While it's been long known that failure strength increases with log hold time, here the slip weakening...
New insights on faulting and intrusion processes during the June 2007, East Rift Zone eruption of Kilauea volcano, Hawai'i
J. Leeburn, C. Wauthier, Emily K. Montgomery-Brown, J. Gonzalez-Santana
2022, Journal of Volcanology and Geothermal Research (421)
The East Rift Zone (ERZ) of Kīlauea Volcano, Hawai'i, represents one of the most volcanically active regions in the world. The 2007 Father's Day (FD) dike intrusion, eruption, and accompanying slow-slip event (SSE) has been previously modeled using geodetic data to constrain the geometry of the intrusion and the timing...
Local variations in broadband sensor installations: Orientations, sensitivities, and noise levels
Adam T. Ringler, Robert Anthony
2022, Pure and Applied Geophysics (179) 217-231
As seismologists continue to place more stringent demands on data quality, accurately described metadata are becoming increasingly important. In order to better constrain the orientation and sensitivities of seismometers deployed in U.S. Geological Survey networks, the Albuquerque Seismological Laboratory (ASL) has recently begun identifying true north...
An evaluation of the timing accuracy of global and regional seismic stations and networks
Ying Yang, Xiaodong Song, Adam T. Ringler
2022, Seismological Research Letters (93) 161-172
Clock accuracy is a basic parameter of any seismic station and has become increasingly important for seismology as the community seeks to refine structures and dynamic processes of the Earth. In this study, we measure the arrival time differences of moderate repeating earthquakes with magnitude...
Riverscape approaches in practice: Perspectives and applications
Christian E. Torgersen, Celine Le Pichon, Aimee H. Fullerton, Stephen J. Dugdale, Jeffrey J. Duda, Floriane Giovannini, Evelyne Tales, Jerome Belliard, Paulo Branco, Normand E. Bergeron, Mathieu L. Roy, Diego Tonolla, Nicolas Lamouroux, Herve Capra, Colden V. Baxter
2022, Biological Reviews (97) 481-504
Landscape perspectives in riverine ecology have been undertaken increasingly in the last 30 years, leading aquatic ecologists to develop a diverse set of approaches for conceptualizing, mapping and understanding ‘riverscapes’. Spatiotemporally explicit perspectives of rivers and their biota nested within the socio-ecological landscape now provide guiding principles...
Time to get real with qPCR controls: The frequency of sample contamination and the informative power of negative controls in environmental DNA studies
Patrick Ross Hutchins, Leah Nicole Simantel, Adam Sepulveda
2022, Molecular Ecology Resources (22) 1319-1329
Environmental (e)DNA methods have enabled rapid, sensitive and specific inferences of taxa presence throughout diverse fields of ecological study. However, use of eDNA results for decision-making has been impeded by uncertainties associated with false positive tests putatively caused by sporadic or systemic contamination. Sporadic contamination is...
Proportions, timing, and re-equilibration progress during the 1959 Summit Eruption of Kīlauea: An example of magma mixing processes operating during OIB petrogenesis
Rosalind L. Helz
2022, Journal of Petrology (63)
Petrographic and chemical analysis of scoria samples collected during the 1959 Kīlauea summit eruption illustrates the progress of thermal and chemical homogenization of the melts, and the gradual growth and/or re-equilibration of olivine phenocrysts, over the course of the eruption. Glass compositions show that thermal equilibration was largely complete...
Reply to “comment on ‘which earthquake accounts matter?’ by Susan E. Hough and Stacey S. Martin” by David J. Wald
Susan E. Hough, Stacey S. Martin
2022, Seismological Research Letters (93) 506-511
We thank David Wald (Wald, 2021; henceforth, W21) for his interest in our recent article (Hough and Martin, 2021; henceforth, HM21). Although different perspectives are vital in science, we are concerned that W21 misrepresents HM21 as an oblique criticism of the U.S....
A simple low-cost approach for transport parameter determination in mountain rivers
Daniella Castillo, Robert L. Runkel, Denisse Duhalde, Pablo Pasten, José L. Arumí, Jorge Oyarzun, Jorge Núñez, Hugo Maturana, Ricardo Oyarzun
2022, River Research and Applications (38) 173-181
A simplified low-cost approach to experimentally determine transport parameters in mountain rivers is described, with an emphasis on the longitudinal dispersion coefficient (DL). The approach is based on a slug injection of table salt (NaCl) as a tracer and specific conductance readings at different locations downstream of the injection spot....
Comment on “Which earthquake accounts matter” by Susan E. Hough and Stacey S. Martin
David J. Wald
2022, Seismological Research Letters (93) 500-505
In their analysis of the U.S. Geological Survey’s (USGS) “Did You Feel It?” (DYFI) data Hough and Martin (2021) claim, among other assertions, that the following:Socioeconomic and geopolitical factors can introduce biases in the USGS’ characterization of earthquakes and their effects, especially if online data collection systems...
Estimating abundance, temporary emigration and the pattern of density dependence in a cyclic snowshoe hare population in Yukon, Canada
Madan K. Oli, Alice J Kenny, Rudy Boonstra, Stan Boutin, Vratika Chaudhary, James E. Hines, Charles J Krebs
2022, Canadian Journal of Zoology (100) 36-45
Estimates of demographic parameters based on capture-mark-recapture (CMR) methods may be biased when some individuals in the population are temporarily unavailable for capture (temporary emigration). We estimated snowshoe hare abundance, apparent survival, and probability of temporary emigration in a population of snowshoe hares (Lepus americanus Erxleben 1777) in...
Magmatism, migrating topography, and the transition from Sevier shortening to Basin and Range extension, western United States
Jens-Erik Lundstern, Elizabeth L. Miller
2022, GSA Special Papers (555)
The paleogeographic evolution of the western U.S. Great Basin from the Late Cretaceous to the Cenozoic is critical to understanding how the North American Cordillera at this latitude transitioned from Mesozoic shortening...