Influence of local river hydraulics on Kootenai River white sturgeon (Acipenser transmontanus) habitat selection during four spawning years, 2017–2020
Taylor Dudunake, Megan K. Kenworthy, Troy Smith, Sarah Stephenson, Ryan S. Hardy
2025, Canadian Journal of Fisheries and Aquatic Sciences (82)
Understanding fine-scale habitat selection of endangered Kootenai River white sturgeon (Acipenser transmontanus) is an important component for monitoring and recovery efforts. Fine-scale habitat selection and quantifying temporal changes in suitable habitat contributes to the work of addressing recruitment failure within the Kootenai River population. Habitat suitability indices were developed using...
How quickly do brook trout lose long-term thermal acclimation?
Matthew J. O'Donnell, Amy M. Regish, S.D. McCormick, Benjamin Letcher
2025, Journal of Thermal Biology (129)
Abundances of coldwater adapted stream fish populations are declining largely due to anthropogenic influences, including increased temperature. To persist in streams with unsuitable thermal habitat, fish must move to coldwater patches, acclimate, or adapt to water temperatures above thermal optima. Brook trout, a coldwater adapted salmonid, has previously displayed physiological...
A nationwide evaluation of crowd-sourced ambient temperature data
Priyanka deSouza, Peter Christian Ibsen, Daniel M. Westervelt, Ralph Kahn, Benjamin Zaitchik, Patrick Kinney
2025, Frontiers of Environmental Science and Engineering in China (13)
Growing concerns about heat in urban areas paired with the sparsity of weather stations have resulted in individuals drawing on data from citizen science sensor networks to fill in data gaps. The PurpleAir are the most widely-used low-cost air quality sensors in the contiguous United States with 14,777 deployed between...
A synthesis of freshwater forested wetland soil organic carbon storage
Yadav Sapkota, Jacob F. Berkowitz, Camille Stagg, Ryan R. Busby
2025, Frontiers in Forests and Global Change (8)
Freshwater forested wetlands account for ~76% (918 M ha) of the total global wetland extent. However, freshwater forested wetlands are difficult to distinguish from upland forest due to canopy coverage, the abundance of wetland-nonwetland mosaics, seasonal hydropatterns, and fewer readily observable connections to large surface water bodies relative to marshes and other...
Environmental conditions influencing the abundance of the salmonid ectoparasite Salmincola californiensis across upper Willamette River Reservoirs, Oregon
Kelsi Antonelli, Christina Amy Murphy, Amanda M.M. Pollock, Ivan Arismendi
2025, Aquatic Biology (13)
The freshwater copepod Salmincola californiensis is an ectoparasite of Pacific salmon and trout (Oncorhynchus spp.). High levels of infection by this parasite can significantly damage gills and result in blood loss, affecting the fitness and survival of hosts, and it may hinder recovery efforts of threatened and endangered salmonids. Juvenile...
Equilibrium line altitudes, accumulation areas, and the vulnerability of glaciers in Alaska
Lucas Zeller, Daniel McGrath, Louis C. Sass, Caitlyn Florentine, Jacob Downs
2025, Journal of Glaciology (71)
The accumulation area ratio (AAR) of a glacier reflects its current state of equilibrium, or disequilibrium, with climate and its vulnerability to future climate change. Here, we present an inventory of glacier-specific annual accumulation areas and equilibrium line altitudes (ELAs) for over 3000 glaciers in Alaska and northwest Canada (88%...
Estimating indicators of cyanobacterial harmful algal blooms in New York State
Philip Savoy, Rebecca M. Gorney, Jennifer L. Graham
2025, Ecological Indicators (173)
Cyanobacteria harmful algal blooms (cyanoHABs) are a global concern for aquatic ecosystem and human health. Limited funding for monitoring programs and inconsistent determination of cyanoHAB occurrence present challenges for identifying commonly effective variables for characterizing cyanoHABs and the development of generalized models. We compiled a combination of water quality measurements,...
Uncertainty quantification of geophysical and hydrologic parameters estimated from borehole nuclear magnetic resonance data
Burke J. Minsley, Stephanie N. Phillips, Stephanie R. James
2025, JGR Machine Learning and Computation (2)
Borehole nuclear magnetic resonance (bNMR) data are typically used to infer in situ hydrologic properties. Partial water content as a function of pore size is estimated by fitting the measured NMR response to a multi-exponential T2 distribution, and the sum of estimated T2 amplitudes equals the total volumetric water content. From these estimated parameters,...
Salinas Valley integrated hydrologic and reservoir operations models, Monterey and San Luis Obispo Counties, California
Wesley R. Henson, Randy Hanson, Scott Boyce, Joseph Hevesi, Elizabeth R. Jachens
2025, Preprint
The area surrounding the Salinas Valley groundwater basin in Monterey and San Luis Obispo Counties of California is a highly productive agricultural area, contributes significantly to the local economy, and provides a substantial portion of vegetables and other agricultural commodities to the Nation. This region of California provides about half...
Streamflow response to glacier mass loss varies with basin precipitation across Alaska
Janet H. Curran, Brianna Rick, Jeremy S. Littell, Louis C. Sass
2025, Water Resources Research (61)
Diminishing glaciers affect streamflow, and given the extent of glaciers in Alaska and adjacent Canada, continued glacier mass loss is likely to have profound effects on ecosystems sensitive to runoff. The effects of glacier mass loss on streamflow are likely to vary across the wide ranges of basin size, glacier...
Optimizing control of a freshwater invader in time and space
Jessica O. Diallo, Sarah J. Converse, Matthew Chmiel, Andy Stites, Julian D. Olden
2025, Ecological Applications (35)
The global spread of invasive species in aquatic ecosystems has prompted population control efforts to mitigate negative impacts on native species and ecosystem functions. Removal programs that optimally allocate removal effort across space and time offer promise for improving invader suppression or eradication, especially given the limited resources available to...
Sprague’s Pipits (Anthus spragueii) occupying high-elevation intermontane valley habitat throughout the breeding season in southwest Montana
Andrew C. Staufer, Emilie K. Maggs, Erik A. Beever, Adam E. Mitchell
2025, Western North American Naturalist (85) 80-86
Sprague's Pipit (Anthus spragueii) is an imperiled bird species that breeds in grasslands of the northern Great Plains of North America. While conducting avian surveys in the Centennial Valley, Beaverhead County, southwest Montana, during spring and summer 2023, we detected approximately 10 male Sprague's Pipits performing aerial displays. These represent...
Living with uncertainty: Using multi-model large ensembles to assess emperor penguin extinction risk for the IUCN Red List
Stephanie Jenouvrier, Alice Eparvier, Bilgecan Sen, Francesco Ventura, Christian Joseph Che-Castaldo, Marika Holland, Laura Landrum, Kristen Krumhardt, Jimmy Garnier, Karine Delord, Christophe Barbraud, Philip Trathan
2025, Biological Conservation (305)
Improved methods for identifying species at risk are needed to strengthen climate change vulnerability assessments, as current estimates indicate that up to one million species face extinction due to environmental changes. Integrating multiple sources of uncertainty enhances the robustness of Red List of Threatened Species assessments, providing a more comprehensive...
Assessing the effect of coral reef restoration location on coastal flood hazard along the San Juan Coastline, Puerto Rico
Ramin Familkhalili, Curt D. Storlazzi, Michael Nemeth, Shay Viehman
2025, Frontiers in Marine Science (12)
Coastal resilience has become a pressing global issue due to the growing vulnerability of coastlines to the effects of climate change. Nature-based solutions have emerged as a promising approach to coastal protection to not only enhance coastal resilience, but also restore critical ecosystems. Coral reef restoration has the potential to...
Seismic intensities, ground motions and basin amplification from the 2022 Mw 6.4 Ferndale, California intraslab earthquake
Leyla Mariam Namazie, Rebecca Medley, Walter D. Mooney
2025, Seismological Research Letters (96) 2796-2811
On December 20, 2022, a Mw 6.4 earthquake occurred at a depth of 18 km within the subducting Gorda plate in the Mendocino Triple Junction (MTJ), one of the most seismically active regions of the contiguous United States, causing widespread damage to local communities. Here we document the seismic intensities,...
Pathways for potential exposure to onshore oil and gas wastewater: What we need to know to protect human health
Ayusha Ariana, Isabelle M. Cozzarelli, Cloelle Danforth, Bonnie McDevitt, Anna Rosofsky, Donna Vorhees
2025, Environmental Health Perspectives (9)
Produced water is a chemically complex waste stream generated during oil and gas development. Roughly four trillion liters were generated onshore in the United States in 2021 (ALL Consulting, 2022, https://www.gwpc.org/wp-content/uploads/2021/09/2021_Produced_Water_Volumes.pdf). Efforts are underway to expand historic uses of produced water to offset freshwater needs in water-stressed regions,...
Evaluating the potential of co-located non-petroleum energy resources in the Gulf Coast using play fairwayaAnalysis
Rand Gardner, Justin E. Birdwell
2025, Conference Paper, GeoGulf transactions
Geological resources critical to the energy transition, such as sedimentary geothermal, carbon storage potential, and lithium in brines, commonly struggle for economic feasibility as stand-alone developments but can have greater viability when the potential for more than one of these resources exist within the same reservoir or stacked...
Behavioral plasticity in detection height of an invasive, arboreal snake based on size, condition, and prey
Melia G. Nafus, Levi Gray, Page E. Klug, Gordon H. Rodda, Scott Michael Goetz
2025, Wildlife Research (52)
ContextAnimals may adjust their behavior in predictable ways to balance tradeoffs between resource acquisition and survival or fecundity. Microhabitat selection based on individual traits or environmental conditions is one measure of risk–reward tradeoffs by individuals.AimsWe used data from observational and manipulative studies to investigate whether an...
Evaluating the applicability of the generalized power-law rating curve model: With applications to paired discharge-stage data from Iceland, Sweden, and the United States
Rafael Daniel Vias, Birgir Hrafnkelsson, Timothy O. Hodson, Sölvi Rögnvaldsson, Axel Örn Jansson, Sigurdur M. Gardarsson
2025, Journal of Hydrology (651)
Hydrologic research and operations make extensive use of streamflow time series. In most applications, these time series are estimated from rating curves, which relate flow to some easy-to-measure surrogate, typically stage. The conventional stage-discharge rating takes the form of a segmented power law, with one segment for each hydrologic control...
Complex staged emplacement of a basaltic lava: The example of the July 1974 flow of Kīlauea
Sebastian Biass, Bruce F. Houghton, Edward W. Llewellin, Kristine C Curran, Thorvaldur Thordarson, Tim R. Orr, Carolyn Parcheta, Peter J. Mouginis-Mark
2025, Bulletin of Volcanology (87)
Basaltic lava flows can be highly destructive. Forecasting the future path and/or behavior of an active lava flow is challenging because topography is often poorly constrained and lava has a complex rheology and emplacement history. Preserved lavas are an important source of information which, combined with observations of active flows,...
The effects of breeding status on common raven movement, home range, and habitat selection
Julia C. Brockman, Peter S. Coates, John C. Tull, Pat J. Jackson, Shawn T. O’Neil, Perry J. Williams
2025, Journal of Wildlife Management (89)
Anthropogenic infrastructure has contributed to increasing common raven (Corvus corax) abundance across the Great Basin region of the United States, particularly in sagebrush ecosystems, where high raven densities are correlated with reduced sage-grouse (Centrocercus urophasianus) nest survival. Our understanding of how raven reproductive behavior affects sage-grouse nest predation is limited,...
Topographic controls on landslide mobility: Modeling hurricane-induced landslide runout and debris-flow inundation in Puerto Rico
Dianne L. Brien, Mark E. Reid, Collin Cronkite-Ratcliff, Jonathan P. Perkins
2025, Natural Hazards and Earth System Sciences (25) 1229-1253
In 2017, Hurricane Maria triggered more than 70 000 landslides in Puerto Rico. After initiation, these predominantly shallow landslides were mobilized to varying extents – some landslides only traveled partway downslope, whereas others reached drainage channels and were mobilized into long-traveled debris flows that could severely impact roads and infrastructure....
The GorDAS Distributed Acoustic Sensing experiment above the Cascadia locked zone and subducted Gorda Slab
Jeffrey J. McGuire, Andrew J. Barbour, Connie Stewart, Victor Yartsev, Martin Karrenbach, Mark Hemphill-Haley, Robert C. McPherson, Kari Stockdale, Clara Yoon, Theresa Marie Sawi
2025, Seismological Research Letters (96) 2489-2503
The southernmost portion of the Cascadia Subduction zone in Northern California produces high rates of moderate and large earthquakes owing to subduction of the Gorda slab and deformation associated with the Mendocino Triple Junction. Distributed Acoustic Sensing (DAS) is rapidly advancing as a method for detecting earthquakes and imaging crustal...
Assessment of western Oregon debris-flow hazards in burned and unburned environments
Brittany Danielle Selander, Nancy C. Calhoun, William Burns, Jason W. Kean, Francis K. Rengers
2025, Earth Surface Processes and Landforms (50)
In the steep and mountainous environment of western Oregon, debris flows pose a considerable threat to property, infrastructure and life. Wildfire is commonly known to increase the susceptibility of steep slopes to debris flows, but the extent of this process in the western Cascades is not well understood. The US...
Understanding predator-prey-competitor dynamics between Lower Missouri River Macrhybopsis and Scaphirhynchus using a population—bioenergetics model ensemble
Mark L. Wildhaber, Janice L. Albers, Nicholas S. Green
2025, Ecological Modeling (504)
The pallid sturgeon Scaphirhynchus albus is a long-lived, endangered fish in the Missouri River. Individuals become piscivorous as adults, so recruitment from stocking or reproduction could reduce populations of prey, including Macrhybopsis chubs. We constructed an individual- and age-based, multi-species, predator-prey-competitor model (IAMP) to represent the benthic community (sturgeons, chubs, and chironomids) of the...