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Page 458, results 11426 - 11450

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Publication Extents

Not all publications have extents, not all extents are completely accurate
Survival of juvenile chinook salmon and coho salmon in the Roza Dam fish bypass and in downstream reaches of the Yakima River, Washington, 2016
Tobias J. Kock, Russell W. Perry, Amy C. Hansen
2016, Open-File Report 2016-1210
Estimates of juvenile salmon survival are important data for fishery managers in the Yakima River Basin. Radiotelemetry studies during 2012–14 showed that tagged juvenile Chinook salmon (Oncorhynchus tshawytscha) that passed through the fish bypass at Roza Dam had lower survival than fish that passed through other routes at the dam....
Sources of groundwater and characteristics of surface-water recharge at Bell, White, and Suwannee Springs, Florida, 2012–13
John F. Stamm, W. Scott McBride
2016, Open-File Report 2016-1190
Discharge from springs in Florida is sourced from aquifers, such as the Upper Floridan aquifer, which is overlain by an upper confining unit that locally can have properties of an aquifer. Water levels in aquifers are affected by several factors, such as precipitation, recharge, and groundwater withdrawals, which in turn...
Simulated effects of nitrogen saturation the global carbon budget using the IBIS model
Xuehe Lu, Hong Jiang, Jinxun Liu, Xiuying Zhang, Jiaxin Jin, Qiuan Zhu, Zhen Zhang, Changhui Peng
2016, Scientific Reports (6) 1-10
Over the past 100 years, human activity has greatly changed the rate of atmospheric N (nitrogen) deposition in terrestrial ecosystems, resulting in N saturation in some regions of the world. The contribution of N saturation to the global carbon budget remains uncertain due to the complicated nature of C-N (carbon-nitrogen)...
Quantifying the effects of research band resighting activities on staging terns in comparison to other disturbances
Melissa Althouse, Jonathan B. Cohen, Jeffrey A. Spendelow, Sarah M. Karpanty, Kayla L. Davis, Katharine C. Parsons, Cristin F. Luttazi
2016, Waterbirds (39) 417-421
Avian research that involves potential disturbance to the study species may have unintended fitness consequences and could lead to biases in measurements of interest. The effects of band resighting on the behavior of mixed-species flocks of staging waterbirds were evaluated against recreational pedestrian activity that was expected to cause flushing....
Concentration, flux, and trend estimates with uncertainty for nutrients, chloride, and total suspended solids in tributaries of Lake Champlain, 1990–2014
Laura Medalie
2016, Open-File Report 2016-1200
The U.S. Geological Survey, in cooperation with the New England Interstate Water Pollution Control Commission and the Vermont Department of Environmental Conservation, estimated daily and 9-month concentrations and fluxes of total and dissolved phosphorus, total nitrogen, chloride, and total suspended solids from 1990 (or first available date) through 2014...
Twitter predicts citation rates of ecological research
Brandon K. Peoples, Stephen R. Midway, Dana K. Sackett, Abigail Lynch, Patrick B. Cooney
2016, PLoS ONE (11)
The relationship between traditional metrics of research impact (e.g., number of citations) and alternative metrics (altmetrics) such as Twitter activity are of great interest, but remain imprecisely quantified. We used generalized linear mixed modeling to estimate the relative effects of Twitter activity, journal impact factor, and time since publication on...
Temporal segmentation of animal trajectories informed by habitat use
Marielle L. van Toor, Scott H. Newman, John Y. Takekawa, Martin Wegmann, Kamran Safi
2016, Ecosphere (7)
Most animals live in seasonal environments and experience very different conditions throughout the year. Behavioral strategies like migration, hibernation, and a life cycle adapted to the local seasonality help to cope with fluctuations in environmental conditions. Thus, how an individual utilizes the environment depends both on the current availability of...
Landscape genetic approaches to guide native plant restoration in the Mojave Desert
Daniel F. Shryock, Caroline A. Havrilla, Lesley A. DeFalco, Todd C. Esque, Nathan Custer, Troy E. Wood
2016, Ecological Applications (27) 429-445
Restoring dryland ecosystems is a global challenge due to synergistic drivers of disturbance coupled with unpredictable environmental conditions. Dryland plant species have evolved complex life-history strategies to cope with fluctuating resources and climatic extremes. Although rarely quantified, local adaptation is likely widespread among these species and potentially influences restoration outcomes....
Statistical tests of simple earthquake cycle models
Phoebe M. R. Devries, Eileen Evans
2016, Geophysical Research Letters (43) 12,036-12,045
A central goal of observing and modeling the earthquake cycle is to forecast when a particular fault may generate an earthquake: a fault late in its earthquake cycle may be more likely to generate an earthquake than a fault early in its earthquake cycle. Models that can explain geodetic observations...
Mechanisms of aquatic species invasions across the South Atlantic Landscape Conservation Cooperative region
Amy J. Benson, Bradley Stith, Victor C. Engel
2016, Scientific Investigations Report 2016-5148
Invasive species are a global issue, and the southeastern United States is not immune to the problems they present. Therefore, various analyses using modeling and exploratory statistics were performed on the U.S. Geological Survey Nonindigenous Aquatic Species (NAS) Database with the primary objective of determining the most appropriate use of...
Multireaction equilibrium geothermometry: A sensitivity analysis using data from the Lower Geyser Basin, Yellowstone National Park, USA
Jonathan M. King, Shaul Hurwitz, Jacob B. Lowenstern, D. Kirk Nordstrom, R. Blaine McCleskey
2016, Journal of Volcanology and Geothermal Research (328) 105-114
A multireaction chemical equilibria geothermometry (MEG) model applicable to high-temperature geothermal systems has been developed over the past three decades. Given sufficient data, this model provides more constraint on calculated reservoir temperatures than classical chemical geothermometers that are based on either the concentration of silica (SiO2), or the ratios of...
Combined exposure of diesel exhaust particles and respirable Soufrière Hills volcanic ash causes a (pro-)inflammatory response in an in vitro multicellular epithelial tissue barrier model
Ines Tomašek, Claire J. Horwell, David Damby, Hana Barosova, Christoph Geers, Alke Petri-Fink, Barbara Rothen-Rutishauser, Martin J. D. Clift
2016, Particle and Fibre Toxicology (13) 1-14
BackgroundThere are justifiable health concerns regarding the potential adverse effects associated with human exposure to volcanic ash (VA) particles, especially when considering communities living in urban areas already exposed to heightened air pollution. The aim of this study was, therefore, to gain an imperative, first...
Isotopic constraints on the genesis and evolution of basanitic lavas at Haleakala, Island of Maui, Hawaii
Erin H. Phillips, K.W.W. Sims, David R. Sherrod, Vincent Salters, Jurek Blusztajn, Henrieta Dulaiova
2016, Geochimica et Cosmochimica Acta (195) 201-225
To understand the dynamics of solid mantle upwelling and melting in the Hawaiian plume, we present new major and trace element data, Nd, Sr, Hf, and Pb isotopic compositions, and 238U–230Th–226Ra and 235U–231Pa–227Ac activities for 13 Haleakala Crater nepheline normative basanites with ages ranging from ∼900 to 4100 yr B.P. These...
Quantifying chemical weathering rates along a precipitation gradient on Basse-Terre Island, French Guadeloupe: new insight from U-series isotopes in weathering rinds
Jacqueline M. Engel, Linda May, Peter B. Sak, Jerome Gaillardet, Minghua Ren, Mark A. Engle, Susan L. Brantley
2016, Geochimica et Cosmochimica Acta (195) 29-67
Inside soil and saprolite, rock fragments can form weathering clasts (alteration rinds surrounding an unweathered core) and these weathering rinds provide an excellent field system for investigating the initiation of weathering and long term weathering rates. Recently, uranium-series (U-series) disequilibria have shown great potential for determining rind formation rates...
Introduction to “Global tsunami science: Past and future, Volume I”
Eric L. Geist, Hermann Fritz, Alexander B. Rabinovich, Yuichiro Tanioka
2016, Pure and Applied Geophysics PAGEOPH (173) 3663-3669
Twenty-five papers on the study of tsunamis are included in Volume I of the PAGEOPH topical issue “Global Tsunami Science: Past and Future”. Six papers examine various aspects of tsunami probability and uncertainty analysis related to hazard assessment. Three papers relate to deterministic hazard and risk assessment. Five more papers...
Building unified geospatial data for land-change modeling—A case study in the area of Richmond, Virginia
David I. Donato, Jason L. Shapiro
2016, Open-File Report 2016-1176
An effort to build a unified collection of geospatial data for use in land-change modeling (LCM) led to new insights into the requirements and challenges of building an LCM data infrastructure. A case study of data compilation and unification for the Richmond, Va., Metropolitan Statistical Area (MSA) delineated the problems...
Efficacy of environmental DNA to detect and quantify Brook Trout populations in headwater streams of the Adirondack Mountains, New York
Barry P. Baldigo, Lee Ann Sporn, Scott D. George, Jacob Ball
2016, Transactions of the American Fisheries Society (146) 99-111
Environmental DNA (eDNA) analysis is rapidly evolving as a tool for monitoring the distributions of aquatic species. Detection of species’ populations in streams may be challenging because the persistence time for intact DNA fragments is unknown and because eDNA is diluted and dispersed by dynamic hydrological processes. During 2015, the...
Groundwater-flow model of the northern High Plains aquifer in Colorado, Kansas, Nebraska, South Dakota, and Wyoming
Steven M. Peterson, Amanda T. Flynn, Jonathan P. Traylor
2016, Scientific Investigations Report 2016-5153
The High Plains aquifer is a nationally important water resource underlying about 175,000 square miles in parts of eight states: Colorado, Kansas, Oklahoma, Nebraska, New Mexico, South Dakota, Texas, and Wyoming. Droughts across much of the Northern High Plains from 2001 to 2007 have combined with recent (2004) legislative mandates...
Quantification of the intrusion process at Kīlauea volcano, Hawai'i
Thomas L. Wright, Bruce Marsh
2016, Journal of Volcanology and Geothermal Research (328) 34-44
The characteristic size of two types of intrusions identified beneath Kīlauea's East Rift zone are uniquely estimated by combining time constraints from fractional crystallization and the rates of magma solidification during cooling. Some intrusions were rapidly emplaced as dikes, but stalled before reaching the surface, and cooled and crystallized to feed later fractionated eruptions. More...
Estimating natural monthly streamflows in California and the likelihood of anthropogenic modification
Daren M. Carlisle, David M. Wolock, Jeanette K. Howard, Theodore E. Grantham, Kurt Fesenmyer, Michael Wieczorek
2016, Open-File Report 2016-1189
Because natural patterns of streamflow are a fundamental property of the health of streams, there is a critical need to quantify the degree to which human activities have modified natural streamflows. A requirement for assessing streamflow modification in a given stream is a reliable estimate of flows expected in the...
Ground squirrel shooting and potential lead exposure in breeding avian scavengers
Garth Herring, Collin A. Eagles-Smith, Mason T. Wagner
2016, PLoS ONE (11)
Recreational ground squirrel shooting is a popular activity throughout the western United States and serves as a tool for managing ground squirrel populations in agricultural regions. Belding’s ground squirrels (Spermophilus beldingi) are routinely shot in California, Nevada, and Oregon across habitats that overlap with breeding avian scavengers. Ground squirrels shot...
Cratering on Ceres: Implications for its crust and evolution
H. Hiesinger, S. Marchi, N. Schmedemann, P. Schenk, J. H. Pasckert, A. Neesemann, D.P. O'Brien, T. Kneissl, A. Ermakov, R.R. Fu, M. T. Bland, A. Nathues, T. Platz, D.A. Williams, R. Jaumann, J. C. Castillo-Rogez, O. Ruesch, B. Schmidt, R.S. Park, F. Preusker, D.L. Buczkowski, C.T. Russell, C.A. Raymond
2016, Science (353)
Thermochemical models have predicted that Ceres, is to some extent, differentiated and should have an icy crust with few or no impact craters. We present observations by the Dawn spacecraft that reveal a heavily cratered surface, a heterogeneous crater distribution, and an apparent absence of large craters. The...
Characteristics of lesser prairie-chicken (Tympanuchus pallidicinctus) long-distance movements across their distribution
Julia E. Earl, Samuel D. Fuhlendorf, David A. Haukos, Ashley M. Tanner, Dwayne Elmore, Scott A. Carleton
2016, Ecosphere (7)
Long-distance movements are important adaptive behaviors that contribute to population, community, and ecosystem connectivity. However, researchers have a poor understanding of the characteristics of long-distance movements for most species. Here, we examined long-distance movements for the lesser prairie-chicken (Tympanuchus pallidicinctus), a species of conservation concern. We addressed the following questions:...
Predictors of current and longer-term patterns of abundance of American pikas (Ochotona princeps) across a leading-edge protected area
Lucas Moyer-Horner, Erik A. Beever, Douglas H. Johnson, Mark Beil, Jami Belt
2016, PLoS ONE (11)
American pikas (Ochotona princeps) have been heralded as indicators of montane-mammal response to contemporary climate change. Pikas no longer occupy the driest and lowest-elevation sites in numerous parts of their geographic range. Conversely, pikas have exhibited higher rates of occupancy and persistence in Rocky Mountain and Sierra Nevada montane ‘mainlands’....
Climate-driven increase of natural wetland methane emissions offset by human-induced wetland reduction in China over the past three decades
Qiuan Zhu, Changhui Peng, Jinxun Liu, Hong Jiang, Xiuqin Fang, Huai Chen, Zhichun Niu, Peng Gong, Guanghui Lin, Meng Wang, Yanzheng Yang, Jie Chang, Ying Ge, Wenhua Xiang, Xiangwen Deng, Jin-Sheng He
2016, Scientific Reports (6)
Both anthropogenic activities and climate change can affect the biogeochemical processes of natural wetland methanogenesis. Quantifying possible impacts of changing climate and wetland area on wetland methane (CH4) emissions in China is important for improving our knowledge on CH4 budgets locally and globally. However, their respective and combined effects are...