Exposure to runoff from coal-tar-sealed pavement induces genotoxicity and impairment of DNA repair capacity in the RTL-W1 fish liver cell line
Aude Kienzler, Barbara Mahler, Peter C. Van Metre, Nathalie Schweigert, Alain Devaux, Sylvie Bony
2015, Science of the Total Environment (520) 73-80
Coal-tar-based (CTB) sealcoat, frequently applied to parking lots and driveways in North America, contains elevated concentrations of polycyclic aromatic hydrocarbons (PAHs) and related compounds. The RTL-W1 fish liver cell line was used to investigate two endpoints (genotoxicity and DNA-repair-capacity impairment) associated with exposure to runoff from asphalt pavement with CTB...
Acute toxicity of runoff from sealcoated pavement to Ceriodaphnia dubia and Pimephales promelas
Barbara Mahler, Christopher G. Ingersoll, Peter C. Van Metre, James L. Kunz, Edward E. Little
2015, Environmental Science & Technology (49) 5060-5069
Runoff from coal-tar-based (CT) sealcoated pavement is a source of polycyclic aromatic hydrocarbons (PAHs) and N-heterocycles to surface waters. We investigated acute toxicity of simulated runoff collected from 5 h to 111 days after application of CT sealcoat and from 4 h to 36 days after application of asphalt-based sealcoat containing...
Effects of extreme floods on trout populations and fish communities in a Catskill Mountain river
Scott D. George, Barry P. Baldigo, Alexander J. Smith, George Robinson
2015, Freshwater Biology (60) 2511-2522
Summary 1. Extreme hydrologic events are becoming more common with changing climate. Although the impacts of winter and spring floods on lotic ecosystems have been well studied, the effects of summer floods are less well known. 2. The Upper Esopus Creek Basin in the Catskill Mountains, NY, experienced severe flooding from Tropical...
Remigial molt of sea ducks
Margaret R. Petersen, Jean-Pierre L. Savard
2015, Book chapter, Ecology and conservation of North American sea ducks; Studies in Avian Biology v. 46
Molt is a dynamic process occurring throughout much of the year in waterfowl. The molt of flight feathers by waterfowl, especially sea ducks, however, occurs over a compressed period of time and in spcific areas used each year. We provide an overview of the flight feather molt of sea ducks....
Habitats of North American sea ducks.
Dirk V. Derksen, Margaret R. Petersen, Jean-Pierre L. Savard
2015, Book chapter, Ecology and conservation of North American sea ducks; Studies in Avian Biology v. 46
Breeding, molting, fall and spring staging, and wintering habitats of the sea duck tribe Mergini are described based on geographic locations and distribution in North America, geomorphology, vegetation and soil types, and fresh water and marine characteristics. The dynamics of habitats are discussed in light of natural and anthropogenic events...
Delineation of fractures, foliation, and groundwater of the bedrock at a geothermal feasibility site on Roosevelt Island, New York County, New York
Frederick Stumm, Anthony Chu, Michael D. Como, Michael L. Noll, Peter K. Joesten
2015, Conference Paper
Advanced borehole-geophysical methods were used to investigate the hydrogeology of the crystalline bedrock in three boreholes on Roosevelt Island, New York County, New York. Cornell University was evaluating the feasibility of using geothermal energy for a future campus at the site. The borehole-logging techniques were used to delineate bedrock fractures,...
Scoops3D: software to analyze 3D slope stability throughout a digital landscape
Mark E. Reid, Sarah B. Christian, Dianne L. Brien, Scott T. Henderson
2015, Techniques and Methods 14-A1
The computer program, Scoops3D, evaluates slope stability throughout a digital landscape represented by a digital elevation model (DEM). The program uses a three-dimensional (3D) method of columns approach to assess the stability of many (typically millions) potential landslides within a user-defined size range. For each potential landslide (or failure), Scoops3D...
Response to "Comment on and Reinterpretation of Gabriel et al. (2014) "Fish Mercury and Surface Water Sulfate Relationships in the Everglades Protection Area""
Mark C. Gabriel, Don Axelrad, William H. Orem, Todd Z. Osborne
2015, Environmental Management (55) 1227-1231
The purpose of this forum is to respond to a rebuttal submitted by Julian et al., Environ Manag 55:1–5, 2015 where they outlined their overall disagreement with the data preparation, methods, and interpretation of results presented in Gabriel et al. (Environ Manag 53:583–593, 2014). Here, we provide background information on the...
The water-energy nexus: An earth science perspective
Richard W. Healy, William M. Alley, Mark A. Engle, Peter B. McMahon, Jerad D. Bales
2015, Circular 1407
Water availability and use are closely connected with energy development and use. Water cannot be delivered to homes, businesses, and industries without energy, and most forms of energy development require large amounts of water. The United States faces two significant and sometimes competing challenges: to provide sustainable supplies of freshwater...
Effects of microhabitat and land use on stream salamander abundance in the southwest Virginia coalfields
Sara E. Sweeten, W. Mark Ford
2015, Conference Paper
Large-scale land uses such as residential wastewater discharge and coal mining practices, particularly surface coal extraction and associated valley fills, are of particular ecological concern in central Appalachia. Identification and quantification of both alterations across scales are a necessary first-step to mitigate negative consequences to biota. In central Appalachian headwater...
Revision and proposed modification for a total maximum daily load model for Upper Klamath Lake, Oregon
Susan A. Wherry, Tamara M. Wood, Chauncey W. Anderson
2015, Scientific Investigations Report 2015-5041
This report presents Phase 2 of the review and development of the mass balance water-quality model, originally developed in 2001, that guided establishment of the phosphorus (P) total maximum daily load (TMDL) for Upper Klamath and Agency Lakes, Oregon. The purpose of Phase 2 was to incorporate a longer (19-year)...
Evaluation of mean-monthly streamflow-regression equations for Colorado, 2014
Michael S. Kohn, Michael R. Stevens, Andrew R. Bock, Stephen J. Char
2015, Scientific Investigations Report 2015-5016
The U.S. Geological Survey, in cooperation with the Colorado Water Conservation Board, evaluated the predictive uncertainty of mean-monthly streamflow-regression equations representative of natural streamflow conditions in Colorado. This study evaluates the predictive uncertainty of mean-monthly streamflow-regression equations developed in a 2009 U.S. Geological Survey study using streamflow data collected over...
New argon-argon (40Ar/39Ar) radiometric age dates from selected subsurface basalt flows at the Idaho National Laboratory, Idaho
Mary K. V. Hodges, Brent D. Turrin, Duane E. Champion, Carl C. Swisher III
2015, Scientific Investigations Report 2015-5028
In 2011, the U.S. Geological Survey, in cooperation with the U.S. Department of Energy, collected samples for 12 new argon-argon radiometric ages from eastern Snake River Plain olivine tholeiite basalt flows in the subsurface at the Idaho National Laboratory. The core samples were collected from flows that had previously published...
Digital surfaces and thicknesses of selected hydrogeologic units of the Floridan aquifer system in Florida and parts of Georgia, Alabama, and South Carolina
Lester J. Williams, Joann F. Dixon
2015, Data Series 926
Digital surfaces and thicknesses of selected hydrogeologic units of the Floridan aquifer system were developed to define an updated hydrogeologic framework as part of the U.S. Geological Survey Groundwater Resources Program. The dataset contains structural surfaces depicting the top and base of the aquifer system, its major and minor hydrogeologic...
Revised hydrogeologic framework of the Floridan aquifer system in Florida and parts of Georgia, Alabama, and South Carolina
Lester J. Williams, Eve L. Kuniansky
2015, Professional Paper 1807
The hydrogeologic framework for the Floridan aquifer system has been revised throughout its extent in Florida and parts of Georgia, Alabama, and South Carolina. The updated framework generally conforms to the original framework established by the U.S. Geological Survey in the 1980s, except for adjustments made to the internal boundaries...
Effect of tides, river flow, and gate operations on entrainment of juvenile salmon into the interior Sacramento–San Joaquin River Delta
Russell W. Perry, Patricia L. Brandes, Jon R. Burau, Philip T. Sandstrom, John R. Skalski
2015, Transactions of the American Fisheries Society (144) 445-455
Juvenile Chinook Salmon Oncorhynchus tshawytscha emigrating from natal tributaries of the Sacramento River, California, must negotiate the Sacramento-San Joaquin River Delta (hereafter, the Delta), a complex network of natural and man-made channels linking the Sacramento River with San Francisco Bay. Fish that enter the interior and southern Delta—the region to...
The dynamics of avian influenza in western Arctic snow geese: implications for annual and migratory infection patterns
Michael D. Samuel, Jeffrey S. Hall, Justin D. Brown, Diana R. Goldberg, S. Ip, Vasily V. Baranyuk
2015, Ecological Applications (25) 1851-1859
Wild water birds are the natural reservoir for low-pathogenic avian influenza viruses (AIV). However, our ability to investigate the epizootiology of AIV in these migratory populations is challenging, and despite intensive worldwide surveillance, remains poorly understood. We conducted a cross-sectional, retrospective analysis in Pacific Flyway lesser snow geese Chen caerulescens...
Intercontinental spread of asian-origin H5N8 to North America through Beringia by migratory birds
Dong-Hun Lee, Mia Kim Torchetti, Kevin Winker, S. Ip, David E. Swayne, Chang-Seon Song
2015, Journal of Virology (89) 6521-6524
Phylogenetic network analysis and understanding of waterfowl migration patterns suggest the Eurasian H5N8 clade 2.3.4.4 avian influenza virus emerged in late 2013 in China, spread in early 2014 to South Korea and Japan, and reached Siberia and Beringia by summer 2014 via migratory birds. Three genetically distinct subgroups emerged and...
A chronicle of a killer alga in the west: Ecology, assessment, and management of Prymnesium parvum blooms
D. L. Roelke, Aaron Barkoh, Bryan W. Brooks, J. P. Grover, K. D. Hambright, John W. LaClaire II, Peter D. R. Moeller, Reynaldo Patino
2015, Hydrobiologia (764) 29-50
Since the mid-1980s, fish-killing blooms of Prymnesium parvum spread throughout the USA. In the south central USA, P. parvum blooms have commonly spanned hundreds of kilometers. There is much evidence that physiological stress brought on by inorganic nutrient limitation enhances toxicity. Other factors influence toxin production as well, such as...
Hydrogeologic framework, hydrology, and refined conceptual model of groundwater flow for Coastal Plain aquifers at the Standard Chlorine of Delaware, Inc. Superfund Site, New Castle County, Delaware, 2005-12
Michael J. Brayton, Roberto M. Cruz, Luke Myers, James R. Degnan, Jeff P. Raffensperger
2015, Scientific Investigations Report 2014-5224
From 1966 to 2002, activities at the Standard Chlorine of Delaware chemical facility in New Castle County, Delaware resulted in the contamination of groundwater, soils, and wetland sediment. In 2005, the U.S. Geological Survey (USGS), in partnership with the U.S. Environmental Protection Agency, Region 3, and the Delaware Department of...
Hydrologic effects of potential changes in climate, water use, and land cover in the Upper Scioto River Basin, Ohio
Andrew D. Ebner, G. F. Koltun, Chad J. Ostheimer
2015, Scientific Investigations Report 2015-5024
This report presents the results of a study to provide information on the hydrologic effects of potential 21st-century changes in climate, water use, and land cover in the Upper Scioto River Basin, Ohio (from Circleville, Ohio, to the headwaters). A precipitation-runoff model, calibrated on the basis of historical climate and...
Landscape prediction and mapping of game fish biomass, an ecosystem service of Michigan rivers
Peter C. Esselman, R. Jan Stevenson, Frank Lupi, Catherine M. Riseng, Michael J. Wiley
2015, North American Journal of Fisheries Management (35) 302-320
The increased integration of ecosystem service concepts into natural resource management places renewed emphasis on prediction and mapping of fish biomass as a major provisioning service of rivers. The goals of this study were to predict and map patterns of fish biomass as a proxy for the availability of catchable...
Water quality in the Cambridge, Massachusetts, drinking-water source area, 2005-8
Kirk P. Smith, Marcus C. Waldron
2015, Fact Sheet 2015-3030
During 2005-8, the U.S. Geological Survey, in cooperation with the Cambridge, Massachusetts, Water Department, measured concentrations of sodium and chloride, plant nutrients, commonly used pesticides, and caffeine in base-flow and stormwater samples collected from 11 tributaries in the Cambridge drinking-water source area. These data were used to characterize current water-quality...
RRAWFLOW: Rainfall-Response Aquifer and Watershed Flow Model (v1.15)
Andrew J. Long
2015, Geoscientific Model Development (8) 865-880
The Rainfall-Response Aquifer and Watershed Flow Model (RRAWFLOW) is a lumped-parameter model that simulates streamflow, spring flow, groundwater level, or solute transport for a measurement point in response to a system input of precipitation, recharge, or solute injection. I introduce the first version of RRAWFLOW available for download and public...
Physical subdivision and description of the water-bearing sediments of the Santa Clara Valley, California
Carl M. Wentworth, Robert C. Jachens, Robert A. Williams, John C. Tinsley III, Randall T. Hanson
2015, Scientific Investigations Report 2015-5017
A thick Quaternary alluvial section fills a sedimentary basin beneath the Santa Clara Valley, California, located within the San Andreas Fault system at the south end of San Francisco Bay. This section consists of an upper sequence about 1,000 feet thick containing eight sedimentary cycles and a lower fine-grained unit...