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Page 518, results 12926 - 12950

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Publication Extents

Not all publications have extents, not all extents are completely accurate
Evaluation of airborne lidar elevation surfaces for propagation of coastal inundation: the importance of hydrologic connectivity
Sandra K. Poppenga, Bruce B. Worstell
2015, Remote Sensing (7) 11695-11711
Detailed information about coastal inundation is vital to understanding dynamic and populated areas that are impacted by storm surge and flooding. To understand these natural hazard risks, lidar elevation surfaces are frequently used to model inundation in coastal areas. A single-value surface method is sometimes used to inundate areas in...
Sensitivity of shovelnose sturgeon (Scaphirhynchus platorynchus) and pallid sturgeon (S. albus) early life stages to 3,30,4,40,5-pentachlorobiphenyl and 2,3,7,8-tetrachlorodibenzo-p-dioxin exposure
Justin Buckler, James S. Candrl, Michael J. McKee, Diana M. Papoulias, Donald E. Tillitt, David L. Galat
2015, Environmental Toxicology and Chemistry (34) 1417-1424
Concern exists that polychlorinated biphenyls (PCBs) may be contributing to the current decline of shovelnose sturgeon (Scaphirhynchus platorynchus) and the US federally endangered pallid sturgeon (Scaphirhynchus albus). Waterborne exposures with newly fertilized eggs were used to assess developmental and morphological effects of 2 of the most potent aryl hydrocarbon receptor...
Experimental enhancement of pickleweed, Suisun Bay, California
A. Keith Miles, Dirk H. Van Vuren, Danika C. Tsao, Julie L. Yee
2015, California Fish and Game (101) 87-100
As mitigation for habitat impacted by the expansion of a pier on Suisun Bay, California, two vehicle parking lots (0.36 ha and 0.13 ha) were restored by being excavated, graded, and contoured using dredged sediments to the topography or elevation of nearby wetlands. We asked if pickleweed (Sarcocornia pacifica L,...
Effects of regulated river flows on habitat suitability for the robust redhorse
J. M. Fisk III, Thomas J. Kwak, R. J. Heise
2015, Transactions of the American Fisheries Society (144) 792-806
The Robust Redhorse Moxostoma robustum is a rare and imperiled fish, with wild populations occurring in three drainages from North Carolina to Georgia. Hydroelectric dams have altered the species’ habitat and restricted its range. An augmented minimum-flow regime that will affect Robust Redhorse habitat was recently prescribed for Blewett Falls...
Energy flow and the “grassification” of desert shrublands
Julio L. Betancourt
2015, Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences (112) 9504-9505
In our directionally and continuously changing world, history still matters, and it does so in increasingly novel and important ways. Human adaptation to global change will rely heavily on robust baselines of historic environmental variability and detailed understanding of how both past and modern ecosystems have responded to both individual...
Closing the loop of the soil water retention curve
Ning Lu, N Alsherif, Alexandra Wayllace, Jonathan W. Godt
2015, Journal of Geotechnical and Geoenvironmental Engineering (141)
The authors, to their knowledge for the first time, produced two complete principal soil water retention curves (SWRCs) under both positive and negative matric suction regimes. An innovative testing technique combining the transient water release and imbibition method (TRIM) and constant flow method (CFM) was used to identify the principal...
A case study of assigning conservation value to dispersed habitat units for conservation planning
Jason J. Rohweder, Sara C. Vacek, Shawn M. Crimmins, Wayne E. Thogmartin
2015, Journal of Conservation Planning (11) 13-27
Resource managers are increasingly tasked with developing habitat conservation plans in the face of numerous, sometimes competing, objectives. These plans must often be implemented across dispersed habitat conservation units that may contribute unequally to overall conservation objectives. Using U.S. Fish and Wildlife Service waterfowl production areas (WPA) in western Minnesota...
Setting the stage for a global science of atmospheric rivers
Michael D. Dettinger, F. Martin Ralph, David A. Lavers
2015, Eos, Earth and Space Science News (96)
Atmospheric rivers are important mechanisms for transporting water vapor through the atmosphere outside the tropics. These long, narrow, transient corridors occur at low altitudes just ahead of the cold front in midlatitude cyclone systems. These rivers in the sky stitch together the components of the extratropical water cycle by providing...
A global satellite assisted precipitation climatology
Christopher C. Funk, Andrew P. Verdin, Joel C. Michaelsen, Diego Pedreros, Gregory J. Husak, P. Peterson
2015, Earth System Science Data (8) 401-425
Accurate representations of mean climate conditions, especially in areas of complex terrain, are an important part of environmental monitoring systems. As high-resolution satellite monitoring information accumulates with the passage of time, it can be increasingly useful in efforts to better characterize the earth's mean climatology. Current state-of-the-science products rely on...
Simulations of potential future conditions in the cache critical groundwater area, Arkansas
Haveen M. Rashid, Brian R. Clark, Hanan H. Mahdi, Hanadi S. Rifai, Haydar J. Al-Shukri
2015, Environmental & Engineering Geoscience (21) 1-19
A three-dimensional finite-difference model for part of the Mississippi River Valley alluvial aquifer in the Cache Critical Groundwater Area of eastern Arkansas was constructed to simulate potential future conditions of groundwater flow. The objectives of this study were to test different pilot point distributions to find reasonable estimates of aquifer...
Projected carbon stocks in the conterminous USA with land use and variable fire regimes
Dominique Bachelet, Ken Ferschweiler, Timothy J. Sheehan, Benjamin M. Sleeter, Zhiliang Zhu
2015, Global Change Biology (21) 4548-4560
The dynamic global vegetation model (DGVM) MC2 was run over the conterminous USA at 30 arc sec (~800 m) to simulate the impacts of nine climate futures generated by 3GCMs (CSIRO, MIROC and CGCM3) using 3 emission scenarios (A2, A1B and B1) in the context of the LandCarbon national carbon sequestration...
Multiscale hydrogeomorphic influences on bull trout (Salvelinus confluentus) spawning habitat
Jared R Bean, Andrew C. Wilcox, William W. Woessner, Clint C. Muhlfeld
2015, Canadian Journal of Fisheries and Aquatic Sciences (72) 514-526
We investigated multiscale hydrogeomorphic influences on the distribution and abundance of bull trout (Salvelinus confluentus) spawning in snowmelt-dominated streams of the upper Flathead River basin, northwestern Montana. Within our study reaches, bull trout tended to spawn in the finest available gravel substrates. Analysis of the mobility of these substrates, based...
Thermal onset of cellular and endocrine stress responses correspond to ecological limits in brook trout, an iconic cold-water fish
Joseph G Chadwick, Kieth H Nislow, Stephen D. McCormick
2015, Conservation Physiology (3) 1-12
Climate change is predicted to change the distribution and abundance of species, yet underlying physiological mechanisms are complex and methods for detecting populations at risk from rising temperature are poorly developed. There is increasing interest in using physiological mediators of the stress response as indicators of individual and population-level response...
Fluid inclusion chemistry of adularia-sericite epithermal Au-Ag deposits of the southern Hauraki Goldfield, New Zealand
Mark P. Simpson, Sabina Strmic Palinkas, Jeffrey L. Mauk, Robert J. Bodnar
2015, Economic Geology (110) 763-786
Microthermometry, laser ablation-inductively coupled plasma-mass spectrometry (LA-ICP-MS), and Raman spectroscopy have been used to determine the temperature, apparent salinity, and composition of individual fluid inclusions in adularia-sericite Au-Ag epithermal veins from the Karangahake, Martha, Favona, and Waitekauri deposits, southern Hauraki goldfield, New Zealand. Quartz veins contain colloform to crustiform bands...
Fast and efficient: postnatal growth and energy expenditure in an Arctic-breeding waterbird, the Red-throated Loon (Gavia stellata)
Daniel Rizzolo, Joel A. Schmutz, John R. Speakman
2015, The Auk (132) 657-670
Environmental conditions can exert a strong influence on the growth and energy demands of chicks. We hypothesized that postnatal growth in a cold, aquatic environment would require a high level of energy metabolism in semiprecocial Red-throated Loon (Gavia stellata) chicks. We measured body-mass growth and daily energy expenditure (DEE) of...
Changes in the Lake Michigan food web following dreissenid mussel invasions: A synthesis
Charles P. Madenjian, David B. Bunnell, David M. Warner, Steven A. Pothoven, Gary L. Fahnenstiel, Thomas F. Nalepa, Henry A. Vanderploeg, Iyob Tsehaye, Randall M. Claramunt, Richard D Clark
2015, Journal of Great Lakes Research (41) 217-231
Using various available time series for Lake Michigan, we examined changes in the Lake Michigan food web following the dreissenid mussel invasions and identified those changes most likely attributable to these invasions, thereby providing a synthesis. Expansion of the quagga mussel (Dreissena rostriformis bugensis) population into deeper waters, which began...
Substantial nitrous oxide emissions from intertidal sediments and groundwater in anthropogenically-impacted West Falmouth Harbor, Massachusetts
Serena Moseman-Valtierra, Kevin D. Kroeger, John Crusius, Sandy Baldwin, Adrian G. Mann, Thomas W. Brooks, E. Pugh
2015, Chemosphere (119) 1281-1288
Large N2O emissions were observed from intertidal sediments in a coastal estuary, West Falmouth Harbor, MA, USA. Average N2O emission rates from 41 chambers during summer 2008 were 10.7 mol N2O m(-2) h(-1)±4.43 μmol N2O m(-2) h(-1) (standard error). Emissions were highest from sediments within a known wastewater plume, where...
Using ground and intact coal Samples to evaluate hydrocarbon fate during supercritical CO2 injection into coal beds: effects of particle size and coal moisture
Jon Kolak, Paul C. Hackley, Leslie F. Ruppert, Peter D. Warwick, Robert Burruss
2015, Energy & Fuels (29) 5187-5203
To investigate the potential for mobilizing organic compounds from coal beds during geologic carbon dioxide (CO2) storage (sequestration), a series of solvent extractions using dichloromethane (DCM) and using supercritical CO2 (40 °C and 10 MPa) were conducted on a set of coal samples collected from Louisiana and Ohio. The coal samples...
Limnogeology, news in brief
Michael R. Rosen, Elizabeth Gierlowski-Kordesch
2015, Environmental Earth Sciences (73) 913-917
We've invited Michael R. Rosen, water quality specialist within the USGS Water Science Field Team in Carson City and Elizabeth Gierlowski-Kordesch, professor of geology at Ohio University, to take a look at the intriguing new developments that are emerging in limnogeologic studies. These studies are increasing our understanding of how...
Coles Hill Uranium Deposit, Virginia, United States, and the Application of UNFC-2009
Susan M. Hall
2015, Book chapter, Application of UNFC to Nuclear Fuel Resources - Selected Case Studies
The case study presented here reviews the uranium resource estimates and summarizes the property situation of the Coles Hill uranium Deposit. Uranium resources at Coles Hill are then classified according to UNFC-2009. The Coles Hill Deposit is located in Pittsylvania County, southern Virginia, United States (Figure 14). Coles Hill was...
A summary of the late Cenozoic stratigraphic and tectonic history of the Santa Clara Valley, California
Victoria E. Langenheim, Robert C. Jachens, Carl M. Wentworth, Russell W. Graymer, Richard G. Stanley, Robert J. McLaughlin, Robert W. Simpson, Robert A. Williams, D. W. Andersen, David A. Ponce
2015, Geosphere (11) 50-62
The late Cenozoic stratigraphic and tectonic history of the Santa Clara Valley illustrates the dynamic nature of the North American–Pacific plate boundary and its effect on basin and landscape development. Prior to early Miocene time, the area that became Santa Clara Valley consisted of eroding Franciscan complex basement structurally interleaved...
Chronology and ecology of late Pleistocene megafauna in the northern Willamette Valley, Oregon
Daniel M. Gilmour, Virginia L. Butler, James E. O'Connor, Edward Byrd Davis, Brendan J. Culleton, Douglas J. Kennett, Gregory W. L. Hodgins
2015, Quaternary Research (83) 127-136
Since the mid-19th century, western Oregon's Willamette Valley has been a source of remains from a wide variety of extinct megafauna. Few of these have been previously described or dated, but new chronologic and isotopic analyses in conjunction with updated evaluations of stratigraphic context provide substantial new information on the...
An integrated approach to conjunctive-use analysis with the one-water hydrologic flow model, MODFLOW-OWHM
Scott E. Boyce, Randall T. Hanson
2015, Conference Paper, Proceedings: MODFLOW and more 2015: Modeling a complex world
The MODFLOW-2005 (MF) family of hydrologic simulators has diverged into multiple versions designed for specific needs, thus limiting their use to their respective designs. The One-Water Hydrologic Flow Model (MF-OWHM v1.0) is an integrated hydrologic flow model that is an enhanced fusion of multiple MF versions. While maintaining compatibility with...