Hydrologic properties of a highly permeable firn aquifer in the Wilkins Ice Shelf, Antarctica
Lynn Montgomery, C. Miege, Julie MIller, Bruce Wallin, Ted A. Scambos, Olivia L. Miller, D Kip Solomon, Richard Forster, Lora Koenig
2020, Geophysical Research Letters (47)
We present measurements of the density, hydraulic conductivity, and specific discharge of a widespread firn aquifer in Antarctica, within the Wilkins Ice Shelf. At the field site, the aquifer is 16.2 m thick, starting at 13.4 m from the snow surface and transitioning from water‐saturated firn to ice at 29.6 m. Hydraulic conductivity...
Fish assemblages in eelgrass beds of Bellingham Bay, Washington, Northern Puget Sound, 2019
Morgan I. Andrews, Theresa L. Liedtke
2020, Data Series 1131
Puget Sound is a critical part of the Pacific Northwest, both culturally and economically. Eelgrass beds are an important feature of Puget Sound and are known to influence fish assemblages. As part of a larger site-characterization effort, and to gain a better understanding of the fish assemblages in Bellingham Bay,...
Differences in neonicotinoid and metabolite sorption to activated carbon are driven by alterations to the insecticidal pharmacophore
Danielle T. Webb, Matthew R. Nagorzanski, Megan M Powers, David M. Cwiertny, Michelle L. Hladik, Gregory H. LeFevre
2020, Environmental Science and Technology (54) 14694-14705
Widespread application of neonicotinoids has led to their proliferation in waters. Despite low neonicotinoid hydrophobicity, our prior studies implicated granular activated carbon (GAC) in neonicotinoid removal. Based on known receptor binding characteristics, we hypothesized that the insecticidal pharmacophore influences neonicotinoid sorption. Our objectives were to illuminate drivers of neonicotinoid sorption...
Harvester ant seed removal in an invaded sagebrush ecosystem: Implications for restoration
Kelsey E Paolini, Matthew Modlin, Alexis A Suazo, David Pilliod, Robert S. Arkle, Kerri T. Vierling, Joseph D. Holbrook
2020, Ecology and Evolution (10) 13731-13741
A better understanding of seed movement in plant community dynamics is needed, especially in light of disturbance‐driven changes and investments into restoring degraded plant communities. A primary agent of change within the sagebrush‐steppe is wildfire and invasion by non‐native forbs and grasses, primarily cheatgrass (Bromus tectorum)....
Salinity and inundation effects on productivity of brackish tidal marsh plants in the San Francisco Bay-Delta Estuary
Christopher N. Janousek, Bruce D. Dugger, Brandon M Drucker, Karen M. Thorne
2020, Hydrobiologia (847) 4311-4323
Plant productivity is central to numerous ecosystem functions in tidal wetlands. We examined how productivity of brackish marsh plants in northern California responded to abiotic stress gradients of inundation and salinity using two experimental approaches. In a greenhouse study with varying salinity, shoot production and biomass of Juncus balticus, Schoenoplectus acutus and S. americanus all...
Detection and assessment of a large and potentially tsunamigenic periglacial landslide in Barry Arm, Alaska
Chunli Dai, Bretwood Higman, Patrick J. Lynett, Mylene Jacquemart, Ian Howat, Anna K. Liljedahl, Anja Dufresne, Jeffery T. Freymueller, Marten Geertsema, Melissa Ward Jones, Peter J. Haeussler
2020, Geophysical Research Letters
The retreat of glaciers in response to global warming has the potential to trigger landslides in glaciated regions around the globe. Landslides that enter fjords or lakes can cause tsunamis, which endanger people and infrastructure far from the landslide itself. Here we document the ongoing movement of an unstable slope...
On the size of the flare associated with the solar proton event in 774 AD
E. W. Cliver, H. Hayakawa, Jeffrey J. Love, D. F. Neidig
2020, Astrophysical Journal (903)
The 774 AD solar proton event (SPE) detected in cosmogenic nuclides had an inferred >1 GV (>430 MeV) fluence estimated to have been ~30–70 times larger than that of the 1956 February 23 ground level event (GLE). The 1956 GLE was itself ~2.5 times larger at >430 MeV than the...
Nitrate in streams during winter low‐flow conditions as an indicator of legacy nitrate
Henry M. Johnson, Edward G. Stets
2020, Water Resources Research (56)
Winter low‐flow (LF) conditions in streams provide a potential opportunity to evaluate the importance of legacy nitrate in catchments due to the dominance of slow‐flow transport pathways and lowered biotic activity. In this study, the concentration, flux, and trend of nitrate in streams during winter low‐flow...
Estimating the effects of forest structure changes from wildfire on snow water resources under varying meteorological conditions
C. David Moeser, Patrick Borxton, Adrian Harpold, Andrew J. Robertson
2020, Water Resources Research (56)
Modeling forest change effects on snow is critical to resource management. However, many models either do not appropriately model canopy structure or cannot represent fine‐scale changes in structure following a disturbance. We applied a 1 m2 resolution energy budget snowpack model at a forested site in New Mexico,...
Modeling water quality in watersheds: From here to the next generation
Baihua Fu, J. S. Horsburgh, Anthony J. Jakeman, C Gaultieri, Todd W. Arnold, Lucy A. Marshall, Tim R Green, Nigel W. T. Quinn, Martin Volk, Randall J. Hunt, L. Vezzaro, Barry Croke, John Jakeman, Valerie O Snow, Brenda Rashleigh
2020, Water Resources Research (56)
In this synthesis, we assess present research and anticipate future development needs in modeling water quality in watersheds. We first discuss areas of potential improvement in the representation of freshwater systems pertaining to water quality, including representation of environmental interfaces, in‐stream water quality and process interactions, soil health and land...
Keeping up with the times: Mapping range-wide habitat suitability for endangered species in a changing environment
Eamon J. Harrity, Bryan S. Stevens, Courtney J. Conway
2020, Biological Conservation (250)
Biologists and policy-makers have the difficult task of allocating limited resources to habitat conservation and management for endangered species in the face of changing environmental conditions. Satellite remote sensing can inform conservation because it is an efficient means to obtain environmental data over broad spatial and temporal extents. Yet, the...
Modest residual effects of short-term warming, altered hydration, and biocrust successional state on dryland soil heterotrophic carbon and nitrogen cycling
Colin Tucker, Scott Ferrenberg, Sasha C. Reed
2020, Frontiers in Ecology and Evolution Section Biogeography and Macroecology (8)
Biological soil crusts (biocrusts) on the Colorado Plateau may fuel carbon (C) and nitrogen (N) cycling of soil heterotrophic organisms throughout the region. Late successional moss and lichen biocrusts, in particular, can increase soil C and N availability, but some data suggest these biocrust types will be replaced by early...
Daily nest predation rates decrease with body size in passerine birds
Mar Unzeta, Thomas E. Martin, Daniel Sol
2020, The American Naturalist (196) 743-754
Body size evolution is generally framed by the benefits of being large, while costs are largely overlooked. An important putative cost of being large is the need to extend development periods, which should increase exposure to predation and potentially select against larger size. In birds, this selection pressure can be...
Mussel community assessment tool for the Upper Mississippi River system
Heidi L. Dunn, Steven J. Zigler, Teresa Newton
2020, Freshwater Mollusk Biology and Conservation (23) 109-123
Upper Mississippi River (UMR) resource managers need a quantitative means of evaluating the health of mussel assemblages to measure effects of management and regulatory actions, assess restoration techniques, and inform regulatory tasks. Our objective was to create a mussel community assessment tool (MCAT), consisting of a suite of metrics and...
Assessment of burrowing behavior of freshwater juvenile mussels in sediment
Nile E. Kemble, John M. Besser, Jeffery A. Steevens, Jamie P. Hughes
2020, Freshwater Mollusk Biology and Conservation (23) 69-81
Standard laboratory sediment toxicity methods have been adapted for conducting toxicity tests with juvenile freshwater mussels. However, studies looking at juvenile mussel burrowing behavior at the water-sediment interface are limited. Juvenile mussels burrow in sediment for the first 0 to 4 yr of life but also may inhabit the sediment-water...
Topographic, soil, and climate drivers of drought sensitivity in forests and shrublands of the Pacific Northwest, USA
Jennifer M. Cartwright, Caitlin E. Littlefield, Julia Michalak, Joshua J. Lawler, Solomon Dobrowski
2020, Scientific Reports (10)
Climate change is anticipated to increase the frequency and intensity of droughts, with major impacts to ecosystems globally. Broad-scale assessments of vegetation responses to drought are needed to anticipate, manage, and potentially mitigate climate-change effects on ecosystems. We quantified the drought sensitivity of vegetation in the Pacific Northwest, USA, as...
Restoration of rapids habitat in a Great Lakes connecting channel, the St. Marys River, Michigan
A. Molina-Moctezuma, E. Ellis, K. Kapuscinski, Edward F. Roseman, T. Heatlie, A. Moerke
2020, Restoration Ecology (29)
Aquatic habitat has been extensively altered throughout the Laurentian Great Lakes to increase navigation connectivity. In particular, the St. Marys River, a Great Lakes connecting channel, lost >50% of its historic rapids habitat over the past century. In 2016, the natural flow was restored to the...
Detecting cover crop end-of-season using VENµS and sentinel-2 satellite imagery
Feng Gao, Martha Anderson, W. Dean Hively
2020, Remote Sensing (12)
Cover crops are planted during the off-season to protect the soil and improve watershed management. The ability to map cover crop termination dates over agricultural landscapes is essential for quantifying conservation practice implementation, and enabling estimation of biomass accumulation during the active cover period. Remote sensing detection of end-of-season (termination)...
Virome of bat guano from nine northern California roosts
Yanpeng Li, Eda Altan, Gabriel Reyes, Brian J. Halstead, Xutao Deng, Eric Delwart
2020, Journal of Virology (95) e01713-e01720
Bats are hosts to a large variety of viruses, including many capable of cross species transmissions to other mammals or humans. We characterized the virome in guano from five common bat species in 9 Northern California roosts and a pool of 5 individual bats. Genomes belonging to 14 viral families...
Ontogenetic shifts in mesohabitat use of young-of-year Rio Grande blue sucker in the Big Bend region of the Rio Grande
Seiji Miyazono, Allison A. Pease, Sarah Fritts, Timothy B. Grabowski
2020, Environmental Biology of Fishes (103) 1471-1480
Alteration of flow regimes by anthropogenic activities is one of the primary environmental problems in riverine systems. Understanding how hydrologic conditions can affect ontogenetic habitat shifts of imperiled fishes is important in order to develop conservation and management strategies for each life-history stage. We examined relationships between the abundance of...
Cenozoic tectonic evolution of the Ecemiş fault zone and adjacent basins, central Anatolia, Turkey during the transition from Arabia - Eurasia collision to escape tectonics
Paul J. Umhoefer, Stuart Thompson, Come Lefebre, Michael Cosca, Christian Teyssier, Donna L. Whitney
2020, Geosphere (16) 1358-1384
The effects of Arabia-Eurasia collision are recorded in faults, basins, and exhumed metamorphic massifs across eastern and central Anatolia. These faults and basins also preserve evidence of major changes in deformation and associated sedimentary processes along major suture zones including the Inner Tauride suture where it lies along the southern...
Statistical methods in water resources
Dennis R. Helsel, Robert M. Hirsch, Karen R. Ryberg, Stacey A. Archfield, Edward J. Gilroy
2020, Techniques and Methods 4-A3
This text began as a collection of class notes for a course on applied statistical methods for hydrologists taught at the U.S. Geological Survey (USGS) National Training Center. Course material was formalized and organized into a textbook, first published in 1992 by Elsevier as part of their Studies in Environmental...
Water resources in the Cheyenne and Arapaho Tribal jurisdictional area, west-central Oklahoma, with an analysis of data gaps through 2015
Carol Becker, Matthew S. Varonka
2020, Scientific Investigations Report 2020-5105
This report provides an overview of existing hydrologic information describing the quality, quantity, and extent of the major surface-water and groundwater resources in the Cheyenne and Arapaho Tribal jurisdictional area, west-central Oklahoma. Hydrologic information is provided for five major river systems (Cimarron River, North Canadian River, Canadian River, Washita River,...
Distribution of giant gartersnakes (Thamnophis gigas) in the Sacramento–San Joaquin Delta, California, 2018–2019
Kristen J. Fouts, Richard Kim, Anna C. Jordan, Alexandria M. Fulton, Jonathan P. Rose, Julia S. M. Ersan, Brian J. Halstead
2020, Open-File Report 2020-1119
SummaryWe examined the occurrence of giant gartersnakes in the Sacramento–San Joaquin Delta, California, in 2018 and 2019. We made eight captures of seven giant gartersnakes (three females, four males) in 2018, and six captures of six giant gartersnakes (four females, two males) in 2019. Detection probabilities were exceedingly low despite using methods...
Meeting the challenge: U.S. Geological Survey North Atlantic and Appalachian Region fiscal year 2020 in review
U.S. Geological Survey
2020, General Information Product 207
The utilization, preservation, and conservation of the Nation’s resources requires well-informed management decisions. The North Atlantic and Appalachian Region (NAAR) of the U.S. Geological Survey (USGS) supports science-based decision making for Federal, State, and local policymakers to meet the challenges of today and into the future. The science centers in...