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...
Do watershed conditions or local climate play a larger role in determining regional stream salamander distributions?
Kristen K. Cecala, Brian J. Halstead, James S. McGrory, John C. Maerz
2025, Hydrobiologia (852) 4053-4067
Anthropogenic influences like land use and climate variability interact with natural heterogeneity to influence the persistence of stream salamanders. Using occupancy modeling in the southern Appalachian Mountains, we investigated the influence of land use, climate, and physical context (e.g., drainage area, elevation) on stream salamander occupancy, noting species, and life...
A crustal thermal model of the conterminous U.S. constrained by multiple data sets: A Monte-Carlo approach
Siyuan Sui, Weisen Shen, Oliver S. Boyd
2025, Geophysical Journal International (241) 1711-1724
The thermal structure of the continental crust plays a critical role in understanding its elastic and rheologic properties as well as its dynamic processes. Thermal parameter data sets on continental scales have been used to constrain the crustal thermal structure, including both the direct (e.g. temperature, heat flux and heat...
Evaluating five shoreline change models against 40 years of field survey data at an embayed sandy beach
Oxana Repina, Rafael C. Carvalho, Giovanni Coco, Jose Antolínez, Iñaki de Santiago, Mitchell D. Harley, Camilo Jaramillo, Kristen D. Splinter, Sean Vitousek, Colin D. Woodroffe
2025, Coastal Engineering (199)
Robust and reliable models are needed to understand how coastlines will evolve over the coming decades, driven by both natural variability and climate change. This study evaluated how accurately five popular ‘reduced-complexity’ models replicate multi-decadal shoreline change at Narrabeen-Collaroy Beach,...
A generalized framework for inferring river bathymetry from image-derived velocity fields
Carl J. Legleiter, Paul J. Kinzel
2025, Geomorphology (479)
Although established techniques for remote sensing of river bathymetry perform poorly in turbid water, image velocimetry can be effective under these conditions. This study describes a framework for mapping both of these attributes: Depths Inferred from Velocities Estimated by Remote Sensing, or DIVERS. The workflow involves linking image-derived velocities to...
Estuarine tidal cycles may preserve thermal refugia as global temperatures increase
Melanie J. Davis, Isa Woo, Susan E.W. De La Cruz
2025, Estuaries and Coasts (48)
Climate change is affecting coastal ecosystems worldwide as water temperatures increase, hydrologic regimes change, and sea levels rise. Consequently, estuaries risk declines in ecosystem functioning due to increasing temperatures and other hydrologic factors. Characterizing and predicting estuarine water temperature are challenging because these systems are highly dynamic. Statistical models have...
Wave driven cross shore and alongshore transport reveal more extreme projections of shoreline change in island environments
Richelle Moskvichev, Anna Mikkelsen, Tiffany Anderson, Sean Vitousek, Joel Nicolow, Charles Fletcher
2025, Scientific Reports (15)
Coastal erosion, intensified by sea level rise, poses significant threats to coastal communities in Hawaiʻi and similar island communities. This study projects long-term shoreline change on the Hawaiian Island of O‘ahu using the data-assimilated CoSMoS-COAST shoreline change model. CoSMoS-COAST models four key shoreline processes: (1) Alongshore transport, (2) Recession due...
A low-cost approach to monitoring streamflow dynamics in small, headwater streams using timelapse imagery and a deep learning model
Phillip J. Goodling, Jennifer H. Fair, Amrita Gupta, Jeffrey D. Walker, Todd Dubreuil, Michael J. Hayden, Benjamin Letcher
2025, Preprint
Despite their ubiquity and importance as freshwater habitat, small headwater streams are under monitored by existing stream gage networks. To address this gap, we describe a low-cost, non-contact, and low-effort method that enables organizations to monitor streamflow dynamics in small headwater streams. The method uses a camera to capture repeat...
Multi-scale geophysical imaging of a hydrothermal system in Yellowstone National Park, USA
Sylvain Pasquet, W. Steven Holbrook, Bradley J. Carr, Neil Terry, Martin A. Briggs, Carol A. Finn, Paul A. Bedrosian, Esben Auken, Jesper Pedersen, Pradip Kumar Maurya, Kenneth Sims
2025, JGR Solid Earth (130)
Little is known about the local plumbing systems that fuel Yellowstone’s famous hot springs, geysers and mud pots. A multi-method, multi-scale geophysical investigation was carried out in the Obsidian Pool Thermal Area (OPTA) to: (i) delineate the lateral extent of the hydrothermal area and associated surface features; (ii) estimate the...
Sulfate reduction drives elevated methylmercury formation in water column of eutrophic freshwater lake
Benjamin D. Peterson, Sarah E. Janssen, Brett A. Poulin, Jacob M. Ogorek, Amber White, Elizabeth A. McDaniel, Robert A. Marick, Grace Jane Armstrong, Nicholas D. Scheel, Michael T. Tate, David P. Krabbenhoft, Katherine D. McMahon
2025, Environmental Science and Technology (59) 6799-6811
Mercury (Hg) contamination of aquatic food webs is controlled in part by the formation and accumulation of toxic and bioaccumulative methylmercury (MeHg). MeHg production is mediated by metabolically diverse microorganisms carrying the hgcAB gene pair, while the demethylation reaction is mediated by several biotic and abiotic processes. However, the relative importance...
Assessing microplastics, per- and polyfluoroalkyl substances (PFAS), and other contaminants of global concern in wadable agricultural streams
Shannon M. Meppelink, Dana W. Kolpin, Gregory H. LeFevre, David M. Cwiertny, Carrie E. Givens, Lee A. Green, Laura E. Hubbard, Luke Iwanowicz, Rachael F. Lane, Alyssa L. Mianecki, Padraic S. O’Shea, Clayton D. Raines, John W. Scott, Darrin A. Thompson, Michaelah C. Wilson, James L. Gray
2025, Environmental Science: Processes & Impacts (27) 1401-1422
Microplastics, per- and polyfluoroalkyl substances (PFAS), antibiotic resistance genes (ARGs), pharmaceuticals and personal care products (PPCPs), and pesticides may lead to unintended environmental contamination through many pathways in multiple matrices. This statewide, multi-matrix study of contaminants of global concern (CGCs) in agricultural streams across Iowa (United States) is the first...
A partnership between the USGS and the Klamath Tribes to apply structured decision making for chronic wasting disease management
Margaret C. McEachran, Katie M. Guntly-Yancey, Richard Eugene Waggaman Berl, Donald Gentry, Michael C. Runge, Carl White, Jonathan D. Cook
2025, Fact Sheet 2025-3012
Project Overview: The Klamath Tribes (TKT) are the Klamath, Modoc, and Yahooskin Paiute peoples, and are the first peoples of the land, having lived in ancestral lands of Oregon and California since time immemorial. Members of TKT have rights to hunt, fish, trap, and gather, including the harvest of mule...
A trend analysis and model comparison of total phosphorus concentrations and loads in the Boise River near Parma, southwestern Idaho, water years 2003–21
Tyler V. King, Alysa M. Yoder
2025, Scientific Investigations Report 2024-5110
Total phosphorus (TP) concentrations and loads in the Boise River near Parma, Idaho, were examined to identify changes by month over a 19-year period from water year 2003 through water year 2021 and to evaluate the performance of three common water-quality models. Mean annual TP concentrations and loads were estimated...
System characterization report on Resourcesat-2A Linear Imaging Self Scanning-4 sensor
Mahesh Shrestha, Aparajithan Sampath, Minsu Kim, Seonkyung Park, Jeffrey Clauson
2025, Open-File Report 2021-1030-U
Executive Summary This report documents the system characterization of the Indian Space Research Organisation Resourcesat-2A Linear Imaging Self Scanning-4 (LISS–4) sensor. It is part of a series of system characterization reports produced by the U.S. Geological Survey Earth Resources Observation and Science Cal/Val Center of Excellence. These reports describe the methodology...
Consistent individual differences and plasticity in migration behaviour of three North American ungulates
Michel P. Laforge, Eric Vander Wal, Quinn M.R. Webber, Chris Geremia, Matthew Kauffman, Douglas E. McWhirter, Arthur Middleton, Tony W. Mong, Kevin L. Monteith, Anna C. Ortega, Hall Sawyer, Jerod A. Merkle
2025, Article
Migratory herbivores often time spring migration to coincide with the green-up of plants. When the timing of green-up changes across years, herbivores can respond directly and be plastic to changing conditions or populations may adapt via inherent differences among individuals that may allow for an evolutionary response. We quantified plasticity...
Nitrate loads and concentrations from forested watersheds and implications for Long Island Sound
Alana B. Spaetzel, James B. Shanley, Leslie A. DeSimone, John R. Mullaney
2025, JGR Biogeosciences (130)
Reduction in point sources of nitrogen has led to improvement in water quality of the Long Island Sound (LIS) since 2000, but changes in nonpoint sources are less clear. A significant yet poorly quantified nonpoint nitrogen source is the forested landscape. Because a large proportion of the LIS basin is...
Reconstructing relative abundance indices for Atlantic sturgeon using hierarchical ecological models
Daniel S. Stich, Dewayne Fox, Amanda Higgs, David C. Kazyak, Richard Pendleton, Suresh A Sethi
2025, Transactions of the American Fisheries Society (154) 134-142
ObjectiveThe Atlantic Sturgeon Acipenser oxyrinchus is a wide-ranging, long-lived diadromous fish that is endangered in most of its range. Our objective was to develop and apply long-term, detection-corrected indices of relative abundance for juvenile and adult Atlantic Sturgeon in the Hudson River, New York, United States, to support...
Too much and not enough data: Challenges and solutions for generating information in freshwater research and monitoring
Adrianne P. Smits, Ed K Hall, Bridget Deemer, Facundo Scordo, Carolina C. Barbosa, Stephanie M. Carlson, Kaelin M Cawley, Hans-Peter Grossart, Patrick T. Kelly, Stefano Mammola, Matthew R. Pintar, Caleb J. Robbins, Albert Ruhi Vidal, Mattia Sacco
2025, Ecosphere (16)
Evaluating progress toward achieving freshwater conservation and sustainability goals requires transforming diverse types of data into useful information for scientists, managers, and other interest groups. Despite substantial increases in the volume of freshwater data collected worldwide, many regions and ecosystems still lack sufficient data collection and/or data access. We illustrate...
Overwinter and prespawning movements by a vulnerable freshwater pelagophilic minnow
Desiree M. Moore, Shannon K. Brewer
2025, Scientific Reports (15)
The decline of pelagophil minnows is related to river fragmentation across the southern Great Plains landscape. Because we know little about pelagophil movement patterns and timing, we aimed to quantify the movements of the vulnerable Arkansas River shiner (ARS) during the winter (November–March) and prespawning (April–June) seasons. We tagged 4233...
Limited directional change in mountaintop plant communities over 19 years in western North America
Kaleb Goff, Meagan Ford Oldfather, Jan Nachlinger, Brian Smithers, Michael Koontz, Catie Bishop, Jim Bishop, Mary Burke, Seema Sheth
2025, Ecosphere (16)
Plant communities on mountain summits are commonly long-lived, cold-adapted perennials with low dispersal ability. These characteristics in tandem with limited area to track suitable conditions make these mountain communities potentially highly vulnerable to climate change, and indicators of climate change impacts. We investigated temporal changes in plant communities on 29...
Critical Minerals in Ores (CMiO) database
George N.D. Case, Garth E. Graham, Christopher Lawley, Evgeniy Bastrakov, David Huston, Albert H. Hofstra, Vladimir Lisitsin, Steph Hawkins, Bronwen Wang
2025, Fact Sheet 2025-3002
Critical minerals are commodities essential to modern industrial and strategic technologies and are highly vulnerable to supply chain disruption. The Critical Minerals Mapping Initiative (CMMI) is a collaboration among the U.S. Geological Survey (USGS), the Geological Survey of Canada, and Geoscience Australia that aims to deepen global understanding of where...