The effect of turbidity on foraging by prerostrum juvenile Paddlefish
Ethan Hood, James M. Long, Daniel E. Shoup, Casey A. Pennock, Andrew R. Dzialowski, Jason D. Schooley
2025, Transaction of the American Fisheries Society (154) 127-133
ObjectiveA previous study evaluating restoration success of Paddlefish Polyodon spathula suggested that excessive turbidity in lakes and rivers may inhibit foraging by juveniles prior to the development of the rostrum. Although a Paddlefish's rostrum, which contains electroreceptors, helps the fish to locate zooplankton prey, the prerostrum stage lacks...
Applying U-Th disequilbrium for dating siliceous sinters
Lauren Sankovitch, Carolina Munoz-Saez, Adam M. Hudson, Linda V. Godfrey, Jay Michael Thompson
2025, Journal of Volcanology and Geothermal Research (462)
Continental hydrothermal systems are critical avenues for the crustal transport of heat and mass captured for geothermal energy and mineral exploration. Thus, understanding their temporal evolution and longevity is important for resource characterization. Deposits of microlaminated siliceous sinter, common surface expressions of high temperature reservoirs (> 170 °C), have the potential...
Wangyanite, PdNi8S8, a new Pd end-member mineral of the pentlandite group from the J-M reef, Stillwater Complex, Montana, USA
Chen Chen, Haiyang Xian, Christopher Jenkins, Zhuosen Yao, Yiping Yang, Xiaoju Lin, Shan Li, Jiaxin Xi, Yuhuan Yuan, Jianxi Zhu, Hongping He
2025, American Mineralogist (110) 1844-1853
Wangyanite (IMA2024-008a), ideally PdNi8S8, is a Pd end-member mineral of the pentlandite group that was discovered in the J-M reef of the Stillwater Complex, Montana, USA. Wangyanite occurs as anhedral-subhedral granular crystals 200–400 µm in size, associated with isoferroplatinum, braggite, pentlandite, and chalcopyrite interstitial to plagioclase grains within anorthosite. Wangyanite exhibits...
Greater sage-grouse seasonal habitat associations: A review and considerations for interpretation and management applications
Gregory T. Wann, Ashley L. Whipple, Elizabeth Kari Orning, Megan M. McLachlan, Jeffrey L. Beck, Peter S. Coates, Courtney J. Conway, Jonathan B. Dinkins, Aaron N. Johnston, Christian A. Hagen, Paul Makela, David Naugle, Michael A Schroeder, James S. Sedinger, Brett L. Walker, Perry J. Williams, Richard D. Inman, Cameron L. Aldridge
2025, Journal of Wildlife Management (89)
Habitat features needed by wildlife can change in composition throughout the year, particularly in temperate ecosystems, leading to distinct seasonal spatial-use patterns. Studies of species-habitat associations therefore often focus on understanding relationships within discrete seasonal periods with common goals of prediction (e.g., habitat mapping) and inference (e.g., interpreting model coefficients)....
Social composition of soft‐release groups is correlated with survival of translocated gopher tortoises
Kevin J. Loope, Rebecca A. Cozad, Derek. B. Breakfield, Matthew J. Aresco, Elizabeth Ann Hunter
2025, The Journal of Wildlife Management (89)
The social structure of translocated animal populations can have important effects on the survival and reproduction of translocated individuals for both solitary and social species. The gopher tortoise (Gopherus polyphemus) is a reptile of conservation concern that is currently experiencing high levels of mitigation translocation in Florida, USA. Individuals live...
Scaling from microsite to landscape to resolve litter decomposition dynamics in globally extensive drylands
Heather L. Throop, Jiwei Li, Daryl L. Moorhead, Sasha C. Reed, Katherine Todd-Brown, Alexi Besser, Dellena Bloom, Thomas Ingalls, Alejandro Cueva
2025, Functional Ecology
1. Decomposition controls the release of carbon and nutrients from decaying plant litter into soils or the atmosphere. In most biomes decomposition rates can be accurately predicted with simple mathematical models, but these models have long under-predicted decomposition in globally- extensive drylands. 2. We posit that the exposed surface conditions...
Shortening migration by 4500 km does not affect nesting phenology or increase nest success for black brant (Branta bernicla nigricans) breeding in Arctic and subarctic Alaska
Toshio Doroff Matsuoka, Vijay P. Patil, Jerry W. Hupp, Alan G. Leach, John Reed, James S. Sedinger, David H. Ward
2025, Movement Ecology (13)
BackgroundSince the 1980s, Pacific Black Brant (Branta bernicla nigricans, hereafter brant) have shifted their winter distribution northward from Mexico to Alaska (approximately 4500 km) with changes in climate. Alongside this shift, the primary breeding population of brant has declined. To understand the population-level implications of the changing migration strategy...
Structural analysis of brittle-plastic shear zones in the Sangre de Cristo Range, southern Colorado USA: Superposition of Rio Grande rift extension on Laramide contraction
Michael C. Sitar, John S. Singleton, Jeffrey M. Rahl, Jonathan Caine, Jacob King, Andrew R C Kylander-Clark, Paul O’Sullivan
2025, Geosphere (21) 446-469
The Sangre de Cristo Range in southern Colorado exposes some of the deepest Cenozoic structural levels in the Rocky Mountain region, including mylonitic shear zones associated with both the Laramide orogeny and Rio Grande rift. We investigated the relation between Laramide contraction and Rio Grande rift extension with detailed geologic...
C4 photosynthesis, trait spectra, and the fast-efficient phenotype
Russell K. Monson, Shuai Li, Elizabeth A. Ainsworth, Yuzhen Fan, John G. Hodge, Alan K. Knapp, Andrew D.B. Leakey, Danica Lombardozzi, Sasha C. Reed, Rowan F. Sage, Melinda D. Smith, Nicholas G. Smith, Christopher J. Still, Danielle A. Way
2025, New Phytologist (246) 879-893
It has been 60 years since the discovery of C4 photosynthesis, an event that rewrote our understanding of plant adaptation, ecosystem responses to global change, and global food security. Despite six decades of research, one aspect of C4 photosynthesis that remains poorly understood is how the pathway fits into the broader context of...
Sea Lamprey control reduction during the COVID-19 pandemic corresponds to rapid increase in Sea Lamprey abundance
Benjamin Marcy-Quay, Sean Alois Lewandoski, Ryan M. Booth, Michael J. Connerton, Aaron K. Jubar, Chris D. Legard, Brian O’Malley, Scott E Prindle, Alexandra W Sumner, Matthew J. Symbal, Andy Todd, Michael J. Yuille, Ted J. Treska, Michael J. Siefkes, Nicholas S. Johnson
2025, Fisheries (50) 355-365
The Sea Lamprey Petromyzon marinus control program in the Laurentian Great Lakes is one of the longest-running and most successful invasive species suppression programs in the world. Although several techniques are used to suppress Sea Lamprey, the control program relies heavily on regular application of lampricide to kill stream-dwelling larvae. The COVID-19...
Responses of larval fish and zooplankton to whole-lake 2,4-D herbicide treatments used to control Eurasian watermilfoil in northern Wisconsin lakes
Nicholas Rydell, Justin VanDeHey, Daniel Dembkowski, Kevin Gauthier, Scott Van Egeren, Jody A. Kubitz, Terry R. Naumann, Daniel A. Isermann
2025, Hydrobiologia (852) 2769-2786
In North America, Eurasian watermilfoil Myriophyllum spicatum is one of the most widespread non-native aquatic plant species in freshwater ecosystems. Applications of 2,4-dichlorophenoxyacetic acid (2,4-D) herbicides are often utilized to control Eurasian watermilfoil. Herbicide applications may have unintended effects on non-target organisms like zooplankton and fish, but these effects are poorly understood....
No magmatic driving force for Europan sea-floor volcanism
A.P. Green, Catherine Elder, Michael Thomas Bland, Paul Tackley, Paul K. Byrne
2025, Nature Astronomy (9) 640-649
The internal ocean of Jupiter’s moon Europa is thought to be a prime candidate for hosting extraterrestrial life. Europa’s silicate interior may contribute to habitability via the generation of reactants through hydrothermal activity, serpentinization, or other geological processes occurring on or just below Europa’s seafloor. However, silicate melting is thought...
Fiber-optic distributed temperature sensing of hydrologic processes—Diverse deployments and new applications by the U.S. Geological Survey
Martin A. Briggs, David M. Rey, Chad C. Opatz, Neil Terry, Connor P. Newman, Lance R. Gruhn, Carole D. Johnson
2025, Fact Sheet 2025-3006
Fiber-optic distributed temperature sensing instruments harness the temperature-dependent properties of glass to measure temperature continuously along optical fibers by using precise pulses of laser light. In the mid-2000s, this technology was refined for environmental monitoring purposes such as snowpack-air exchange, groundwater/surface-water exchange, and lake-water stratification. Fiber-optic distributed temperature sensing has...
Assessing earthquake risks to lifeline infrastructure systems in the United States
N. Simon Kwong, Kishor S. Jaiswal
2025, International Journal of Critical Infrastructure Protection (49)
The security and economic stability of the United States rely heavily on robust lifeline infrastructure systems and yet the risks to such systems are seldom quantified at the national scale. For example, while earthquake risks to buildings in the United States have been investigated at the national scale regularly, such...
The importance of sampling design for unbiased estimation of survival using joint live-recapture and live resight models
Maria C. Dzul, Charles Yackulic, William L. Kendall
2025, Peer Community Journal (5)
Survival is a key life history parameter that can inform management decisions and basic life history research. Because true survival is often confounded with emigration from the study area, many studies are forced to estimate apparent survival (i.e., probability of surviving and remaining inside the study area), which can be...
Planting seeds for thriving data management
Abigail Benson, Stace Beaulieu, Bradley Wade Bishop, Stephen C. Diggs, Stephen Killfoile Formel
2025, Eos, American Geophysical Union
The volumes and varieties of data coming from all types of scientific instrumentation around the globe and beyond are rapidly growing. To reuse and capitalize on these data effectively, scientists must be able to share and access them efficiently, which requires the data to be well managed. Many scientists intuit...
Consideration of grid cell size to represent stream network geometry for the conterminous United States
Brandon J. Fleming, Kenneth Belitz, Courtney D. Killian
2025, Groundwater (63) 301-305
No abstract available....
Bayesian calibration of the 40K decay scheme with implications for 40K-based geochronology
Jack N. Carter, Caroline Hasler, Anthony Fuentes, Andrew Tholt, Leah E. Morgan, Paul R. Renne
2025, Geochimica et Cosmochimica Acta (397) 149-163
The K/Ar and 40Ar/39Ar geochronometers are based on the naturally occurring radionuclide 40K. Their precision and accuracy are limited by uncertainties on the 40K decay constants and, in the case of the 40Ar/39Ar geochronometer, the isotopic composition of neutron fluence monitors. To address these limitations, we introduce a Bayesian calibration of the 40K decay scheme....
An enhanced national-scale urban tree canopy cover dataset for the United States
Lucila Marie Corro, Kenneth J. Bagstad, Mehdi Heris, Peter Christian Ibsen, Karen Schleeweis, James E. Diffendorfer, Austin Troy, Kevin Megown, Jarlath P.M. O'Neil-Dunne
2025, Scientific Data (12)
Moderate-resolution (30-m) national map products have limited capacity to represent fine-scale, heterogeneous urban forms and processes, yet improvements from incorporating higher resolution predictor data remain rare. In this study, we applied random forest models to high-resolution land cover data for 71 U.S. urban areas, moderate-resolution National Land Cover Database (NLCD)...
Properties of solid bitumen formed during hydrous, anhydrous, and brine pyrolysis of oil shale: Implications for solid bitumen reflectance in source-rock reservoirs
Paul C. Hackley, Justin E. Birdwell, Ryan J. McAleer
2025, Applied Geochemistry (185)
Solid bitumen reflectance (BRo in %) is widely used as a thermal maturity proxy in source-rock reservoirs, yet solid bitumen texture and physical attributes may be affected by varying environmental constraints during its formation, e.g., water saturation, mineral catalysis, or salinity. Herein we investigated the development of solid bitumen properties during...
Ranking river basins for stream temperature research and monitoring in the contiguous United States
Ramon C. Naranjo, Zachary Johnson, Lisa Lucas, Nancy T. Baker, Christopher Green
2025, Journal of Hydrology (658)
There is a need to prioritize research and data collection in river basins by integrating information from environmental, ecological, and socioeconomic datasets to maintain acceptable water quality for human uses and ecosystem health. Multiple anthropogenic and natural stressors are responsible for driving changes in stream temperatures that can alter ecosystems...
Optimizing per vessel hour capture efficiency for rare, heterogeneously distributed fishes: Invasive grass carp Ctenopharyngodon idella in the Sandusky River
Robert Daniel Hunter, Song S. Qian, Jason L. Fischer, Ryan Brown, Lucas Nathan, John M. Dettmers, James Roberts, Corbin David Hilling, Matthew Ross Acre, Robert L. Mapes, Ryan Young, Christine M. Mayer
2025, Fisheries Research (285)
Natural resources management is often concerned with conserving rare-native or controlling rare-invasive fishes. Informing and assessing conservation and control efforts frequently requires information from captures. When little is understood about spatial and temporal fish distributions, captures can be infrequent and costly. If successful management depends on effective management response, optimizing...
New paleomagnetic constraints on the eruption timing, stratigraphy, and post-emplacement deformation of the Picture Gorge Basalt within the Columbia River Basalt Group
Anthony Francis Pivarunas, Margaret Susan Avery, Jonathan T. Hagstrum, Scott E.K. Bennett, Andrew T. Calvert
2025, Journal of Geophysical Research: Solid Earth (130)
The Picture Gorge Basalt (PGB) is part of the Miocene Columbia River Basalt Group (CRBG). The PGB, which outcrops in eastern Oregon, is considered coincident in time with the voluminous Grande Ronde Basalt. New radiometric ages have expanded the age‐range of the PGB, suggesting it began erupting prior to the Steens...
Predicting invasiveness of freshwater fishes imported into North America: Regional differences in models and outcomes
Jennifer G. Howeth, Sarah A. Amjad, Crysta A. Gantz, Nicholas E. Mandrak, Paul L. Angermeier, Michael P. Marchetti, Julian D. Olden, David M. Lodge
2025, Biological Invasions (27)
Biological invasions driven by international trade heighten the urgency for development of invasion risk models, as the traits and parameters that consistently predict successful invasion remain unresolved. For four regions of North America that include parts of the United States and Canada (Sacramento-San Joaquin River Basins, Lower Colorado River Basin,...
Predicting bat roosts in bridges using Bayesian Additive Regression Trees
Jacob Oram, Amy Kristine Wray, Helen Trice Davis, Luz A. de Wit, Winifred F. Frick, Andrew B. Hoegh, Kathryn M. Irvine, Patrick Pollock, Andrea Nichole Schuhmann, Frank (Contractor) Charles Tousley, Brian Reichert
2025, Global Ecology and Conservation (60)
Human-built structures can provide important habitat for wildlife, but predicting which structures are most likely to be used remains challenging. To evaluate the predictive capabilities of data-driven ensemble modeling approaches, we conducted surveys for bats and signs of bat use, such as urine and guano staining, at bridges across the...