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Gravity surveys and depth to bedrock in the Truxton basin, northwestern Arizona
Jeffrey R. Kennedy
Jon P. Mason, editor(s)
2020, Scientific Investigations Report 2020-5017-C
The volume of available groundwater and the effect of groundwater pumping in an alluvial basin is influenced in part by the shape and depth of the basin boundary, which commonly consists of low-permeability bedrock. To better understand the shape and depth of basin fill in the Truxton valley in Arizona,...
Simulation of groundwater-level changes from projected groundwater withdrawals in the Truxton basin, northwestern Arizona
Jacob E. Knight
Jon P. Mason, editor(s)
2020, Scientific Investigations Report 2020-5017-E
A three-dimensional, numerical groundwater flow model of the Hualapai Plateau and Truxton basin was developed to assist water-resource managers in understanding the potential effects of projected groundwater withdrawals on groundwater levels and storage in the basin. The Truxton Basin Hydrologic Model (TBHM) is a transient model that simulates the hydrologic...
Transmitter effects on growth and survival of Forster’s tern chicks
Mark P. Herzog, Josh T. Ackerman, C. Alex Hartman, Sarah H. Peterson
2020, Journal of Wildlife Management (84) 891-901
Radio‐telemetry is a commonly used scientific technique that allows researchers to collect detailed movement, habitat use, and survival data of animals; however, evidence indicates that using telemetry can affect behavior and survival. Using multiple breeding colonies and years, we investigated the effects of attached radio‐transmitters on growth and survival of...
A pan-African high-resolution drought index dataset
Jian Peng, Simon Dawdson, Firaya Hirpa, Ellen Dyer, Sergio Vicento-Serrano, Chris Funk
2020, Earth System Science Data (12) 753-769
Droughts in Africa cause severe problems, such as crop failure, food shortages, famine, epidemics and even mass migration. To minimize the effects of drought on water and food security on Africa, a high-resolution drought dataset is essential to establish robust drought hazard probabilities and to assess drought vulnerability considering a...
Efficacy and biases of cover object survey design for sampling eastern red-backed salamanders (Plethodon cinereus) at forest edge and interior locations
Eric L. Margenau, Petra B. Wood, Donald A. Brown
2020, Herpetological Conservation and Biology (15) 440-447
Terrestrial salamanders are adapted to moist, cool microenvironments that facilitate cutaneous respiration and decrease risk of desiccation. Warmer, drier microenvironments may induce habitat use changes by salamanders to alleviate stressful microenvironmental conditions. Changes in salamander habitat use may bias population metrics when sampling occurs in areas with different microenvironmental conditions....
Climate-induced expansions of invasive species in the Pacific Northwest, North America: A synthesis of observations and projections
Jennifer Gervais, Ryan P. Kovach, Adam J. Sepulveda, Robert K. Al-Chokhachy, J. Joseph Giersch, Clint C. Muhlfeld
2020, Biological Invasions (22) 2163-2183
Climate change may facilitate the expansion of non-native invasive species (NIS) in aquatic and terrestrial systems. However, empirical evidence remains scarce and poorly synthesized at scales necessary for effective management. We conducted a literature synthesis to assess the state of research on the observed and predicted effects of climate change...
Seasonal habitat use indicates that depth may mediate the potential for invasive round goby impacts in inland lakes
Kara J. Andres, Suresh Sethi, Elizabeth Duskey, Jesse M. Lepak, Aaron N. Rice, Bobbi J. Estabrook, Kimberly B. Fitzpatrick, Ellen George, Benjamin Marcy-Quay, Matthew R. Paufve, Kelly Perkins, Anne E. Scofield
2020, Freshwater Biology (65) 1337-1347
The round goby (Neogobius melanostomus) is among the fastest-spreading introduced aquatic species in North America and is radiating inland from the Great Lakes into freshwater ecosystems across the landscape. Predicting and managing the impacts of round gobies requires information on the factors influencing their distribution in habitats along the...
Probabilistic seismic hazard analysis at regional and national scale: State of the art and future challenges
M. C. Gerstenberger, W. Marzocchi, T. J. Allen, M. Pagani, Janice Adams, L. Danciu, Edward H. Field, H. Fujiwara, Nico Luco, K-F Ma, C. Meletti, Mark D. Petersen
2020, Reviews of Geophysics (58)
Seismic hazard modelling is a multi-disciplinary science that aims to forecast earthquake occurrence and its resultant ground shaking. Such models consist of a probabilistic framework that quantifies uncertainty across a complex system; typically, this includes at least two model components developed from Earth science: seismic-source and ground-motion models. Although there...
Operational global actual evapotranspiration: Development, evaluation, and dissemination
Gabriel Senay, Stefanie Kagone, Naga M. Velpuri
2020, Article
Satellite-based actual evapotranspiration (ETa) is becoming increasingly reliable and available for various water management and agricultural applications from water budget studies to crop performance monitoring. The Operational Simplified Surface Energy Balance (SSEBop) model is currently used by the US Geological Survey (USGS) Famine Early Warning System Network (FEWS NET) to...
Movement-assisted localization from acoustic telemetry data
Nathan J. Hostetter, Andy Royle
2020, Movement Ecology (8)
Acoustic telemetry technologies are being increasingly deployed to study a variety of aquatic taxa including fishes, reptiles, and marine mammals. Large cooperative telemetry networks produce vast quantities of data useful in the study of movement, resource selection and species distribution. Efficient use of acoustic telemetry data requires estimation of acoustic...
High-throughput sequencing reveals distinct regional genetic structure among remaining populations of an endangered salt marsh plant in California
Elizabeth R. Milano, Margaret R Mulligan, Jon P. Rebman, Amy G. Vandergast
2020, Conservation Genetics (21) 547-559
Conservation of rare species requires careful consideration to both preserve locally adapted traits and maintain genetic diversity, as species’ ranges fluctuate in response to a changing climate and habitat loss. Salt marsh systems in California have been highly modified and many salt marsh obligate species have undergone range reductions and...
Molecular indicators of methane metabolisms at cold seeps along the United States Atlantic margin
Nancy G. Prouty, Pamela L. Campbell, Hilary Close, Jennifer F. Biddle, Sabrina Beckmann
2020, Chemical Geology (119603)
A lipid biomarker study was undertaken to determine the microbial composition and variability in authigenic carbonates and associated soft bottom habitats from the Norfolk and the Baltimore Canyon seep fields along the US mid-Atlantic margin. Results from this study capture a distinct molecular signal from methane oxidizing archaea, including archaeol...
Activation of optimally and unfavourably oriented faults in a uniform local stress field during the 2011 Prague, Oklahoma, sequence
Elizabeth S. Cochran, Robert Skoumal, Devin McPhillips, Z. Ross, Katie M. Keranen
2020, Geophysical Journal International (222) 153-168
The orientations of faults activated relative to the local principal stress directions can provide insights into the role of pore pressure changes in induced earthquake sequences. Here, we examine the 2011 M 5.7 Prague earthquake sequence that was induced by nearby wastewater disposal. We estimate the local principal compressive stress direction near...
Hillslope groundwater discharges provide localized ecosystem buffers from regional PFAS contamination in a gaining coastal stream
Martin A. Briggs, Andrea K. Tokranov, Robert B. Hull, Denis R. LeBlanc, A. Haynes, John W. Lane Jr.
2020, Hydrological Processes (34) 2281-2291
Emerging groundwater contaminants such as per- and polyfluoroalkyl substances (PFAS) may impact surface-water quality and groundwater-dependent ecosystems of gaining streams. Although complex near-surface hydrogeology of stream corridors challenges sampling efforts, recent advances in heat tracing of discharge zones enable efficient and informed data collection. For this study we used a...
Channel narrowing by inset floodplain formation of the lower Green River in the Canyonlands region, Utah
Alexander E. Walker, Johnnie N. Moore, Paul E. Grams, David J. Dean, John C. Schmidt
2020, GSA Bulletin (132) 2333-2352
The lower Green River episodically narrowed between the mid-1930s and present day through deposition of new floodplains within a wider channel that had been established and/or maintained during the early twentieth century pluvial period. Comparison of air photos spanning a 74-yr period (1940−2014) and covering a 61 km study area...
Climatically driven displacement on the Eglington fault, Las Vegas, Nevada
Kathleen B. Springer, Jeffrey S. Pigati
2020, Geology (48) 574-578
The Eglington fault is one of several intrabasinal faults in the Las Vegas Valley, Nevada and is the only one recognized as a source for significant earthquakes. Its broad warp displaces late Pleistocene paleo-spring deposits of the Las Vegas Formation, which record hydrologic fluctuations that occurred in response to millennial...
Framework for a long-term strategic plan for the Capital Area Groundwater Conservation Commission
Michael C. Runge, Ellen A Bean, Adrian McInnis, Ryan Clark, Alyssa Dausman
2020, Report
The Capital Area Groundwater Conservation Commission oversees the use of groundwater in six parishes in Louisiana. In carrying out its statutory responsibilities and authorities, the Commission recognizes the complexity of its decisions: the long-term objectives it is seeking are multifaceted; the actions it can choose from are numerous and interdependent;...
Epigenetic response of Louisiana Waterthrush Parkesia motacilla to shale gas development
Mack W. Frantz, Petra B. Wood, Steve Latta, Amy Welsh
2020, Ibis (162) 1211-1224
Epigenetic mechanisms such as DNA methylation may vary in response to environmental stressors and introduce adaptive or maladaptive gene expression within and among wild bird populations. We examined the association between DNA methylation and demographic characteristics of the Louisiana Waterthrush Parkesia motacilla in territories with and without disturbance...
Landscape drivers of dynamic change in water quality of US rivers
Edward G. Stets, Lori A. Sprague, Gretchen P. Oelsner, Henry M. Johnson, Jennifer C. Murphy, Karen R. Ryberg, Aldo V. Vecchia, Robert E. Zuellig, James A. Falcone, Melissa L. Riskin
2020, Environmental Science & Technology (54) 4336-4343
Water security is a top concern for social well-being and dramatic changes in the availability of freshwater have occurred as a result of human uses and landscape management. Elevated nutrient loading and perturbations to major ion composition have resulted from human activities and have degraded freshwater resources. This study...
Intraspecific and biogeographical variation in foliar fungal communities and pathogen damage of native and invasive Phragmites australis
Warwick J. Allen, Aaron Devries, Nicholas J. Bologna, Wesley A. Bickford, Kurt P. Kowalski, Laura A. Meyerson, James T. Cronin
2020, Global Ecology and Biogeography (29) 1199-1211
AimRecent research has highlighted that the relationship between species interactions and latitude can differ between native and invasive plant taxa, generating biogeographical heterogeneity in community resistance to plant invasions. In the first study with foliar pathogens, we tested whether co‐occurring native and invasive lineages of common reed...
Pyrrhotite distribution in the conterminous United States, 2020
Jeffrey L. Mauk, Thomas C. Crafford, John D. Horton, Carma A. San Juan, Robinson Jr.
2020, Fact Sheet 2020-3017
In parts of Connecticut and Massachusetts, foundations of some homes are cracking and crumbling. Failing foundations can reduce the market value of a home and lifting a house to replace and repour a foundation is an expensive undertaking. In response, some homeowners are defaulting on their mortgages and abandoning their homes. The...
Odds ratios and hurdle models: a long-term analysis of parasite infection patterns in endangered young-of-the-year suckers from Upper Klamath Lake, Oregon, USA
Douglas F. Markle, Andrew Janik, James Peterson, Anindo Choudhury, David C. Simon, Vasyl V. Tkach, Mark R. Terwilliger, Justin L. Sanders, Michael L. Kent
2020, International Journal for Parasitology (50) 315-330
We used odds ratios and a hurdle model to analyze parasite co-infections over 25 years on >20,000 young-of-the year of endangered Shortnose and Lost River Suckers. Host ecologies differed as did parasite infections. Shortnose Suckers were more likely to be caught inshore and 3–5 times more likely to have Bolbophorus spp. and Contracaecum sp. infections,...
Effects of huisache removal on rangeland evapotranspiration in Victoria County, south-central Texas, 2015–18
Richard N. Slattery, Darwin J. Ockerman, Matthew Bromley, Justin Huntington, John R. Banta
2020, Scientific Investigations Report 2020-5008
The U.S. Geological Survey and Desert Research Institute, in cooperation with the Natural Resources Conservation Service, Texas State Soil and Water Conservation Board, Victoria County Groundwater Conservation District, Victoria Soil and Water Conservation District, and the San Antonio River Authority, evaluated the hydrologic effects of Vachellia farnesiana var. farnesiana (huisache)...
Short and long-term movement of mudflows of the Mississippi River Delta Front and their known and potential impacts on oil and gas infrastructure
Jason Chaytor, Wayne E. Baldwin, Samuel J. Bentley, Melanie Damour, Douglas Jones, Jillian Maloney, Michael Miner, Jeff Obelcz, Kehui Xu
2020, Geological Society of London Special Publications
Mudflows on the Mississippi River Delta Front (MRDF) are recognized hazards to oil and gas infrastructure in the shallow (20 – 300 m water depth) Gulf of Mexico. Preconditioning of the seafloor for failure results from high sedimentation rates coupled with slope over-steepening, under-consolidation, and abundant biogenic gas production. Catastrophic...
Hurricane sedimentation in a subtropical salt marsh-mangrove community is unaffected by vegetation type
Karen L. McKee, Irving A. Mendelssohn, Mark W. Hester
2020, Estuarine, Coastal and Shelf Science (239)
Hurricanes periodically deliver sediment to coastal wetlands, such as those in the Mississippi River Delta Complex (MRDC), slowing elevation loss and improving resilience to sea-level rise. However, the amount of hurricane sediment deposited and retained in a wetland may vary depending on the dominant vegetation. In the subtropical climate of...