Lower-crustal xenoliths from Jurassic kimberlite diatremes, upper Michigan (USA): Evidence for Proterozoic orogenesis and plume magmatism in the lower crust of the southern Superior Province
Robert E. Zartman, Pamela D. Kempton, James B. Paces, Hilary Downes, Ian S. Williams, Gabor Dobosi, Kiyoto Futa
2013, Journal of Petrology (54) 575-608
Jurassic kimberlites in the southern Superior Province in northern Michigan contain a variety of possible lower-crustal xenoliths, including mafic garnet granulites, rare garnet-free granulites, amphibolites and eclogites. Whole-rock major-element data for the granulites suggest affinities with tholeiitic basalts. P–T estimates for granulites indicate peak temperatures of 690–730°C and pressures of...
Genetic analysis of a novel invasion of Puerto Rico by an exotic constricting snake
R. Graham Reynolds, Alberto R. Puente-Rolon, Robert N. Reed, Liam J. Revell
2013, Biological Invasions (15) 953-959
The tropical island Puerto Rico is potentially vulnerable to invasion by some species of exotic snakes; however, until now no established populations had been reported. Here we report and genetically characterize the nascent invasion of Puerto Rico by an exotic constricting snake of the family Boidae (Boa constrictor) using mtDNA...
An algorithmic and information-theoretic approach to multimetric index construction
Donald R. Schoolmaster Jr., James B. Grace, E. William Schweiger, Glenn R. Guntenspergen, Brian R. Mitchell, Kathryn M. Miller, Amanda M. Little
2013, Ecological Indicators (26) 14-23
The use of multimetric indices (MMIs), such as the widely used index of biological integrity (IBI), to measure, track, summarize and infer the overall impact of human disturbance on biological communities has been steadily growing in recent years. Initially, MMIs were developed for aquatic communities using pre-selected biological metrics as...
Optimal temperature for malaria transmission is dramatically lower than previously predicted
Erin A. Mordecai, Krijn P. Paaijmans, Leah R. Johnson, Christian Balzer, Tal Ben-Horin, Emily de Moor, Amy McNally, Samraat Pawar, Sadie J. Ryan, Thomas C. Smith, Kevin D. Lafferty
2013, Ecology Letters (16) 22-30
The ecology of mosquito vectors and malaria parasites affect the incidence, seasonal transmission and geographical range of malaria. Most malaria models to date assume constant or linear responses of mosquito and parasite life-history traits to temperature, predicting optimal transmission at 31 °C. These models are at odds with field observations...
The response of Lake Tahoe to climate change
G.B. Sahoo, S.G. Schladow, J.E. Reuter, R. Coats, M. Dettinger, J. Riverson, B. Wolfe, M. Costa-Cabral
2013, Climatic Change (116) 71-95
Meteorology is the driving force for lake internal heating, cooling, mixing, and circulation. Thus continued global warming will affect the lake thermal properties, water level, internal nutrient loading, nutrient cycling, food-web characteristics, fish-habitat, aquatic ecosystem, and other important features of lake limnology. Using a 1-D numerical model - the Lake...
Increasing synchrony of high temperature and low flow in western North American streams: double trouble for coldwater biota?
Ivan Arismendi, Mohammad Safeeq, Sherri L. Johnson, Jason B. Dunham, Roy Haggerty
2013, Hydrobiologia (712) 61-70
Flow and temperature are strongly linked environmental factors driving ecosystem processes in streams. Stream temperature maxima (Tmax_w) and stream flow minima (Qmin) can create periods of stress for aquatic organisms. In mountainous areas, such as western North America, recent shifts toward an earlier spring peak flow and decreases in low...
Environmental factors regulating the recruitment of walleye Sander vitreus and white bass Morone chrysops in irrigation reservoirs
Jason A. DeBoer, Kevin L. Pope, Keith D. Koupal
2013, Ecology of Freshwater Fish (22) 43-54
Understanding the environmental factors that regulate fish recruitment is essential for effective management of fisheries. Generally, first-year survival, and therefore recruitment, is inherently less consistent in systems with high intra- and interannual variability. Irrigation reservoirs display sporadic patterns of annual drawdown, which can pose a substantial challenge to recruitment of...
Estimating shaking-induced casualties and building damage for global earthquake events: a proposed modelling approach
Emily So, Robin Spence
2013, Bulletin of Earthquake Engineering (11) 347-363
Recent earthquakes such as the Haiti earthquake of 12 January 2010 and the Qinghai earthquake on 14 April 2010 have highlighted the importance of rapid estimation of casualties after the event for humanitarian response. Both of these events resulted in surprisingly high death tolls, casualties and survivors made homeless. In...
Gonadal abnormalities in frogs (Lithobates spp.) collected from managed wetlands in an agricultural region of Nebraska, USA
Diana M. Papoulias, Matt S. Schwarz, Lourdes Mena
2013, Environmental Pollution (172) 1-8
Nebraska's Rainwater Basin (RWB) provides important wetland habitat for North American migratory birds. Concern exists that pesticide and nutrient runoff from surrounding row-crops enters wetlands degrading water quality and adversely affecting birds and wildlife. Frogs may be especially vulnerable. Plains leopard (Lithobates blairi) metamorphs from RWB wetlands with varying concentrations...
Toxicity of sediment pore water in Puget Sound (Washington, USA): a review of spatial status and temporal trends
Edward R. Long, R. Scott Carr, James M. Biedenbach, Sandra Weakland, Valerie Partridge, Margaret Dutch
2013, Environmental Monitoring and Assessment (185) 755-775
Data from toxicity tests of the pore water extracted from Puget Sound sediments were compiled from surveys conducted from 1997 to 2009. Tests were performed on 664 samples collected throughout all of the eight monitoring regions in the Sound, an area encompassing 2,294.1 km2. Tests were performed with the gametes...
Shovelnose sturgeon spawning in relation to varying discharge treatments in a Missouri River tributary
B.J. Goodman, C.S. Guy, S.L. Camp, W.M. Gardner, K.M. Kappenman, M.A.H. Webb
2013, River Research and Applications (29) 1004-1015
Many lotic fish species use natural patterns of variation in discharge and temperature as spawning cues, and these natural patterns are often altered by river regulation. The effects of spring discharge and water temperature variation on the spawning of shovelnose sturgeon Scaphirhynchus platorynchus have not been well documented. From 2006...
Rejuvenating Pre-GPS era geophysical surveys using The National Map
Michael P. Finn, Thomas G. Shoberg, Paul Stoddard
2013, Journal of Surveying Engineering (138) 57-65
Old geophysical surveys [pre–Global Positioning System (GPS)] stand as valuable, largely untapped sources of scientific data. If data from these surveys were in a format that had reasonable accuracy, availability, and ease of access, they could be more widely used. In this paper, a pre-GPS survey is integrated into a...
Past and predicted future changes in the land cover of the Upper Mississippi River floodplain, USA
N. R. De Jager, J.J. Rohweder, J.C. Nelson
2013, River Research and Applications 608-618
This study provides one historical and two alternative future contexts for evaluating land cover modifications within the Upper Mississippi River (UMR) floodplain. Given previously documented changes in land use, river engineering, restoration efforts and hydro-climatic changes within the UMR basin and floodplain, we wanted to know which of these changes...
Macroinvertebrate response to flow changes in a subalpine stream: predictions from two-dimensional hydrodynamic models
T.J. Waddle, J.G. Holmquist
2013, River Research and Applications (29) 366-379
Two-dimensional hydrodynamic models are being used increasingly as alternatives to traditional one-dimensional instream flow methodologies for assessing adequacy of flow and associated faunal habitat. Two-dimensional modelling of habitat has focused primarily on fishes, but fish-based assessments may not model benthic macroinvertebrate habitat effectively. We extend two-dimensional techniques to a macroinvertebrate...
Are two systemic fish assemblage sampling programmes on the upper Mississippi River telling us the same thing?
J.T. Dukerschein, A.D. Bartels, B.S. Ickes, M.S. Pearson
2013, River Research and Applications (29) 79-89
We applied an Index of Biotic Integrity (IBI) used on Wisconsin/Minnesota waters of the upper Mississippi River (UMR) to compare data from two systemic sampling programmes. Ability to use data from multiple sampling programmes could extend spatial and temporal coverage of river assessment and monitoring efforts. We normalized for effort...
Treating floodplain lakes of large rivers as study units for variables that vary within lakes; an evaluation using chlorophyll a and inorganic suspended solids data from floodplain lakes of the Upper Mississippi River
B. R. Gray, J.R. Rogala, J.N. Houser
2013, River Research and Applications (29) 330-342
Contiguous floodplain lakes ('lakes') have historically been used as study units for comparative studies of limnological variables that vary within lakes. The hierarchical nature of these studies implies that study variables may be correlated within lakes and that covariate associations may differ not only among lakes but also by spatial...
Measuring discharge with acoustic Doppler current profilers from a moving boat
David S. Mueller, Chad R. Wagner, Michael S. Rehmel, Kevin A. Oberg, Francois Rainville
2013, Techniques and Methods 3-A22
The use of acoustic Doppler current profilers (ADCPs) from a moving boat is now a commonly used method for measuring streamflow. The technology and methods for making ADCP-based discharge measurements are different from the technology and methods used to make traditional discharge measurements with mechanical meters. Although the ADCP is...
Temperature logging of groundwater in bedrock wells for geothermal gradient characterization in New Hampshire, 2012
James Degnan, Gregory Barker, Neil Olson, Leland Wilder
2012, Data Series 728
The U.S. Geological Survey, in cooperation with the New Hampshire Geological Survey, measured the fluid temperature of groundwater in deep bedrock wells in the State of New Hampshire in order to characterize geothermal gradients in bedrock. All wells selected for the study had low water yields, which correspond to low...
Core Science Systems—Mission overview
Kevin T. Gallagher
2012, Fact Sheet 2012-3009
The Core Science Systems Mission Area delivers nationally focused Earth systems and information science that provides fundamental research and data that underpins all Mission Areas of the USGS, the USGS Science Strategy, and Presidential, Secretarial, and societal priorities. —Kevin T. Gallagher, Associate Director, Core Science SystemsThe U.S. Geological Survey (USGS)...
LiDAR - An emerging tool for geological applications
Jason M. Stoker
2012, Outcrop: The Newsletter of the Rocky Mountain Association of Geologists (61) 6-10
Over the past five to ten years the use and applicability of light detection and ranging (LiDAR) technology has increased dramatically. As a result, more and more LiDAR data now are being collected across the country for a wide range of applications, and LiDAR currently is the technology of choice...
Water-quality and lake-stage data for Wisconsin lakes, water years 2008−2011
S. Bridgett Manteufel, Daniel Olson, Dale M. Robertson, Gerald L. Goddard
2012, Open-File Report 2012-1238
The U.S. Geological Survey (USGS), in cooperation with local and other agencies, collects data at selected lakes throughout Wisconsin. These data, accumulated over many years, provide a data base for developing an improved understanding of the water quality of lakes. To make these data available to interested parties outside the...
Habitat associations of fish species of greatest conservation need in wadeable Iowa streams
Anthony R. Sindt, Michael C. Quist, Clay Pierce
2012, North American Journal of Fisheries Management 1046-1061
Fish and habitat data were collected from 84 wadeable stream reaches in the Mississippi River drainage of Iowa to predict the occurrences of seven fish species of greatest conservation need and to identify the relative importance of habitat variables measured at small (e.g., depth, velocity, and substrate) and large (e.g.,...
Effects of smallmouth bass (Micropterus dolomeiu) on Atlantic salmon (Salmo salar) habitat use and diel movements in an artificial stream.
Joseph D. Zydlewski, Stephen M. Coghlan Jr., Joan G. Trial, Gus Wathen
2012, Transactions of the American Fisheries Society (141) 174-184
Invasive smallmouth bass Micropterus dolomieu have been introduced to some of the last remaining watersheds that contain wild anadromous Atlantic salmon Salmo salar, yet little is known about the interactions between these species. We used an artificial stream equipped with passive integrated transponder tag antenna arrays to monitor habitat use...
A comparison of approaches for estimating relative impacts of nonnative fishes
N.W.R. Lapointe, R. M. Pendleton, Paul L. Angermeier
2012, Environmental Management (49) 82-95
Lack of standard methods for quantifying impact has hindered risk assessments of high-impact invaders. To understand methodological strengths and weaknesses, we compared five approaches (in parentheses) for quantifying impact of nonnative fishes: reviewing documented impacts in a large-scale database (review); surveying fish biologists regarding three categories of impact (socioeconomic, ecological,...
Lewis and Clark National Historical Park Elk Monitoring Program Annual Report 2010
Carla Cole, Paul Griffin, Kurt Jenkins
2012, Natural Resource Technical Report NPS/NCR/NCRO/NRTR 2012/531
Fiscal year 2010 was the second full year of elk monitoring protocol implementation at Lewis and Clark National Historical Park (LEWI), part of the North Coast and Cascades Network (NCCN) Inventory and Monitoring program. Elk monitoring at Lewis and Clark NHP includes two components. Fecal pellet surveys at a systematic...