Potential duration of aftershocks of the 2020 southwestern Puerto Rico earthquake
Nicholas van der Elst, Jeanne L. Hardebeck, Andrew J. Michael
2020, Open-File Report 2020-1009
AbstractAftershocks (earthquakes clustered spatially and chronologically near the occurrence of a causative earthquake) are ongoing in southwestern Puerto Rico after a series of earthquakes, which include a magnitude 6.4 earthquake that occurred near Barrio Indios, Guayanilla, on January 7, 2020, and affected the surrounding area. This report estimates the expected...
Are elevation and open-water conversion of salt marshes connected?
Neil K. Ganju, Zafer Defne, Sergio Fagherazzi
2020, Geophysical Research Letters (47)
Salt marsh assessments focus on vertical metrics such as accretion or lateral metrics such as open-water conversion, without exploration of how the dimensions are related. We exploited a novel geospatial dataset to explore how elevation is related to the unvegetated-vegetated marsh ratio (UVVR), a lateral metric, across individual marsh “units”...
Fatty acid-based diet estimates suggest ringed seal remain the main prey of southern Beaufort Sea polar bears despite recent use of onshore food resources
Jennifer Bourque, Todd C. Atwood, George J. Divoky, Connie Stewart, Melissa A. McKinney
2020, Ecology and Evolution (10) 2093-2103
Polar bears (Ursus maritimus) from the southern Beaufort Sea (SB) subpopulation have traditionally fed predominantly upon ice‐seals; however, as the proportion of the subpopulation using onshore habitat has recently increased, foraging on land‐based resources, including remains of subsistence‐harvested bowhead whales (Balaena mysticetus) and colonial nesting seabirds has been observed. Adipose...
A brief introduction to seismic instrumentation: Where does my data come from?
Adam T. Ringler, Patrick Bastien
2020, Seismological Research Letters (91) 1074-1083
Modern seismology has been able to take advantage of several technological advances. These include feedback loops in the seismometer, specialized digitizers with absolute timing, and compression formats for storing data. While all of these advances have helped to improve the field, they can also leave newcomers a bit...
Paired stated preference methods for valuing management of white pine blister rust: order effects and outcome uncertainty
James Meldrum, Patricia A. Champ, Craig A. Bond, Anna Schoettle
2020, Journal of Forest Economics (35) 75-101
The literature on nonmarket valuation includes many examples of stated and revealed preference comparisons. However, comparisons within stated preference methods are sparse. Specifically, the literature provides few examples of pairing both a discrete choice experiment (CE) and a contingent valuation (CV) question within a single survey. This paper presents results...
Rapid peat development beneath created, maturing mangrove forests: Ecosystem changes across a 25-year chronosequence
Michael J. Osland, Laura C. Feher, Amanda C. Spivak, Janet A. Nestlerode, Alejandro E. Almario, Nicole Cormier, Andrew From, Ken W. Krauss, Marc J. Russell, Federico Alvarez, Darrin D. Dantin, James E. Harvey, Camille L. Stagg
2020, Ecological Applications (30)
Mangrove forests are among the world’s most productive and carbon‐rich ecosystems. Despite growing understanding of factors controlling mangrove forest soil carbon stocks, there is a need to advance understanding of the speed of peat development beneath maturing mangrove forests— especially in created and restored mangrove forests that are intended to...
Revealing migration and reproductive habitat of invasive fish under an active population suppression program
Lee F. G. Gutowsky, Jason G. Romine, Nicholas A. Heredia, Patricia E. Bigelow, Michael J. Parsley, Philip T. Sandstrom, Cory D. Suski, Andy J. Danylchuk, Steven J. Cooke, Robert E. Gresswell
2020, Conservation Science and Practice (2)
Endemic species face a variety of threats including predation from non‐native invaders. In some cases, however, invasive species can be managed by directly suppressing populations, and tracking technologies that allow researchers to identify movement patterns and aggregations representative of the population can facilitate suppression activities. In Yellowstone Lake (Yellowstone National...
Age distribution of red tree voles in northern spotted owl pellets estimated from molar tooth development
Chad A. Marks-Fife, Eric D. Forsman, Katie Dugger
2020, Northwest Science (93) 193-208
We used molar measurements from 136 known-age red tree voles (Arborimus longicaudus) to develop regression models that could estimate tree vole age from skeletonized remains. The best regression included a quadratic structure of the ratio between two measurements, crown height and anterior height, and natural log-transformed age in days. The...
Does the virus cross the road? Viral phylogeographic patterns among bobcat populations reflect a history of urban development
Christopher P. Kozakiewicz, Christopher P. Burridge, W. Chris Funk, Meggan E. Craft, Kevin R. Crooks, Robert N. Fisher, Nicholas M. Fountain-Jones, Megan K. Jennings, Simona J Kraberger, Justin S. Lee, Lisa M. Lyren, Seth P.D. Riley, Laurel E K Serieys, Sue VandeWoude, Scott Carver
2020, Evolutionary Applications (13) 1806-1817
Urban development has major impacts on connectivity among wildlife populations and is thus likely an important factor shaping pathogen transmission in wildlife. However, most investigations of wildlife diseases in urban areas focus on prevalence and infection risk rather than potential effects of urbanization on transmission itself. Feline immunodeficiency virus (FIV)...
Climate and human water use diminish wetland networks supporting continental waterbird migration
J.P. Donnelly, Sammy L. King, N.L. Silverman, D. P. Collins, E.M. Carrera-Gonzalez, A. Lafon-Terrazas, J.N. Moore
2020, Global Change Biology (26) 2042-2059
Migrating waterbirds moving between upper and lower latitudinal breeding and wintering grounds rely on a limited network of endorheic lakes and wetlands when crossing arid continental interiors. Recent drying of global endorheic water stores raises concerns over deteriorating migratory pathways, yet few studies have considered these effects at the scale...
Forecasting future beach width- A case study along the Florida Atlantic coast
Joseph W. Long, Rachel E. Henderson, David M. Thompson
2020, Open-File Report 2019-1150
Historical cross-shore positions of the shoreline and dune base were used as inputs for a Kalman filter algorithm to forecast the positions of these features in the year 2028. The beach width was also computed as the cross-shore distance between the forecasted 2028 shoreline and dune-base positions. While it does...
Spatiotemporal patterns of mineral and organic matter deposition across two San Francisco Bay-Delta tidal marshes
Kevin Buffington, Christopher N. Janousek, Karen M. Thorne, Bruce D. Dugger
2020, Wetlands (40) 1395-1407
Sediment deposition in tidal wetlands is a critical process that determines whether vertical growth will keep pace with sea-level rise. However, more information is needed on how sediment deposition varies spatially and temporally across wetlands, including the effects of elevation, tidal inundation, vegetation, and weather. We...
Estimating rupture dimensions of three major earthquakes in Sichuan, China, for early warning and rapid loss estimates
Jiawei Li, Maren Bose, Max Wyss, David J. Wald, Alexandra Hutchinson, John F. Clinton, Zhongliang Wu, Changsheng Jiang, Shiyong Zhou
2020, Bulletin of the Seismological Society of America (110) 920-936
Large earthquakes like in Wenchuan in 2008, MW 7.9, Sichuan, China, provide opportunity for earthquake early warning (EEW) as many heavily shaken areas are far (~50 km) from the epicenter and warning time could be long enough (≥ 5 s) to take effective preventative action. On the other hand, earthquakes...
Magma intrusion and volatile ascent beneath Norris Geyser Basin, Yellowstone National Park
Charles Wicks, Daniel Dzurisin, Jacob B. Lowenstern, Jerry L. Svarc
2020, Journal of Geophysical Research- Solid Earth (125)
Recent activity has provided new insights into the causes of surface deformation in and around the Yellowstone Caldera, a topic that has been debated since the discovery of caldera floor uplift more than four decades ago. An episode of unusually rapid uplift (>15 cm/yr) centered near Norris...
Outmigration survival of wild Chinook salmon smolts through the Sacramento River during historic drought and high water conditions
Jeremy J. Notch, Alex S. McHuron, Cyril J. Michel, Flora Cordoleani, Matt Johnson, Mark J. Henderson, Arnold J. Ammann
2020, Environmental Biology of Fishes (103) 561-576
Populations of wild spring-run Chinook salmon in California’s Central Valley, once numbering in the millions, have dramatically declined to record low numbers. Dam construction, habitat degradation, and altered flow regimes have all contributed to depress populations, which currently persist in only a few tributaries to the Sacramento River. Mill Creek...
Catalogue of polar bear (Ursus maritimus) maternal den locations in the Beaufort and Chukchi Seas and nearby areas, 1910–2018
George M. Durner, Steven C. Amstrup, Todd C. Atwood, David C. Douglas, Anthony S. Fischbach, Jay W. Olson, Karyn D. Rode, Ryan H. Wilson
2020, Data Series 1121
This report presents data on the approximate locations and methods of discovery of 530 polar bear (Ursus maritimus) maternal dens observed in the Beaufort and Chukchi Seas and neighboring areas from 1910 to 2018, and archived partly by the U.S. Geological Survey, Alaska Science Center, and partly by the...
Effects of temperature on hatching rate and early development of alligator gar and spotted gar in a laboratory setting
James M. Long, Richard A. Snow, M. J. Porta
2020, North American Journal of Fisheries Management (40) 661-668
Water temperature influences both morphological and physiological development in fishes. However, the effects of water temperature on the early development of Alligator Gar Atractosteus spatula and Spotted Gar Lepisosteus oculatus are not well understood. Both gar species were collected from natural environments and spawned in a hatchery setting. After spawning,...
Testing four hypotheses to explain partial migration: Balancing reproductive benefits with limits to fasting endurance
Carl G. Lundblad, Courtney J. Conway
2020, Behavioral Ecology and Sociobiology (74)
Seasonal migration is ubiquitous in animals, and yet its underlying cause(s) remain poorly known. Species exhibiting short-distance altitudinal migration and intraspecific variation in migratory behavior (partial or differential migration) are ideal study systems for examining the selective pressures that affect individual migratory decisions. We used an individually marked population of...
Earthquakes, did you feel it?
David J. Wald, Vince Quitoriano, James W. Dewey
2020, Book chapter, Encyclopedia of Solid Earth Geophysics
The US Geological Survey (USGS) “Did You Feel It?”® (DYFI) system is an automated system for rapidly collecting macroseismic intensity data from Internet users’ shaking and damage reports and generating intensity maps immediately following earthquakes.Although the collection and assignment of DYFI-based Macroseismic Intensity (MI) data...
Constraints on eruption processes and event masses for the 2016–2017 eruption of Bogoslof volcano, Alaska, through evaluation of IASI satellite SO2 masses and complementary datasets
Taryn Lopez, Lieven Clarisse, Hans Schwaiger, Alexa R. Van Eaton, Matthew W. Loewen, David Fee, John J. Lyons, Kristi L. Wallace, Cheryl Searcy, Aaron Wech, Matthew M. Haney, David J. Schneider, Nathan Graham
2020, Bulletin of Volcanology (82)
Bogoslof volcano, Alaska, experienced at least 70 explosive eruptions between 12 December 2016 and 31 August 2017. Due to its remote location and limited local monitoring network, this eruption was monitored and characterized primarily using remote geophysical and satellite techniques. SO2 emissions from Bogoslof were persistently detected...
The influence of frost weathering on the debris flow sediment supply in an alpine basin
Francis K. Rengers, Jason W. Kean, Nadine G. Reitman, Joel B. Smith, Jeffrey A. Coe, Luke McGuire
2020, Journal of Geophysical Research (125)
Rocky, alpine mountains are prone to mass wasting from debris flows. The Chalk Cliffs study area (central Colorado, USA) produces debris flows annually. These debris flows are triggered when overland flow driven by intense summer convective storms mobilizes large volumes of sediment within the channel network. Understanding the debris flow hazard in this, and...
How "simple" methodological decisions affect interpretation of population structure based on reduced representation library DNA sequencing: A case study using the lake whitefish
Carly F. Graham, Douglas R. Boreham, Richard G. Manzon, Wendylee Stott, Joanna Y. Wilson, Christopher M. Somers
2020, PLoS ONE (15)
Reduced representation (RRL) sequencing approaches (e.g., RADSeq, genotyping by sequencing) require decisions about how much to invest in genome coverage and sequencing depth, as well as choices of values for adjustable bioinformatics parameters. To empirically explore the importance of these “simple” methodological decisions, we generated two independent sequencing libraries for the same 142 individual...
Herpetofauna occupancy and community composition along a tidal swamp salinity gradient
Sidney T Godfrey, J. Hardin Waddle, Robert F Baldwin, William H. Conner, William C Bridges, Jamie A. Duberstein
2020, Wetlands (40) 1561-1575
Occupancy patterns of herpetofauna in most tidal freshwater swamps are unknown. Tidal freshwater swamps currently face multiple threats, including salinization, which can influence their associated plant and animal communities. The impacts of salinization to herpetofauna communities in tidal freshwater swamps have not been assessed. To improve predictions regarding these herpetofauna,...
Factors that influence participation of Puerto Rican coffee farmers in conservation programs
Tatiana M. Gladkikh, Jaime A. Collazo, Alejandro Torres-Abreu, Angelica M. Reyes, Marysol Molina
2020, Conservation Science and Practice (2)
Sustainable, conservation-oriented agricultural practices like shade coffee and agroforestry can enhance conservation objectives in tropical landscapes. Adoption of these practices, however, is influenced by numerous factors. We conducted a survey of 89 coffee farmers in Puerto Rico to understand their farming practices, experience with existing incentives, and willingness to participate...
Uptake, metabolism, and elimination of fungicides from coated wheat seeds in Japanese quail (Coturnix japonica)
Michael S. Gross, Thomas G. Bean, Michelle L. Hladik, Barnett A. Rattner, Kathryn Kuivila
2020, Journal of Agricultural and Food Chemistry (68) 1514-1524
Pesticides coated to the seed surface potentially pose an ecological risk to granivorous birds that consume incompletely buried or spilled seeds. To assess the toxicokinetics of seeds treated with current-use fungicides, Japanese quail (Coturnix japonica) were orally dosed with commercially coated wheat seeds. Quail were exposed to metalaxyl, tebuconazole, and...