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Page 605, results 15101 - 15125

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Not all publications have extents, not all extents are completely accurate
Estimating burn severity and carbon emissions from a megafire in boreal forests of China
Wenru Xu, Hong S He, Todd Hawbaker, Zhiliang Zhu, Paul Henne
2020, Science of the Total Environment (716)
Wildfires, especially those of large size, worsen air quality and alter the carbon cycle through combustion of large quantities of biomass and release of carbon into the atmosphere. The Black Dragon fire, which occurred in 1987 in the boreal forests of China is among the top five of such megafires...
Advanced biofilm analysis in streams receiving organic deicer runoff
Michelle A Nott, Heather E. Driscoll, Minoru Takeda, Mahesh Vangala, Steven Corsi, Scott W. Tighe
2020, PLoS ONE (15)
Prolific heterotrophic biofilm growth is a common occurrence in airport receiving streams containing deicers and anti-icers, which are composed of low-molecular weight organic compounds. This study investigated biofilm spatiotemporal patterns and responses to concurrent and antecedent (i.e., preceding biofilm sampling) environmental conditions at stream sites upstream and downstream from Milwaukee...
An experimental investigation of interaction between andesite and hyperacidic volcanic lake water
Vincent van Hinsberg, Kim Berlo, Jacob B. Lowenstern
2020, Minerals (10)
Alteration in magmatic-hydrothermal systems leads to distinct changes in rock texture and mineralogy, and a strong redistribution of elements between fluid and rock. Here, we experimentally interacted andesite scoria with hyperacidic, high-sulfidation style fluids from Kawah Ijen volcano (Indonesia) at 25 and 100˚C, seeking to reproduce the textures observed in...
Fire history across forest types in the southern Beartooth Mountains, Wyoming
Sabrina R. Brown, Ashley Baysinger, Peter M. Brown, Justin L. Cheek, Jeffrey M. Diez, Christopher M. Gentry, Thomas A. Grant, Jeannine-Marie St-Jacques, David A. Jordan, Morgan L. Leef, Mary K. Rourke, James H. Speer, Carrie E. Spradlin, Jens Stevens, Jeffery R. Stone, Brian Van Winkle, Nickolas E. Zeibig-Kichas
2020, Tree-Ring Research (76) 27-39
Fire is a critical ecosystem process that has played a key role in shaping forests throughout the Beartooth Mountains in northwestern Wyoming. The highly variable topography of the area provides ideal conditions to compare fire regimes across contiguous forest types, yet pyro-dendrochronological research in this area is limited. We reconstructed...
Recent evaluation of corbicula form D distribution in the Midwest, U.S.A
Sarah Douglass, Emily Reasor, Jeremy S. Tiemann, Alison Stodola, Stephen E. McMurray, Barry C. Poulton
2020, The American Midland Naturalist (183) 136-142
The genus Corbicula contains one of the most common and successful aquatic invasive species to North America. Prior to 2015 two predominant species of Corbicula were known from the United States—C. fluminea and C. largillierti, referred to as Forms A and B, respectively. Form A has spread throughout most of the U.S., while Form B is...
Looking at the bigger picture: How abundance of nesting and brooding habitat influences lek-site selection by Lesser Prairie-Chickens
Jacquelyn M. Gehrt, Daniel S. Sullins, David A. Haukos
2020, American Midland Naturalist (183) 52-77
Lesser Prairie-Chicken (Tympanuchus pallidicinctus) populations have declined throughout most of their distribution since the mid-1980s. These declines are largely attributed to loss of habitat through the conversion and expansion of cropland, construction of oil wells and other anthropogenic features on the landscape, and grazing intensification. Changes in habitat availability and...
Evaluation of ground‐motion models for U.S. Geological Survey seismic hazard forecasts: Hawaii tectonic earthquakes and volcanic eruptions
Daniel E. McNamara, Emily Wolin, Peter M. Powers, Allison Shumway, Morgan P. Moschetti, John Rekoske, Eric M. Thompson, Charles Mueller, Mark D. Petersen
2020, Bulletin of the Seismological Society of America (110) 666-688
The selection and weighting of ground‐motion models (GMMs) introduces a significant source of uncertainty in U.S. Geological Survey (USGS) National Seismic Hazard Modeling Project (NSHMP) forecasts. In this study, we evaluate 18 candidate GMMs using instrumental ground‐motion observations of horizontal peak ground acceleration (PGA) and 5%‐damped pseudospectral acceleration (0.02–10 s) for...
A chemo-mechanical snapshot of in-situ conversion of kerogen to petroleum
Arash Abarghani, Mehdi Ostadhassan, Paul C. Hackley, Andrew E. Pomerantz, Siamak Nejati
2020, Geochimica et Cosmochimica Acta (273) 37-50
Organic matter (OM) from various biogenic origins converts to solid bitumen in-situ when it undergoes thermal maturation. It is well documented that during this process, the ratios of both hydrogen and oxygen to carbon will decrease, resulting in an increase in OM aromaticity and molecular chemo-mechanical homogeneity. Although there have been extensive...
Antimony mobility during the early stages of stibnite weathering in tailings at the Beaver Brook Sb deposit, Newfoundland
Anezka Borcinova Radkova, Heather E. Jamieson, Kate M. Campbell
2020, Applied Geochemistry (115)
The aqueous speciation and mineralogy of antimony (Sb) in waters and tailings at Beaver Brook antimony deposit have been analyzed to understand Sb mobility during the initial stages of stibnite (Sb2S3) weathering in a near-surface environment. Dissolution of stibnite in oxidizing conditions releases Sb in drainage water and Sb is...
Introgression obscures lineage boundaries and phylogeographic history in the western banded gecko, Coleonyx variegatus (Squamata: Eublepharidae)
Dean H Leavitt, Bradford Hollingsworth, Robert N. Fisher, Tod W Reeder
2020, Zoological Journal of the Linnean Society (190) 181-226
The geomorphological formation of the Baja California peninsula and the Gulf of California is a principal driver of diversification for the reptiles of North America’s warm deserts. The western banded gecko, Coleonyx variegatus, is distributed throughout the Mojave, Sonoran and Peninsular deserts. In this study we use multilocus sequence data to...
Dunes in the world's big rivers are characterized by low-angle lee-side slopes and a complex shape
Julia Cisneros, Jim L. Best, Thaienne van Dijk, Renato Paes de Almeida, Mario Amsler, Justin A. Boldt, Bernardo Freitas, Cristiano Galeazzi, Richard J. Huizinga, Marco Ianniruberto, Hongbo Ma, Jeff Nittrouer, Kevin Oberg, Oscar Orfeo, Daniel Parsons, Ricardo N. Szupiany, Ping Wang, Yuanfeng Zhang
2020, Nature Geoscience (13) 156-162
Dunes form critical agents of bedload transport in all of the world’s big rivers, and constitute appreciable sources of bed roughness and flow resistance. Dunes also generate stratification that is the most common depositional feature of ancient riverine sediments. However, current models of dune dynamics and stratification are conditioned by...
Shifts in hatching date of American crocodile (Crocodylus acutus) in southern Florida
Michael Cherkiss, James I. Watling, Laura A. Brandt, Frank J. Mazzotti, Jim Linsay, Jeffrey S. Beauchamp, Jerome J. Lorenz, Joseph Wasilewski, Ikuko Fujisaki, Kristen Hart
2020, Journal of Thermal Biology (88)
Globally temperature of marine environments is on the rise and temperature plays an important role in the life-history of reptiles. In this study, we examined the relationship between sea surface temperature and average date of hatching for American crocodiles (Crocodylus acutus) over a 37-year period at two nesting sites, Everglades...
Estimating detection probability for Burmese Pythons with few detections and zero recapture events
Melia G. Nafus, Frank J. Mazzotti, Robert Reed
2020, Journal of Herpetology (54) 24-30
Detection has been a long-standing challenge to monitoring populations of cryptic herpetofauna, which often have detection probabilities that are closer to zero than one. Burmese Pythons (Python bivittatus =Python molurus bivittatus), a recent invader in the Greater Everglades Ecosystem of Florida, are cryptic snakes that have long periods of inactivity....
A hierarchical analysis of habitat area, connectivity, and quality on amphibian diversity across spatial scales
AD Wright, Evan H. Campbell Grant, EF Zipkin
2020, Landscape Ecology (35) 529-544
Habitat fragmentation can alter species distributions and lead to reduced diversity at multiple scales. Yet, the literature describing fragmentation effects on biodiversity patterns is contradictory and inconclusive, possibly because most studies fail to integrate spatial scale into experimental designs and statistical analyses. As a result, it is difficult to extrapolate...
Influence of land use and region on glyphosate and aminomethylphosphonic acid in streams in the USA
Laura Medalie, Nancy T. Baker, Megan E. Shoda, Wesley W. Stone, Michael T. Meyer, Edward G. Stets, Michaelah C. Wilson
2020, Science of the Total Environment (707)
Glyphosate is the most widely used herbicide in the United States for agricultural and non-agricultural weed control. Many studies demonstrate possible effects of glyphosate and its degradate AMPA on human and ecological health. Although glyphosate is thought to have limited mobility in soil, it is found year-round in many rivers...
Genetic confirmation of a natural hybrid between a Northern Goshawk (Accipiter gentilis) and a Cooper’s Hawk (A. cooperii)
Christy Haughey, Arthur Nelson, Paul Napier, R. N. Rosenfield, Sarah A. Sonsthagen, Sandra L. Talbot
2020, Wilson Journal of Ornithology (131) 838-844
Although hybrids between captive Accipiter species are known, and hybrids between wild Accipiter species in North America have long been suspected, none have been confirmed to date. However, in 2014, a hatching year Accipiter captured at Cape May, New Jersey, during fall migration, appeared intermediate in size and plumage between...
A revised Holocene coral sea-level database from the Florida reef tract, USA
Anastasios Stathakopoulos, Bernhard M Riegl, Lauren Toth
2020, PeerJ (8)
The coral reefs and mangrove habitats of the south Florida region have long been used in sea-level studies for the western Atlantic because of their broad geographic extent and composition of sea-level tracking biota. The data from this region have been used to support several very different Holocene sea-level reconstructions (SLRs) over the years....
Breeding and diet of White-tailed Kites (Elanus leucurus) in the Texas panhandle
Katheryn Watson, Daniel U. Greene, Clint W. Boal
2020, Wilson Journal of Ornithology (131) 844-849
White-tailed Kites (Elanus leucurus) are grassland raptors that typically breed along coastal regions, particularly in California, southeastern Texas, and southern Florida. This species is irregular in the Texas panhandle, with few confirmed breeding and sighting records. We describe the first breeding record in Lubbock County, Texas, in which a pair...
Along-strike segmentation in the northern Caribbean plate boundary zone (Hispaniola sector): Tectonic implications
A. Rodriguez-Zurrunero, J. L. Granja-Bruna, A. Muñoz-Martín, Sarah LeRoy, Uri S. ten Brink, J.M. Gorosabel-Araus, L. Gomez de la Pena, M Druet, A. Carbo- Gorosabel
2020, Tectonophysics (776)
The North American (NOAM) plate converges with the Caribbean (CARIB) plate at a rate of 20.0 ± 0.4 mm/yr. towards 254 ± 1°. Plate convergence is highly oblique (20–10°), resulting in a complex crustal boundary with along-strike segmentation, strain partitioning and microplate tectonics. We study the...
Combining fisheries surveys to inform marine species distribution modelling
Meadhbh Moriarty, Debbi Pedreschi, T. Scott Smeltz, Suresh Sethi, Bradley P. Harris, Chris McGonigle, Nathan Wolf, Simon P.R. Greenstreet
2020, ICES Journal of Marine Science (77) 539-552
Ecosystem-scale examination of fish communities typically involves creating spatio-temporally explicit relative abundance distribution maps using data from multiple fishery-independent surveys. However, sampling performance varies by vessel and sampling gear, which may influence estimated species distribution patterns. Using GAMMs, the effect of different gear–vessel combinations on relative abundance estimates at...
Marine latitudinal diversity gradients, niche conservatism and out of the tropics and Arctic: Climatic sensitivity of small organisms
Wing-Tung Ruby Chiu, Moriaki Yasuhara, Thomas M. Cronin, Gene Hunt, Laura Gemery, Chih‐Lin Wei
2020, Journal of Biogeography (47) 817-828
AimThe latitudinal diversity gradient (LDG) is a consequence of evolutionary and ecological mechanisms acting over long history, and thus is best investigated with organisms that have rich fossil records. However, combined neontological‐palaeontological investigations are mostly limited to large, shelled invertebrates, which keeps our...
Quantifying western U.S. rangelands as fractional components with multi-resolution remote sensing and in situ data
Matthew Rigge, Collin Homer, Lauren Cleeves, Deb Meyer, Brett Bunde, Hua Shi, George Z. Xian, Matthew R Bobo
2020, Remote Sensing (12)
Quantifying western U.S. rangelands as a series of fractional components with remote sensing provides a new way to understand these changing ecosystems. Nine rangeland ecosystem components, including percent shrub, sagebrush (Artemisia), big sagebrush, herbaceous, annual herbaceous, litter, and bare ground cover, along with sagebrush and shrub heights, were...
Coal biomethanation potential of various ranks from Pakistan: A possible alternative energy source
Aneela Y. Malik, Muhammad Ishtiaq Ali, Asif Jamal, Uzma Farooq, Nazia Khatoon, William H. Orem, Elliott P. Barnhart, John R. SanFilipo, Huan He, Zaixing Huang
2020, Article
The present study investigated the possibility of microbial transformations of coal to gas (biogasification) as an alternative to conventional coal mining because this approach has the potential to be less expensive, cleaner, and providinge greater access to deeper coal resources. Biogasification is often associated with low rank coal such as...
A domestic earthquake impact alert protocol based on the combined USGS PAGER and FEMA Hazus loss estimation systems
David J. Wald, Hope A. Seligson, Jesse Rozelle, Jordan Burns, Kristin Marano, Kishor S. Jaiswal, Mike Hearne, Douglas Bausch
2020, Earthquake Spectra (36) 164-182
The U.S. Geological Survey’s PAGER alert system provides rapid (10-20 min) but general loss estimates of ranges of fatalities and economic impact for significant global earthquakes. FEMA’s Hazus software, in contrast, provides time consuming (2-5 hours) but more detailed loss information quantified in terms of structural, social, and economic consequences...
Genotyping-by-sequencing illuminates high levels of divergence among sympatric forms of coregonines in the Laurentian Great Lakes
Amanda S. Ackiss, Wesley Larson, Wendylee Stott
2020, Evolutionary Applications (13) 1037-1054
Effective resource management depends on our ability to partition diversity into biologically meaningful units. Recent evolutionary divergence, however, can often lead to ambiguity in morphological and genetic differentiation, complicating the delineation of valid conservation units. Such is the case with the "coregonine problem," where recent postglacial radiations of coregonines into...