Forests do not limit bumble bee foraging movements in a montane meadow complex
John Michael Mola, Michael R. Miller, Sean M. O'Rourke, Neal M. Williams
2020, Ecological Entomology (45) 955-965
1. Understanding the roles of habitat fragmentation and resource availability in shaping animal movement are integral for promoting species persistence and conservation. For insects like bumble bees, their movement patterns affect the survival and reproductive potential of their colonies as well as the pollen flow of plant species. However, our...
Cascadia Margin cold seeps: Subduction zone fluids, gas hydrates, and chemosynthetic habitats
Amanda Demopoulos, Carolyn D. Ruppel, Nancy G. Prouty, Janet Watt, Tamara Baumberger, David A Butterfield
2020, Conference Paper, Workshop to identify national ocean exploration priorities in the Pacific: White paper submissions
Priority Geographic Area: The outer continental shelf and upper continental slope from Canada/U.S. border offshore Washington State to the Mendocino Fracture Zone (Northern California), entirely within the U.S. Exclusive Economic Zone (EEZ), from the outermost shelf to at least 2000 m water depth (Figure 1). Description of Priority Area: Since...
Mapping, exploration, and characterization of the California continental margin and associated features from the California-Oregon border to Ensenada, Mexico
Amanda Demopoulos, Nancy G. Prouty, Daniel S. Brothers, Janet Watt, James E. Conrad, Jason Chaytor, Chris Caldow
2020, Conference Paper, Workshop to identify national ocean exploration priorities in the Pacific: White paper submissions
Priority Geographic Area: Both within and outside US Exclusive Economic Zone (EEZ). California continental margin. This area includes and continues south of the geographic area captured in the Watt et al. white paper. Description of Priority Area: The California continental margin, from the narrow shelf to abyssal depths, contains diverse...
Steps to develop early warning systems and future scenarios of wave-driven flooding along coral reef-lined coasts
Gundula Winter, Curt D. Storlazzi, Sean Vitousek, Ap van Dongeren, Robert T. McCall, Ron Hoeke, William Skirving, John Marra, Johan Reyns, Jerome Aucan, Matthew J. Widlansky, Janet Becker, Chris Perry, Gerd Masselink, Ryan Lowe, Murray Ford, Andrew Pomeroy, Fernando J. Mendez, Ana C. Rueda, Moritz Wandres
2020, Frontiers in Marine Science (7)
Tropical coral reef-lined coasts are exposed to storm wave-driven flooding. In the future, flood events during storms are expected to occur more frequently and to be more severe due to sea-level rise, changes in wind and weather patterns, and the deterioration of coral reefs. Hence, disaster managers and coastal planners...
Determinants and consequences of dispersal in vertebrates with complex life cycles: a review of pond-breeding amphibians
H Cayuela, V Valenzuela-Sanchez, L Teulier, I Martinez-Solano, J Lena, J Merila, Erin L. Muths, R Shine, L Quay, M Denoel, J Clobert, B. Schmidt
2020, The Quarterly Review of Biology (95)
Dispersal is a central process in ecology and evolution. It strongly influences the dynamics of spatially structured populations, by affecting population growth rate and local colonization-extinction processes. Dispersal can also influence evolutionary processes because it determines rates and patterns of gene flow in spatially structured populations and is closely linked...
Population and harvest dynamics of midcontinent sandhill cranes
Aaron T. Pearse, Glen A. Sargeant, Gary Krapu, David A. Brandt
2020, Journal of Wildlife Management (84) 902-910
Sandhill cranes (Antigone canadensis) inhabiting the midcontinent of North America have been hunted since the 1960s under management goals of maintaining abundance, retaining geographic distribution, and maximizing sustainable harvest. Some biologists have raised concerns regarding harvest sustainability because sandhill cranes have lower reproductive rates than other game birds. We summarized...
Herring Disease Program II 19120111-E - 2019 Annual Report
Paul Hershberger, Maureen K. Purcell
2020, Report
We will investigate fish health factors that may be contributing to the failed recovery of Pacific herring populations in Prince William Sound. Field samples will provide infection and disease prevalence data from Prince William Sound and Sitka Sound that will inform the ASA model, serological data that will indicate the...
Flea parasitism and host survival in a plague-relevant system: Theoretical and conservation implications
David A. Eads, Rachel C. Abbott, Dean E. Biggins, Tonie E. Rocke
2020, Journal of Wildlife Diseases (56) 378-387
Plague is a bacterial zoonosis of mammalian hosts and flea vectors. The disease is capable of ravaging rodent populations and transforming ecosystems. Because plague mortality is likely to be predicted by flea parasitism, it is critical to understand vector dynamics. It has been hypothesized that paltry precipitation and reduced vegetative...
2019 Status of the Lake Ontario Lower Trophic Levels
Kristen T. Holeck, Lars G. Rudstam, Christopher Hotaling, Dave Lemon, Web Pearsall, Jana Lantry, Mike Connerton, Chris Legard, Steve LaPan, Zy Biesinger, Brian F. Lantry, Brian Weidel, Brian O’Malley
2020, Report, 2019 Lake Ontario Unit Annual Report
Spring total phosphorus (TP) in 2019 was 3.2 µg/L (offshore) and 4.7 µg/L (nearshore), both all-time lows; however, there is no significant time trend in our data series (1995-2019 for nearshore; 2002-2019 for offshore). Apr/May – Oct mean TP concentrations were low at both nearshore and offshore locations (range, 3.7...
Greater sage-grouse chick killed by Great Basin gopher snake
Sarah E McIntire, Jordan C. Rabon, Peter S. Coates, Mark A. Ricca, Tracey N. Johnson
2020, Western North American Naturalist (80) 70-73
Despite extensive range overlap between Great Basin gopher snakes (Pituophis catenifer deserticola) and Greater Sage-Grouse (Centrocercus urophasianus) within sagebrush ecosystems, there are few documented predator–prey interactions between these species. Although gopher snakes have been observed preying on nests of other prairie grouse, studies that used video-monitoring at sage-grouse nests found...
Regionally Optimized Background Earthquake Rates from ETAS (ROBERE) for probabilistic seismic hazard assessment
Andrea L. Llenos, Andrew J. Michael
2020, Bulletin of the Seismological Society of America (110) 1172-1190
We use an epidemic‐type aftershock sequence (ETAS) based approach to develop a regionally optimized background earthquake rates from ETAS (ROBERE) method for probabilistic seismic hazard assessment. ROBERE fits parameters to the full seismicity catalog for a region with maximum‐likelihood estimation, including uncertainty. It then averages the earthquake rates over a...
Nexus between wildfire, climate change and population growth in California
Jon Keeley, Alexandra D. Syphard
2020, Fremontia (47) 4-13
Since the year 2000 California has experienced a remarkable upsurge in wildfires. Over five million hectares have burned in the last 20 years, which is double the area burned in the previous two decades. Much of this increase has been driven by large fires of more than 50,000 hectares that...
The ODD protocol for describing agent-based and other simulation models: A second update to improve clarity, replication, and structural realism
Volker Grimm, Steven F. Railsback, Christian Vincenot, Uta Berger, Cara Gallagher, Don DeAngelis, Bruce Edmonds, Jiaqi Ge, Jarl Giske, Jurgen Groeneveld, Alice S.A. Johnston, Alexander Miles, Jacob Nabe-Nielson, J. Gareth Polhill, Viktoriia Radchuk, Marie-Sophie Rohwader, Richard A. Stillman, Jan Theile, Daniel Ayllon
2020, Journal of Artificial Societies and Social Simulation (23)
The Overview, Design concepts and Details (ODD) protocol for describing Individual- and Agent-Based Models (ABMs) is now widely accepted and used to document such models in journal articles. As a standardized document for providing a consistent, logical and readable account of the structure and dynamics of ABMs, some research groups...
Final report: Southwestern Willow Flycatcher (Empidonax traillii extimus) and Western Yellow-billed Cuckoo (Coccyzus americanus occidentalis) surveys and habitat availability modeling on the Santa Clara River, California, 26 March 2020
Linnea S. Hall, Bruce K. Orr, James Hatten, Adam Lambert, Tom L. Dudley
2020, Report
Our project aimed to conduct population surveys for Southwestern Willow Flycatcher (Empidonax trailii extimus; SWFL) and Yellow-billed Cuckoo (Coccyzus americanus; YBCU) in 2018 and 2019, apply existing habitat models to illustrate and predict past, current, and future habitat suitabilities for these two species, and update and standardize classification and mapping...
Multiple mechanisms determine the effect of warming on plant litter decomposition in a dryland
Peter F. Chuckran, Robin H. Reibold, Heather L. Throop, Sasha C. Reed
2020, Soil Biology and Biochemistry (145)
In drylands, where soil fertility is typically low, plant litter decomposition provides particularly critical carbon and nitrogen inputs into soil. Although climate change is projected to increase the already large global extent of drylands, it is unknown how warmer temperatures will affect core ecosystem processes, such as plant litter decomposition,...
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...
Geology and hydrology of the Truxton basin and Hualapai Plateau, northwestern Arizona
Jon P. Mason, Donald J. Bills, Jamie P. Macy
Jon P. Mason, editor(s)
2020, Scientific Investigations Report 2020-5017-B
The geology of northwestern Arizona is prominently displayed on the canyon and cliff walls that compose the high-desert landscape of the Hualapai Plateau and that border the Truxton basin. The Truxton basin is a small topographic basin filled with Quaternary and Tertiary deposits and volcanic rock (about 1,600 feet thick...
Major hydrostratigraphic contacts of the Truxton basin and Hualapai Plateau, northwestern Arizona, developed from airborne electromagnetic data
Lyndsay B. Ball
Jon P. Mason, editor(s)
2020, Scientific Investigations Report 2020-5017-D
The area surrounding the Grand Canyon has spectacular outcrop exposure in the modern canyon walls, leading to stratigraphic contact delineations that are well constrained near canyons yet poorly constrained where the terrain remains undissected and relatively unexplored by boreholes. An airborne electromagnetic and magnetic survey of the western Hualapai Indian...
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,...
Groundwater availability in the Truxton basin, northwestern Arizona
Jon P. Mason, Jacob E. Knight, Lyndsay B. Ball, Jeffrey R. Kennedy, Jamie P. Macy, Donald J. Bills
Jon P. Mason, editor(s)
2020, Scientific Investigations Report 2020-5017-A
This is a summary chapter of a multichapter volume that includes a brief description of the study area and descriptions of the hydrogeologic framework, numerical groundwater-flow model, and estimates of simulated changes to groundwater levels of the Truxton aquifer....
Hydrogeologic characterization of the Hualapai Plateau on the western Hualapai Indian Reservation, northwestern Arizona
Jon P. Mason, Jamie P. Macy, Donald J. Bills, Bruce Gungle, Casey J.R. Jones
2020, Scientific Investigations Report 2020-5025
This study was developed to assess if groundwater from the western Hualapai Plateau could be used to supply developments in the Grand Canyon West area of the Hualapai Indian Reservation and to collect hydrogeologic data for future use in a numerical groundwater model for the reservation. Ground-based geophysical surveys; existing...
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...