The water-quality effects of a bulkhead installed in the Dinero mine tunnel, near Leadville, Colorado
Katherine Walton-Day, Taylor J. Mills, Adolph Amundson, Kato T. Dee, Melissa R. Relego, Caitlin Borbely
A. Brown, L. Figueroa, C. Wolkersdorfer, editor(s)
2013, Conference Paper, Annual International Mine Water Association conference — Reliable mine water technology
No abstract available....
SPARROW models used to understand nutrient sources in the Mississippi/Atchafalaya River Basin
Dale M. Robertson, David A. Saad
2013, Journal of Environmental Quality (42) 1422-1440
Nitrogen (N) and phosphorus (P) loading from the Mississippi/Atchafalaya River Basin (MARB) has been linked to hypoxia in the Gulf of Mexico. To describe where and from what sources those loads originate, SPAtially Referenced Regression On Watershed attributes (SPARROW) models were constructed for the MARB using geospatial datasets for 2002,...
Variable intertidal temperature explains why disease endangers black abalone
Tal Ben-Horin, Hunter S. Lenihan, Kevin D. Lafferty
2013, Ecology (94) 161-168
Epidemiological theory suggests that pathogens will not cause host extinctions because agents of disease should fade out when the host population is driven below a threshold density. Nevertheless, infectious diseases have threatened species with extinction on local scales by maintaining high incidence and the ability to spread efficiently even as...
A natural resource condition assessment for Sequoia and Kings Canyon National Parks: Appendix 22: climatic change
Adrian J. Das, Nathan L. Stephenson
2013, Natural Resource Report NPS/SEKI/NRR--2013/665.22
Climate is a master controller of the structure, composition, and function of biotic communities, affecting them both directly, through physiological effects, and indirectly, by mediating biotic interactions and by influencing disturbance regimes. Sequoia and Kings Canyon National Park’s (SEKI’s) dramatic elevational changes in biotic communities -- from warm mediterranean to...
Monitoring vegetation response to episodic disturbance events by using multitemporal vegetation indices
Gregory D. Steyer, Brady R. Couvillion, John A. Barras
2013, Journal of Coastal Research 118-130
Normalized Difference Vegetation Index (NDVI) derived from MODerate-resolution Imaging Spectroradiometer (MODIS) satellite imagery and land/water assessments from Landsat Thematic Mapper (TM) imagery were used to quantify the extent and severity of damage and subsequent recovery after Hurricanes Katrina and Rita of 2005 within the vegetation communities of Louisiana's coastal wetlands....
Reply to discussion: "Nutrient inputs to the Laurentian Great Lakes by source and watershed estimated using SPARROW watershed models" by R. Peter Richards, Ibrahim Alameddine, J. David Allan, David B. Baker, Nathan S. Bosch, Remegio Confesor, Joseph V. DePinto, David M. Dolan, Jeffrey M. Reutter, and Donald Scavia
Dale M. Robertson, David A. Saad
2013, Journal of the American Water Resources Association (49) 725-734
No abstract available....
Marsh collapse thresholds for coastal Louisiana estimated using elevation and vegetation index data
Brady R. Couvillion, Holly Beck
2013, Journal of Coastal Research 58-67
Forecasting marsh collapse in coastal Louisiana as a result of changes in sea-level rise, subsidence, and accretion deficits necessitates an understanding of thresholds beyond which inundation stress impedes marsh survival. The variability in thresholds at which different marsh types cease to occur (i.e., marsh collapse) is not well understood. We...
Reorganization of vegetation, hydrology and soil carbon after permafrost degradation across heterogeneous boreal landscapes
M. Torre Jorgenson, Jennifer Harden, Mikhail Kanevskiy, Jonathan O'Donnell, Kim Wickland, Stephanie Ewing, Kristen Manies, Qianlai Zhuang, Yuri Shur, Robert G. Striegl, Joshua C. Koch
2013, Environmental Research Letters (8)
The diversity of ecosystems across boreal landscapes, successional changes after disturbance and complicated permafrost histories, present enormous challenges for assessing how vegetation, water and soil carbon may respond to climate change in boreal regions. To address this complexity, we used a chronosequence approach to assess changes in vegetation composition, water...
Survival of Apache Trout eggs and alevins under static and fluctuating temperature regimes
Matthew S. Recsetar, Scott A. Bonar
2013, Transactions of the American Fisheries Society (142) 373-379
Increased stream temperatures due to global climate change, livestock grazing, removal of riparian cover, reduction of stream flow, and urbanization will have important implications for fishes worldwide. Information exists that describes the effects of elevated water temperatures on fish eggs, but less information is available on the effects of fluctuating...
Contaminants in stream sediments from seven United States metropolitan areas: part I: distribution in relation to urbanization
Lisa H. Nowell, Patrick W. Moran, Robert J. Gilliom, Daniel L. Calhoun, Christopher G. Ingersoll, Nile E. Kemble, Kathryn Kuivila, Patrick J. Phillips
2013, Archives of Environmental Contamination and Toxicology (64) 32-51
Organic contaminants and trace elements were measured in bed sediments collected from streams in seven metropolitan study areas across the United States to assess concentrations in relation to urbanization. Polycyclic aromatic hydrocarbons, polychlorinated biphenyls, organochlorine pesticides, the pyrethroid insecticide bifenthrin, and several trace elements were significantly related to urbanization across...
Zinc isotope and transition-element dynamics accompanying hydrozincite biomineralization in the Rio Naracauli, Sardinia, Italy
Richard B. Wanty, F. Podda, Giovanni De Giudici, R. Cidu, Pierfranco Lattanzi
2013, Chemical Geology (337-338) 1-10
The Rio Naracauli in SW Sardinia drains part of the Ingurtosu Zn–Pb mining district, and contains extreme concentrations of dissolved Zn at near-neutral pH. In the upper reaches of the stream, pH, alkalinity and Zn concentrations are such that hydrozincite [Zn5(CO3)2(OH)6] precipitates in a biologically mediated process facilitated by a...
Assessing winter cover crop nutrient uptake efficiency using a water quality simulation model
In-Young Yeo, Sangchui Lee, Ali M. Sadeghi, Peter C. Beeson, W. Dean Hively, Greg W. McCarty, Megan W. Lang
2013, Hydrology and Earth System Sciences (10) 14229-14263
Winter cover crops are an effective conservation management practice with potential to improve water quality. Throughout the Chesapeake Bay Watershed (CBW), which is located in the Mid-Atlantic US, winter cover crop use has been emphasized and federal and state cost-share programs are available to farmers to subsidize the cost of...
Galveston Bay: Chapter D in Emergent wetlands status and trends in the northern Gulf of Mexico: 1950-2010
Lawrence R. Handley, Kathryn A. Spear, Eleonor Taylor, Cindy A. Thatcher
2013, Report, Emergent wetlands status and trends in the northern Gulf of Mexico: 1950-2010
The Galveston Bay estuary is located on the upper Texas Gulf coast (Lester and Gonzalez, 2002). It is composed of four major sub-bays - Galveston, Trinity, East, and West Bays. It is Texas’ largest estuary on the Gulf Coast with a total area of 155,399 hectares (384,000 acres) and 1,885...
Empirical flow parameters : a tool for hydraulic model validity
William H. Asquith, Thomas E. Burley, Theodore G. Cleveland
2013, Book
The objectives of this project were (1) To determine and present from existing data in Texas, relations between observed stream flow, topographic slope, mean section velocity, and other hydraulic factors, to produce charts such as Figure 1 and to produce empirical distributions of the various flow parameters to provide a...
Topological and canonical kriging for design flood prediction in ungauged catchments: an improvement over a traditional regional regression approach?
Stacey A. Archfield, Alessio Pugliese, Attilio Castellarin, Jon O. Skoien, Julie E. Kiang
2013, Hydrology and Earth System Sciences (17) 1575-1588
In the United States, estimation of flood frequency quantiles at ungauged locations has been largely based on regional regression techniques that relate measurable catchment descriptors to flood quantiles. More recently, spatial interpolation techniques of point data have been shown to be effective for predicting streamflow statistics (i.e., flood flows and...
Towards a publicly available, map-based regional software tool to estimate unregulated daily streamflow at ungauged rivers
Stacey A. Archfield, Peter A. Steeves, John D. Guthrie, Kernell G. Ries III
2013, Geoscientific Model Development (6) 101-115
Streamflow information is critical for addressing any number of hydrologic problems. Often, streamflow information is needed at locations that are ungauged and, therefore, have no observations on which to base water management decisions. Furthermore, there has been increasing need for daily streamflow time series to manage rivers for both human...
Summary, synthesis, and significance
Todd C. Esque, Kenneth E. Nussear, Richard D. Inman, Marjorie D. Matocq, Peter J. Weisberg, Thomas E. Dilts, Phillip Leitner
2013, Book chapter, Habitat modeling, landscape genetics, and habitat connectivity for the Mohave ground squirrel to guide renewable energy development, CEC‐500‐2014‐003
The initial habitat suitability model estimates pre‐European suitable habitat of the Mohave ground squirrel (MGS, Xerospermophilus mohavensis) covering 19,023 km2. Impact scenarios predicted that between 10 percent and 16 percent of suitable habitat has been lost to historical human disturbances, and up to an additional 10 percent may be affected...
Statewide summary for Mississippi
Lawrence R. Handley, Kathryn A. Spear, Ali Leggett, Cindy A. Thatcher
2013, Report, Emergent wetlands status and trends in the northern Gulf of Mexico: 1950-2010
The Mississippi coastline is 113 linear kilometers (70 miles) long and its estuaries cover approximately 594 km (369 mi; Figure 1) (Handley and others, 2007). It has a man-made sand beach 43.5 km (27 mi) long and 595.5 km (370 mi) of shoreline (Klein and others, b., 1998). The Mississippi...
Mobile Bay
Lawrence R. Handley, Kathryn A. Spear, Stephen Jones, Cindy A. Thatcher
2013, Report, Emergent wetlands status and trends in the northern Gulf of Mexico: 1950-2010
Mobile Bay is the largest bay found in Alabama’s coastal area (Handley et al., 2007). It was named an Estuary of National Significance in 1995 under the U.S. Environmental Protection Agency’s (EPA) National Estuary Program (NEP), and its Comprehensive Conservation Management Plan was completed in 2002. Mobile Bay is 1,070...
Statewide summary for Alabama
Lawrence R. Handley, Kathryn A. Spear, Stephen Jones, Cindy A. Thatcher
2013, Report, Emergent wetlands status and trends in the northern Gulf of Mexico: 1950-2010
Alabama is over 132,000 km2 (51,000 miles2) in area, 483 km (300 miles) long, and 322 km (200 miles) wide (Copeland, 1968). Coastal Alabama comprises Mobile and Baldwin Counties and the surrounding State waters in the Gulf of Mexico (Figure 1; O’Neil and Mettee, 1982). It is part of both...
Freshwater and drought on Pacific Islands
Scot K. Izuka, Victoria Keener
2013, Book chapter, Climate Change and Pacific Islands: Indicators and Impacts: Report for the 2012 Pacific Islands Regional Climate Assessment
Mercury and selenium concentrations in biofilm, macroinvertebrates, and fish collected in the Yankee Fork of the Salmon River, Idaho, USA, and their potential effects on fish health
Darren T. Rhea, Aida M. Farag, David D. Harper, Elizabeth McConnell, William G. Brumbaugh
2013, Archives of Environmental Contamination and Toxicology (64) 130-139
The Yankee Fork is a large tributary of the Salmon River located in central Idaho, USA, with an extensive history of placer and dredge-mining activities. Concentrations of selenium (Se) and mercury (Hg) in various aquatic trophic levels were measured in the Yankee Fork during 2001 and 2002. Various measurements of...
Fish population failure caused by an environmental estrogen is long-lasting and regulated by direct and parental effects on survival and fecundity
Adam R. Schwindt, Dana L. Winkelman
2013, Thesis, The population ecology of fathead minnows (<i>Pimephales promelas</i>) in estrogen contaminated environments
Despite significant research demonstrating effects of estrogens such as 17α - ethinylestradiol (EE2) on fish, the underlying mechanisms regulating population failure are unknown. Projected water shortages could leave waterways increasingly dominated by wastewater effluent and understanding mechanisms is necessary for conservation and management. Here we identify mechanisms of...
Appendix D: Use of wave scenarios to assess potential submerged oil mat (SOM) formation along the coast of Florida and Alabama
P. Soupy Dalyander, Joseph W. Long, Nathaniel G. Plant, David M. Thompson
2013, Operational Science Advisory Team Report III
During the Deepwater Horizon oil spill, oil in the surf zone mixed with sediment in the surf zone to form heavier-than-water sediment oil agglomerates of various size, ranging from small (cm-scale) pieces (surface residual balls, SRBs) to large mats (100-m scale, surface residue mats, SR mats). Once SR mats formed...
Trends in landscape and vegetation change and implications for the Santa Cruz Watershed
Miguel L. Villarreal, Laura M. Norman, Robert H. Webb, Raymond M. Turner
2013, Book, Proceedings of the Science on the Sonoita Plain Symposium
Monitoring and characterizing the interactive effects of land use and climate on land surface processes is a primary focus of land change science, and of particular concern in arid Wells Distribution in Shallow Groundwater Areas Pumping Trends Increase Streamflow Extent Declines 27 environments where both landscapes and livelihoods can be...