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40807 results.

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Page 643, results 16051 - 16075

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A wetting and drying scheme for ROMS
John C. Warner, Zafer Defne, Kevin Haas, Hernan G. Arango
2013, Computers & Geosciences (58) 54-61
The processes of wetting and drying have many important physical and biological impacts on shallow water systems. Inundation and dewatering effects on coastal mud flats and beaches occur on various time scales ranging from storm surge, periodic rise and fall of the tide, to infragravity wave motions. To correctly simulate...
Lidar-derived estimate and uncertainty of carbon sink in successional phases of woody encroachment
Temuulen Sankey, Rupesh Shrestha, Joel B. Sankey, Stuart Hardgree, Eva Strand
2013, Journal of Geophysical Research: Biogeosciences (118) 1144-1155
Woody encroachment is a globally occurring phenomenon that contributes to the global carbon sink. The magnitude of this contribution needs to be estimated at regional and local scales to address uncertainties present in the global- and continental-scale estimates, and guide regional policy and management in balancing restoration activities, including removal...
Mapping risk of avian influenza transmission at the interface of domestic poultry and wild birds
Diann J. Prosser, Laura L. Hungerford, R. Michael Erwin, Mary Ann Ottinger, John Y. Takekawa, Erle C. Ellis
2013, Frontiers in Public Health (1)
Emergence of avian influenza viruses with high lethality to humans, such as the currently circulating highly pathogenic A(H5N1) (emerged in 1996) and A(H7N9) cause serious concern for the global economic and public health sectors. Understanding the spatial and temporal interface between wild and domestic populations, from which these viruses emerge,...
Food-web dynamics in a large river discontinuum
Wyatt F. Cross, Colden V. Baxter, Emma J. Rosi-Marshall, Robert O. Hall Jr., Theodore A. Kennedy, Kevin C. Donner, Holly A. Wellard Kelly, Sarah E.Z. Seegert, Kathrine E. Behn, Michael D. Yard
2013, Ecological Monographs (83) 311-337
Nearly all ecosystems have been altered by human activities, and most communities are now composed of interacting species that have not co-evolved. These changes may modify species interactions, energy and material flows, and food-web stability. Although structural changes to ecosystems have been widely reported, few studies have linked such changes...
On the twenty-first-century wet season projections over the Southeastern United States
Christopher Selman, Vasu Misra, Lydia Stefanova, Steven Dinapoli, Thomas J. Smith III
2013, Regional Environmental Change (13) 153-164
This paper reconciles the difference in the projections of the wet season over the Southeastern United States (SEUS) from a global climate model (the Community Climate System Model Version 3 [CCSM3]) and from a regional climate model (the Regional Spectral Model [RSM]) nested in the CCSM3. The CCSM3 projects a...
Comparison of age distributions estimated from environmental tracers by using binary-dilution and numerical models of fractured and folded karst: Shenandoah Valley of Virginia and West Virginia, USA
Richard M. Yager, Niel Plummer, Leon J. Kauffman, Daniel H. Doctor, David L. Nelms, Peter Schlosser
2013, Hydrogeology Journal (21) 1193-1217
Measured concentrations of environmental tracers in spring discharge from a karst aquifer in the Shenandoah Valley, USA, were used to refine a numerical groundwater flow model. The karst aquifer is folded and faulted carbonate bedrock dominated by diffuse flow along fractures. The numerical model represented bedrock structure and discrete features...
On the insignificance of Herschel's sunspot correlation
Jeffrey J. Love
2013, Geophysical Research Letters (40) 4171-4176
We examine William Herschel's hypothesis that solar-cycle variation of the Sun's irradiance has a modulating effect on the Earth's climate and that this is, specifically, manifested as an anticorrelation between sunspot number and the market price of wheat. Since Herschel first proposed his hypothesis in 1801, it has been regarded...
Quantifying wetland–aquifer interactions in a humid subtropical climate region: An integrated approach
Itza Mendoza-Sanchez, Mantha S. Phanikumar, Jie Niu, Jason R. Masoner, Isabelle M. Cozzarelli, Jennifer T. McGuire
2013, Journal of Hydrology (498) 237-253
Wetlands are widely recognized as sentinels of global climate change. Long-term monitoring data combined with process-based modeling has the potential to shed light on key processes and how they change over time. This paper reports the development and application of a simple water balance model based on long-term climate, soil,...
Climate downscaling effects on predictive ecological models: a case study for threatened and endangered vertebrates in the southeastern United States
David N. Bucklin, James I. Watling, Carolina Speroterra, Laura A. Brandt, Frank J. Mazzotti, Stephanie S. Romañach
2013, Regional Environmental Change (13) 57-68
High-resolution (downscaled) projections of future climate conditions are critical inputs to a wide variety of ecological and socioeconomic models and are created using numerous different approaches. Here, we conduct a sensitivity analysis of spatial predictions from climate envelope models for threatened and endangered vertebrates in the southeastern United States to...
Modelling interactions of toxicants and density dependence in wildlife populations
Aafke M. Schipper, Harrie W.M. Hendriks, Matthew J. Kauffman, A. Jan Hendriks, Mark A.J. Huijbregts
2013, Journal of Applied Ecology (50) 1469-1478
1. A major challenge in the conservation of threatened and endangered species is to predict population decline and design appropriate recovery measures. However, anthropogenic impacts on wildlife populations are notoriously difficult to predict due to potentially nonlinear responses and interactions with natural ecological processes like density dependence. 2. Here, we incorporated...
Phenology-based, remote sensing of post-burn disturbance windows in rangelands
Joel B. Sankeya, Cynthia S.A. Wallace, Sujith Ravi
2013, Ecological Indicators (30) 35-44
Wildland fire activity has increased in many parts of the world in recent decades. Ecological disturbance by fire can accelerate ecosystem degradation processes such as erosion due to combustion of vegetation that otherwise provides protective cover to the soil surface. This study employed a novel ecological indicator based on remote...
Geologic effects on groundwater salinity and discharge into an estuary
Christopher J. Russonielloa, Cristina Fernandeza, John F. Bratton, Joel F. Banaszakc, David E. Krantzc, Scott Andresd, Leonard F. Konikow, Holly A. Michaela
2013, Journal of Hydrology (498) 1-12
Submarine groundwater discharge (SGD) can be an important pathway for transport of nutrients and contaminants to estuaries. A better understanding of the geologic and hydrologic controls on these fluxes is critical for their estimation and management. We examined geologic features, porewater salinity, and SGD rates and patterns at an estuarine...
Sex difference in polychlorinated biphenyl concentrations of burbot Lota lota from Lake Erie
C.P. Madenjian, M.A. Stapanian, R.R. Rediske, J. P. O’Keefe
2013, Archives of Environmental Contamination and Toxicology (65) 300-308
Whole-fish polychlorinated biphenyl (PCB) concentrations were determined for 25 female and 25 male burbot Lota lota from Lake Erie. Bioenergetics modeling was used to investigate whether the sex difference in growth rate resulted in a difference in gross growth efficiency (GGE) between the sexes. For ages 6–13 years, male burbot...
National assessment of geologic carbon dioxide storage resources: results
U.S. Geological Survey Geologic Carbon Dioxide Storage Resources Assessment Team
2013, Circular 1386
In 2012, the U.S. Geological Survey (USGS) completed an assessment of the technically accessible storage resources (TASR) for carbon dioxide (CO2) in geologic formations underlying the onshore and State waters area of the United States. The formations assessed are at least 3,000 feet (914 meters) below the ground surface. The...
Energy cost of vessel disturbance to Kittlitz's Murrelets Brachyramphus brevirostris
Alison M. Agness, Kristin N. Marshall, John F. Piatt, James C. Ha, Glenn R. VanBlaricom
2013, Marine Ornithology: Journal of Seabird Research and Conservation (41) 13-21
We evaluated the energy cost of vessel disturbance for individual Kittlitz’s Murrelets Brachyramphus brevirostris in Glacier Bay National Park and Preserve in Alaska, USA. We used Monte Carlo simulations to model the daily energy expense associated with flight from vessels by both breeding and non-breeding birds and evaluated risk based...
The uses and limitations of the square‐root‐impedance method for computing site amplification
David Boore
2013, Bulletin of the Seismological Society of America (103) 2356-2368
The square‐root‐impedance (SRI) method is a fast way of computing approximate site amplification that does not depend on the details from velocity models. The SRI method underestimates the peak response of models with large impedance contrasts near their base, but the amplifications for those models is often close to or...
Air - water temperature relationships in the trout streams of southeastern Minnesota’s carbonate - sandstone landscape
Lori A. Krider, Joseph A. Magner, Jim Perry, Bruce C. Vondracek, Leonard C. Ferrington Jr.
2013, Journal of the American Water Resources Association (49) 896-907
Carbonate-sandstone geology in southeastern Minnesota creates a heterogeneous landscape of springs, seeps, and sinkholes that supply groundwater into streams. Air temperatures are effective predictors of water temperature in surface-water dominated streams. However, no published work investigates the relationship between air and water temperatures in groundwater-fed streams (GWFS) across watersheds. We...
Constraints on magma processes, subsurface conditions, and total volatile flux at Bezymianny Volcano in 2007–2010 from direct and remote volcanic gas measurements
Taryn Lopez, Sergey Ushakov, Pavel Izbekov, Franco Tassi, Cathy Cahill, Owen Neill, Cynthia A. Werner
2013, Journal of Volcanology and Geothermal Research (263) 92-107
Direct and remote measurements of volcanic gas composition, SO2 flux, and eruptive SO2 mass from Bezymianny Volcano were acquired between July 2007 and July 2010. Chemical composition of fumarolic gases, plume SO2 flux from ground and air-based ultraviolet remote sensing (FLYSPEC), and eruptive SO2 mass from Ozone Monitoring Instrument (OMI) satellite observations were used...
Modeling spatially explicit fire impact on gross primary production in interior Alaska using satellite images coupled with eddy covariance
Shengli Huang, Heping Liu, Devendra Dahal, Suming Jin, Lisa R. Welp, Jinxun Liu, Shuguang Liu
2013, Remote Sensing of Environment (135) 178-188
In interior Alaska, wildfires change gross primary production (GPP) after the initial disturbance. The impact of fires on GPP is spatially heterogeneous, which is difficult to evaluate by limited point-based comparisons or is insufficient to assess by satellite vegetation index. The direct prefire and postfire comparison is widely used, but...
Fine-scale hydrologic modeling for regional landscape applications: the California Basin Characterization Model development and performance
Lorraine E. Flint, Alan L. Flint, James H. Thorne, Ryan Boynton
2013, Ecological Processes (2) 1-21
IntroductionResource managers need spatially explicit models of hydrologic response to changes in key climatic drivers across variable landscape conditions. We demonstrate the utility of a Basin Characterization Model for California (CA-BCM) to integrate high-resolution data on physical watershed characteristics with historical or projected climate data to...
Possible return of Acropora cervicornis at Pulaski Shoal, Dry Tortugas National Park, Florida
Barbara H. Lidz, David G. Zawada
2013, Journal of Coastal Research (29) 256-271
Seabed classification is essential to assessing environmental associations and physical status in coral reef ecosystems. At Pulaski Shoal in Dry Tortugas National Park, Florida, nearly continuous underwater-image coverage was acquired in 15.5 hours in 2009 along 70.2 km of transect lines spanning ~0.2 km2. The Along-Track Reef-Imaging System (ATRIS), a...
Self-reporting bias in Chinook salmon sport fisheries in Idaho: implications for roving creel surveys
Joshua L. McCormick, Michael C. Quist, Daniel J. Schill
2013, North American Journal of Fisheries Management (33) 723-731
Self-reporting bias in sport fisheries of Chinook Salmon Oncorhynchus tshawytscha in Idaho was quantified by comparing observed and angler-reported data. A total of 164 observed anglers fished for 541 h and caught 74 Chinook Salmon. Fifty-eight fish were harvested and 16 were released. Anglers reported fishing for 604 h, an...
Emerging methods for the study of coastal ecosystem landscape structure and change
John Brock, Jeffrey J. Danielson, Sam Purkis
2013, International Journal of Remote Sensing (34) 6283-6285
Coastal landscapes are heterogeneous, dynamic, and evolve over a range of time scales due to intertwined climatic, geologic, hydrologic, biologic, and meteorological processes, and are also heavily impacted by human development, commercial activities, and resource extraction. A diversity of complex coastal systems around the globe, spanning glaciated shorelines to tropical...
A new dry hypothesis for the formation of Martian linear gullies
Serina Diniega, Candice J. Hansen, Jim N. McElwaine, C.H. Hugenholtz, Colin M. Dundas, Alfred S. McEwen, Mary C. Bourke
2013, Icarus (225) 526-537
Long, narrow grooves found on the slopes of martian sand dunes have been cited as evidence of liquid water via the hypothesis that melt-water initiated debris flows eroded channels and deposited lateral levées. However, this theory has several short-comings for explaining the observed morphology and activity of these linear gullies....
Multi-scale habitat selection of the endangered Hawaiian Goose
Christina R. Leopold, Steven C. Hess
2013, Condor (115) 17-27
After a severe population reduction during the mid-20th century, the endangered Hawaiian Goose (Branta sandvicensis), or Nēnē, has only recently re-established its seasonal movement patterns on Hawai‘i Island. Little is currently understood about its movements and habitat use during the nonbreeding season. The objectives of this research were to identify...