Bayesian multistate models for measuring invasive carp movement and evaluating telemetry array performance
Jessica C. Stanton, Marybeth K. Brey, Alison A. Coulter, David R. Stewart, Brent Knights
2024, PeerJ (12)
Understanding the movement patterns of an invasive species can be a powerful tool in designing effective management and control strategies. Here, we used a Bayesian multistate model to investigate the movement of two invasive carp species, silver carp (Hypophthalmichthys molitrix) and bighead carp (H. nobilis), using acoustic telemetry. The invaded...
Risk of capture is modified by hypoxia and interjurisdictional migration of Lake Whitefish (Coregonus clupeaformis)
Richard Kraus, H. Andrew Cook, Alexis Sakis, Thomas MacDougall, Matthew Faust, Joseph Schmitt, Christopher Vandergoot
2024, Scientific Reports (14)
Interjurisdictional migrations lead to seasonally changing patterns of exploitation risk, emphasizing the importance of spatially explicit approaches to fishery management. Understanding how risk changes along a migration route supports time-area based fishery management, but quantifying risk can be complicated when multiple fishing methods are geographically segregated and when bycatch species...
A robust quantitative method to distinguish runoff-generated debris flows from floods
David B. Cavagnaro, Scott W. McCoy, Jason W. Kean, Matthew A. Thomas, Donald N. Lindsay, Brian W. McArdell, Jacob Hirschberg
2024, Geophysical Research Letters (51)
Debris flows and floods generated by rainfall runoff occur in rocky mountainous landscapes and burned steeplands. Flow type is commonly identified post-event through interpretation of depositional structures, but these may be poorly preserved or misinterpreted. Prior research indicates that discharge magnitude is commonly amplified in debris flows relative to floods...
Observations of flocs in an estuary and implications for computation of settling velocity
Rachel Allen, Daniel Livsey, Samantha C. McGill
2024, Journal of Geophysical Research: Oceans (129)
The settling velocity (ws) in estuarine environments can impact whether a region is eroding or accreting sediment on the bed, yet determining this rate can be an indirect process requiring a number of assumptions. Accurate determination of ws is especially needed for numerical models to reproduce observed sediment concentrations at the appropriate...
Clustering and unconstrained ordination with Dirichlet process mixture models
Christian Stratton, Andrew Hoegh, Thomas Rodhouse, Jennifer L. Green, Katharine M. Banner, Kathryn Irvine
2024, Methods in Ecology and Evolution (15) 1720-1732
Assessment of similarity in species composition or abundance across sampled locations is a common goal in multi-species monitoring programs. Existing ordination techniques provide a framework for clustering sample locations based on species composition by projecting high-dimensional community data into a low-dimensional, latent ecological gradient representing species composition. However, these...
Wide-ranging migration of post-nesting hawksbill sea turtles (Eretmochelys imbricata) from the Caribbean island of Nevis
Daniel R. Evans, Lemuel Pemberton, Raymond Carthy
2024, Marine Biology (171)
Little is known about the post-nesting migration and foraging areas of hawksbill turtles (Eretmochelys imbricata) nesting on St. Kitts and Nevis, an important nesting site for hawksbills in the eastern Caribbean. To elucidate internesting, migration and foraging patterns of hawksbills from Nevis, we satellite tagged 28 post-nesting turtles between 2006 and...
Evaluation of techniques for estimating the age and growth of known‐age White Sturgeon
Courtnie L. Ghere, Ryan S. Hardy, Sean Wilson, Michael C. Quist
2024, North American Journal of Fisheries Management (44) 880-889
Objective Successful conservation and management of fishes require an understanding of their age and growth. However, methods for estimating the age and growth of long-lived fish species are difficult to validate. The Kootenai River basin has a decades-long mark–recapture program for endangered White Sturgeon Acipenser transmontanus. The mark–recapture history information for...
Environmental drivers and spatial patterns of antibiotic-resistant, enteric coliforms across a forest–urban riverscape
Angela M Klock, Christian E. Torgersen, Marilyn C Roberts, Daniel J Vogt, Kristiina A Vogt
2024, Freshwater Science (43) 231-249
Antibiotic resistant bacteria are prevalent environmental contaminants in freshwaters, and antibiotic resistance genes circulate throughout the urban water cycle. The increase of antibiotic resistant pathogens threatens public health through direct and indirect exposure, and natural resource managers need information on the spatial...
Peri-Gondwanan sediment in the Arkoma Basin derived from the north: The detrital zircon record of a uniquely concentrated non-Laurentian source signal in the late Paleozoic
Tyson Michael Smith, Marieke Dechesne, Jaime Ann Megumi Hirtz, Glenn R. Sharman, Mark R. Hudson, Brandon Michael Lutz, Neil Patrick Griffis
2024, Geosphere (20) 1286-1314
During the assembly of Pangea, peri-Gondwanan terranes collided with the eastern and southern margins of Laurentia and brought with them unique detrital zircon U-Pb signatures. Discriminating between individual peri-Gondwanan terranes in the detrital record is difficult due to their similar geologic histories. However,...
Asynchronous movement patterns between breeding and stopover locations in a long-distance migratory songbird
Theodore J. Zenzal Jr., Andrea Contina, Hannah B. Vander Zanden, Leanne K. Kuwahara, Daniel C. Allen, Kristen M. Covino
2024, Avian Conservation and Ecology (19)
The species-specific migratory patterns and strategies of many songbirds remain unknown or understudied, as research in animal ecology is biased toward the breeding period, with the fewest studies on the migratory period across taxa. Identifying large-scale spatiotemporal migratory patterns is challenging, as individuals within a species may vary in their...
Capelin on the rebound: Using seabird diets to track trends in forage fish populations
Mayumi L. Arimitsu, Caitlin Elizabeth Marsteller, John F. Piatt, Scott Hatch, Shannon Wheland
2024, Newsletter
Capelin are cold-water forage fish that respond rapidly to fluctuating ocean temperatures. They are prized food for seabirds and other marine predators in Alaska. Researchers have monitored seabird diets at Middleton Island for decades to make connections between changes in abundance of predators and their prey. During a prolonged marine...
Observing systems, modeling, and forecasting
Keith Bouma-Gregson, Gregory Doucette, Jennifer L. Graham, Raphael Kudela, Beth Stauffer, Clarissa Anderson, John F. Bratton, Benjamin M. Holcomb, Kate Hubbard, Tenaya Norris, Tom Stiles, Peter J. Tango, Heather Raymond, Vanessa Zubkousky
2024, Report, Harmful algal research & response: A national environmental science strategy (HARRNESS), 2024-2034
Predicting harmful algal blooms (HABs) requires integrating physical, chemical, and biological data collected from observing networks and then assimilating these data into models, which are used to generate forecasts. In 2005, the Harmful Algal Research and Response: A National Environmental Science Strategy 2005-2015 (HARRNESS, 2005) made recommendations on how to...
Abundance and distribution of white-tailed deer on First State National Historical Park and surrounding lands
H. Brian Underwood, Madison R. Hand, Donald J. Leopold
2024, Science Report NPS/SR—2024/176
We estimated both abundance and distribution of white-tailed deer (Odocoileus virginianus) on the Brandywine Valley unit of First State National Historical Park (FRST) and the Brandywine Creek State Park (BCSP) during 2020 and 2021 with two widely used field methods — a road-based count and a network of camera traps....
Incorporating climate data into emergency planning and exercises: A primer for emergency management practioners and data developers
Christine M. Albano, Maureen I. McCarthy, Stephanie Anne Mcafee, Anne Wein, Michael D. Dettinger
2024, Report
Climate change has and will continue to sharpen climate-related risks to communities and natural resources in California and elsewhere, as the probabilities of more extreme weather, floods, and fires continue to increase. This poses a problem of novel situations for emergency management. Progress has been made in terms of formally...
Diminishing productivity and hyperstable harvest in northern Wisconsin walleye fisheries
Joseph T. Mrnak, Holly Susan Embke, Max V. Wilkinson, Steph L. Shaw, M. Jake Vander Zanden, Greg G. Sass
2024, Canadian Journal of Fisheries and Aquatic Sciences (81) 1650-1665
Managing fisheries in a changing socio-ecological environment may require holistic approaches for identifying and adapting to novel ecosystem dynamics. Using 32 years of Ceded Territory of Wisconsin (CTWI) walleye (Sander vitreus) data, we estimated production (P), biomass (B), biomass turnover (P/B), yield (Y), and yield over production (Y/P) and tested...
Disentangling genetic diversity of Myotis septentrionalis: population structure, demographic history, and effective population size
Jenna R. Grimshaw, Deahn M. Donner, Roger W. Perry, W. Mark Ford, Alex Silvis, Carlos J. Garcia, Richard D. Stevens, David A. Ray
2024, Journal of Mammalogy (105) 854-864
Myotis septentrionalis (Northern Long-eared Bat) has recently suffered a >90% decline in population size in North America due to white-nose syndrome (WNS). We assessed genetic diversity, population structure, current effective population size, and demographic history of M. septentrionalis distributed across the United States to determine baseline levels pre-WNS. We analyzed RADseq data from...
Living with wildfire in Lake Wenatchee, Chelan County, Washington: 2022 Data report
Julia Goolsby, Patricia A. Champ, Suzanne Wittenbrink, Colleen Donovan, Kris King, Hannah Brenkert-Smith, James R. Meldrum, Christopher M. Barth, Carolyn Wagner, Chiara Forrester
2024, Research Note RMRS-RN-103
Community wildfire readiness includes actions taken by residents, including wildfire risk mitigation at the parcel level and evacuation preparedness. This report presents results from two data collection efforts in the Lake Wenatchee Fire & Rescue service district in Chelan County, Washington: parcel level rapid wildfire risk assessments and household surveys...
Methods for computing water-quality concentrations and loads at sites operated by the U.S. Geological Survey Kansas Water Science Center
Mandy L. Stone, Casey J. Lee, Teresa J. Rasmussen, Thomas J. Williams, Ariele R. Kramer, Brian J. Klager
2024, Open-File Report 2024-1049
The U.S. Geological Survey (USGS) Kansas Water Science Center (KSWSC) has published time-series computations of water-quality concentrations and loads based on in situ sensor data since 1995. Water-quality constituent concentrations or densities are computed using regression models that relate in situ sensor values to laboratory analyses of periodically collected samples....
Boom and bust: The effects of masting on seed predator range dynamics and trophic cascades
Michael T. Hallworth, Alexej Sirén, William DeLuca, Timothy Duclos, Kent P. McFarland, Jason M. Hill, Christopher C. Rimmer, Toni Lyn Morelli
2024, Diversity and Distributions (30)
AimSpatiotemporal variation in resource availability is a strong driver of animal distributions. In the northern hardwood and boreal forests of the northeastern United States, tree mast events provide resource pulses that drive the population dynamics of small mammals, including the American red squirrel (Tamiasciurus hudsonicus), a primary songbird nest predator....
Identifying transportation data and system needs for a Federal lands transportation data platform
Daniel Manier, Nicholas Grisham, Amit Armstrong, Elijah Henley, Jason Doolittle, Richard D. Inman
2024, Open-File Report 2024-1038
Executive SummaryModern transportation and land-use planning efforts include information from many sources to address topics such as safety, efficiency, commercial, and social needs. This wide breadth of topics provides opportunities for collaboration and development of common tools for diverse users. In many cases, different information systems provide the spatial data...
The new self-anchored suspension (SAS) San Francisco Bay Bridge- Its response to a small earthquake
Mehmet Celebi
2024, Conference Paper, Proceedings of the 18th WCEE 2024
This paper presents a summary of previously published work (Celebi 2023) related to the new Self-Anchored Suspension (SAS) bridge that went into service within the last decade as a replacement for the older truss bridge spanning between Yerba Buena Island and Oakland, California, within the San Francisco Bay Area. During the...
Assessing habitat use and population dynamics of fisheries resources at Kaloko Fishpond
Timothy B. Grabowski, Ricky Tabandera, Nathaniel Greenwald, Annie Larson
2024, Hawai’i Cooperative Fishery Research Unit Technical Report Series HCFRU-003
Throughout Hawai'i, fishponds are considered by their local communities as important cultural touchstones, a source of local, sustainably produced food, and an important component to the development of community-based management for nearshore fisheries. Within Kaloko-Honokōhau National Historical Park, the restoration of Kaloko Fishpond for traditional aquaculture management is a goal...
Low-flow period seasonality, trends, and climate linkages across the United States
Caelan Simeone, Gregory J. McCabe, Jory Seth Hecht, John C. Hammond, Glenn A. Hodgkins, Carolyn G. Olson, Michael Wieczorek, David M. Wolock
2024, Hydrological Sciences Journal (69) 1387-1398
Low-flow period properties, including timing, magnitude, and duration, influence many key processes for water resource managers and ecosystems. We computed annual low-flow period duration and timing metrics from 1951 to 2020 for 1032 conterminous United States (CONUS) streamgages and analyzed spatial patterns, trends through time, and relationships to climate. Results...
Movement behavior in a dominant ungulate underlies successful adjustment to a rapidly changing landscape following megafire
Kendall L. Calhoun, Thomas Connor, Kaitlyn M. Gaynor, Amy Van Scoyoc, Michael C Mcinturff, Samantha E.S. Kreling, Justin S. Brashares
2024, Movement Ecology (12)
BackgroundMovement plays a key role in allowing animal species to adapt to sudden environmental shifts. Anthropogenic climate and land use change have accelerated the frequency of some of these extreme disturbances, including megafire. These megafires dramatically alter ecosystems and challenge the capacity of several species to adjust to...
Forecasting inundation of catastrophic landslides from precursory creep
Yuankun Xu, R. Burgmann, David L. George, E..J. Fielding, G.X. Solis-Gordillo, D.B. Yanez-Borja
2024, Geophysical Research Letters (51)
Forecasting landslide inundation upon catastrophic failure is crucial for reducing casualties, yet it remains a long-standing challenge owing to the complex nature of landslides. Recent global studies indicate that catastrophic hillslope failures are commonly preceded by a period of precursory creep, motivating a novel scheme to foresee...