Coal geology and assessment of resources and reserves in the Little Snake River Coal Field and Red Desert Assessment Area, Greater Green River Basin, Wyoming
David C. Scott, Brian N. Shaffer, Jon E. Haacke, Paul E. Pierce, Scott A. Kinney
2019, Professional Paper 1836
The U.S. Geological Survey is studying regional-scale assessments of resources and reserves of primary coal beds in the major coal bed basins in the United States to help formulate policy for Federal, State, and local energy and land use. This report summarizes the geology and coal resources and reserves in...
Assessment of coal resources and reserves in the Little Snake River coal field and Red Desert assessment area, Greater Green River Basin, Wyoming
Brian N. Shaffer, Paul E. Pierce, Scott A. Kinney, Ricardo A. Olea, James A. Luppens
2019, Fact Sheet 2019-3053
The assessment of the Little Snake River coal field and Red Desert area covers approximately 2,300 square miles in the eastern portion of the Greater Green River Basin in south-central Wyoming. Coal-bearing formations are present throughout the Eocene, Paleocene, and Cretaceous strata in the assessment area. Paleogene-age coal beds are...
The burning of biocrusts facilitates the emergence of a bare soil community of poorly-connected chemoheterotrophic bacteria with depressed ecosystem services
Zachary T. Aanderud, Jason Bahr, David M. Robinson, Jayne Belnap, Tayte Campbell, Richard Gill, Brock McMillian, Samuel B St. Clair
2019, Frontiers in Ecology and Evolution (7)
Wildfires destabilize biocrust, requiring decades for most biological constituents to regenerate, but bacteria may recover quickly and mitigate the detrimental consequences of burnt soils. To evaluate the short-term recovery of biocrust bacteria, we tracked shifts in bacterial community form and function in Cyanobacteria/lichen-dominated (shrub interspaces) and Cyanobacteria/moss-dominated (beneath Artemisia tridentata)...
A comparison of bacteria cultured from unionid mussel hemolymph between stable populations in the upper Mississippi River and a mortality event in the Clinch River
Eric Leis, Sarah Erickson, Diane L. Waller, Jordan Richard, Tony Goldberg
2019, Freshwater Mollusk Biology and Conservation (22) 70-80
The diagnosis of bacterial disease in freshwater unionid mussels has been hindered by a lack of baseline information regarding the microbial communities associated with these animals. In this study, we cultured and identified bacteria from the hemolymph of stable mussel populations from the upper Mississippi River basin and compared results...
Using maintenance records from a long-term sensor monitoring network to evaluate the relationship between maintenance schedule and data quality
Donald R. Schoolmaster Jr., Sarai Piazza
2019, Environmental Monitoring and Assessment (192)
Sensor-based environmental monitoring networks are beginning to provide the large-scale, long-term data required to address important fundamental and applied questions in ecology. However, the data quality from deployed sensors can be difficult and costly to ensure. In this study, we use maintenance records from the 12-year history of Louisiana’s Coastwide...
Understanding tidal marsh trajectories: Evaluation of multiple indicators of marsh persistence
Kerstin Wasson, Neil K. Ganju, Zafer Defne, Charlie Endris, Tracy Elsey-Quirk, Karen M. Thorne, Chase M. Freeman, Glenn R. Guntenspergen, Daniel J. Nowacki, Kenneth B. Raposa
2019, Environmental Research Letters (14)
Robust assessments of ecosystem stability are critical for informing conservation and management decisions. Tidal marsh ecosystems provide vital services, yet are globally threatened by anthropogenic alterations to physical and biological processes. A variety of monitoring and modeling approaches have been undertaken to determine which tidal marshes are likely to persist...
Economic analysis for U.S. Geological Survey Coal Basin Assessments
Paul E. Pierce
2019, Open-File Report 2019-1082
This report presents economic principles and applications as they pertain to the U.S. Geological Survey’s U.S. Coal Resources and Reserves Assessment Project. This report compares commercial and governmental applications of economic principles and evaluation techniques. Common practices are described for evaluating the commercial investment potential of coal properties and calculating the government reserve...
U.S. Geological Survey EDMAP Program—Training the next generation of geologic mappers
Abby Ackerman, Darcy McPhee
2019, Fact Sheet 2019-3059
Detailed geologic maps are the basis of nearly every Earth-science investigation and can be used for natural hazard mitigation, resource identification and exploration, infrastructure planning, and more. A component of the congressionally mandated National Cooperative Geologic Mapping Program, EDMAP is a partnership among the U.S. Geological Survey, the Association of...
Sedimentation survey of Lago Guayabal, Villalba, Puerto Rico, December 2017
Julieta M. Gómez-Fragoso, Manuel Rosario
2019, Scientific Investigations Map 3442
The U.S. Geological Survey, in cooperation with the Puerto Rico Electric Power Authority, conducted a sedimentation survey of Lago Guayabal in 2017 to determine reservoir infill sedimentation rates, generate a bathymetric map of the bottom elevations of the reservoir, and create a stage-volume relation. The original (1913) capacity of Lago...
The seasonal energetic landscape of an apex marine carnivore, the polar bear
Anthony M. Pagano, Todd C. Atwood, George M. Durner, Terrie M. Williams
2019, Ecology
Divergent movement strategies have enabled wildlife populations to adapt to environmental change. In recent decades, the Southern Beaufort Sea subpopulation of polar bears (Ursus maritimus) has developed a divergent movement strategy in response to diminishing sea ice where the majority of the subpopulation (73–85%) stays on the sea ice in...
Simulated water-table and pond-level responses to proposed public water-supply withdrawals in the Hyannis Ponds Wildlife Management Area, Barnstable, Massachusetts
Denis R. LeBlanc, Timothy D. McCobb, Jeffrey R. Barbaro
2019, Scientific Investigations Report 2019-5121
The glacial kettle ponds in the Hyannis Ponds Wildlife Management Area in Barnstable, Massachusetts, support a community of rare and endangered plants. The ponds are hydraulically connected to the unconfined aquifer that underlies Cape Cod. The plants are adapted to the rise and fall of water levels in the ponds...
Use of subsistence-harvested whale carcasses by polar bears in the southern Beaufort Sea
Kate M Lillie, Eric M Gese, Todd C. Atwood, Mary M Conner
2019, Arctic (72) 337-484
The availability of a food subsidy has the potential to influence the condition, behavior, fitness, and population dynamics of a species. Since the early 2000s, monitoring efforts along the coast of northern Alaska indicated a higher proportion of polar bears (Ursus maritimus) of the southern Beaufort Sea (SB) subpopulation come...
Illuminating subduction zone rheological properties in the wake of a giant earthquake
Jonathan Weiss, Qiang Qiu, Sylvain Barbot, Tim J. Wright, James H. Foster, Alexander Saunders, Benjamin A. Brooks, Michael Bevis, Eric Kendrick, Todd Ericksen, Jonathan Avery, Robert Smalley Jr., Sergio R. Cimbaro, Luis E. Lenzano, Jorge Baron, Juan Carlos Báez, Arturo Echalar
2019, Science Advances (5)
Deformation associated with plate convergence at subduction zones is accommodated by a complex system involving fault slip and viscoelastic flow. These processes have proven difficult to disentangle. The 2010 Mw 8.8 Maule earthquake occurred close to the Chilean coast within a dense network of continuously recording Global Positioning System stations, which provide...
Influence of turbulence and in-stream structures on the transport and survival of grass carp eggs and larvae at various developmental stages
Andres F. Prada, Amy E. George, Benjamin H. Stahlschmidt, P. Ryan Jackson, Duane Chapman, Rafael O. Tinoco
2019, Aquatic Sciences (82)
Understanding the response of grass carp to flow and turbulence regimes during early life stages is fundamental to monitoring and controlling their spread. A comprehensive set of hydrodynamic experiments was conducted with live grass carp eggs and larvae, to better understand their drifting and swimming patterns with 3 different in-stream...
Fossilized diatoms of siliceous hydrothermal deposits in Yellowstone National Park, USA
Sabrina Brown, Sherilyn Fritz, Lisa Ann Morgan Morzel, Wayne (Pat) Shanks
2019, Diatom Research (34) 193-204
The study of eukaryotic extremophiles is relatively novel, and, therefore, documentation of the structure and function of micro-organisms in continental hydrothermal systems globally is limited. In this study, we investigate fossil diatoms in siliceous hydrothermal deposits of the Upper Geyser and Yellowstone Lake hydrothermal basins in Yellowstone...
Phosphorus runoff risk assessment in karstic regions of the U.S.
Andrew N. Sharpley, Phillip D. Hays, Michael B. Daniels, Karl W. VanDevender
2019, Agricultural & Environmental Letters (5)
The Phosphorus (P) Index risk assessment tool has been widely adopted across the U.S. to identify and rank site vulnerability to P runoff as part of the Natural Resources Conservation Service (NRCS) nutrient management planning (NMP) process. However, limited success has been achieved in addressing the risk of P loss...
User's guide for the national hydrography dataset plus (NHDPlus) high resolution
Richard B. Moore, Lucinda D. McKay, Alan H. Rea, Timothy R. Bondelid, Curtis V. Price, Thomas G. Dewald, Craig M. Johnston
2019, Open-File Report 2019-1096
The National Hydrography Dataset Plus High Resolution (NHDPlus HR) is a scalable geospatial hydrography framework built from the High Resolution (1:24,000-scale or better) National Hydrography Dataset (NHD), nationally complete Watershed Boundary Dataset (WBD), and ⅓-arc-second (10-meter ground spacing) 3D Elevation Program (3DEP) digital elevation model (DEM) data. The NHDPlus HR...
Rating fire danger from the ground up
Matthew Levi, Erik S. Krueger, Grant J. Snitker, Tyson Ochsner, Miguel L. Villarreal, Emile H. Elias, Dannele E. Peck
2019, Eos, Earth and Space Science News
Soil moisture information could improve assessments of wildfire probabilities and fuel conditions, resulting in better fire danger ratings....
Determination of study reporting limits for pesticide constituent data for the California Groundwater Ambient Monitoring and Assessment Program Priority Basin Project, 2004–2018—Part 1: National Water Quality Schedules 2003, 2032, or 2033, and 2060
Miranda S. Fram, Sylvia V. Stork
2019, Scientific Investigations Report 2019-5107
The California Groundwater Ambient Monitoring and Assessment Program Priority Basin Project (GAMA-PBP) is a long-term cooperative project designed to assess the quality of groundwater resources used for public and domestic drinking water supplies in the State of California, to monitor and evaluate changes to that quality, to investigate the human...
The effects of management practices on grassland birds—Thick-billed Longspur (Rhynchophanes mccownii)
Jill A. Shaffer, Lawrence D. Igl, Douglas H. Johnson, Marriah L. Sondreal, Christopher M. Goldade, Paul A. Rabie, Travis L. Wooten, Betty R. Euliss
2019, Professional Paper 1842-Y
The key to Thick-billed Longspur (Rhynchophanes mccownii) management is providing short, sparsely vegetated native grasslands of adequate size. Mixed-grass prairies can be made suitable for breeding Thick-billed Longspurs by implementing moderate-to-heavy or season-long grazing. Thick-billed Longspurs have been reported to use habitats with 5–42 centimeters (cm) average...
Inactivation of viable surrogates for the select agents virulent Newcastle disease virus and highly pathogenic avian influenza virus using either commercial lysis buffer or heat
Katrina E. Alger, S. Ip, Jeffrey S. Hall, Sean Nashold, Katherine Richgels, Carrie Alison Smith
2019, Applied Biosafety (24) 189-199
Introduction:Federal Select Agent Program regulations require laboratories to document a validated procedure for inactivating select agents prior to movement outside registered space. Avian influenza viruses and virulent Newcastle disease virus (vNDV) are cultured in chicken amnio-allantoic fluid (AAF), but the efficacy of commercial lysis buffers to...
Migrating bison engineer the green wave
Chris Geremia, Jerod Merkle, Daniel R. Eacker, Rick L. Wallen, P. J. White, Mark Hebblewhite, Matthew J. Kauffman
2019, Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences of the United States of America (116) 25707-25713
Newly emerging plants provide the best forage for herbivores. To exploit this fleeting resource, migrating herbivores align their movements to surf the wave of spring green-up. With new technology to track migrating animals, the Green Wave Hypothesis has steadily gained empirical support across a diversity of...
Simulating land cover change impacts on groundwater recharge under selected climate projections, Maui, Hawaiʻi
Laura Brewington, Victoria Keener, Alan Mair
2019, Remote Sensing (11)
This project developed an integrated land cover/hydrological modeling framework using remote sensing and geographic information systems (GIS) data, stakeholder input, climate information and projections, and empirical data to estimate future groundwater recharge on the Island of Maui, Hawaiʻi, USA. End-of-century mean annual groundwater recharge was estimated under...
Ecological effects of establishing a 40-year oasis protection system in a Northwestern China Desert
Guohua Wang, Seth M. Munson, Kailiang Yu, Ning Chen, Qianqian Gou
2019, Catena (187)
Aims: Desertification around oasis areas is a serious problem in semi-arid and arid regions, which is expected to continue into the future due to a rapidly increasing human population. Oasis protection systems are created to reverse desertification by recovering degraded soil and vegetation properties and improving ecosystem services. Most research...
Deglacial water-table decline in Southern California recorded by noble gas isotopes
Alan M. Seltzer, Jessica Ng, Wesley R. Danskin, Justin T. Kulongoski, Riley Gannon, Martin Stute, Jeffery P. Severinghaus
2019, Nature Communications (10)
Constraining the magnitude of past hydrological change may improve understanding and predictions of future shifts in water availability. Here we demonstrate that water-table depth, a sensitive indicator of hydroclimate, can be quantitatively reconstructed using Kr and Xe isotopes in groundwater. We present the first-ever measurements of these dissolved noble gas...