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Bathymetric surveys of the Kootenai River near Bonners Ferry, Idaho, water year 2011
Ryan L. Fosness
2013, Data Series 694
In 2009, the Kootenai Tribe of Idaho released and implemented the Kootenai River Habitat Restoration Master Plan. This plan aimed to restore, enhance, and maintain the Kootenai River habitat and landscape to support and sustain habitat conditions for aquatic species and animal populations. In support of these restoration efforts, the...
A global standard for monitoring coastal wetland vulnerability to accelerated sea-level rise
Edward L. Webb, Daniel A. Friess, Ken W. Krauss, Donald R. Cahoon, Glenn R. Guntenspergen, Jacob Phelps
2013, Nature Climate Change (3) 458-465
Sea-level rise threatens coastal salt-marshes and mangrove forests around the world, and a key determinant of coastal wetland vulnerability is whether its surface elevation can keep pace with rising sea level. Globally, a large data gap exists because wetland surface and shallow subsurface processes remain unaccounted for by traditional vulnerability...
Investigation of the structure and lithology of bedrock concealed by basin fill, using ground-based magnetic-field-profile data acquired in the San Rafael Basin, southeastern Arizona
Mark W. Bultman
2013, Scientific Investigations Report 2013-5038
Data on the Earth’s total-intensity magnetic field acquired near ground level and at measurement intervals as small as 1 m include information on the spatial distribution of nearsurface magnetic dipoles that in many cases are unique to a specific lithology. Such spatial information is expressed in the texture (physical appearance...
Multiscale sagebrush rangeland habitat modeling in the Gunnison Basin of Colorado
Collin G. Homer, Cameron L. Aldridge, Debra K. Meyer, Spencer J. Schell
2013, Open-File Report 2013-1049
North American sagebrush-steppe ecosystems have decreased by about 50 percent since European settlement. As a result, sagebrush-steppe dependent species, such as the Gunnison sage-grouse, have experienced drastic range contractions and population declines. Coordinated ecosystem-wide research, integrated with monitoring and management activities, is needed to help maintain existing sagebrush habitats; however,...
Evaluation of the potential for hysteresis in index-velocity ratings for the Chicago Sanitary and Ship Canal near Lemont, Illinois
P. Ryan Jackson, Sumit Sinha, Som Dutta, Kevin K. Johnson, James J. Duncker, Marcelo H. Garcia
2013, Scientific Investigations Report 2013-5095
The U.S. Geological Survey (USGS) is responsible for monitoring flows in the Chicago Sanitary and Ship Canal (CSSC) near Lemont, Illinois, as a part of the Lake Michigan Diversion Accounting overseen by the U.S. Army Corps of Engineers, Chicago District. Lake Michigan Diversion Accounting is mandated by a U.S. Supreme...
Estimating irrigation water use in the humid eastern United States
Sara B. Levin, Phillip J. Zarriello
2013, Scientific Investigations Report 2013-5066
Accurate accounting of irrigation water use is an important part of the U.S. Geological Survey National Water-Use Information Program and the WaterSMART initiative to help maintain sustainable water resources in the Nation. Irrigation water use in the humid eastern United States is not well characterized because of inadequate reporting and...
The U.S. Geological Survey Climate Geo Data Portal: an integrated broker for climate and geospatial data
David L. Blodgett
2013, Fact Sheet 2013-3019
The increasing availability of downscaled climate projections and other data products that summarize or predict climate conditions, is making climate data use more common in research and management. Scientists and decisionmakers often need to construct ensembles and compare climate hindcasts and future projections for particular spatial areas. These tasks generally...
Using diets to reveal overlap and egg predation among benthivorous fishes in Lake Michigan
Justin G. Mychek-Londer, David B. Bunnell, Wendylee Stott, James S. Diana, John R. P. French III, Margret Chriscinske
2013, Transactions of the American Fisheries Society (142) 492-504
Ecological stability in the Laurentian Great Lakes has been altered by nonindigenous species, such as the Round Goby Neogobius melanostomus and dreissenid mussels, and by declines in native amphipods Diporeia spp. We evaluated whether these changes could influence diet overlap between three benthivorous fishes (Slimy Sculpin Cottus cognatus, Deepwater Sculpin...
Evapotranspiration and water balance of an anthropogenic coastal desert wetland: responses to fire, inflows and salinities
Edward P. Glenn, Lourdes Mexicano, Jaqueline Garcia-Hernandez, Pamela L. Nagler, Martha M. Gomez-Sapiens, Dawei Tang, Marcelo A. Lomeli, Jorge Ramírez-Hernández, Francisco Zamora-Arroyo
2013, Ecological Engineering (59) 176-184
Evapotranspiration (ET) and other water balance components were estimated for Cienega de Santa Clara, an anthropogenic brackish wetland in the delta of the Colorado River in Mexico. The marsh is in the Biosphere Reserve of the Upper Gulf of California and Delta of the Colorado River, and supports a high...
Field measurement of basal forces generated by erosive debris flows
S.W. McCoy, G.E. Tucker, J. W. Kean, J. A. Coe
2013, Journal of Geophysical Research F: Earth Surface (118) 589-602
It has been proposed that debris flows cut bedrock valleys in steeplands worldwide, but field measurements needed to constrain mechanistic models of this process remain sparse due to the difficulty of instrumenting natural flows. Here we present and analyze measurements made using an automated sensor network, erosion bolts, and a...
Regional patterns and proximal causes of the recent snowpack decline in the Rocky Mountains, U.S.
Gregory T. Pederson, Julio L. Betancourt, Gregory J. McCabe
2013, Geophysical Research Letters (40) 1811-1816
We used a first-order, monthly snow model and observations to disentangle seasonal influences on 20th century,regional snowpack anomalies in the Rocky Mountains of western North America, where interannual variations in cool-season (November–March) temperatures are broadly synchronous, but precipitation is typically antiphased north to south and uncorrelated with temperature. Over the...
Evaporative losses from soils covered by physical and different types of biological soil crusts
S. Chamizo, Y. Canton, F. Domingo, J. Belnap
2013, Hydrological Processes (27) 324-332
Evaporation of soil moisture is one of the most important processes affecting water availability in semiarid ecosystems. Biological soil crusts, which are widely distributed ground cover in these ecosystems, play a recognized role on water processes. Where they roughen surfaces, water residence time and thus infiltration can be greatly enhanced,...
Estimating irrigation water demand using an improved method and optimizing reservoir operation for water supply and hydropower generation: a case study of the Xinfengjiang reservoir in southern China
Yiping Wu, Ji Chen
2013, Agricultural Water Management (116) 110-121
The ever-increasing demand for water due to growth of population and socioeconomic development in the past several decades has posed a worldwide threat to water supply security and to the environmental health of rivers. This study aims to derive reservoir operating rules through establishing a multi-objective optimization model for the...
Optimizing stream water mercury sampling for calculation of fish bioaccumulation factors
Karen Riva-Murray, Paul M. Bradley, Celeste A. Journey, Mark E. Brigham, Barbara C. Scudder Eikenberry, Christopher Knightes, Daniel T. Button
2013, Environmental Science & Technology (47) 5904-5912
Mercury (Hg) bioaccumulation factors (BAFs) for game fishes are widely employed for monitoring, assessment, and regulatory purposes. Mercury BAFs are calculated as the fish Hg concentration (Hgfish) divided by the water Hg concentration (Hgwater) and, consequently, are sensitive to sampling and analysis artifacts for fish and water. We evaluated the...
Evaluation of a new model of aeolian transport in the presence of vegetation
Junran Li, Gregory S. Okin, Jeffrey E. Herrick, Jayne Belnap, Mark E. Miller, Kimberly Vest, Amy E. Draut
2013, Journal of Geophysical Research F: Earth Surface (118) 288-306
Aeolian transport is an important characteristic of many arid and semiarid regions worldwide that affects dust emission and ecosystem processes. The purpose of this paper is to evaluate a recent model of aeolian transport in the presence of vegetation. This approach differs from previous models by accounting for how vegetation...
Estimating economic losses from earthquakes using an empirical approach
Kishor Jaiswal, David J. Wald
2013, Earthquake Spectra (29) 309-324
We extended the U.S. Geological Survey's Prompt Assessment of Global Earthquakes for Response (PAGER) empirical fatality estimation methodology proposed by Jaiswal et al. (2009) to rapidly estimate economic losses after significant earthquakes worldwide. The requisite model inputs are shaking intensity estimates made by the ShakeMap system, the spatial distribution of...
Simulating mechanisms for dispersal, production and stranding of small forage fish in temporary wetland habitats
Simeon Yurek, Donald L. DeAngelis, Joel C. Trexler, Fred Jopp, Douglas D. Donalson
2013, Ecological Modelling (250) 391-401
Movement strategies of small forage fish (<8 cm total length) between temporary and permanent wetland habitats affect their overall population growth and biomass concentrations, i.e., availability to predators. These fish are often the key energy link between primary producers and top predators, such as wading birds, which require high concentrations...
National assessment of geologic carbon dioxide storage resources: methodology implementation
Madalyn S. Blondes, Sean T. Brennan, Matthew D. Merrill, Marc L. Buursink, Peter D. Warwick, Steven M. Cahan, M.D. Corum, Troy A. Cook, William H. Craddock, Christina A. DeVera, Ronald M. Drake II, Lawrence J. Drew, P.A. Freeman, Celeste D. Lohr, Ricardo A. Olea, Tina L. Roberts-Ashby, Ernie R. Slucher, Brian A. Varela
2013, Open-File Report 2013-1055
In response to the 2007 Energy Independence and Security Act, the U.S. Geological Survey (USGS) conducted a national assessment of potential geologic storage resources for carbon dioxide (CO2). Storage of CO2 in subsurface saline formations is one important method to reduce greenhouse gas emissions and curb global climate change. This...
Tidal wetlands of the Yaquina and Alsea River estuaries, Oregon: Geographic Information Systems layer development and recommendations for National Wetlands Inventory revisions
Laura S. Brophy, Deborah A. Reusser, Christopher N. Janousek
2013, Open-File Report 2012-1038
Geographic Information Systems (GIS) layers of current, and likely former, tidal wetlands in two Oregon estuaries were generated by enhancing the 2010 National Wetlands Inventory (NWI) data with expert local field knowledge, Light Detection and Ranging-derived elevations, and 2009 aerial orthophotographs. Data were generated for two purposes: First, to enhance...
Groundwater depletion in the United States (1900−2008)
Leonard F. Konikow
2013, Scientific Investigations Report 2013-5079
A natural consequence of groundwater withdrawals is the removal of water from subsurface storage, but the overall rates and magnitude of groundwater depletion in the United States are not well characterized. This study evaluates long-term cumulative depletion volumes in 40 separate aquifers or areas and one land use category in...
Ecosystem services from keystone species: diversionary seeding and seed-caching desert rodents can enhance Indian ricegrass seedling establishment
William Longland, Steven M. Ostoja
2013, Restoration Ecology (21) 285-291
Seeds of Indian ricegrass (Achnatherum hymenoides), a native bunchgrass common to sandy soils on arid western rangelands, are naturally dispersed by seed-caching rodent species, particularly Dipodomys spp. (kangaroo rats). These animals cache large quantities of seeds when mature seeds are available on or beneath plants and recover most of their...
Practical guidance on characterizing availability in resource selection functions under a use-availability design
Joseph M. Northrup, Mevin Hooten, Charles R. Anderson Jr., George Wittemyer
2013, Ecology (94) 1456-1463
Habitat selection is a fundamental aspect of animal ecology, the understanding of which is critical to management and conservation. Global positioning system data from animals allow fine-scale assessments of habitat selection and typically are analyzed in a use-availability framework, whereby animal locations are contrasted with random locations (the availability sample)....
Present, future, and novel bioclimates of the San Francisco, California region
Alicia A. Torregrosa, Maxwell D. Taylor, Lorraine E. Flint, Alan L. Flint
2013, PLoS ONE (8) 1-14
Bioclimates are syntheses of climatic variables into biologically relevant categories that facilitate comparative studies of biotic responses to climate conditions. Isobioclimates, unique combinations of bioclimatic indices (continentality, ombrotype, and thermotype), were constructed for northern California coastal ranges based on the Rivas-Martinez worldwide bioclimatic classification system for the end of the...
Continuous real-time water-quality monitoring and regression analysis to compute constituent concentrations and loads in the North Fork Ninnescah River upstream from Cheney Reservoir, south-central Kansas, 1999–2012
Mandy L. Stone, Jennifer L. Graham, Jackline W. Gatotho
2013, Scientific Investigations Report 2013-5071
Cheney Reservoir, located in south-central Kansas, is the primary water supply for the city of Wichita. The U.S. Geological Survey has operated a continuous real-time water-quality monitoring station since 1998 on the North Fork Ninnescah River, the main source of inflow to Cheney Reservoir. Continuously measured water-quality physical properties include...
Parallelization of a hydrological model using the message passing interface
Yiping Wu, Tiejian Li, Liqun Sun, Ji Chen
2013, Environmental Modelling and Software (43) 124-132
With the increasing knowledge about the natural processes, hydrological models such as the Soil and Water Assessment Tool (SWAT) are becoming larger and more complex with increasing computation time. Additionally, other procedures such as model calibration, which may require thousands of model iterations, can increase running time and thus further...