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Publication Extents

Not all publications have extents, not all extents are completely accurate
Paleoenvironmental, epigraphic, and archaeological evidence of total warfare among the Classic Maya
David Wahl, Lysanna Anderson, Francisco Estrada-Belli, Alexandre Tokovinine
2019, Nature (3) 1049-1054
Despite over a century of archaeological research, the nature and broader consequences of Classic Maya warfare remain poorly understood. Based on frequent epigraphic references and iconographic themes, Classic period (250-950 CE) Maya warfare has largely been viewed as ritualized and limited in scope. Evidence of warfare in the Terminal Classic...
De facto reuse and disinfection by-products in drinking water systems in the Shenandoah River watershed
Richard J Weisman, Larry B. Barber, Jennifer Rapp, Celso M Ferreira
2019, Environmental Science: Water Research & Technology (5) 1699-1708
De facto reuse is increasingly being studied among the variety of stressors that are relevant to drinking water systems that obtain their source water from surface waters. De facto reuse may influence the levels and types of precursors relevant to formation of disinfection by-products (DBPs) in surface water systems. DBPs such as trihalomethanes...
Influence of season, sex, age and diet composition on mercury concentration in Walleye Sander vitreus
Trevor M. Selch, Steven R. Chipps, Brian G. Blackwell, Robert P. Hanten
2019, Archives of Environmental Contamination and Toxicology (77) 336-343
We collected Walleye Sander vitreus (May–October) from Bitter and Twin lakes, South Dakota to assess seasonal- and diet-related variation in tissue mercury (Hg) concentration. The average Hg concentration in Walleye was 43–68% higher in the spring for Bitter (p < 0.008) and Twin Lakes (p < 0.017) compared with summer or autumn months. Bioenergetics analysis of...
A mosaic of estuarine habitat types with prey resources from multiple environmental strata supports a diversified foraging portfolio for juvenile Chinook salmon
Isa Woo, Melanie J. Davis, Christopher S. Ellings, Sayre Hodgson, John Y. Takekawa, Glynnis Nakai, Susan E.W. De La Cruz
2019, Estuaries and Coasts (42) 1938-1954
Estuaries provide vital nursery habitat for threatened Chinook salmon (Oncorhynchus tshawytscha) by promoting an ecological portfolio effect, whereby multiple habitat types and environmental strata maximize foraging opportunities for out-migrating salmon by varying the abundance and composition of prey through space and time. To study this portfolio effect, we evaluated the...
Quantifying trends and uncertainty in prehistoric forest composition
Andria Dawson, Christopher J. Paciorek, Simon Goring, Stephen Jackson, Jason S. McLachlan, John W. Williams
2019, Ecology (100)
Forest ecosystems in eastern North America were in flux over the last several thousand years, well before Euro-American land clearance and the 20th-century onset of anthropogenic climate change. However, the magnitude and uncertainty of prehistoric vegetation change have been difficult to quantify because of the multiple ecological, dispersal, and sedimentary processes that govern the relationship...
Artificial intelligence and avian influenza: Using machine learning to enhance active surveillance for avian influenza viruses
Daniel P. Walsh, Ting Fung Ma, S. Ip, Jun Zhu
2019, Transboundary and Emerging Diseases (66) 2537-2545
Influenza A viruses are one of the most significant viral groups globally with substantial impacts on human, domestic animal and wildlife health. Wild birds are the natural reservoirs for these viruses, and active surveillance within wild bird populations provides critical information about viral evolution forming the basis of risk assessments...
Drinking water quality in the glacial aquifer system, northern USA
Melinda L. Erickson, Richard M. Yager, Leon J. Kauffman, John T. Wilson
2019, Science of Total Environment (694)
Groundwater supplies 50% of drinking water worldwide, but compromised water quality from anthropogenic and geogenic contaminants can limit usage of groundwater as a drinking water source. Groundwater quality in the glacial aquifer system, USA (GLAC), is presented in the context of a hydrogeologic framework...
Zooplankton dynamics in a Great Lakes connecting channel: Exploring the seasonal composition within the St. Clair-Detroit River System
Kevin (Contractor) Keeler, Taaja Tucker, Christine M Mayer, William W. Taylor, Edward F. Roseman
2019, Journal of Great Lakes Research (45) 888-900
The connecting channels linking the Laurentian Great Lakes provide important migration routes, spawning grounds, and nursery habitat for fish, but their role as conduits between lakes for zooplankton is less understood. To address this knowledge gap in the St. Clair–Detroit River System (SCDRS), a comprehensive survey of crustacean zooplankton was...
Regional patterns of anthropogenic influences on streams and rivers in the conterminous United States, from the early 1970s to 2012
James A. Falcone, Jennifer C. Murphy, Lori A. Sprague
2019, Journal of Land Use Science (13) 585-614
This paper introduces a dataset containing consistent time-series measurements of anthropogenic activities potentially affecting stream quality across the conterminous United States and summarizes the most noteworthy trends from 61 variables in 16 categories. Data include measures of atmospheric deposition, agricultural production, livestock, urbanization, irrigation, land use, nutrients from fertilizer,...
Cambarus fetzneri sp. nov., a new species of burrowing crayfish (Decapoda: Cambaridae) from the Allegheny Mountains of Virginia and West Virginia, USA
Zachary J. Loughman, Stuart A. Welsh, Roger F. Thoma
2019, Zootaxa (4651) 38-50
The disjunct distribution of Cambarus monongalensis has led to speculation about its taxonomic status. An Appalachian Plateau population occurs in northern and central West Virginia and Southwestern Pennsylvania, and a mountain population occurs in the Allegheny Mountains and Ridge and Valley physiographic provinces of the Virginias. Herein we describe the mountain population as Cambarus fetzneri sp....
From Manitoba to Texas: A study of the population genetic structure of bur oak (Quercus macrocarpa)
Mira Garner, Kasey Pham, Alan T. Whittemore, Jeannine Cavender-Bares, Paul F. Gugger, Paul Manos, Ian S. Pearse, Andrew Hipp
2019, International Oaks (20) 131-138
In the taxonomic world, the oaks are known as a rambunctious group, notorious for hybridizing. In this report, we present preliminary information to address the question of how much hybridization is occurring between bur oak and white oaks with which it is sympatric, through rangewide sampling of bur oak and...
White-tailed deer movements and space use on Fire Island: A four-year radio-telemetry study 2015-2016 post-Hurricane Sandy assessment
Chellby R. Kilheffer, Jordan Raphael, Lindsay Ries, H. Brian Underwood
2019, Natural Resource Report 2019/2037
Hurricane Sandy provided a unique opportunity to better understand the movements of Fire Island’s dense white-tailed deer (Odocoileus virginianus borealis) herds. White-tailed deer inhabit all areas of Fire Island National Seashore and their high densities negatively affect native vegetation in several areas of the island, especially as disturbed areas attempt...
What nutrient sources support anomalous growth and the recent sargassum mass stranding on Caribbean beaches? A review
Candace Oviatt, Kristin Huizenga, Caroline Rogers, Jeff Miller
2019, Marine Pollution Bulletin (145) 517-525
Since 2011, tropical beaches from Africa to Brazil, Central America, and the Caribbean have been inundated by tons of sargassum seaweed from a new equatorial source of pelagic sargassum in the Atlantic. In recent years the extraordinary accumulations of sargassum make this a nuisance algal bloom for tropical coasts. In...
Proactive management of amphibians: Challenges and opportunities
SC Sterrett, Evan H. Campbell Grant, Katz R, Adrianne Brand, William R. Fields, A Dietrich, Hocking D, Foreman T, A Wiewel
2019, Biological Conservation (236) 404-410
Delaying species management reduces the chance of successful recovery, increases the risk of extinction, and can be expensive. Acting before major declines are realized affords access to a greater suite of cost-effective management actions to sustain populations, reducing the likelihood of declines warranting protected status. It is clear that reactive...
Mapping research on hydropower and sustainability in the Brazilian Amazon: Advances, gaps in knowledge and future directions
Simone Athayde, Mason Matthews, Stephanie Bohlman, Walterlina Brasil, Carolina RC Doria, Jynessa Dutka-Gianelli, Philip M. Fearnside, Bette Loiselle, Elineide E Marques, Theodore Melis, Brent Millikan, Evandro M. Moretto, Anthony Oliver-Smith, Amintas Rossete, Raffaele Vacca, David Kaplan
2019, Current Opinion in Environmental Sustainability (37) 50-69
In the last twenty years, multiple large and small hydroelectric dams have begun to transform the Amazonian region, spawning a growing volume of academic research across diverse disciplinary and interdisciplinary fields. In this article, we offer a critical review of recent research related to hydropower and sustainability with a focus...
Documentation of a Soil-Water-Balance Model to estimate recharge to Blue Ridge, Piedmont, and Mesozoic Basin fractured-rock aquifers, Fauquier County, Virginia, 1996 through 2015
Kurt J. McCoy, David E. Ladd
2019, Scientific Investigations Report 2019-5056
This report documents a Soil-Water-Balance (SWB) model that was developed for an area covering the Blue Ridge, Piedmont, and Mesozoic basin fractured-rock aquifers in Fauquier County, Virginia, for the calendar years 1996–2015. The SWB model includes an area of 1,498 square miles, divided into 1,076-square-foot (100-square-meter) grid cells on which...
Insect herbivores on urban native oak trees
Ian Pearse
2019, International Oaks (30) 101-108
Oak trees host an amazing diversity of insects, many of which specialize on Quercus species. Oak species and genotypes are commonly planted far from where an acorn was produced. Urban plantings, restoration sites, and plantings anticipating climate change each cause this to happen. What evidence exists that provenance of oak...
Barred Owls reduce occupancy and breeding propensity of Northern Spotted Owl in a Washington old-growth forest
Anna O. Mangan, Tara Chestnut, Jody C. Vogeler, Ian K. Breckheimer, Wendy M. King, Keith E. Bagnall, Katie Dugger
2019, Ornithological Applications (121)
Protected lands like national parks are important refuges for threatened and endangered species as environmental pressures on wildlife and their habitats increase. The Northern Spotted Owl (Strix occidentalis caurina), a species designated as threatened under the Endangered Species Act, occurs on public lands throughout the western United States including Mount...
Responding to risky neighbors: Testing for spatial spillover effects for defensible space in a fire-prone WUI community
Travis Warziniack, Patricia A. Champ, James Meldrum, Hannah Brenkert-Smith, Christopher M. Barth, Lilia C. Falk
2019, Environmental and Resource Economics (73) 1023-1047
Often, factors that determine the risk of an environmental hazard occur at landscape scales, and risk mitigation requires action by multiple private property owners. How property owners respond to risk mitigation on neighboring lands depends on whether mitigation actions are strategic complements or strategic substitutes. We test for these neighbor...
Understanding fish assemblage structure in lentic ecosystems: Relative effects of abiotic factors and management legacies
Jesse Robert Fischer, Michael C. Quist
2019, North American Journal of Fisheries Management (39) 607-624
We investigated associations of fish assemblages and habitat characteristics (e.g., morphology and water chemistry) from 45 natural lakes and reservoirs in Iowa to determine whether species or trophic guild composition and environmental correlations were concordant between waterbodies of different origins. Overall, fish assemblage composition between natural...
Magmatic-hydrothermal gold mineralization at the Lone Tree Mine, Battle Mountain district, Nevada
Elizabeth A. Holley, Justin Lowe, Craig A. Johnson, Michael Pribil
2019, Economic Geology (114) 811-856
The Lone Tree deposit is located in the northern Battle Mountain mining district, Nevada. Prior to mine closure in 2006, Santa Fe Pacific Gold and Newmont produced 4.2 Moz of gold at an average grade of 2.06 g/t at Lone Tree, primarily from the N-S– to NNW-SSE–striking Wayne zone. The...
Hydroclimatology of the Mississippi River Basin
Gregory J. McCabe, David M. Wolock
2019, Journal of the American Water Resources Association (55) 1053-1064
Model estimated monthly water balance (WB) components (i.e., potential evapotranspiration, actual evapotranspiration, and runoff [R]) for 848 United States (U.S.) Geological Survey 8-digit hydrologic units located in the Mississippi River Basin (MRB) are used to examine the temporal and spatial variability of the MRB WB for water years 1901 through...
Informing planning and management through visitor experiences in Grand Staircase-Escalante National Monument
Derrick Taff, Jeremy Wimpey, Jeffrey L. Marion, Johanna Arredondo, Fletcher Meadema, Forrest Schwartz, Ben Lawhon, Cody Dems
2019, International Journal of Wilderness (2) 44-56
Policies mandate that managers at Grand Staircase-Escalante National Monument must balance recreational opportunities with a variety of resource management and utilization activities across a vast and diverse landscape containing numerous Wilderness Study Areas and other lands containing spectacular resources. This balancing act is stressed by increasing levels of use and...
Operationalizing small unoccupied aircraft systems for rapid flood inundation mapping and event response
Frank L. Engel, Rogelio Hernandez
2019, Conference Paper, Proceedings of SEDHYD 2019
Small Unoccupied Aircraft Systems (sUAS) offer the capability to collect rapid and accurate aerial survey data during flood response. The rapid collection of aerial flood data can potentially enable scientists to produce detailed geospatial products and related datasets in time for decisional support. A workflow for sUAS event response before,...
Intra- and interspecific variation in production of bile acids that act as sex pheromones in lampreys
Tyler John Buchinger, Ugo Bussy, Ke Li, Liang Jia, Cindy F. Baker, Ethan G. Buchinger, Zhang Zhen, Nicholas S. Johnson, Weiming Li
2019, Physiological and Biochemical Zoology (92) 463-472
Pheromones are important sexual signals in most animals, but research into their evolution is largely biased toward insects. Lampreys are a jawless fish with a relatively well-understood pheromone communication system and offer a useful opportunity to study pheromone evolution in a vertebrate. Once sexually mature, male sea lamprey (Petromyzon marinus),...