Effects of invasive plants on fire regimes and postfire vegetation diversity in an arid ecosystem
Emma C. Underwood, Robert C. Klinger, Matthew L. Brooks
2019, Ecology and Evolution (9) 12421-12435
We assessed the impacts of co‐occurring invasive plant species on fire regimes and postfire native communities in the Mojave Desert, western USA. We analyzed the distribution and co‐occurrence patterns of three invasive annual grasses (Bromus rubens, Bromus tectorum, and Schismus spp.) known to alter fuel conditions and community structure, and...
Puerto Rico Sicydium goby diversity: Species-specific insights on population structures and distributions
A.C. Engman, G.M Hogue, W.C. Starnes, M. E. Raley, Thomas J. Kwak
2019, Neotropical Biodiversity (5) 22-29
Sicydiine gobies are major contributors to Caribbean stream fish biodiversity, and ecosystem functions and services. In the Caribbean, Sicydiine gobies are represented by a single genus, Sicydium, but species-level Sicydium taxonomy and distributions remain unresolved in this region. A previous study posited that four species of Sicydium are present in...
Changes in long-term water quality of Baltimore streams are associated with both gray and green infrastructure
Alexander J. Reisinger, Ellen L Woytowitz, Emily H. Majcher, Emma J. Rosi, Kenneth T. Belt, Jonathan M. Duncan, Sujay S. Kaushal, Peter M. Groffman
2019, Limnology and Oceanography journal (64) S60-S76
The steadily rising global urban population has placed substantial strain on urban water quality, and this strain is projected to increase for the foreseeable future. Considerable attention has been given to the hydrological and physico-chemical effects of urbanization on stream ecosystems. However, due to the relative infancy of the field...
Adapting to climate change: Guidance for the management of inland glacial lake fisheries
R.W. Tingley, Craig P. Paukert, G. G. Sass, P. C. Jacobson, G. J. A. Hansen, Abigail Lynch, P. D. Shannon
2019, Lake and Reservoir Management (35) 435-452
Climate change is altering glacial lake fisheries in the United States, presenting a complex challenge for fisheries managers. Here we provide a regional perspective to guide management of heterogeneous and yet interdependent fishery resources in glacial lakes of the upper Midwest. Our main objective was to promote the adaptation of...
Mercury source changes and food web shifts alter contamination signatures of predatory fish from Lake Michigan
Ryan F. Lepak, Joel C. Hoffman, Sarah E. Janssen, David P. Krabbenhoft, Jacob M. Ogorek, John F. DeWild, Michael T. Tate, Christopher L. Babiarz, Runsheng Yin, Elizabeth W Murphy, Daniel R Engstrom, James P. Hurley
2019, Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences (116) 23600-23608
To understand the impact reduced mercury (Hg) loading and invasive species have had on methylmercury bioaccumulation in predator fish of Lake Michigan, we reconstructed bioaccumulation trends from a fish archive (1978 to 2012). By measuring fish Hg stable isotope ratios, we related temporal changes in Hg concentrations to varying Hg...
2019 Disaster Relief Act: USGS recovery activities
Jo Ellen Hinck, Joseph Stachyra
2019, Fact Sheet 2019-3066
The Additional Supplemental Appropriations for Disaster Relief Act of 2019 (H.R. 2157) was signed by the President on June 6, 2019. The U.S. Geological Survey received $98.5 million for repair and replacement of facilities and equipment, collection of high-resolution elevation data in affected areas, and scientific assessments to support recovery...
Serum iron analytes in healthy and diseased Florida manatees (Trichechus manatus latirostris)
John W. Harvey, Kendal E Harr, David Murphy, Michael T. Walsh, Martine deWit, Charles J. Deutsch, Robert Bonde
2019, Journal of Comparative Pathology (173) 58-70
Serum iron concentration is usually decreased in true iron deficiency and with inflammatory disease in man and domestic animals. Serum total iron binding capacity (TIBC) may be increased in true iron deficiency and decreased with inflammatory disease. This prospective study was designed to measure serum iron analytes in healthy free-ranging...
Overhauling ocean spatial planning to improve marine megafauna conservation
Ana M. M. Sequeira, Graeme C. Hays, David W. Sims, Victor M. Eguiluz, Jorge P. Rodriguez, Michelle R. Heupel, Robert G. Harcourt, Hannah J. Calich, Nuno Queiroz, Daniel P. Costa, Juan Fernandez-Gracia, Luciana C. Ferreira, Simon D. Goldsworthy, Mark Hindell, Mary-Anne Lea, Mark G. Meekan, Anthony M. Pagano, Scott A. Shaffer, Julia Reisser, Michele Thums, Michael J Weise, Carlos M. Duarte
2019, Frontiers in Marine Science (6)
Tracking data have led to evidence-based conservation of marine megafauna, but a disconnect remains between the many thousands of individual animals that have been tracked and the use of these data in conservation and management actions. Furthermore, the focus of most conservation efforts is within Exclusive Economic Zones despite the...
Copula theory as a generalized framework for flow-duration curve-based streamflow estimates in ungaged and partially gaged catchments
Scott C. Worland, Scott Steinschneider, William H. Farmer, William H. Asquith, Rodney Knight
2019, Water Resources Research (55) 9378-9397
Flow‐duration curve (FDC) based streamflow estimation methods involve estimating an FDC at an ungaged or partially gaged location and using the time series of nonexceedance probabilities estimated from donor streamgage sites to generate estimates of streamflow. We develop a mathematical framework to illustrate the connection between copulas and prior FDC‐based...
The potential resiliency of a created tidal marsh to sea-level rise
Brock J. W. Kamrath, Michael R. Burchell, Nicole Cormier, Ken W. Krauss, Darren Johnson
2019, Transactions of the ASABE (62) 1567-1577
The purpose of this study was to determine the elevation dynamics of a created tidal marsh on the North Carolina coast. Deep rod surface elevation tables (RSET) and feldspar marker horizons (MH) were installed in plots to measure net surface elevation changes and to quantify contributing processes. Twelve total plots...
Genetic Characterization of Non-Native African Jewelfish, Hemichromis letourneuxi Sauvage 1880, in Florida
Natalia M. Belfiore, Pamela J. Schofield
2019, Southeastern Naturalist (18) 561-570
The African Jewelfish, Hemichromis letourneuxi, is an invasive, predatory cichlid fish introduced at least once to Florida. Its native range is in northern Africa. First encountered in Miami in the 1960s, it has since been found west and north within the State of Florida. It thrives in a wide range of...
De novo assembly and annotation from parental and F1 puma genomes of the Florida panther genetic restoration program
Alexander Ochoa, David P Onorato, Robert R. Fitak, Melody Roelke-Parker, Melanie Culver
2019, G3 Genes|Genomes|Genetics (9) 3531-3536
In the mid-1990s, the population size of Florida panthers became so small that many individuals manifested traits associated with inbreeding depression (e.g., heart defects, cryptorchidism, high pathogen-parasite load). To mitigate these effects, pumas from Texas were introduced into South Florida to augment genetic variation in Florida panthers. In this study,...
Multipurpose oxbows as a nitrate export reduction practice in the agricultural Midwest
Keith E. Schilling, Karen Wilke, Clay Pierce, Keegan Kult, Aleshia Kenny
2019, Agricultural & Environmental Letters (4)
Core IdeasOxbows reduce nitrate export from agricultural fields to adjacent rivers and streams.Oxbows are important habitat for wildlife, including the endangered Topeka shiner.Oxbows have largely disappeared from midwestern landscapes modified for agriculture.Restoring multipurpose oxbows provides multiple benefits in the agricultural Midwest.Nutrient export from the agricultural...
The behavior of the Salesforce Tower, the tallest building in San Francisco, California inferred from earthquake and ambient shaking
Mehmet Celebi, Hamid Haddadi, Moh Huang, Michael Valley, John Hooper, Klemencic. Ron
2019, Earthquake Spectra (35) 1711-1737
The newly constructed tallest building designed in conformance with performance-based design procedure in San Francisco, California is a 61-story building equipped with an accelerometric array that recorded the January 4, 2018 M4.4 Berkeley earthquake. The building is designed with concrete core shear walls and perimeter gravity steel...
La Niña-driven flooding in the Indo-Pacific warm pool during the past millennium
Jessica Rodysill, James M. Russell, Mathias Vuille, Sylvia Dee, Brent D. Lunghino, Satria Bijaksana
2019, Quaternary Science Reviews (225)
Extreme precipitation events are one of the most consequential components of climate change for society. The El Niño-Southern Oscillation (ENSO) is the dominant mode of precipitation variability in the tropics and causes severe flooding and drought in many socioeconomically vulnerable regions. It remains unclear how tropical rainfall extremes and ENSO...
Tidal erosion and upstream sediment trapping modulate records of land-use change in a formerly glaciated New England estuary
Justin L. Shawler, Christopher J. Hein, Elizabeth A Canuel, James M Kaste, Gregory G Fitzsimons, Ioannis Y. Georgiou, Debra A. Willard
2019, Anthropocene Coasts (2) 340-361
Land clearing, river impoundments, and other human modifications to the upland landscape and within estuarine systems can drive coastal change at local to regional scales. However, as compared with mid-latitude coasts, the impacts of human modifications along sediment-starved formerly glaciated coastal landscapes are relatively understudied. To address this...
2017 Monitoring and tracking wet nitrogen deposition at Rocky Mountain National Park
Kristi Morris, M. Alisa Mast, Gregory A. Wetherbee, Jill S. Baron, Jim Cheatham, Jim Bromberg, Lisa Devore, James Hou, Kristi Gebhart, Mike Bell, David Gay, Michael Olson, Timothy Weinmann, Daniel Bowker
2019, Natural Resource Report 2019/1905
The Colorado Department of Public Health and Environment (CDPHE), the National Park Service (NPS), and the U.S. Environmental Protection Agency (EPA) issued the Nitrogen Deposition Reduction Plan (NDRP) in 2007 to address the effects and trends of nitrogen deposition at Rocky Mountain National Park (RMNP). The agencies chose a glidepath...
The susceptibility of Oklahoma’s basement to seismic reactivation
Folarin Kolawole, C.S. Johnston, C.B. Morgan, Jefferson Chang, K Marfurt, David A. Lockner, Ze’ev Reches, B M Carpenter
2019, Nature Geoscience (12) 839-844
Recent widespread seismicity in Oklahoma is attributed to the reactivation of pre-existing, critically stressed and seismically unstable faults due to decades of wastewater injection. However, the structure and properties of the reactivated faults remain concealed by the sedimentary cover. Here, we explore the major ingredients needed to induce earthquakes in...
Optimization of salt marsh management at the Rhode Island National Wildlife Refuge Complex through use of structured decision making
Hilary A. Neckles, James E. Lyons, Jessica L. Nagel, Susan C. Adamowicz, Toni Mikula, Nicholas T. Ernst
2019, Open-File Report 2019-1103
Structured decision making is a systematic, transparent process for improving the quality of complex decisions by identifying measurable management objectives and feasible management actions; predicting the potential consequences of management actions relative to the stated objectives; and selecting a course of action that maximizes the total benefit achieved and balances...
Columbia Environmental Research Center
U.S. Geological Survey
2019, Fact Sheet 2019-3040
The U.S. Geological Survey Columbia Environmental Research Center performs research to solve challenging environmental problems related to contaminants and habitat alterations in aquatic and terrestrial ecosystems. The research is interdisciplinary and pursued through partnerships within the U.S. Geological Survey and with national, international, state, and local agencies; nongovernmental organizations; and...
The LArge-n Seismic Survey in Oklahoma (LASSO) experiment
S. Dougherty, Elizabeth S. Cochran, R. M. Harrington
2019, Seismological Research Letters (90) 2015-2057
In 2016, the U.S. Geological Survey deployed more than 1,800 vertical-component nodal seismometers in Grant County, Oklahoma to study induced seismic activity associated with production of the Mississippi Limestone Play. The LArge-n Seismic Survey in Oklahoma (LASSO) array operated for approximately one month, covering a 25-km-by-32-km region with a nominal...
A mosaic of land tenure and ownership creates challenges and opportunities for transboundary conservation in the US-Mexico borderlands
Miguel L. Villarreal, Sandra L. Haire, Juan Carlos Bravo, Laura M. Norman
2019, Case Studies in the Environment (3) 1-10
In the Madrean Sky Islands of western North America, a mixture of public and private land ownership and tenure creates a complex situation for collaborative efforts in conservation. In this case study, we describe the current ownership and management structures in the US-Mexico borderlands where social, political, and economic conditions...
Partly cloudy with a chance of lava flows: Forecasting volcanic eruptions in the 21st century
Michael P. Poland, Kyle R. Anderson
2019, Journal of Geophysical Research (1)
A primary goal of volcanology is forecasting hazardous eruptive activity. Despite much progress over the last century, however, volcanoes still erupt with no detected precursors, lives and livelihoods are lost to eruptive activity, and forecasting the onsets of eruptions remains fraught with uncertainty. Long‐term forecasts are generally...
Late Quaternary slip rate of the Central Sierra Madre fault, southern California: Implications for slip partitioning and earthquake hazard
Reed J. Burgette, Austin Hanson, Katherine M. Scharer, Tammy M. Rittenour, Devin McPhillips
2019, Earth and Planetary Science Letters (530)
The Sierra Madre fault system accommodates contraction within a large restraining bend area of the San Andreas fault along the northern margin of the Los Angeles metropolitan area in Southern California. Reverse slip along this fault system during earthquakes controls growth of the San Gabriel Mountains and poses a significant...
Coseismic slip and early afterslip of the M6.0 August 24, 2014 South Napa, California, earthquake
Frederick Pollitz, Jessica R. Murray, Sarah E. Minson, Charles W. Wicks Jr., Jerry L. Svarc, Benjamin A. Brooks
2019, Journal of Geophysical Research (124) 11728-11747
We employ strong motion seismograms and static offsets from the Global Positioning System, Interferometric Synthetic Aperture Radar, and other measurements in order to derive a coseismic slip and afterslip model of the M6.0 24 August 2014 South Napa earthquake. This earthquake ruptured an ∼13‐km‐long portion of...