Pacific island landbird monitoring annual report, National Park of American Samoa, Ta‘u and Tutuila units, 2011
Seth W. Judge, Richard J. Camp, Visa Vaivai, Patrick J. Hart
2013, National Park Service Natural Resource Technical Report NPS/PACN/NRTR—2013/666
The National Park of American Samoa (NPSA) was surveyed for landbirds and habitat characteristics from June through August, 2011. This information provides the first data in the time-series of landbird monitoring for long-term trends in forest bird distribution, density, and abundance within the NPSA. The NPSA survey area was comprised...
The effect of complex fault rupture on the distribution of landslides triggered by the 12 January 2010, Haiti earthquake
Edwin L. Harp, Randall W. Jibson, Richard L. Dart
Claudio Margottini, Paolo Canuti, Kyoji Sassa, editor(s)
2013, Book chapter, Landslide Science and Practice: Volume 5: Complex Environment
The MW 7.0, 12 January 2010, Haiti earthquake triggered more than 7,000 landslides in the mountainous terrain south of Port-au-Prince over an area that extends approximately 50 km to the east and west from the epicenter and to the southern coast. Most of the triggered landslides were rock and soil...
Loess and its geomorphic, stratigraphic and paleoclimatic significance in the Quaternary
Daniel R. Muhs
2013, Book chapter, Reference Module in Earth Systems and Environmental Sciences: Treatise on Geomorphology
Loess is aeolian silt visible in the field as a sedimentary body. It covers a significant portion of the land surface of the Earth. Loess thickness, particle size, and carbonate content decrease downwind from sources, useful trends for paleowinds. Many loess sections consist of relatively thick deposits of mostly unaltered...
Using habitat suitability models to target invasive plant species surveys
Alycia W. Crall, Catherine S. Jarnevich, Brendon Panke, Nick Young, Mark Renz, Jeffrey Morisette
2013, Ecological Applications (23) 60-72
Managers need new tools for detecting the movement and spread of nonnative, invasive species. Habitat suitability models are a popular tool for mapping the potential distribution of current invaders, but the ability of these models to prioritize monitoring efforts has not been tested in the field. We tested the utility...
Geochemical monitoring for potential environmental impacts of geologic sequestration of CO2
Yousif K. Kharaka, David R. Cole, James J. Thordsen, Kathleen D. Gans, Randal B. Thomas
2013, Reviews in Mineralogy and Geochemistry (77) 399-430
Carbon dioxide sequestration is now considered an important component of the portfolio of options for reducing greenhouse gas emissions to stabilize their atmospheric levels at values that would limit global temperature increases to the target of 2 °C by the end of the century (Pacala and Socolow 2004; IPCC 2005,...
Potential effects of sea-level rise on coastal wetlands in southeastern Louisiana
Patty Glick, Jonathan Clough, Amy Polaczyk, Brady R. Couvillion, Brad Nunley
2013, Journal of Coastal Research 211-233
Coastal Louisiana wetlands contain about 37% of the estuarine herbaceous marshes in the conterminous United States. The long-term stability of coastal wetlands is often a function of a wetland's ability to maintain elevation equilibrium with mean sea level through processes such as primary production and sediment accretion. However, Louisiana has...
Pacific Island landbird monitoring annual report, Haleakalā National Park, 2012
Seth W. Judge, Richard J. Camp, Patrick J. Hart
2013, National Park Service Natural Resource Technical Report NPS/PACN/NRTR—2013/740
Haleakalā National Park (HALE) was surveyed for landbirds and habitat characteristics from March 20 through July 26, 2012. This information provides data in the time-series of landbird monitoring for long-term trends in forest bird distribution, density, and abundance. The Kīpahulu District of eastern Haleakalā Volcano was surveyed using point-transect distance...
SPARROW models used to understand nutrient sources in the Mississippi/Atchafalaya River Basin
Dale M. Robertson, David A. Saad
2013, Journal of Environmental Quality (42) 1422-1440
Nitrogen (N) and phosphorus (P) loading from the Mississippi/Atchafalaya River Basin (MARB) has been linked to hypoxia in the Gulf of Mexico. To describe where and from what sources those loads originate, SPAtially Referenced Regression On Watershed attributes (SPARROW) models were constructed for the MARB using geospatial datasets for 2002,...
The influence of precipitation, vegetation and soil properties on the ecohydrology of sagebrush steppe rangelands on the INL site
Matthew J. Germino
2013, Report
The INL Site and other landscapes having sagebrush steppe vegetation are experiencing a simultaneous change in climate and floristics that result from increases in exotic species. Determining the separate and combined/interactive effects of climate and vegetation change is important for assessing future changes on the landscape and for hydrologic processes. This...
A natural resource condition assessment for Sequoia and Kings Canyon National Parks: Appendix 22: climatic change
Adrian J. Das, Nathan L. Stephenson
2013, Natural Resource Report NPS/SEKI/NRR--2013/665.22
Climate is a master controller of the structure, composition, and function of biotic communities, affecting them both directly, through physiological effects, and indirectly, by mediating biotic interactions and by influencing disturbance regimes. Sequoia and Kings Canyon National Park’s (SEKI’s) dramatic elevational changes in biotic communities -- from warm mediterranean to...
Variable intertidal temperature explains why disease endangers black abalone
Tal Ben-Horin, Hunter S. Lenihan, Kevin D. Lafferty
2013, Ecology (94) 161-168
Epidemiological theory suggests that pathogens will not cause host extinctions because agents of disease should fade out when the host population is driven below a threshold density. Nevertheless, infectious diseases have threatened species with extinction on local scales by maintaining high incidence and the ability to spread efficiently even as...
Monitoring vegetation response to episodic disturbance events by using multitemporal vegetation indices
Gregory D. Steyer, Brady R. Couvillion, John A. Barras
2013, Journal of Coastal Research 118-130
Normalized Difference Vegetation Index (NDVI) derived from MODerate-resolution Imaging Spectroradiometer (MODIS) satellite imagery and land/water assessments from Landsat Thematic Mapper (TM) imagery were used to quantify the extent and severity of damage and subsequent recovery after Hurricanes Katrina and Rita of 2005 within the vegetation communities of Louisiana's coastal wetlands....
Reply to discussion: "Nutrient inputs to the Laurentian Great Lakes by source and watershed estimated using SPARROW watershed models" by R. Peter Richards, Ibrahim Alameddine, J. David Allan, David B. Baker, Nathan S. Bosch, Remegio Confesor, Joseph V. DePinto, David M. Dolan, Jeffrey M. Reutter, and Donald Scavia
Dale M. Robertson, David A. Saad
2013, Journal of the American Water Resources Association (49) 725-734
No abstract available....
Strong species-environment feedback shapes plant community assembly along environmental gradients
Jiang Jiang, Donald L. DeAngelis
2013, Ecology and Evolution (3) 4119-4128
An aim of community ecology is to understand the patterns of competing species assembly along environmental gradients. All species interact with their environments. However, theories of community assembly have seldom taken into account the effects of species that are able to engineer the environment. In this modeling study, we integrate...
Empirical estimates to reduce modeling uncertainties of soil organic carbon in permafrost regions: a review of recent progress and remaining challenges
U. Mishra, J.D. Jastrow, R. Matamala, G. Hugelius, C.D. Koven, Jennifer W. Harden, S.L. Ping, G.J. Michaelson, Z. Fan, R.M. Miller, A. D. McGuire, C. Tarnocai, P. Kuhry, W.J. Riley, K. Schaefer, E.A.G. Schuur, M.T. Jorgenson, L. D. Hinzman
2013, Environmental Research Letters (8)
The vast amount of organic carbon (OC) stored in soils of the northern circumpolar permafrost region is a potentially vulnerable component of the global carbon cycle. However, estimates of the quantity, decomposability, and combustibility of OC contained in permafrost-region soils remain highly uncertain, thereby limiting our ability to predict the...
Influence of estuarine processes on spatiotemporal variation in bioavailable selenium
A. Robin Stewart, Samuel N. Luoma, Kent A. Elrick, James L. Carter, Mick van der Wegen
2013, Marine Ecology Progress Series (492) 41-56
Dynamic processes (physical, chemical and biological) challenge our ability to quantify and manage the ecological risk of chemical contaminants in estuarine environments. Selenium (Se) bioavailability (defined by bioaccumulation), stable isotopes and molar carbon-tonitrogen ratios in the benthic clam Potamocorbula amurensis, an important food source for predators, were determined monthly for...
Flying with the wind: Scale dependency of speed and direction measurements in modelling wind support in avian flight
Kamran Safi, Bart Kranstauber, Rolf P. Weinzierl, Larry Griffin, Eileen C. Reese, David Cabot, Sebastian Cruz, Carolina Proaño, John Y. Takekawa, Scott H. Newman, Jonas Waldenstrom, Daniel Bengtsson, Roland Kays, Martin Wikelski, Gil Bohrer
2013, Movement Ecology (1)
Background: Understanding how environmental conditions, especially wind, influence birds' flight speeds is a prerequisite for understanding many important aspects of bird flight, including optimal migration strategies, navigation, and compensation for wind drift. Recent developments in tracking technology and the increased availability of data on large-scale weather patterns have made it...
Permafrost and organic layer interactions over a climate gradient in a discontinuous permafrost zone
Kristofer D. Johnson, Jennifer W. Harden, A. David McGuire, Mark Clark, Fengming Yuan, Andrew O. Finley
2013, Environmental Research Letters (8)
Permafrost is tightly coupled to the organic soil layer, an interaction that mediates permafrost degradation in response to regional warming. We analyzed changes in permafrost occurrence and organic layer thickness (OLT) using more than 3000 soil pedons across a mean annual temperature (MAT) gradient. Cause and effect relationships between permafrost...
Effects of mercury deposition and coniferous forests on the mercury contamination of fish in the south central United States
Ray W. Drenner, Matthew M. Chumchal, Christina M. Jones, Christopher M.B. Lehmann, David A. Gay, David I. Donato
2013, Environmental Science & Technology (47) 1274-1279
Mercury (Hg) is a toxic metal that is found in aquatic food webs and is hazardous to human and wildlife health. We examined the relationship between Hg deposition, land coverage by coniferous and deciduous forests, and average Hg concentrations in largemouth bass (Micropterus salmoides)-equivalent fish (LMBE) in 14 ecoregions located...
The magnetic tides of Honolulu
Jeffrey J. Love, Erin Joshua Rigler
2013, Conference Paper, Progress in EM Induction Studies of Crust and Mantle From Land, Sea, Air, and Space lll Posters
We review the phenomenon of time-stationary, periodic quiet-time geomagnetic tides. These are generated by the ionospheric and oceanic dynamos, and, to a lesser-extent, by the quiet-time magnetosphere, and they are affected by currents induced in the Earth's electrically conducting interior. We examine historical time series of hourly magnetic-vector measurements made...
Contaminants in stream sediments from seven United States metropolitan areas: part I: distribution in relation to urbanization
Lisa H. Nowell, Patrick W. Moran, Robert J. Gilliom, Daniel L. Calhoun, Christopher G. Ingersoll, Nile E. Kemble, Kathryn Kuivila, Patrick J. Phillips
2013, Archives of Environmental Contamination and Toxicology (64) 32-51
Organic contaminants and trace elements were measured in bed sediments collected from streams in seven metropolitan study areas across the United States to assess concentrations in relation to urbanization. Polycyclic aromatic hydrocarbons, polychlorinated biphenyls, organochlorine pesticides, the pyrethroid insecticide bifenthrin, and several trace elements were significantly related to urbanization across...
Assessing winter cover crop nutrient uptake efficiency using a water quality simulation model
In-Young Yeo, Sangchui Lee, Ali M. Sadeghi, Peter C. Beeson, W. Dean Hively, Greg W. McCarty, Megan W. Lang
2013, Hydrology and Earth System Sciences (10) 14229-14263
Winter cover crops are an effective conservation management practice with potential to improve water quality. Throughout the Chesapeake Bay Watershed (CBW), which is located in the Mid-Atlantic US, winter cover crop use has been emphasized and federal and state cost-share programs are available to farmers to subsidize the cost of...
Estimating abundance of the Southern Hudson Bay polar bear subpopulation using aerial surveys, 2011 and 2012
Martyn E. Obbard, Kevin R. Middel, Seth P. Stapleton, Isabelle Thibault, Vincent Brodeur, Charles Jutras
2013, Wildlife Research Series 2013-01
The Southern Hudson Bay (SH) polar bear subpopulation occurs at the southern extent of the species’ range. Although capture-recapture studies indicate that abundance remained stable between 1986 and 2005, declines in body condition and survival were documented during the period, possibly foreshadowing a future decrease in abundance. To obtain a...
Generalized additive regression models of discharge and mean velocity associated with direct-runoff conditions in Texas: Utility of the U.S. Geological Survey discharge measurement database
William H. Asquith, George R. Herrmann, Theodore G. Cleveland
2013, Journal of Hydrologic Engineering (18) 1331-1348
A database containing more than 17,700 discharge values and ancillary hydraulic properties was assembled from summaries of discharge measurement records for 424 U.S. Geological Survey streamflow-gauging stations (stream gauges) in Texas. Each discharge exceeds the 90th-percentile daily mean streamflow as determined by period-of-record, stream-gauge-specific, flow-duration curves. Each discharge therefore is...
Towards a publicly available, map-based regional software tool to estimate unregulated daily streamflow at ungauged rivers
Stacey A. Archfield, Peter A. Steeves, John D. Guthrie, Kernell G. Ries III
2013, Geoscientific Model Development (6) 101-115
Streamflow information is critical for addressing any number of hydrologic problems. Often, streamflow information is needed at locations that are ungauged and, therefore, have no observations on which to base water management decisions. Furthermore, there has been increasing need for daily streamflow time series to manage rivers for both human...