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...
Empirical flow parameters : a tool for hydraulic model validity
William H. Asquith, Thomas E. Burley, Theodore G. Cleveland
2013, Book
The objectives of this project were (1) To determine and present from existing data in Texas, relations between observed stream flow, topographic slope, mean section velocity, and other hydraulic factors, to produce charts such as Figure 1 and to produce empirical distributions of the various flow parameters to provide a...
A Structured approach to incidental take decision making
Conor P. McGowan
2013, Environmental Management (51) 241-250
Decision making related to incidental take of endangered species under U.S. law lends itself well to a structured decision making approach. Incidental take is the permitted killing, harming, or harassing of a protected species under the law as long as that harm is incidental to an otherwise lawful activity and...
An ecological perspective on the changing face of Brucella abortus in the western United States
Paul C. Cross, Eric J. Maichak, Angela Brennan, Brandon Scurlock, John C. Henningsen, Gordon Luikart
2013, OIE Revue Scientifique et Technique (32) 79-87
After a hiatus during the 1990s, outbreaks of Brucella abortus in cattle are occurring more frequently in some of the western states of the United States, namely, Montana, Wyoming and Idaho. This increase is coincident with increasing brucellosis seroprevalence in elk (Cervus elaphus), which is correlated with elk density. Vaccines...
Spatial Relation Predicates in Topographic Feature Semantics
Dalia E. Varanka, Holly K. Caro
2013, Book chapter, Cognitive and Linguistic Aspects of Geographic Space
Topographic data are designed and widely used for base maps of diverse applications, yet the power of these information sources largely relies on the interpretive skills of map readers and relational database expert users once the data are in map or geographic information system (GIS) form. Advances in geospatial semantic...
Future distribution of tundra refugia in northern Alaska
Andrew G. Hope, Eric Waltari, David C. Payer, Joseph A. Cook, Sandra L. Talbot
2013, Nature Climate Change (3) 931-938
Climate change in the Arctic is a growing concern for natural resource conservation and management as a result of accelerated warming and associated shifts in the distribution and abundance of northern species. We introduce a predictive framework for assessing the future extent of Arctic tundra and boreal biomes in northern...
Climate change has indirect effects on resource use and overlap among coexisting bird species with negative consequences for their reproductive success
Thomas E. Martin, Sonya K. Auer
2013, Global Change Biology (19) 411-419
Climate change can modify ecological interactions, but whether it can have cascading effects throughout ecological networks of multiple interacting species remains poorly studied. Climate-driven alterations in the intensity of plant–herbivore interactions may have particularly profound effects on the larger community because plants provide habitat for a wide diversity of organisms....
Adaptive strategies and life history characteristics in a warming climate: salmon in the Arctic?
Jennifer L. Nielsen, Gregory T. Ruggerone, Christian E. Zimmerman
2013, Environmental Biology of Fishes (96) 1187-1226
In the warming Arctic, aquatic habitats are in flux and salmon are exploring their options. Adult Pacific salmon, including sockeye (Oncorhynchus nerka), coho (O. kisutch), Chinook (O. tshawytscha), pink (O. gorbuscha) and chum (O. keta) have been captured throughout the Arctic. Pink and chum salmon are the most common species...
Strategies for rapid global earthquake impact estimation: the Prompt Assessment of Global Earthquakes for Response (PAGER) system
Kishor Jaiswal, D.J. Wald
2013, Book chapter, Handbook of seismic risk analysis and management of civil infrastructure systems
This chapter summarizes the state-of-the-art for rapid earthquake impact estimation. It details the needs and challenges associated with quick estimation of earthquake losses following global earthquakes, and provides a brief literature review of various approaches that have been used in the past. With this background, the chapter introduces the operational...
Vegetation ecogeomorphology, dynamic equilibrium, and disturbance
Cliff R. Hupp, W. R. Osterkamp
2013, Book chapter, Ecogeomorphology: Volume 12 in Treatise in Geomorphology
Early ecologists understood the need to document geomorphic form and process to explain plant species distributions. Although this relationship has been acknowledged for over a century, with the exception of a few landmark papers, only the past few decades have experienced intensive research on this interdisciplinary topic. Here the authors...
Spatio-temporal dynamics of pneumonia in bighorn sheep
E. Frances Cassirer, Raina K. Plowright, Kezia R. Manlove, Paul C. Cross, Andrew P. Dobson, Kathleen A. Potter, Peter J. Hudson
2013, Journal of Animal Ecology (82) 518-528
Bighorn sheep mortality related to pneumonia is a primary factor limiting population recovery across western North America, but management has been constrained by an incomplete understanding of the disease. We analysed patterns of pneumonia-caused mortality over 14 years in 16 interconnected bighorn sheep populations to gain insights into underlying disease...
Reactivation of the Archean-Proterozoic suture along the southern margin of Laurentia during the Mazatzal orogeny: Petrogenesis and tectonic implications of ca. 1.63 Ga granite in southeastern Wyoming
Daniel S. Jones, Calvin G. Barnes, Wayne R. Premo, Arthur W. Snoke
2013, Geological Society of America Bulletin (125) 164-183
The presence of ca. 1.63 Ga monzogranite (the “white quartz monzonite”) in the southern Sierra Madre, southeastern Wyoming, is anomalous given its distance from the nearest documented plutons of similar age (central Colorado) and the nearest contemporaneous tectonic margin (New Mexico). It is located immediately south of the Cheyenne belt—a...
Watering the forest for the trees: An emerging priority for managing water in forest landscapes
Gordon E. Grant, Christina L. Tague, Craig D. Allen
2013, Frontiers in Ecology and the Environment (11) 314-321
Widespread threats to forests resulting from drought stress are prompting a re-evaluation of priorities for water management on forest lands. In contrast to the widely held view that forest management should emphasize providing water for downstream uses, we argue that maintaining forest health in the context of a changing climate...
Recent, slow normal and strike-slip faulting in the Pasto Ventura region of the southern Puna Plateau, NW Argentina
Renjie Zhou, Lindsay M. Schoenbohm, Michael Cosca
2013, Tectonics (32) 19-33
Recent normal and strike-slip faulting on the Puna Plateau of NW Argentina has been linked to lithospheric foundering, gravitational spreading, plate boundary forces and a decrease in crustal shortening from north to south. However, the timing, kinematics and rate of extension remain poorly constrained. We focus on the Pasto Ventura...
Modern salt-marsh and tidal-flat foraminifera from Sitkinak and Simeonof Islands, southwestern Alaska
Andrew C. Kemp, Simon E. Engelhart, Stephen J. Culver, Alan R. Nelson, Richard W. Briggs, Peter J. Haeussler
2013, Journal of Foraminiferal Research (43) 88-98
We describe the modern distribution of salt-marsh and tidal-flat foraminifera from Sitkinak Island (Trinity Islands) and Simeonof Island (Shumagin Islands), Alaska, to begin development of a dataset for later use in reconstructing relative sea-level changes caused by great earthquakes along the Alaska-Aleutian subduction zone. Dead foraminifera...
Spatial and temporal variations in landscape evolution: historic and longer-term sediment flux through global catchments
Jacob A. Covault, William H. Craddock, Brian W. Romans, Andrea Fildani, Mayur Gosai
2013, The Journal of Geology (121) 35-56
Sediment generation and transport through terrestrial catchments influence soil distribution, geochemical cycling of particulate and dissolved loads, and the character of the stratigraphic record of Earth history. To assess the spatiotemporal variation in landscape evolution, we compare global compilations of stream gauge–derived () and cosmogenic radionuclide (CRN)–derived (predominantly 10Be; )...
Mobile Bay
Lawrence R. Handley, Kathryn A. Spear, Stephen Jones, Cindy A. Thatcher
2013, Report, Emergent wetlands status and trends in the northern Gulf of Mexico: 1950-2010
Mobile Bay is the largest bay found in Alabama’s coastal area (Handley et al., 2007). It was named an Estuary of National Significance in 1995 under the U.S. Environmental Protection Agency’s (EPA) National Estuary Program (NEP), and its Comprehensive Conservation Management Plan was completed in 2002. Mobile Bay is 1,070...
Current status, issues and applications of GIS to inland fisheries
William Fisher
Geoffery J. Meaden, Jose Aguilar-Manjarrez, editor(s)
2013, Book chapter, Advances in geographic information systems and remote sensing for fisheries and aquaculture: Summary version (FAO Fisheries and Aquaculture Technical Paper 552)
This chapter is concerned with GIS applications made to inland fisheries. These include fisheries in freshwater rivers, lakes and reservoirs. Although these GIS applications have increased rapidly since the late 1980s, this area of fish production receives less attention than either aquaculture or marine fisheries. This is probably because inland...
Nyamulagira’s magma plumbing system inferred from 15 years of InSAR
Christelle Wauthier, Valerie Cayol, Michael P. Poland, Francois Kervyn, Nicolas D’Oreye, Andrew Hooper, Sergei Samsonov, Kristy Tiampo, Benoit Smets
D. M. Pyle, T.A. Mather, J. Biggs, editor(s)
2013, Book chapter, Remote Sensing of Volcanoes and Volcanic Processes: Integrating Observation and Modelling
Nyamulagira, located in the east of the Democratic Republic of Congo on the western branch of the East African rift, is Africa’s most active volcano, with an average of one eruption every 3 years since 1938. Owing to the socio-economical context of that region, the volcano lacks ground-based geodetic measurements...
Computationally efficient statistical differential equation modeling using homogenization
Mevin Hooten, Martha J. Garlick, James A. Powell
2013, Journal of Agricultural, Biological, and Environmental Statistics (18) 405-428
Statistical models using partial differential equations (PDEs) to describe dynamically evolving natural systems are appearing in the scientific literature with some regularity in recent years. Often such studies seek to characterize the dynamics of temporal or spatio-temporal phenomena such as invasive species, consumer-resource interactions, community evolution, and resource selection. Specifically,...
Limiting the immediate and subsequent hazards associated with wildfires
Jerome V. DeGraff, Susan H. Cannon, Mario Parise
2013, Book chapter, Landslide Science and Practice: Volume 4: Global Environmental Change
Wildfire is a unique natural hazard because it poses immediate threats to life and property as well as creating conditions that can lead to subsequent debris flows. In recent years, the immediate destructive force of wildfires has been decreased through better understanding of fire behavior. Lightning detection networks now identify...
A comparison of data-driven groundwater vulnerability assessment methods
Alessandro Sorichetta, Cristiano Ballabio, Marco Masetti, Gilpin R. Robinson Jr., Simone Sterlacchini
2013, Groundwater (51) 866-879
Increasing availability of geo-environmental data has promoted the use of statistical methods to assess groundwater vulnerability. Nitrate is a widespread anthropogenic contaminant in groundwater and its occurrence can be used to identify aquifer settings vulnerable to contamination. In this study, multivariate Weights of Evidence (WofE) and Logistic Regression (LR) methods,...
An evaluation of automated GIS tools for delineating karst sinkholes and closed depressions from 1-meter LIDAR-derived digital elevation data
Daniel H. Doctor, John A. Young
2013, Conference Paper, Sinkholes and the Engineering and Environmental Impacts of Karst: Proceedings of the Thirteenth Multidisciplinary Conference
LiDAR (Light Detection and Ranging) surveys of karst terrains provide high-resolution digital elevation models (DEMs) that are particularly useful for mapping sinkholes. In this study, we used automated processing tools within ArcGIS (v. 10.0) operating on a 1.0 m resolution LiDAR DEM in order to delineate sinkholes and closed depressions...
Pushing the Volcanic Explosivity Index to its limit and beyond: Constraints from exceptionally weak explosive eruptions at Kīlauea in 2008
Bruce F. Houghton, Don Swanson, J. Rausch, R.J. Carey, S.A. Fagents, Tim R. Orr
2013, Geology (41) 627-630
Estimating the mass, volume, and dispersal of the deposits of very small and/or extremely weak explosive eruptions is difficult, unless they can be sampled on eruption. During explosive eruptions of Halema‘uma‘u Crater (Kīlauea, Hawaii) in 2008, we constrained for the first time deposits of bulk volumes as small as 9–300...
Photogrammetric monitoring of lava dome growth during the 2009 eruption of Redoubt Volcano
Angela K. Diefenbach, Katharine F. Bull, Rick Wessels, Robert G. McGimsey
2013, Journal of Volcanology and Geothermal Research (259) 308-316
The 2009 eruption of Redoubt Volcano, Alaska, began with a phreatic explosion on 15 March followed by a series of at least 19 explosive events and growth and destruction of at least two, and likely three, lava domes between 22 March and 4 April. On 4 April explosive activity...