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Page 692, results 17276 - 17300

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Not all publications have extents, not all extents are completely accurate
Native rainbow smelt and nonnative alewife distribution related to temperature and light gradients in Lake Champlain
Donna L. Parrish, Paul W. Simonin, Lars G. Rudstam, Patrick J. Sullivan, Bernard Pientka
2012, Journal of Great Lakes Research (38) 115-122
Alewife (Alosa pseudoharengus) recently became established in Lake Champlain and may compete with native rainbow smelt (Osmerus mordax) for food or consume larval rainbow smelt. The strength of this effect depends partly on the spatial and temporal overlap of different age groups of the two species; therefore, we need a...
Overwintering tadpoles and loss of fitness correlates in Polypedates braueri tadpoles that use artificial pools in a lowland agroecosystem
Juei-Ling Hsu, Yeong-Choy Kam, Gary M. Fellers
2012, Herpetologica (68) 184-194
We studied growth, development, and metamorphic traits of Polypedates braueri tadpoles in Taiwan to elucidate the cause of tadpole overwintering in man-made water containers in lowland orchards on the Bagua Terrace. Polypedates braueri bred from March to August, but tadpoles were present year round. Laboratory experiments demonstrated that tadpole overwintering...
Power analysis and trend detection for water quality monitoring data. An application for the Greater Yellowstone Inventory and Monitoring Network
Kathryn M. Irvine, Kezia Manlove, Cynthia Hollimon
2012, Natural Resource Report NPS/GRYN/NRR-2012/556
An important consideration for long term monitoring programs is determining the required sampling effort to detect trends in specific ecological indicators of interest. To enhance the Greater Yellowstone Inventory and Monitoring Network’s water resources protocol(s) (O’Ney 2006 and O’Ney et al. 2009 [under review]), we developed a set of tools...
Long term mean annual water temperature for stream reaches in Pacific Northwest United States
Water Resources Division, U.S. Geological Survey
2012, Report
Long-term mean annual water temperature (degrees Celsius) was estimated for the E2RF1 stream network (Brakebill and Terziotti, 2011) located within the Pacific Northwest region of the United States (HUC2 = 17; the Columbia River basin, the Puget Sound watershed, the coastal drainages of Washington and Oregon, and the closed basins...
Conditions and processes affecting radionuclide transport
Ardyth M. Simmons, Leonid A. Neymark
2012, GSA Memoirs (209) 277-362
Characteristics of host rocks, secondary minerals, and fluids would affect the transport of radionuclides from a previously proposed repository at Yucca Mountain, Nevada. Minerals in the Yucca Mountain tuffs that are important for retarding radionuclides include clinoptilolite and mordenite (zeolites), clay minerals, and iron and manganese oxides and hydroxides. Water...
Multi-gauge Calibration for modeling the Semi-Arid Santa Cruz Watershed in Arizona-Mexico Border Area Using SWAT
Rewati Niraula, Laura A. Norman, Thomas Meixner, James B. Callegary
2012, Air, Soil and Water Research (2012) 41-57
In most watershed-modeling studies, flow is calibrated at one monitoring site, usually at the watershed outlet. Like many arid and semi-arid watersheds, the main reach of the Santa Cruz watershed, located on the Arizona-Mexico border, is discontinuous for most of the year except during large flood events, and therefore the...
Results of the first North American comparison of absolute gravimeters, NACAG-2010
David Schmerge, Olvier Francis, J. Henton, D. Ingles, D. Jones, Jeffrey R. Kennedy, K. Krauterbluth, J. Liard, D. Newell, R. Sands, J. Schiel, J. Silliker, D. van Westrum
2012, Journal of Geodesy (86) 591-596
The first North American Comparison of absolute gravimeters (NACAG-2010) was hosted by the National Oceanic and Atmospheric Administration at its newly renovated Table Mountain Geophysical Observatory (TMGO) north of Boulder, Colorado, in October 2010. NACAG-2010 and the renovation of TMGO are part of NGS’s GRAV-D project (Gravity for the Redefinition...
Stable water isotopologue ratios in fog and cloud droplets of liquid clouds are not size-dependent
J.K. Spiegel, F. Aemisegger, M. Scholl, F.G. Wienhold, J.L. Collett Jr., T. Lee, D. van Pinxteren, S. Mertes, A. Tilgner, H. Herrmann, Roland A. Werner, N. Buchmann, W. Eugster
2012, Atmospheric Chemistry and Physics (12) 9855-9863
In this work, we present the first observations of stable water isotopologue ratios in cloud droplets of different sizes collected simultaneously. We address the question whether the isotope ratio of droplets in a liquid cloud varies as a function of droplet size. Samples were collected from a ground intercepted cloud...
An evaluation of the relative quality of dike pools for benthic macroinvertebrates in the Lower Missouri River, USA
B.C. Poulton, A.L. Allert
2012, River Research and Applications (28) 1658-1679
A habitat-based aquatic macroinvertebrate study was initiated in the Lower Missouri River to evaluate relative quality and biological condition of dike pool habitats. Water-quality and sediment-quality parameters and macroinvertebrate assemblage structure were measured from depositional substrates at 18 sites. Sediment porewater was analysed for ammonia, sulphide, pH and oxidation-reduction potential....
Microbial water quality before and after the repair of a failing onsite wastewater treatment system adjacent to coastal waters
K.E. Conn, M.Y. Habteselassie, Blackwood A. Denene, R.T. Noble
2012, Journal of Applied Microbiology (112) 214-224
Aims: The objective was to assess the impacts of repairing a failing onsite wastewater treatment system (OWTS, i.e., septic system) as related to coastal microbial water quality. Methods and Results: Wastewater, groundwater and surface water were monitored for environmental parameters, faecal indicator bacteria (total coliforms, Escherichia coli, enterococci) and the...
Occurrence and geochemistry of radium in water from principal drinking-water aquifer systems of the United States
Z. Szabo, Vincent T. DePaul, J.M. Fischer, T. F. Kraemer, E. Jacobsen
2012, Applied Geochemistry (27) 729-752
A total of 1270 raw-water samples (before treatment) were collected from 15 principal and other major aquifer systems (PAs) used for drinking water in 45 states in all major physiographic provinces of the USA and analyzed for concentrations of the Ra isotopes 224Ra, 226Ra and 228Ra establishing...
Fate of 4-nonylphenol and 17β-estradiol in the Redwood River of Minnesota
Jeffrey H. Writer, Joseph N. Ryan, Steffanie H. Keefe, Larry B. Barber
2012, Environmental Science & Technology (46) 860-868
The majority of previous research investigating the fate of endocrine-disrupting compounds has focused on single processes generally in controlled laboratory experiments, and limited studies have directly evaluated their fate and transport in rivers. This study evaluated the fate and transport of 4-nonylphenol, 17β-estradiol, and estrone in a 10-km reach of...
A Holocene record of endogenic iron and manganese precipitation and vegetation history in a lake-fen complex in northwestern Minnesota
Walter E. Dean, L.A. Doner
2012, Journal of Paleolimnology (47) 29-42
Little Shingobee Lake and Fen are part of the extensive network of lakes and wetlands in the Shingobee River headwaters of northwestern Minnesota, designed to study the interactions between surface and ground waters. Prior to about 11.2 cal. ka, most of these lakes and wetlands were interconnected to form glacial Lake...
Ecological controls on the shell geochemistry of pink and white Globigerinoides ruber in the northern Gulf of Mexico: implications for paleoceanographic reconstruction
Julie N. Richey, Richard Z. Poore, Benjamin P. Flower, David J. Hollander
2012, Marine Micropaleontology (82-83) 28-37
We evaluate the relationship between foraminiferal test size and shell geochemistry (δ13C, δ18O, and Mg/Ca) for two of the most commonly used planktonic foraminifers for paleoceanographic reconstruction in the subtropical Atlantic Ocean: the pink and white varieties of Globigerinoides ruber. Geochemical analyses were performed on foraminifera from modern core-top samples...
Migration of Sakhalin taimen (Parahucho perryi): Evidence of freshwater resident life history types
Christian E. Zimmerman, P.S. Rand, M. Fukushima, S.F. Zolotukhin
2012, Environmental Biology of Fishes (93) 223-232
Sakhalin taimen (Parahucho perryi) range from the Russian Far East mainland along the Sea of Japan coast, and Sakhalin, Kuril, and Hokkaido Islands and are considered to primarily be an anadromous species. We used otolith strontium-to-calcium ratios (Sr/Ca) to determine the chronology of migration between freshwater and saltwater and identify...
Hierarchy in factors affecting fish biodiversity in floodplain lakes of the Mississippi Alluvial Valley
D.J. Dembkowski, L.E. Miranda
2012, Environmental Biology of Fishes (93) 357-368
River-floodplain ecosystems offer some of the most diverse and dynamic environments in the world. Accordingly, floodplain habitats harbor diverse fish assemblages. Fish biodiversity in floodplain lakes may be influenced by multiple variables operating on disparate scales, and these variables may exhibit a hierarchical organization depending on whether one variable governs...
Mapping carbon flux uncertainty and selecting optimal locations for future flux towers in the Great Plains
Yingxin Gu, Daniel M. Howard, Bruce K. Wylie, Li Zhang
2012, Landscape Ecology (27) 319-326
Flux tower networks (e. g., AmeriFlux, Agriflux) provide continuous observations of ecosystem exchanges of carbon (e. g., net ecosystem exchange), water vapor (e. g., evapotranspiration), and energy between terrestrial ecosystems and the atmosphere. The long-term time series of flux tower data are essential for studying and understanding terrestrial carbon cycles,...
Spatial patterns of soil nitrification and nitrate export from forested headwaters in the northeastern United States
D.S. Ross, J. B. Shanley, J.L. Campbell, G.B. Lawrence, S.W. Bailey, G.E. Likens, B.C. Wemple, G. Fredriksen, A.E. Jamison
2012, Journal of Geophysical Research G: Biogeosciences (117)
Nitrogen export from small forested watersheds is known to be affected by N deposition but with high regional variability. We studied 10 headwater catchments in the northeastern United States across a gradient of N deposition (5.4 - 9.4 kg ha -1 yr -1) to determine if soil nitrification...