Integrative taxonomy reveals a new species of freshwater mussel, Potamilus streckersoni sp. nov. (Bivalvia: Unionidae): Implications for conservation and management
Chase H. Smith, Nathan Johnson, Kentaro Inoue, Robert Doyle, Charles R. Randklev
2019, Systematics and Biodiversity (17) 331-348
Inaccurate systematics confound our ability to determine evolutionary processes that have led to the diversification of many taxa. The North American freshwater mussel tribe Lampsilini is one of the better-studied groups in Unionidae, however, many supraspecific relationships between lampsiline genera remain unresolved. Two genera previously hypothesized to...
Cell-Based metabolomics for untargeted screening and prioritization of vertebrate-active stressors in streams across the United States
Timothy W. Collette, Drew R. Ekman, Huajun Zhen, Ha Nguyen, Paul Bradley, Quincy Teng
2019, Environmental Science & Technology (53) 9232-9240
The U.S. Geological Survey and the U.S. Environmental Protection Agency have assessed contaminants in 38 streams across the U.S., using an extensive suite of target-chemical analysis methods along with a variety of biological effects tools. Here we report zebrafish liver (ZFL) cell-culture based NMR metabolomic analysis of these split stream...
A network approach to prioritize conservation efforts for migratory birds
Yanjie Xu, Yali Si, John Takekawa, Qiang Liu, Herbert H.T. Prins, Shenglai Yin, Diann J. Prosser, Peng Gong, Willem F. de Boer
2019, Conservation Biology (34) 416-426
Habitat loss can trigger migration network collapse by isolating migratory birds’ breeding grounds from non-breeding grounds. Theoretically, habitat loss can have vastly different impacts depending on the site’s importance within the migratory corridor. However, migration network connectivity and the impacts of site loss are not completely understood. Here we used...
Intermountain west drought social science synthesis working group: Report to the National Climate Adaptation Science Center
Adam Wilke, Amanda E. Cravens, Robin O’Malley
2019, Report
Throughout the Intermountain West, there has been significant investment in understanding how social factors influence manager and citizen experiences of drought in particular locations. Yet there is still a gap in knowledge of how human dimensions of drought impacts, planning, and resilience are similar and different across cases and regions....
Sources of inherent infiltration variability in postwildfire soils
John A. Moody, Richard G. Martin, Brian A. Ebel
2019, Hydrological Processes (33) 3010-3029
An automated disc infiltrometer was developed to improve the measurements of soil hydraulic properties (saturated hydraulic conductivity and sorptivity) of soils affected by wildfire. Guidelines are given for interpreting curves showing cumulative infiltration as a function of time measured by the autodisc. The autodisc was used...
Inorganic nitrogen wet deposition gradients in the Denver-Boulder metropolitan area and Colorado Front Range – Preliminary implications for Rocky Mountain National Park and interpolated deposition maps
Gregory A. Wetherbee, Katherine Benedict, Sheila F. Murphy, Emily Elliott
2019, Science of the Total Environment (691) 1027-1042
For the first time in the 40-year history of the National Atmospheric Deposition Program / National Trends Network (NADP/NTN), a unique urban-to-rural transect of wet deposition monitoring stations were operated as part of the NTN in 2017 to quantify reactive inorganic nitrogen wet deposition for adjacent urban and rural, montane...
Depth determination of the 2010 El Mayor‐Cucapah earthquake sequence (M ≥ 4.0)
C. Yu, E. Hauksson, Z. Zhan, Elizabeth S. Cochran, D. Helmberger
2019, Journal of Geophysical Research B: Solid Earth (124) 6801-6814
The 2010 MW 7.2 El Mayor‐Cucapah earthquake ruptured a zone of ~120 km in length in northern Baja California. The geographic distribution of this earthquake sequence was well constrained by waveform relocation. The depth distribution, however, was poorly determined as it is near the edge of, or outside, the Southern California Seismic...
Perspective: Developing flow policies to balance the water needs of humans and wetlands requires a landscape scale approach inclusive of future scenarios and multiple timescales
Brent Murry, Jared Bowden, Benjamin Branoff, Miguel Garcia-Bermudez, Beth Middleton, Jorge Ortiz-Zayas, Carla Restrepo, Adam J. Terando
2019, Wetlands 1-13
Maintenance of the natural flow regime is essential for continued wetland integrity; however, the flow regime is greatly influenced by both natural and anthropogenic forces. Wetlands may be particularly susceptible to altered flow regimes as they are directly impacted by water flows at a variety of time scales. In Puerto...
Hydrologic site assessment for passive treatment of groundwater nitrogen with permeable reactive barriers, Cape Cod, Massachusetts
Jeffrey R. Barbaro, Marcel Belaval, Danna B. Truslow, Denis R. LeBlanc, Thomas C. Cambareri, Scott C. Michaud
2019, Scientific Investigations Report 2019-5047
Wastewater disposal associated with rapid population growth and development on Cape Cod, Massachusetts, during the past several decades has resulted in widespread contamination of groundwater with nitrogen. As a result, water quality in many of the streams, lakes, and coastal embayments on Cape Cod is impaired by excess nitrogen. To...
Late Miocene to Pleistocene source to sink record of exhumation and sediment routing in the Gulf of Alaska from detrital zircon fission-track and U-Pb double dating
Nathaniel Bootes, Eva Enkelmann, Richard O. Lease
2019, Tectonics (38) 2703-2726
We investigate the late Miocene‐Pleistocene offshore sedimentary record of the Yakutat microplate to evaluate the spatial and temporal variations in rock exhumation and sediment routing patterns at the heavily glaciated and actively converging plate boundary in southeast Alaska. We present 1,456 new fission track ages and 1,372...
Lithosphere and shallow asthenosphere rheology from observations of post-earthquake relaxation
Frederick Pollitz
2019, Physics of Earth and Planetary Interiors (293)
In tectonically active regions, post-earthquake motions are generally shaped by a combination of continued fault slippage (afterslip) on a timescale of days to months and viscoelastic relaxation of the lower crust and upper mantle on a timescale of days to years. Transient crustal motions have been observed following numerous magnitude >~7 earthquakes in various tectonic...
Modeling transient soil moisture limitations on microbial carbon respiration: A cost-performance comparison
Yuchen Liu, Corey R. Lawrence, Mathew Winnick, Hsiao-Tieh Hsu, Katherine Maher, Jennifer Druhan
2019, Biogeosciences (124) 2222-2247
Soil microorganisms are known to survive periods of aridity and to recover rapidly after wetting events, with the ability to transition between a dormant state in dry conditions and an active state in wet conditions. Though this dynamic behavior has been previously incorporated into soil carbon respiration modeling frameworks, a...
Hydroacoustic, seismic, and bathymetric observations of the 2014 submarine eruption at Ahyi Seamount, Mariana Arc
Gabrielle Tepp, William W. Chadwick, Matthew M. Haney, John J. Lyons, Robert Dziak, Susan Merle, Dave Butterfield, Charles W. Young
2019, Geochemistry, Geophysics, Geosystems (20) 3608-3627
Ahyi seamount, a shallow submarine volcano in the Northern Mariana Islands, began erupting on April 23, 2014. Hydroacoustic eruption signals were observed on the regional Mariana seismic network and on distant hydrophones, and NOAA scuba divers working in the area soon after the eruption began heard and felt underwater explosion...
Alteration, mass analysis, and magmatic compositions of the Sentinel Bluffs Member, Columbia River flood basalt province: REPLY
Michael G. Sawlan
2019, Geosphere (15) 1448-1458
No abstract available....
Potential vulnerability of 348 herbaceous species to atmospheric deposition of nitrogen and sulfur in the United States
Christopher M. Clark, Samuel M. Simkin, Edith B. Allen, William D. Bowman, Jayne Belnap, Matthew L. Brooks, Scott L. Collins, Linda H Geiser, Frank S Gilliam, Sarah E. Jovan, Linda H Pardo, Bethany K Schultz, Carly J. Stevens, Katharine N. Suding, Heather L. Throop, Donald M. Waller
2019, Nature Plants (5) 697-705
Atmospheric nitrogen and sulfur pollution increased over much of the United States during the twentieth century from fossil fuel combustion and industrial agriculture. Despite recent declines, nitrogen and sulfur deposition continue to affect many plant communities in the United States, although which species are at risk remains uncertain. We used...
Sharp savanna-forest transitions in the Midwest followed environmental gradients but are absent from the modern landscape
Caitlin M. Broderick, Kelly A Heilman, Tamatha Patterson, Jody Peters, Jason S. McLachlan
2019, The American Midland Naturalist (180) 1-17
Historically, closed eastern forests transitioned into open savannas and prairies in the US Midwest, but this transition is poorly understood. To investigate the eastern boundary of the prairie-forest ecotone, we conducted a case study of historic and modern vegetation patterns of the Yellow River watershed in northwest Indiana. Historic vegetation...
The Teton fault
M. S. Zellman, Christopher DuRoss, Glenn R. Thackray
2019, Open-File Report 2019-1
No abstract available....
Comparability of different river suspended sediment sampling and laboratory analysis methods and the effect of sand
Joel T. Groten, Gregory D. Johnson
2019, Conference Paper, Proceedings of SEDHYD 2019
Accurate measurements of suspended sediment, a leading water-quality impairment in many rivers, are important for managing and protecting water resources; however, water quality standards for suspended sediment in Minnesota are based on grab field sampling and total suspended solids (TSS) laboratory analysis methods. These methods have underrepresented concentrations of suspended...
The relationship of channel planform and point bar architecture on a reach of the Wabash River near Grayville, Illinois
Taylor Rowley, Kory Konsoer, Mick Ursic, Eddy J. Langendoen
2019, Conference Paper, Proceedings of SEDHYD 2019
The erosional and depositional characteristics of meandering rivers lead to the formation and maintenance of point bars along the inner banks of meander bends. Point bars are composed of sediment layers in patterns resulting from the rate and style of channel migration, hydrodynamics, and sediment transport and deposition within the...
Toutle River debris flows initiated by atmospheric rivers: November 2006
Adam R. Mosbrucker, Kurt R. Spicer, Jon J. Major
2019, Conference Paper, Proceedings of SEDHYD 2019
In early November, 2006, an atmospheric river brought heavy rainfall and high freezing levels to the Pacific Northwest. Without snowpack to buffer the hydrologic response, the storm caused widespread landslides and debris flows in drainages sourced from every central Cascades volcano. At Mount St. Helens, in southwestern Washington State, intense...
Assessing the precision and accuracy of particle-size analysis with a laboratory laser-diffraction analyzer
Katherine K. Norton
2019, Conference Paper, Proceedings of SEDHYD 2019
The purpose of this study is to assess the precision and accuracy of laboratory laser-diffraction particle-size distribution (PSD) analysis in support of an effort to formally adopt the method for routine use in U.S. Geological Survey (USGS) sediment laboratories. USGS sediment laboratories analyze the PSD of sediment in support...
Strategic directions of the USGS water mission area’s fluvial sediment science program
Molly S. Wood, Timothy D. Straub
2019, Conference Paper, Proceedings of SEDHYD 2019
The USGS Water Mission Area’s Sediment Science Program provides leadership, training, and methods development in fluvial sediment science for the USGS and its external partners. Overarching objectives of the USGS Sediment Science Program (which includes the Federal Interagency Sedimentation Project) include: 1) developing and promoting innovative sediment monitoring techniques that result in cost effective,...
Channel modification and evolution alter hydraulic connectivity in the Atchafalaya River basin increasing vulnerability to sea-level rise
Daniel Kroes, Richard H. Day, Charles R. Demas, Yvonne C. Allen, Steve Roberts
2019, Conference Paper, Proceedings of SEDHYD 2019
Channel dredging and erosion in the Atchafalaya River basin have resulted in changes to the hydraulic connectivity of this floodplain swamp that have not been previously quantified. In this study, analyses were conducted to determine hydraulic and geomorphic factors that have changed since channel closure in 1962. Results indicated changes...
Sediment monitoring to support modeling a reservoir sediment flush on a sand-bed river in Northern Nebraska
Nathaniel J. Schaepe, Paul M Boyd
2019, Conference Paper, Proceedings of SEDHYD 2019
The U.S. Geological Survey (USGS) in cooperation with the U.S. Army Corps of Engineers (USACE), monitored a sediment flush event from Spencer Dam located on the Niobrara River near Spencer, Nebraska, during the fall of 2014. Data collected during the flush was used to validate a one-dimensional sediment transport model...
Field-scale sediment feed flume: Upper Santa Ana River, California
Scott Wright, J. Toby Minear
2019, Conference Paper, Proceedings of SEDHYD 2019
Along the San Bernardino Valley, the Santa Ana River decreases in slope, increases in width, and deposits particles from boulders to sand as it loses transport capacity. Episodic rainfalls feed very large winter floods, but dry summer and fall periods lead to extensive dry alluvial reaches due to surface water...