Annual wastewater nutrient data preparation and load estimation using the Point Source Load Estimation Tool (PSLoadEsT)
Lillian E. Gorman Sanisaca, Kenneth D. Skinner, Molly A. Maupin
2019, Open-File Report 2019-1025
The Point-Source Load Estimation Tool (PSLoadEsT) provides a user-friendly interface for generating reproducible load calculations for point source dischargers while managing common data challenges including duplicates, incompatible input tables, and incomplete or missing nutrient concentration or effluent flow data. Maintaining a consistent method across an entire study area is important...
Point-source nutrient loads to streams of the conterminous United States, 2012
Kenneth D. Skinner, Molly A. Maupin
2019, Data Series 1101
Total nitrogen and phosphorous loads were estimated for 5,430 major point-source facilities (all types) and 11,537 minor wastewater treatment facilities discharging to streams in the conterminous United States during 2012. Facilities classified as a major discharger are typically a facility that discharges greater than one million gallons of water...
Effect of light intensity and substrate type on siscowet lake trout (Salvelinus namaycush siscowet) predation on deepwater sculpin (Myoxocephalus thompsonii)
Trevor D. Keyler, Thomas R. Hrabik, Allen F. Mensinger, Loranzie S Rogers, Owen Gorman
2019, Hydrobiologia 1-12
Foraging characteristics of siscowet lake trout (Salvelinus namaycush siscowet) on deepwater sculpin (Myoxocephalus thompsonii) were studied under ecologically relevant downwelling light intensities (9.0 × 108 to 1.62 × 1011 photons m−2 s−1) and emission spectrum (500–510 nm) on varying substrates (gravel, sand, and black fabric). Siscowet reaction distance within our trials increased with light intensity...
The current unlikely earthquake hiatus at California’s transform boundary paleoseismic sites
Glenn Biasi, Katherine M. Scharer
2019, Seismological Research Letters (90) 1168-1176
Paleoseismic and historical earthquake records used to quantify earthquake recurrence rates can also be used to test the likelihood of seismically quiescent periods. At principal paleoseismic sites in California on the San Andreas, San Jacinto, Elsinore, and Hayward faults, no ground‐rupturing earthquake has occurred in the last 100 yr, yet this...
Which trees die during drought? The key role of insect host-tree selection
Nathan L. Stephenson, Adrian J. Das, Nicholas J. Ampersee, Beverly M Bulaon, Julie L. Yee
2019, Journal of Ecology (107) 2383-2401
1. During drought, the tree subpopulations (such as size or vigor classes) that suffer disproportionate mortality can be conceptually arrayed along a continuum defined by the actions of biotic agents, particularly insects. At one extreme, stress dominates: insects are absent or simply kill the most physiologically stressed...
Wetlands and development influence fish diversity in a species-rich small river
Leandro E. Miranda, J.A. Martinez-Lanfranco, K. J. Kilgore
2019, Environmental Biology of Fishes (102) 873-886
We identified in-stream and off-stream characteristics that influenced various species diversity metrics in reaches of the Duck River Basin, Tennessee, USA. This relatively small basin is home to one of the most diverse freshwater fish faunas in North America. In all, over 325,000 native fish representing 136 native fish species...
Holocene thermokarst lake dynamics in northern Interior Alaska: The interplay of climate, fire, and subsurface hydrology
Lesleigh Anderson, Mary E. Edwards, Mark D. Shapley, Bruce P. Finney, Catherine Langdon
2019, Frontiers in Earth Science (7) 1-22
The current state of permafrost in Alaska and meaningful expectations for its future evolution are informed by long-term perspectives of previous permafrost degradation. Thermokarst processes in permafrost landscapes often lead to widespread lake formation and the spatial and temporal evolution of thermokarst lake landscapes reflects the combined effects of climate,...
Environmental and geomorphological changes on the eastern North American Continental Shelf across the Paleocene-Eocene Boundary
Marci M. Robinson, Whittney Spivey
2019, Paleoceanography and Paleoclimatology (34) 715-732
Foraminiferal evidence from two sites in southern Maryland, eastern United States, reveals a series of rapid ecological changes on the continental shelf during the onset of the Paleocene-Eocene Thermal Maximum (PETM). Benthic and planktic foraminifer assemblages from the South Dover Bridge (SDB) and Mattawoman Creek-Billingsley Road (MCBR) cores in the...
Changes in breeding population sizes of double-crested Cormorants Phalacrocorax auritus in the Humboldt Bay area, California, 1924–2017
Phillip J. Capitolo, Harry R. Carter, Julie L. Yee, Gerard J. McChesney, Michael W Parker, Richard J Young, Richard T. Golightly, W Breck Tyler
2019, Marine Ornithology: Journal of Seabird Research and Conservation (47) 115-126
To better understand recent population growth of the Double-crested Cormorant Phalacrocorax auritus along the Pacific coast of North America, we assessed long-term breeding population trends in the Humboldt Bay area, California, using aerial photographic survey data collected since 1989 as well as available prior data. The earliest documentations of breeding (but without...
Anatomical physiology of fishes
Christine L. Densmore
2019, Book chapter, Fish diseases and medicine
This chapter highlights the major consistencies and differences that are evident in the anatomy and physiology of those fish most likely to be encountered by the veterinarian or biologist working in the realm of aquatic animal health. It describes teleost fish, members of the infraclass Teleostei that includes bony fish...
Disentangling effects of invasive species and habitat while accounting for observer error in a long-term amphibian study
Jennifer Rowe, Adam Duarte, Christopher Pearl, Brome McCreary, Stephanie Galvan, James T. Peterson, Michael J. Adams
2019, Ecosphere (10)
The invasive American bullfrog (Lithobates catesbeianus) and a variety of non‐native sport fish commonly co‐occur in lowland lentic habitats of the western United States. Both invasive taxa are implicated in declines of native amphibians in this region, but few long‐term studies of communities exist. Further, field studies of invasive–native interactions...
Terrestrial lidar data of the February 14, 2019 Sausalito Boulevard Landslide, Sausalito, California
Brian D. Collins, Skye C. Corbett
2019, Data Series 1112
On February 14, 2019, just before 2:56 am local time (Pacific Standard Time), a landslide initiated from the hillslopes above the Hurricane Gulch section of the City of Sausalito, Marin County, California. The landslide, specifically classified as a debris flow, overran a road (Sausalito Boulevard) immediately below the landslide source...
Improving earthquake forecasts during swarms with a duration model
Andrea L. Llenos, Nicholas van der Elst
2019, Bulletin of the Seismological Society of America
Earthquake swarms present a challenge for operational earthquake forecasting because they are driven primarily by transient external processes, such as fluid flow, the behavior and duration of which are difficult to predict. In this study, we develop a swarm duration model to estimate how long a swarm is likely to...
Potential sea level rise for the Chitimacha Tribe of Louisiana
Kathryn A. Spear, William Jones, Kereen Griffith, Blair E. Tirpak, Kimberly Walden
2019, Open-File Report 2019-1030
Situated in the Mississippi Alluvial Plain of the Gulf Coast Prairie Landscape Conservation Cooperative (GCP LCC), the Chitimacha Tribe is one of four federally recognized tribes in Louisiana. The Tribal seat, trust lands/ reservation, and adjacent Tribal owned lands are located near Charenton, Louisiana, totaling nearly 1,000 acres. The...
Restoration affects sexual reproductive capacity in a salt marsh
Scott F. Jones, Erik S. Yando, Camille Stagg, Courtney T. Hall, Mark W. Hester
2019, Estuaries and Coasts (42) 976-986
Plant sexual reproduction is an important driver of plant community maintenance, dispersal, and recovery from disturbance. Despite this, sexual reproduction in habitats dominated by clonally spreading perennial species, such as salt marshes, is often ignored. Communities dominated by long-lived perennial species can still depend on sexual reproduction for recolonizing large...
Bioavailable iron production in airborne mineral dust: Controls by chemical composition and solar flux
Eshani Hettiarachchi, Richard L. Reynolds, Harland L. Goldstein, Bruce M. Moskowitz, Gayan Rubasinghege
2019, Atmospheric Environment (205) 90-102
A large part of oceanic biological production is limited by the scarcity of dissolved iron. Mineral dust aerosol, processed under acidic atmospheric conditions, is the primary natural source of bioavailable iron to oceanic life. However,...
Functional variation at an expressed MHC class IIß locus associates with Ranavirus infection intensity in larval anuran populations
Anna E. Savage, Carly R. Muletz-Wolz, Evan H. Campbell Grant, Robert C. Fleischer, Kevin P. Mulder
2019, Immunogenetics (17) 335-346
Infectious diseases are causing catastrophic losses to biodiversity globally. Iridoviruses in the genus Ranavirus are among the leading causes of amphibian disease-related mortality. Polymorphisms in major histocompatibility complex (MHC) genes are significantly associated with variation in amphibian susceptibility to pathogens. MHC genes encode diverse cell-surface molecules that can recognize and...
Spatial capture–recapture for categorically marked populations with an application to genetic capture–recapture
Ben C. Augustine, J. Andrew Royle, Sean M. Murphy, Richard B. Chandler, John J. Cox, Marcella Kelly
2019, Ecosphere (10)
Recently introduced unmarked spatial capture–recapture (SCR), spatial mark–resight (SMR), and 2‐flank spatial partial identity models (SPIMs) extend the domain of SCR to populations or observation systems that do not always allow for individual identity to be determined with certainty. For example, some species do not have natural marks that can...
Quaternary eolian sediments and Carolina Bays of the U.S. Atlantic Coastal Plain province
Christopher S. Swezey
2019, Conference Paper
Under modern conditions, the Atlantic Coastal Plain province of the eastern United States is not very conducive to widespread eolian sediment mobilization because of a humid and mesothermal climate, relatively low mean surface wind velocities (~1–3 m/sec), and relatively dense vegetation. LiDAR data, however, have revealed the presence of...
Living with wildfire in Montezuma County, Colorado: 2015 data report
Hannah Brenkert-Smith, James Meldrum, Pamela Wilson, Patricia A. Champ, Christopher M. Barth, Angela Boag
2019, Research Note RMRS-RN-81
Residents in the wildland-urban interface (WUI) can play an important role in reducing wildfire’s negative effects by performing wildfire risk mitigation on their property. This report offers insight into the wildfire risk mitigation activities and related considerations, such as attitudes, experiences, and concern about wildfire, for people with homes in...
Individual based modelling of fish migration in a 2-D river system: Model description and case study
Marcia N. Snyder, Nathan H. Schumaker, Joseph E Ebersole, Jason B. Dunham, Randy Comeleo, Matthew Keefer, Peter Leinenbach, Allen Brookes, Ben Cope, Jennifer Wu, John Palmer, Druscilla Keenan
2019, Landscape Ecology (34) 737-754
Context: Diadromous fish populations in the Pacific Northwest face challenges along their migratory routes from declining habitat quality, harvest, and barriers to longitudinal connectivity. These stressors complicate the prioritization of proposed management actions intended to improve conditions for migratory fishes including anadromous salmon and trout. Objectives: We describe a multi-scale hybrid...
Early career climate communications and networking
Ezra Markowitz, Michelle D. Staudinger
2019, Conference Paper
The Department of the Interior and the U.S. Geological Survey have made it a priority to train the next generation of scientists and resource managers. The Climate Adaptation Science Centers (CSC) and consortium institutions are working to contribute to this initiative by supporting and building a network of students across...
Mini-columns and ghost columns in Columbia river lava
James G. Moore
2019, Journal of Volcanology and Geothermal Research (374) 242-251
The master joints bounding the columns that make up the basal colonnade of large lava flows of the Columbia Plateau are, in places, flanked by sub-horizontal mini-columns that have grown normal to the master joints. The secondary mini-columns grow into the main columns and are clearly younger than them. They...
Energetic costs of aquatic locomotion in a subadult polar bear
Anthony M. Pagano, Amy Cutting, Nicole Nicassio-Hiskey, Amy Hash, Terrie M. Williams
2019, Marine Mammal Science (35) 649-659
Most marine mammals rely on swimming as their primary form of locomotion. These animals have evolved specialized morphologies, physiologies, and behaviors that have enabled them to efficiently move through an aquatic environment (Williams 1999). Such adaptations include body streamlining, modified plantar surfaces for propulsion, and abilities...
Relative prediction intervals reveal larger uncertainty in 3D approaches to predictive digital soil mapping of soil properties with legacy data
Travis Nauman, Michael C. Duniway
2019, Geoderma (347) 170-184
Fine scale maps of soil properties enable efficient land management and inform earth system models. Recent efforts to create soil property maps from field observations tend to use similar tree-based machine learning interpolation approaches, but often deal with depth of predictions, validation, and uncertainty differently. One of the main differences...