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Not all publications have extents, not all extents are completely accurate
Attributes for MRB_E2RF1 Catchments by Major River Basins in the Conterminous United States: STATSGO Soil Characteristics
Michael Wieczorek, Andrew E. LaMotte
2010, Data Series 491-26
This tabular data set represents estimated soil variables compiled for every MRB_E2RF1 catchment of selected Major River Basins (MRBs, Crawford and others, 2006). The variables included are cation exchange capacity, percent calcium carbonate, slope, water-table depth, soil thickness, hydrologic soil group, soil erodibility (k-factor), permeability, average water capacity, bulk density,...
Trace elements have limited utility for studying migratory connectivity in shorebirds that winter in Argentina
J. Torres-Dowdall, A.H. Farmer, M. Abril, E.H. Bucher, I. Ridley
2010, Condor (112) 490-498
Trace-element analysis has been suggested as a tool for the study of migratory connectivity because (1) trace-element abundance varies spatially in the environment, (2) trace elements are assimilated into animals' tissues through the diet, and (3) current technology permits the analysis of multiple trace elements in a small tissue sample,...
Distribution and conservation standing of West Virginia crayfishes
Zachary J. Loughman, Stuart A. Welsh
2010, Southeastern Naturalist 63-78
The diversity of crayfishes in West Virginia represents a transition between the species-rich southern Appalachian faunas and the depauperate crayfish diversity in the northeastern United States. Currently, 22 described species occur in the state, of which 6 are given S1 status, and 3 are introduced species. One species, Orconectes limosus...
Spawning by walleye (Sander vitreus) and white sucker (Catostomus commersoni) in the Detroit River: Implications for spawning habitat enhancement
B.A. Manny, G.W. Kennedy, J.C. Boase, J.D. Allen, E.F. Roseman
2010, Journal of Great Lakes Research (36) 490-496
Few active fish spawning grounds have been found in channels connecting the Great Lakes. Here, we describe one near Belle Isle in the Detroit River, part of the channel connecting lakes Huron and Erie. There, in 2005, we collected 1,573 fish eggs, cultured them, and identified the hatched larvae as...
Species differences in the sensitivity of avian embryos to methylmercury
G. H. Heinz, D. J. Hoffman, J.D. Klimstra, K.R. Stebbins, S. L. Kondrad, C. A. Erwin
2009, Archives of Environmental Contamination and Toxicology (56) 129-138
We injected doses of methylmercury into the air cells of eggs of 26 species of birds and examined the dose-response curves of embryo survival. For 23 species we had adequate data to calculate the median lethal concentration (LC50). Based on the dose-response curves and LC50s, we ranked species...
Sediment Characteristics and Transport in the Kootenai River White Sturgeon Critical Habitat near Bonners Ferry, Idaho
Ryan L. Fosness, Marshall L. Williams
2009, Scientific Investigations Report 2009-5228
Recovery efforts for the endangered Kootenai River population of white sturgeon require an understanding of the characteristics and transport of suspended and bedload sediment in the critical habitat reach of the river. In 2007 and 2008, the U.S. Geological Survey in cooperation with the Kootenai Tribe of Idaho, conducted suspended-...
Geophysical log analysis of selected test holes and wells in the High Plains Aquifer, Central Platte River Basin, Nebraska
J. Alton Anderson, Roger H. Morin, James C. Cannia, John Williams
2009, Scientific Investigations Report 2009-5033
The U.S. Geological Survey in cooperation with the Central Platte Natural Resources District is investigating the hydrostratigraphic framework of the High Plains aquifer in the Central Platte River basin. As part of this investigation, a comprehensive set of geophysical logs was collected from six test holes at three sites and...
Passerine bird trends at Hakalau Forest National Wildlife Refuge, Hawai‘i
Richard J. Camp, Thane K. Pratt, P. Marcos Gorresen, John J. Jeffrey, Bethany L. Woodworth
2009, Technical Report HCSU-011
Hakalau Forest National Wildlife Refuge, on the Island of Hawai‘i, was established in 1985 to protect native forest birds, particularly endangered species. Management actions on the 15,400 ha refuge include removing feral ungulates from the forest and pastures, controlling invasive alien plants, reforesting pastures, and supplementing endangered plant populations. To...
Kootenai River velocities, depth, and white sturgeon spawning site selection – A mystery unraveled?
V.L. Paragamian, R. McDonald, G.J. Nelson, G. Barton
2009, Journal of Applied Ichthyology (25) 640-646
The Kootenai River white sturgeon Acipenser transmontanus population in Idaho, US and British Columbia (BC), Canada became recruitment limited shortly after Libby Dam became fully operational on the Kootenai River, Montana, USA in 1974. In the USA the species was listed under the Endangered Species Act in September of 1994. Kootenai River...
Probability of detection of nests and implications for survey design
P.A. Smith, J. Bart, Richard B. Lanctot, B. J. McCaffery, S. Brown
2009, Condor (111) 414-423
Surveys based on double sampling include a correction for the probability of detection by assuming complete enumeration of birds in an intensively surveyed subsample of plots. To evaluate this assumption, we calculated the probability of detecting active shorebird nests by using information from observers who searched the same plots independently....
Stratigraphic framework and estuarine depositional environments of the Miocene Bear Lake Formation, Bristol Bay Basin, Alaska: Onshore equivalents to potential reservoir strata in a frontier gas-rich basin
E.S. Finzel, K.D. Ridgway, R.R. Reifenstuhl, R. B. Blodgett, J. M. White, P.L. Decker
2009, American Association of Petroleum Geologists Bulletin (93) 379-405
The Miocene Bear Lake Formation is exposed along the coast and mountains of the central Alaska Peninsula and extends offshore as part of the Bristol Bay Basin. The Bear Lake Formation is up to 2360 m (7743 ft) thick in an offshore well and is considered to have the highest...
Combined use of frequency‐domain electromagnetic and electrical resistivity surveys to delineate the freshwater/saltwater interface near saline lakes in the Nebraska Sand Hills, Nebraska, USA
John T. Ong, Eric A. White, John W. Lane Jr., Todd Halihan, Vitaly A Zlotnik
Dwain K. Butler, editor(s)
2009, Conference Paper, Proceedings of the Symposium on the Application of Geophysics to Engineering and Environmental Problems 2009
We investigate the use of frequency‐domain electromagnetic (FDEM) and electrical resistivity (ER) surveys for rapid and detailed characterization of the direction of lake‐aquifer fluxes and the configuration of salt plumes generated from saline lakes. This methodology was developed and applied at several lakes in the Nebraska Sand Hills, Nebraska, in...
Movement and habitat use of sika and white-tailed deer on Assateague Island National Seashore, Maryland
Duane R. Diefenbach, Sonja Christensen
2009, Technical Report NPS/NER/NRTR—2009/140
This research project was conducted to describe habitat use of sika deer (Cervus nippon) and white-tailed deer (Odocoileus virginianus) and possibly attribute the effects of ungulate herbivory to specific deer species, if spatial separation in habitat use could be identified. Sturm (2007) conducted an exclosure study to document the effect...
Surveillance and status of fish stocks in western Lake Erie, 2008
Michael T. Bur, William Edwards, Michael J. Porta, Martin A. Stapanian, Patrick Kocovsky
2009, Conference Paper
The Lake Erie Biological Station has conducted bottom trawl assessments of fish populations in western Lake Erie near East Harbor State Park, Ohio each summer and autumn since 1961. The catches of most age-0 forage fishes in 2008 were less than their 15-year means. Mean densities for five species exceeded...
Population variation in isotopic composition of shorebird feathers: Implications for determining molting grounds
J. Torres-Dowdall, A.H. Farmer, E.H. Bucher, R. O. Rye, G. Landis
2009, Waterbirds (32) 300-310
Stable isotope analyses have revolutionized the study of migratory connectivity. However, as with all tools, their limitations must be understood in order to derive the maximum benefit of a particular application. The goal of this study was to evaluate the efficacy of stable isotopes of C, N, H, O and...
Evidence that pairing with genetically similar mates is maladaptive in a monogamous bird
Herve Mulard, E. Danchin, Sandra L. Talbot, Andrew M. Ramey, Scott A. Hatch, J.F. White, F. Helfenstein, R.H. Wagner
2009, BMC Evolutionary Biology (9)
BackgroundEvidence of multiple genetic criteria of mate choice is accumulating in numerous taxa. In many species, females have been shown to pair with genetically dissimilar mates or with extra-pair partners that are more genetically compatible than their social mates, thereby increasing their offsprings' heterozygosity which often correlates with...
Complex influences of low-head dams and artificial wetlands on fishes in a Colorado River tributary system
R.J. Beatty, F.J. Rahel, W.A. Hubert
2009, Fisheries Management and Ecology (16) 457-467
Low-head dams in arid regions restrict fish movement and create novel habitats that have complex effects on fish assemblages. The influence of low-head dams and artificial wetlands on fishes in Muddy Creek, a tributary of the Colorado River system in the USA was examined. Upstream, fish assemblages were dominated by...
Miocene Total Petroleum System -- Lower Bakersfield Arch Assessment Unit of the San Joaquin Basin Province: Chapter 14 in Petroleum systems and geologic assessment of oil and gas in the San Joaquin Basin Province, California
Donald L. Gautier, Allegra Hosford Scheirer
2008, Professional Paper 1713-14
The Lower Bakersfield Arch Assessment Unit (AU) of the Miocene Total Petroleum System (San Joaquin Basin Province) is primarily defined by the distribution of hydrocarbons generated from biosiliceous shale of the Monterey Formation and by the distribution of basinal-facies sandstones of the Stevens sand of Eckis (1940; hereafter referred to...
Origin and paleoclimatic significance of late Quaternary loess in Nebraska: Evidence from stratigraphy, chronology, sedimentology, and geochemistry
Daniel R. Muhs, E. Arthur Bettis III, John N. Aleinikoff, John P. McGeehin, Jossh Beann, Gary Skipp, Brian D. Marshall, Helen M. Roberts, William C. Johnson, Rachel Benton
2008, GSA Bulletin (120) 1378-1407
Loess is one of the most extensive surficial geologic deposits in midcontinental North America, particularly in the central Great Plains region of Nebraska. Last-glacial-age loess (Peoria Loess) reaches its greatest known thickness in the world in this area. New stratigraphic, geochronologic, mineralogic, and geochemical data yield information about the age...
Miocene Total Petroleum System -- Southeast Stable Shelf Assessment Unit of the San Joaquin Basin Province: Chapter 13 in Petroleum systems and geologic assessment of oil and gas in the San Joaquin Basin Province, California
Donald L. Gautier, Allegra Hosford Scheirer
2008, Professional Paper 1713-13
The confirmed stratigraphic and structural-stratigraphic Southeast Stable Shelf Assessment Unit (AU) of the Miocene Total Petroleum System (San Joaquin Basin Province) comprises all hydrocarbon accumulations within the geographic limits of the AU. Traps typically display low dip angles, gentle folds, and normal faults. Reservoirs, which range in age from fractured...
Nearshore habitat and fish community associations of coaster brook trout in Isle Royale, Lake Superior
O. T. Gorman, S.A. Moore, A.J. Carlson, H.R. Quinlan
2008, Transactions of the American Fisheries Society (137) 1252-1267
We characterized the nearshore habitat and fish community composition of approximately 300 km of shoreline within and adjacent to the major embayments of Isle Royale, Lake Superior. Sampling yielded 17 species, of which 12 were widespread and represented a common element of the Lake Superior fish community, including cisco Coregonus...
Depositional settings of sand beaches along whitewater rivers
K.R. Vincent, E.D. Andrews
2008, River Research and Applications (24) 771-788
The numbers and sizes of sand beaches suitable for recreation along selected whitewater rivers in the western United States depend on sand concentrations, range of discharge and the size, frequency and type of depositional settings. River-width expansions downstream from constrictions are the predominant depositional setting for sand beaches in the...
Geochemical trends and natural attenuation of RDX, nitrate, and perchlorate in the hazardous test area Fractured-Granite aquifer, White Sands Missile Range, New Mexico, 1996-2006
Jeff B. Langman, Andrew J. Robertson, Jamar Bynum, Fredrick E. Gebhardt
2008, Scientific Investigations Report 2008-5157
A fractured-granite aquifer at White Sands Missile Range is contaminated with the explosive compound RDX, nitrate, and perchlorate (oxidizer associated with rocket propellant) from the previous use of the Open Burn/Open Detonation site at the Hazardous Test Area. RDX, nitrate, and perchlorate ground-water concentrations were analyzed to examine source characteristics, spatial...
Late Pleistocene through Holocene landscape evolution of the White River Badlands, South Dakota
Patrick A. Burkhart, Jack Livingston, J. E. Rawling III, Paul R. Hanson, Shannon A. Mahan, Rachel Benton, Erin Heffron, Michael Jahn, Travis Anderson, Bryan Page
2008, Book chapter, Roaming the Rocky Mountains and environs: Geological field trips: Geological Society of America Field Guide 10
Badlands are common arid and semiarid landscapes long recognized in slope development and erosion rate studies by preeminent geomorphologists including Gilbert, Davis, and Schumm. The trip described here will examine in detail Quaternarystrata and landscape evolution in arguably the most famous badlands, the White River Badlands of South Dakota, which...