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Relative abundance and molecular evolution of Lake Sinai Virus (Sinaivirus) clades
Robert S. Cornman
2019, PeerJ (7)
Lake Sinai Viruses (Sinaivirus) are commonly detected in honey bees (Apis mellifera) but no disease phenotypes or fitness consequences have yet been demonstrated. This viral group is genetically diverse, lacks obvious geographic structure, and multiple lineages can co-infect individual bees. While phylogenetic analyses have been performed, the molecular evolution...
A supervolcano and its sidekicks: A 100 ka eruptive chronology of the Fish Canyon Tuff and associated units of the La Garita magmatic system
Leah E. Morgan, Samuel Johnstone, Amy K. Gilmer, Michael A. Cosca, Ren A. Thompson
2019, Geology (47) 453-456
Establishing temporal constrains on major volcanic eruptions is limited by the precision of existing geochronometers. Prior work on the La Garita caldera, created by the eruption of the Fish Canyon Tuff, failed to resolve temporal differences between pre-, syn-, and post-collapse eruptive units. Here, we report 40Ar/39Ar geochronologic data supporting...
Validating the performance of occupancy models for estimating habitat use and predicting the distribution of highly-mobile species: A case study using the American black bear
Matthew J. Gould, William R. Gould, James W. Cain III, Gary W. Roemer
2019, Biological Conservation (234) 28-36
Occupancy models have become a valuable tool for estimating wildlife-habitat relationships and for predicting species distributions. Highly-mobile species often violate the assumption that sampling units are geographically closed shifting the probability of occupancy to be interpreted as the probability of use. We used occupancy models, in conjunction with noninvasive sampling,...
Hydraulic conductivity estimates from slug tests in the Big Sioux aquifer near Sioux Falls, South Dakota
William G. Eldridge, Colton J. Medler
2019, Scientific Investigations Report 2019-5013
Hydraulic conductivity estimates were made for 15 observation wells using slug-out (rising-head) tests in the Big Sioux aquifer near Sioux Falls, South Dakota, as part of a cooperative study with the City of Sioux Falls to characterize the hydrogeology and the extent of the Big Sioux aquifer north of the...
Extreme reduction in nutritional value of a key forage fish during the Pacific marine heatwave of 2014–2016
Vanessa R. von Biela, Mayumi L. Arimitsu, John F. Piatt, Brielle Heflin, Sarah K. Schoen, Jannelle Trowbridge, Chelsea Clawson
2019, Marine Ecology Progress Series (613) 171-182
Pacific sand lance Ammodytes personatus are a key forage fish in the North Pacific for many species of salmon, groundfish, seabirds, and marine mammals and have historically been important to predators in relatively warm years. However, extreme declines in the nutritional value of sand lance in Prince William Sound, Alaska, USA,...
Relatedness within and among Myotis septentrionalis colonies at a local scale
W. Mark Ford, Miluska Olivera-Hyde, Alexander Silvis, Eric M. Hallerman, Eric R. Britzke
2019, Canadian Journal of Zoology
Abstract: We assessed parentage within and among maternity colonies of the northern long-eared bat (Myotis septentrionalis Troessart 1897) in north-central Kentucky from 2011–2013 to better understand colony social structure, formation, and membership dynamics. We intensively sampled colonies in close and remote (> 10 km) spatial proximity both before and...
Downstream‐propagating channel responses to decadal‐scale climate variability in a glaciated river basin
Scott W. Anderson, Christopher P. Konrad
2019, Journal of Geophysical Research: Earth Surface (124) 902-919
Regional climate is an important control on the rate of coarse sediment mobilization and transport in alpine river systems. Changes in climate are then expected to cause a cascade of geomorphic responses, including adjustments in downstream channel morphology. However, the mechanics and sensitivity of channel response to short‐term climate variability...
Defining the limits of spectrally based bathymetric mapping on a large river
Carl J. Legleiter, Ryan L. Fosness
2019, Remote Sensing (11) 1-29
Remote sensing has emerged as a powerful method of characterizing river systems but is subject to several important limitations. This study focused on defining the limits of spectrally based mapping in a large river. We used multibeam echosounder (MBES) surveys and hyperspectral images from a deep, clear-flowing channel to develop...
Regression models for estimating sediment and nutrient concentrations and loads at the Kankakee River, Shelby, Indiana, December 2015 through May 2018
Timothy R. Lathrop, Aubrey R. Bunch, Myles S. Downhour
2019, Scientific Investigations Report 2019-5005
The Kankakee River in northern Indiana flows through the area once known as the Grand Marsh. Beginning in the 1860s, anthropogenic changes to the river within Indiana resulted in downstream flooding and additional transport of sediment and nutrients. In 2015, the U.S. Geological Survey, in cooperation with the Indiana Department...
State-space analysis of power to detect regional brook trout population trends over time
Kasey C. Pregler, R. Daniel Hanks, Evan S. Childress, Nathaniel P. Hitt, Daniel J. Hocking, Benjamin H. Letcher, Yoichiro Kanno
2019, Canadian Journal of Fisheries and Aquatic Sciences (76) 2145-2155
Threats to aquatic biodiversity are expressed at broad spatial scales, but identifying regional trends in abundance is challenging owing to variable sampling designs, and temporal and spatial variation in abundance. We compiled a regional dataset of brook trout Salvelinus fontinalis counts across their southern range representing 326 sites from eight...
Better approaches to managing drought in the American Southwest
Patrick Lambert, Timothy N. Titus, Andrea Ostroff
2019, Eos, Transactions, American Geophysical Union (100)
The second in a series of USGS Southwest Region (SWR) “Science Exchange” annual workshops, focused on USGS drought science. The participants considered how extreme drought conditions are evolving in much of the American southwest, with an emphasis on integrated drought science planning at the USGS bureau and program levels. The...
User’s manual for the Draper climate-distribution software suite with data‑evaluation tools
John M. Donovan, Kathryn M. Koczot
2019, Techniques and Methods 7-C22
Development of a time series of spatially distributed climate data is an important step in the process of developing physically based environmental models requiring distributed inputs of climate data beyond what is available from observations collected at climate stations. To prepare inputs required for model-mapping units across the study area,...
100-kyr paced climate change in the Pliocene warm period, Southwest Pacific
Rocio Caballero-Gill, Timothy D. Herbert, Harry Dowsett
2019, Paleoceanography and Paleoclimatology (34) 524-525
The mid to late Pliocene (~4.2-2.8 Ma.) represents an experiment in climate sensitivity to orbital pacing in which nearly all continental ice was confined to the Southern Hemisphere. Most studies have emphasized the dominant role of obliquity in determining changes in ice volume and temperature at this time, although most records come from the...
Environmental regulation of sex determination in fishes: Insights from Atheriniformes
Y. Yamamoto, R. S. Hattori, Reynaldo Patino, C. A. Strüssmann
2019, Book chapter
Sex determination is the first step toward the establishment of phenotypic sex in most vertebrates. Aquatic poikilotherms such as teleost fishes exhibit a high diversity of sex-determination mechanisms and gonadal phenotypes that are remarkably plastic and responsive to a variety of environmental factors (e.g., water temperature, pH, salinity, photoperiod, population density)....
Growth disparity in sympatric kokanee breeding groups
Zachary B. Klein, Michael C. Quist, Andrew M. Dux, Matthew P. Corsi
2019, North American Journal of Aquaculture (81) 169-177
Growth is arguably the most important dynamic rate function due to its interaction with survival and recruitment. As such, understanding the mechanisms underlying growth is a primary focus of fisheries research. Kokanee Oncorhynchus nerka in Lake Pend Oreille, Idaho, provide an interesting case study for investigating the factors that influence growth. Early‐run...
Estimating the energy expenditure of free‐ranging polar bears using tri‐axial accelerometers: A validation with doubly labeled water
Anthony M. Pagano, Terrie M. Williams
2019, Ecology and Evolution (9) 4210-4219
Measures of energy expenditure can be used to inform animal conservation and management, but methods for measuring the energy expenditure of free‐ranging animals have a variety of limitations. Advancements in biologging technologies have enabled the use of dynamic body acceleration derived from accelerometers as a proxy for energy expenditure. Although...
Discovery of an extensive deep-sea fossil serpulid reef associated with a cold seep, Santa Monica Basin, California
Magdalena N Georgieva, Charles K. Paull, Crispin TS Little, Mary McGann, Diana Sahy, Daniel Condon, Lonny Lundsten, Jack Pewsey, David W Caress, Robert C Vrijenhoek
2019, Frontiers in Marine Science
Multi-beam mapping of the Santa Monica Basin in the eastern Pacific has revealed the existence of a number of elevated bathymetric features, or mounds, harboring cold seep communities. During 2013-2014, mounds at ~600 m water depth were observed for the first time and sampled by Monterey Bay Aquarium Research Institute’s...
Spatial heterogeneity of prion gene polymorphisms in an area recently infected by chronic wasting disease
William L. Miller, W. David Walter
2019, Prion (13) 65-76
Genetic variability in the prion protein (Prnp) gene influences host susceptibility to many pathogenic prion diseases. Understanding the distribution of susceptible Prnp variants and determining factors influencing spatial genetic patterns are important components of many chronic wasting disease mitigation strategies. Here, we describe Prnp variability in white-tailed deer (Odocoileus virginianus) from the Mid-Atlantic region...
Tectono-magmatic evolution of porphyry belts in the central Tethys region of Turkey, the Caucasus, Iran, western Pakistan, and southern Afghanistan
Lukas Zurcher, Arthur A. Bookstrom, Jane M. Hammarstrom, John C. Mars, Stephen Ludington, Michael L. Zientek, Pamela Dunlap, John Wallis
2019, Ore Geology Reviews (111)
Exploration in the central Tethys region of Turkey, Armenia, Azerbaijan, Georgia, Iran, and western Pakistan has led to the identification of the giant Reko Diq (24 Mt Cu and 1300 t...
Characteristics and spatial variability of wind noise on near-surface broadband seismometers
S. N. Dybing, Adam T. Ringler, David C. Wilson, Robert E. Anthony
2019, Bulletin of the Seismological Society of America (109) 1082-1098
By coupling with the ground, wind causes ground motion that appears on seismic records as noise across a wide bandwidth. This wind-generated noise can drown out important features such as small earthquakes and prevent observation of normal modes from large earthquakes. Because the wind field is heterogeneous at local scales...
Quality of surface water in Missouri, water year 2017
Miya N. Barr, Katherine A. Bartels
2019, Data Series 1108
The U.S. Geological Survey, in cooperation with the Missouri Department of Natural Resources, designed and operates a network of monitoring stations on streams and springs throughout Missouri known as the Ambient Water-Quality Monitoring Network. During water year 2017 (October 1, 2016, through September 30, 2017), data presented in this report...
Comparison of site dominant frequency from earthquake and microseismic data in California
Behzad Hassani, Alan Yong, Gail M. Atkinson, Tian Feng, Lingseng Meng
2019, Bulletin of the Seismological Society of America (109) 1034-1040
An important predictive variable for site amplification is the site dominant frequency (⁠ƒd⁠). At seismic monitoring stations, ƒd can be calculated from the peak of the horizontal‐to‐vertical spectral ratios (HVSRs) obtained from earthquake recordings (eHVSR). For other sites, ƒd can be estimated from microseismic (mHVSR) observations....
Relationships between diatom metrics based on species nutrient traits and agricultural land use
Robert Pillsbury, R. Jan Stevenson, Mark D. Munn, Ian R. Waite
2019, Environmental Monitoring and Assessment (191)
We assessed how diatom metrics were related to different ranges of agricultural land use. Diatom assemblage composition, nutrients, and landscape characteristics were determined at 232 sites in eight agriculturally dominated study areas of the continental United States. Two regional groups based on differences in diatom relations to human disturbance were...
Integrated assessment of wastewater reuse, exposure risk, and fish endocrine disruption in the Shenandoah River watershed
Larry B. Barber, Jennifer L. Krstolic, Chintamani Kandel, Steffanie H. Keefe, Jacelyn Rice, Paul Westerhoff, David Bertolatus, Alan M. Vajda
2019, Environmental Science & Technology (53) 3429-3440
Reuse of municipal and industrial wastewater treatment plant (WWTP) effluent is an important component in augmenting global freshwater supplies. The Shenandoah River Watershed was selected to conduct on-site exposure experiments to assess endocrine disrupting characteristics of different source waters. This investigation of the Shenandoah River Watershed integrates WWTP wastewater reuse...