National Park Service socioeconomic monitoring pilot survey: Visitor spending analysis
Catherine Cullinane Thomas, Egan Cornachione, Lynne Koontz, Christopher Keyes
2019, Natural Resource Report 2019/1924
The National Park Service (NPS) is in the process of establishing a formal socioeconomic monitoring (SEM) program that will provide a standard visitor survey instrument and a long-term, systematic sampling design for in-park visitor surveys. The development of the pilot SEM survey provided the opportunity to add to the set...
A synthesis of ecosystem management strategies for forests in the face of chronic N deposition
Christopher M. Clark, J. Richkus, Philip W Jones, Jennifer Phelan, Douglas A. Burns, Wim deVries, Enzai Du, Mark E. Fenn, Laurence Jones, Shaun A. Watmough
2019, Environmental Pollution (248) 1046-1058
The relative importance of nitrogen (N) deposition as a stressor to global forests is likely to increase in the future, as N deposition increases in Asia and Africa, and as sulfur declines more than nitrogen in Europe, the US, and Canada. Even so, it appears that decreased N deposition may...
New geochemical evidence for the origin of North America's largest dune field, the Nebraska Sand Hills, central Great Plains, USA
Daniel R. Muhs, James R. Budahn
2019, Geomorphology (332) 188-212
The Nebraska Sand Hills region is the largest dune field in North America and has diverse aeolian landforms. It has been active during both the late Pleistocene and late Holocene. Despite decades of study, the source of sediment for this large sand sea is still controversial. Here we report new trace element compositions of aeolian sand that are compared to four hypothesized sediment sources, Tertiary rocks of...
Population characteristics of Ozark Bass (Ambloplites constellatus) in the upper White River basin of northern Arkansas
A. W. Rodman, K. R. Brye, Daniel D. Magoulick, S. Todd
2019, Natural Resources (10) 121-138
Ozark Bass (Ambloplites constellatus) is an understudied, endemic fish species in the Upper White River Basin of northern Arkansas. This study was part of an effort by fisheries managers to gather baseline data about the Ozark Bass to aid in understanding population dynamics and contribute to the limited data available...
Integration and tradeoffs
Michele R. Crist, Karen Prentice, Jeanne C. Chambers, Sue Phillips, Lief A. Wiechman
2019, Report
Managing for sagebrush ecosystems that are resilient to disturbance and resistant to invasive plants often requires managers to make tough decisions in the face of considerable complexity and uncertainty. The deci¬sion making environment is often characterized by multiple management objectives, limited manage¬ment authorities and capabilities, dynamic ecosystems and plant communities,...
Movements of immature bald eagles: Implications for bird aircraft strike hazard
Tricia A. Miller, Jeff L Cooper, Adam E. Duerr, Melissa A. Braham, James T. Anderson, Todd E. Katzner
2019, Journal of Wildlife Management (83) 879-892
Bald eagle (Haliaeetus leucocephalus) aircraft strikes have increased dramatically over the last 20 years as their populations have recovered to near historic sizes. Their attraction to airfields and their large body size makes them a danger to aircraft and therefore important to airfield wildlife managers. However, their management is complicated...
Historical changes in New York State streamflow: Attribution of temporal shifts and spatial patterns from 1961 to 2016
Robin Glas, Douglas A. Burns, Laura K. Lautz
2019, Journal of Hydrology (574) 308-323
To better understand the effects of climate change on streamflow, the hydrologic response to both temperature and precipitation needs to be examined at the mesoscale. New York State provides a hydrologically diverse mesoscale region, where sub-regional clusters of watersheds may respond...
Temporal variability in stream fish assemblage metrics and implications for long-term monitoring
Scott D. George, Barry P. Baldigo, Daniel S. Stich
2019, Ecological Indicators (101) 661-669
High natural variability in the condition of fish communities in headwater streams complicates detection of long-term responses to changes in water quality. As a result, little is known about the impacts and recovery of fishes from acid deposition in streams of New York. Twenty-one fish metrics from annual electrofishing surveys...
Risk at the margins: A natural hazards perspective on the Syrian refugee crisis in Lebanon
William Pollock, Joseph Wartman, Grace Abou-Jaoude, Alex R. Grant
2019, International Journal of Disaster Risk Reduction (36)
Quantitative landslide risk analysis is a key step in creating appropriate land use policies. The forced migration of those displaced by recent armed conflict in Syria has highlighted the need for studies to guide humanitarian aid and resettlement policies. Over 1.5 million displaced Syrians now...
Virally-vectored vaccine candidates against white-nose syndrome induce anti-fungal immune response in little brown bats (Myotis lucifugus)
Tonie E. Rocke, Brock Kingstad-Bakke, Marcel Wuthrich, Ben Stading, Rachel C. Abbott, Marcos Isidoro Ayza, Hannah E. Dobson, Lucas dos Santos Dias, Kevin Galles, Julia S. Lankton, Elizabeth Falendysz, Jeffrey M. Lorch, J. Scott Fites, Jaime Lopera-Madrid, Bruce Klein, Jorge E. Osorio, J. Paul White
2019, Scientific Reports (9)
White-nose syndrome (WNS) caused by the fungus, Pseudogymnoascus destructans (Pd) has killed millions of North American hibernating bats. Currently, methods to prevent the disease are limited. We conducted two trials to assess potential WNS vaccine candidates in wild-caught Myotis lucifugus. In a pilot...
Higher nest predation favors rapid fledging at the cost of plumage quality in nestling birds
Thomas E. Martin, Lea M. Callan1, Frank A. La Sorte2, 4 Vanya G. Rohwer1
2019, The American Naturalist (193) 717-724
Life-history theory predicts that rapid growth comes at a cost to offspring quality and adult longevity. However, trade-offs have been examined primarily based on proximate variation within species rather than evolved differences across species. Evolved differences are important to examine because species may co-evolve mechanisms to reduce long-term costs of...
A federal-state partnership for mapping Florida's coast and seafloor
Cheryl J. Hapke, Ryan Druyor, Rene D. Baumstark, Philip Kramer, Ekaterina Fitos, Xan Fredericks, Elizabeth H. Fetherston-Resch
2019, Coastal Sediments 2150-2158
The Florida Coastal Mapping Program, a partnership of state and federal agencies, has a goal of having modern, consistent, high- resolution sea-floor data for all of Florida’s coastal zone in the next decade to support a myriad of coastal zone science and management applications. One of the early steps in...
Revisiting Herto: New evidence of Homo sapiens from Ethiopia
Yonatan Sahle, Yonas Beyene, Alban Defleur, Berhane Asfaw, Giday WoldeGabriel, William K Hart, Leah E. Morgan, Paul R. Renne, Joshua Carlson, Tim D White
2019, Book chapter, Modern Human Origins and Dispersal
Localities in the radiometrically dated Upper Herto Member of Ethiopia’s Bouri Formation continue to produce new data that complement and extend initial reports of fossils and artifacts published in 2003. Results of these revisits are reported here and include the in situ recovery of artifacts from the same sediments containing...
Quarterly wildlife mortality report April 2019
Bryan J. Richards, Daniel A. Grear, C. LeAnn White, Thierry M. Work, Emily A Underwood
2019, Wildlife Disease Association Newsletter 32-33
No abstract available....
Evaluation of ground motion models for USGS seismic hazard forecasts: Induced and tectonic earthquakes in the Central and Eastern U.S.
Daniel E. McNamara, Mark D. Petersen, Eric M. Thompson, Peter M. Powers, Allison Shumway, Susan M. Hoover, Morgan P. Moschetti, Emily Wolin
2019, Bulletin of the Seismological Society of America (109) 322-335
Ground motion model (GMM) selection and weighting introduces a significant source of uncertainty in United States Geological Survey (USGS) seismic hazard models. The increase in moderate moment magnitude induced earthquakes (Mw 4 to 5.8) in Oklahoma and Kansas since 2009, due to increased wastewater injection related to oil and...
Shrub persistence and increased grass mortality in response to drought in dryland systems
Daniel E. Winkler, Jayne Belnap, David L. Hoover, Sasha C. Reed, Michael C. Duniway
2019, Global Change Biology (25) 3121-3135
Droughts in the southwest United States have led to major forest and grassland die‐off events in recent decades, suggesting plant community and ecosystem shifts are imminent as native perennial grass populations are replaced by shrub‐ and invasive plant‐dominated systems. These patterns are similar to those observed in arid and semiarid...
Spatiotemporal distribution of waterfowl disease outbreaks in Kansas
David A. Haukos
2019, Prairie Naturalist (50) 4-14
No abstract available....
Snake River fall chinook salmon life history investigations, 2018 annual report
Kenneth F. Tiffan, Paul M. Chittaro, Brian P. Kennedy
2019, Report
The following report is divided into three sections each of which describes work conducted by different project cooperators. Chapter One describes smallmouth bass (Micropterus dolomieu) predation on subyearling fall Chinook salmon (Oncorhynchus tshawytscha) in Lower Granite Reservoir in 2018. Smallmouth bass abundance increased seasonally in shoreline habitats and was highest...
Kinetic study on clogging of a geothermal pumping well triggered by mixing-induced biogeochemical reactions
Luc Burte, Charles A. Cravotta III, Lorine Bethencourt, Julien Farasin, Mathieu Pedrot, Alexis Dufresne, Marie-Francoise Gerard, Catherine Baranger, Tanguy Le Borgne, Luc Aquilina
2019, Environmental Science & Technology (53) 5848-5857
The sustainability of ground-source geothermal systems can be severely impacted by microbially mediated clogging processes. Biofouling of water wells by hydrous ferric oxide is a widespread problem. Although the mechanisms and critical environmental factors associated with clogging development are widely recognized, effects of mixing processes within the wells and time...
Distributed fault slip in the eastern California shear zone: Adding pieces to the puzzle near Barstow, California
Elizabeth K. Haddon, David M. Miller, Victoria Langenheim, Shannon A. Mahan
2019, Conference Paper, Exploring the ends of eras in the eastern Mojave Desert: 2019 Desert symposium field guide and proceedings
We investigate the dextral Lockhart and Mt. General faults, which are among four active structures in the northwestern portion of the eastern California shear zone (ECSZ). Early mapping depicts the Lockhart and Mt. General faults as discontinuous fault traces that continue northwest of the Lenwood Fault. Recent work indicates that...
Estimated 2016 groundwater level and drawdown from predevelopment to 2016 in the Santa Fe Group Aquifer System in the Albuquerque Area, Central New Mexico
Amy E. Galanter, Lucas T.S. Curry
2019, Scientific Investigations Map 3433
The U.S. Geological Survey, in cooperation with the Albuquerque Bernalillo County Water Utility Authority (ABCWUA), has developed a series of maps and associated reports to document changes in the groundwater level in the production zone of the Santa Fe Group aquifer system in the Albuquerque, New Mexico, area. The current...
Quantifying thermal-imager effectiveness for detecting bird nests on farms
Matthew D. Stephenson, Lisa A. Schulte, Robert W. Klaver
2019, Wildlife Society Bulletin (43) 302-307
We conducted a designed experiment to test whether having a thermal-imaging camera available affected researchers' nest detection rates when searching for bird nests in cropland and grassland habitat in an agricultural landscape of Iowa, USA, in 2016. With known active nests present, naïve observers searched for nests with and without...
Rigorously valuing the role of U.S. coral reefs in coastal hazard risk reduction
Curt D. Storlazzi, Borja G. Reguero, Aaron Cole, Erik Lowe, James B. Shope, Ann E. Gibbs, Barry A. Nickel, Robert T. McCall, Ap R. van Dongeren, Michael W. Beck
2019, Open-File Report 2019-1027
The degradation of coastal habitats, particularly coral reefs, raises risks by increasing the exposure of coastal communities to flooding hazards. The protective services of these natural defenses are not assessed in the same rigorous economic terms as artificial defenses, such as seawalls, and therefore often are not considered in decision...
Permafrost collapse is accelerating carbon release
Merritt R. Turetsky, Benjamin W. Abbott, Miriam Jones, Katey Walter Anthony, David Olefeldt, Edward A. Schuur, Charles Koven, A.D. McGuire, Guido Grosse, Peter Kuhry, Gustaf Hugelius, David M. Lawrence, Carolyn Gibson, A. B. K. Sannel
2019, Nature (569) 32-34
This much is clear: the Arctic is warming fast, and frozen soils are starting to thaw, often for the first time in thousands of years. But how this happens is as murky as the mud that oozes from permafrost when ice melts.As the temperature of the ground rises above freezing,...
The Appalachian Geo-STEM Camp: Learning about geology through experiential adventure recreation
Robert Burns, Mark W. Carter, John Brock, Jonas Leveque, Emily Bunse, Monica Palaseanu-Lovejoy, Gerald F. Guala, Nathan Harlan, Mitchel Blake, Jasmine Moreira, Jim Britton, Kenny Ashton, Barnes Nugent, Michael Marketti
2019, Professional Geologist (56) 27-31
The inaugural Appalachian Geo-STEM Camp (AGC) was a partnership between West Virginia University (WVU), the U.S. Geological Survey (USGS) and the West Virginia Geological and Economic Survey (WVGES). Designed to engage high school students in geoscience-oriented Science, Technology, Engineering and Mathematics (STEM) activities through adventure-based outdoor recreation, the inaugural...