Communication strategy of the U.S. Geological Survey Hawaiian Volcano Observatory during the lava-flow crisis of 2014–2015, Kilauea Volcano, Hawaii
Steven Brantley, James P. Kauahikaua, Janet Babb, Tim R. Orr, Matthew R. Patrick, Michael P. Poland, Frank A. Trusdell, Darryl Oliveira
2019, Book chapter, Field volcanology: A tribute to the distinguished career of Don Swanson
In 2014–2015, a slow-moving pāhoehoe lava flow from the remote Pu‘u ‘Ō‘ō vent on Kīlauea Volcano advanced 20 km into populated areas of the Puna District on the Island of Hawai‘i. The staff of the U.S. Geological Survey’s (USGS) Hawaiian Volcano Observatory (HVO) mobilized their resources to closely monitor the...
Geochemical evolution of Keanakāko‘i Tephra, Kīlauea Volcano, Hawai‘i
M.O. Garcia, Adonara E. Mucek, Kendra J. Lynn, Donald A. Swanson, Marc D. Norman
Michael P. Poland, Michael O Garcia, Victor E. Camp, Anita L. Grunder, editor(s)
2019, Book chapter, Field volcanology: A tribute to the distinguished career of Don Swanson
The Keanakāko‘i Tephra was deposited from 1500 to ca. 1820 CE, when Kīlauea’s magmatic output was ~2% of the average output during historical times (post–1823 CE). The tephra consists of deposits from numerous phreatomagmatic and phreatic eruptions, three episodes of high lava fountains, and one lava. Fresh glass is available...
Hydrogeology of Lower Amargosa Valley and groundwater discharge to the Amargosa Wild and Scenic River, Inyo and San Bernardino Counties, California, and adjacent areas in Nye and Clark Counties, Nevada
Wayne R. Belcher, Donald S. Sweetkind, Candice B. Hopkins, Megan E. Poff
2019, Scientific Investigations Report 2018-5151
In 2009, Congress designated certain reaches of the Amargosa River in Inyo County, California between the town of Shoshone and Dumont Dunes as a Wild and Scenic River. As part of the management of the Amargosa Wild and Scenic River, the Bureau of Land...
Lava lake thermal pattern classification using self organizing maps and relationships to eruption processes at Kilauea Volcano, Hawaii
Amy M Burzynski, Steve W. Anderson, Kerryn Morrison, Matthew R. Patrick, Tim R. Orr, Weston Thelen
2019, Special Papers of the Geological Society of America 538
Kīlauea Volcano’s active summit lava lake poses hazards to downwind residents and over 1.6 million Hawai‘i Volcanoes National Park visitors each year. The lava lake surface is dynamic; crustal plates separated by incandescent cracks move across the lake as magma circulates below. We hypothesize that these dynamic thermal patterns are...
Monitoring landscape dynamics in central U.S. grasslands with harmonized Landsat-8 and Sentinel-2 time series data
Qiang Zhou, Jennifer Rover, Jesslyn F. Brown, Bruce B. Worstell, Danny Howard, Zhuoting Wu, Alisa L. Gallant, Bradley Rundquist, Morgan Burke
2019, Remote Sensing (11)
Remotely monitoring changes in central U.S. grasslands is challenging because these landscapes tend to respond quickly to disturbances and changes in weather. Such dynamic responses influence nutrient cycling, greenhouse gas contributions, habitat availability for wildlife, and other ecosystem processes and services. Traditionally, coarse-resolution satellite data acquired at daily intervals have...
A new perspective on the 19th century golden pumice deposit of Kilauea volcano
Sebastien Biass, Donald A. Swanson, Bruce F. Houghton
Michael P. Poland, Michael O. Garcia, Victor E. Camp, Anita L. Grunder, editor(s)
2019, Book chapter, Field Volcanology: A Tribute to the Distinguished Career of Don Swanson
The golden pumice deposit (unit K1) represents one of the latest episodes of Hawaiian fountaining in the Keanakāko‘i Tephra and is the product of the first high fountaining eruption at Kīlauea summit in ~300 yr, since the caldera formed in ca. 1500 CE. We present a new physical characterization of...
Predicting the initial spread of novel Asian origin influenza A viruses in the continental USA by wild waterfowl
Alan B. Franklin, Sarah N. Bevins, Jeremy W. Ellis, Ryan S. Miller, Susan A. Shriner, J. Jeffrey Root, Daniel P. Walsh, Thomas J. DeLiberto
2019, Transboundary and Emerging Diseases (66) 705-714
Using data on waterfowl band recoveries, we identified spatially explicit hotspots of concentrated waterfowl movement to predict occurrence and spatial spread of a novel influenza A virus (clade 2.3.4.4) introduced from Asia by waterfowl from an initial outbreak in North America in November 2014. In response to the outbreak, the...
A scale to characterize the strength and impacts of atmospheric rivers
F. Martin Ralph, Jonathan J. Rutz, Jason M. Cordeira, Michael D. Dettinger, Michael Anderson, David Reynolds, Lawrence J. Schick, Christopher Smallcomb
2019, Bulletin of the American Meteorological Society (100) 269-289
Atmospheric rivers (ARs) play vital roles in the western United States and related regions globally, not only producing heavy precipitation and flooding, but also providing beneficial water supply. This paper introduces a scale for the intensity and impacts of ARs. Its utility may be greatest where ARs are the most...
Freshwater tidal forests and estuarine wetlands may confer early life growth advantages for delta-reared Chinook Salmon
Melanie J. Davis, Isa Woo, Christopher S. Ellings, Sayre Hodgson, David A. Beauchamp, Glynnis Nakai, Susan E.W. De La Cruz
2019, Transactions of the American Fisheries Society (148) 289-307
Large river deltas are complex ecosystems that are believed to play a pivotal role in promoting the early marine growth and survival of threatened Chinook Salmon Oncorhynchus tshawytscha. We used a fish bioenergetics model to assess the functional role of multiple delta habitats across a gradient of salinities and vegetation types,...
Landslides triggered by Hurricane Maria: Assessment of an extreme event in Puerto Rico
Erin Bessette-Kirton, Corina Cerovski-Darriau, William H. Schulz, Jeffrey A. Coe, Jason W. Kean, Jonathan W. Godt, Matthew A. Thomas, K. Stephen Hughes
2019, GSA Today (29) 4-10
Hurricane Maria hit the island of Puerto Rico on 20 September 2017 and triggered more than 40,000 landslides in at least three-fourths of Puerto Rico’s 78 municipalities. The number of landslides that occurred during this event was two orders of magnitude greater than those reported from previous hurricanes. Landslide source...
Field diagnostics and seasonality of Ophidiomyces ophiodiicola in wild snake populations
Jennifer M. McKenzie, Steven J. Price, J. Leo Fleckenstein, Andrea N. Drayer, Grant M. Connette, Elizabeth A. Bohuski, Jeffrey M. Lorch
2019, EcoHealth (16) 141-150
Snake fungal disease (SFD) is an emerging disease caused by the fungal pathogen, Ophidiomyces ophiodiicola. Clinical signs of SFD include dermal lesions, including regional and local edema, crusts, and ulcers. Snake fungal disease is widespread in the Eastern United States, yet there are limited data on how clinical signs...
Considerations for Globigerinoides ruber (white and pink) paleoceanography: Comprehensive insights from a long‐running sediment trap
Julie N. Richey, Kaustubh Thirumalai, Deborah Khider, Caitlin E. Reynolds, Judson W. Partin, Terrence M. Quinn
2019, Paleoceanography and Paleoclimatology (34) 353-373
We present a detailed analysis of the seasonal distribution, size, morphological variability and geochemistry of co‐occurring pink and white chromotypes of Globigerinoides ruberfrom a high‐resolution (1–2 weeks) and long‐running sediment trap time series in the northern Gulf of Mexico. We find no difference in the seasonal flux of the two chromotypes....
Controls on lava lake level at Halema‘uma‘u Crater, Kīlauea Volcano
Matthew R. Patrick, Donald A. Swanson, Tim R. Orr
2019, Bulletin of Volcanology (81)
The height of the lava column is a fundamental measure of open-vent volcanic activity, but little continuous long-term data exist to understand this parameter. The recent (2008-2018) lava lake activity at the summit of Kīlauea Volcano provides a unique opportunity to track and understand the processes that control lava...
The rupture process of the 2018 Mw 6.9 Hawaiʻi earthquake as imaged by a genetic algorithm-based back-projection technique
Haiyang Kehoe, Eric Kiser, Paul G. Okubo
2019, Geophysical Research Letters (46) 2467-2474
An episode of unrest began at Kīlauea in April 2018 that produced both significant volcanic output and high rates of seismicity, including a Mw 6.9 earthquake on 4 May 2018. In this study, we image the rupture process of this earthquake using a genetic algorithm-based back-projection technique. The dominant feature of the...
Assessment of bird exposure to lead at Tyndall and Beale Air Force Bases, 2016–17
Timothy A. Bargar
2019, Scientific Investigations Report 2018-5164
Soil contamination by lead (Pb) from past small munitions training on Beale Air Force Base, California, and Tyndall Air Force Base, Florida, may result in adverse effects for passerine birds that utilize the locations. A study was conducted during 2016-17 by the U.S. Geological Survey, in cooperation with the U.S....
The Mississippi Alluvial Plain aquifers—An engine for economic activity
Mustapha Alhassan, Collin B. Lawrence, Steven Richardson, Emily Pindilli
2019, Fact Sheet 2019-3003
U.S. Geological Survey science supports groundwater resource management in the Mississippi Alluvial Plain region. The USGS Science and Decisions Center is working with the Water Availability and Use Science Program to integrate economics into a sophisticated model of groundwater in the region. The model will quantify the status of the...
Monitoring the pulse of our Nation's rivers and streams—The U.S. Geological Survey streamgaging network
Sandra M. Eberts, Michael D. Woodside, Mark N. Landers, Chad R. Wagner
2019, Fact Sheet 2018-3081
In the late 1800s, John Wesley Powell, second Director of the U.S. Geological Survey (USGS), proposed gaging the flow of rivers and streams in the Western United States to evaluate the potential for irrigation. Around the same time, several cities in the Eastern United States established primitive streamgages to help...
POLARIS properties: 30-meter probabilistic maps of soil properties over the contiguous United States
Nathaniel W. Chaney, Budiman Minasny, Jonathan D. Herman, Travis W. Nauman, Colby W. Brungard, Cristine L. S. Morgan, Alexander B. McBratney, Eric F. Wood, Yohannes Yimam
2019, Water Resources Research (55) 2916-2938
Soils play a critical role in the cycling of water, energy, and carbon in the Earth system. Until recently, due primarily to a lack of soil property maps of a sufficiently high‐quality and spatial detail, a minor emphasis has been placed on providing high‐resolution measured soil parameter estimates for land...
Space-based imaging radar studies of U.S. volcanoes
Daniel Dzurisin, Zhong Lu, Michael P. Poland, Charles W. Wicks Jr.
2019, Frontiers in Earth Science (6) 1-15
The arrival of space-based imaging radar as a revolutionary land-surface mapping and monitoring tool little more than a quarter century ago enabled a spate of innovative volcano research worldwide. Soon after launch of European Space Agency’s ERS-1 spacecraft in 1991, the U.S. Geological Survey began SAR and InSAR studies of...
Diatom assemblage changes in agricultural alluvial plain streams and application for nutrient management
Matthew B. Hicks, Jason M. Taylor
2019, Journal of Environmental Quality (48) 83-92
In large, alluvial floodplains dominated by agriculture, small streams have the potential to experience nutrient enrichment affecting algal assemblage structure and metabolism. Nutrient enrichment is largely driven by application of nutrients and altered hydrologic regimes. To inform stressor–response-based nutrient reduction goals for agricultural alluvial plain streams, diatom assemblages were sampled...
Elk forage and risk tradeoffs during the fall archery season
Jesse DeVoe, Kelly Proffitt, Michael S. Mitchell, Craig Jourdonnais, Kristin J. Barker
2019, Journal of Wildlife Management (83) 801-816
During late summer and fall, elk (Cervus canadensis) need access to adequate nutrition to support physiological requirements for reproduction and overwinter survival. The archery hunting season often occurs during this period and can affect distributions of elk as they seek areas that minimize perceived harvest risk. Areas that confer lower...
Long-term suppression of the Lake Trout (Salvelinus namaycush) population in Lake Pend Oreille, Idaho
Michael J. Hansen, Matthew P. Corsi, Andrew M. Dux
2019, Hydrobiologia (840) 335-349
A simulation model of lake trout Salvelinus namaycush (Walbaum 1792) population dynamics in Lake Pend Oreille, Idaho, was used to estimate (1) the optimal allocation of effort among gillnet mesh sizes that minimizes abundance in the shortest time; (2) the number of years needed to suppress the population to 90%...
Enhancement of primary production during drought in a temperate watershed is greater in larger rivers than headwater streams
Jacob D. Hosen, Kelly S. Aho, Alison P. Appling, E.C. Creech, Jennifer H Fair, Robert O Hall, Ethan Kyzivat, Rachel Lowenthal, Serena Matt, Jonathan Morrison, James E. Saiers, James B. Shanley, Lisa Weber, Bryan Yoon, Peter A. Raymond
2019, Limnology & Oceanography (64) 1458-1472
Drought is common in rivers, yet how this disturbance regulates metabolic activity across network scales is largely unknown. Drought often lowers gross primary production (GPP) and ecosystem respiration (ER) in small headwaters but by contrast can enhance GPP and cause algal blooms in downstream estuaries. We estimated ecosystem metabolism across...
Multi‐scale habitat selection of elk in response to beetle‐killed forest
Bryan G. Lamont, Kevin L. Monteith, Jerod Merkle, Tony W. Mong, Shannon E. Albeke, Matthew M. Hayes, Matthew J. Kauffman
2019, Journal of Wildlife Management (83) 679-693
Forests of the Rocky Mountains (USA and Canada) have experienced a large‐scale bark‐beetle (Dendoctronus ponderosae) epidemic that has led to widespread mortality of pine trees, followed by structural and compositional changes to the forest. The millions of dead trees resulting from this event likely have an effect on ecosystem processes,...
In situ evaluation of benthic suffocation methods for suppression of invasive Lake Trout embryos in Yellowstone Lake
Nathan A. Thomas, Christopher S. Guy, Todd M. Koel, Alexander V. Zale
2019, North American Journal of Fisheries Management (39) 104-111
Suppression of invasive Lake Trout Salvelinus namaycush is an important management tool to use in native fish and ecosystem conservation throughout the U.S. Intermountain West. Lake Trout suppression, primarily by gill netting, has been ongoing in Yellowstone Lake, Yellowstone National Park, Wyoming, since 1995. Additional methods that cause...