Effects of Bromus tectorum invasion on microbial carbon and nitrogen cycling in two adjacent undisturbed arid grassland communities
Sean M. Schaeffer, Susan E. Ziegler, Jayne Belnap, R.D. Evans
2012, Biogeochemistry (111) 427-441
Soil nitrogen (N) is an important component in maintaining ecosystem stability, and the introduction of non-native plants can alter N cycling by changing litter quality and quantity, nutrient uptake patterns, and soil food webs. Our goal was to determine the effects of Bromus tectorum (C3) invasion on soil microbial N...
Crop classification modelling using remote sensing and environmental data in the Greater Platte River Basin, USA
Daniel M. Howard, Bruce K. Wylie, Larry L. Tieszen
2012, International Journal of Remote Sensing (33) 6094-6108
With an ever expanding population, potential climate variability and an increasing demand for agriculture-based alternative fuels, accurate agricultural land-cover classification for specific crops and their spatial distributions are becoming critical to researchers, policymakers, land managers and farmers. It is important to ensure the sustainability of these and other land uses...
Probabilistic Relationships between Ground‐Motion Parameters and Modified Mercalli Intensity in California
C.B. Worden, David J. Wald, D.A. Rhoades
2012, Bulletin of the Seismological Society of America (102) 204-221
We use a database of approximately 200,000 modified Mercalli intensity (MMI) observations of California earthquakes collected from USGS "Did You Feel It?" (DYFI) reports, along with a comparable number of peak ground-motion amplitudes from California seismic networks, to develop probabilistic relationships between MMI and peak ground velocity (PGV), peak ground...
A comparison of selected parametric and imputation methods for estimating snag density and snag quality attributes
Bianca Eskelson, Joan Hagar, Hailemariam Temesgen
2012, Forest Ecology and Management 26-34
Snags (standing dead trees) are an essential structural component of forests. Because wildlife use of snags depends on size and decay stage, snag density estimation without any information about snag quality attributes is of little value for wildlife management decision makers. Little work has been done to develop models that...
Mineral resource of the month: manganese
Lisa A. Corathers
2012, Earth (57) 23-23
Manganese is a silver-colored metal resembling iron and often found in conjunction with iron. The earliest-known human use of manganese compounds was in the Stone Age, when early humans used manganese dioxide as pigments in cave paintings. In ancient Rome and Egypt, people started using it to color or remove...
Ordovician of the Sauk megasequence in the Ozark region of northern Arkansas and parts of Missouri and adjacent states
Raymond L. Ethington, John E. Repetski, James R. Derby
2012, AAPG Memoir (98) 275-300
Exposures of Ordovician rocks of the Sauk megasequence in Missouri and northern Arkansas comprise Ibexian and lower Whiterockian carbonates with interspersed sandstones. Subjacent Cambrian strata are exposed in Missouri but confined to the subsurface in Arkansas. The Sauk-Tippecanoe boundary in this region is at the base of the St. Peter...
An evaluation of the relative quality of dike pools for benthic macroinvertebrates in the Lower Missouri River, USA
B.C. Poulton, A.L. Allert
2012, River Research and Applications (28) 1658-1679
A habitat-based aquatic macroinvertebrate study was initiated in the Lower Missouri River to evaluate relative quality and biological condition of dike pool habitats. Water-quality and sediment-quality parameters and macroinvertebrate assemblage structure were measured from depositional substrates at 18 sites. Sediment porewater was analysed for ammonia, sulphide, pH and oxidation-reduction potential....
Large submarine sand waves and gravel lag substrates on Georges Bank off Atlantic Canada
B.J. Todd, Page C. Valentine
Peter T Harris, E.K. Baker, editor(s)
2012, Book chapter, Seafloor geomorphology as benthic habitat: GeoHab atlas of seafloor geomorphic features and benthic habitats,
Georges Bank is a large, shallow, continental shelf feature offshore of New England and Atlantic Canada. The bank is mantled with a veneer of glacial debris transported during the late Pleistocene from continental areas lying to the north. These sediments were reworked by marine processes during postglacial sea-level transgression and...
Digital outcrop model of stratigraphy and breccias of the southern Franklin Mountains, El Paso, Texas
Jerome A. Bellian, Charles Kerans, John E. Repetski
James R. Derby, R.D. Fritz, S.A. Longacre, W.A. Morgan, C.A. Sternbach, editor(s)
2012, Book chapter, The great American carbonate bank: The geology and economic resources of the Cambrian-Ordovician Sauk megasequence of Laurentia
This chapter reviews and synthesizes the lithostratigraphy, biostratigraphy, chronostratigraphy, and breccia types of the southwestern part of the great American carbonate bank in the southern Franklin Mountains (SFM), El Paso, Texas. Primary stratigraphic units of focus are the Lower Ordovician El Paso and Upper Ordovician Montoya Groups. These groups preserve...
A method for physically based model analysis of conjunctive use in response to potential climate changes
R. T. Hanson, L. E. Flint, A. L. Flint, M. D. Dettinger, C.C. Faunt, D. Cayan, W. Schmid
2012, Water Resources Research (48)
Potential climate change effects on aspects of conjunctive management of water resources can be evaluated by linking climate models with fully integrated groundwater-surface water models. The objective of this study is to develop a modeling system that links global climate models with regional hydrologic models, using the California Central Valley...
History of land cover mapping
Thomas R. Loveland
Chandra P. Giri, editor(s)
2012, Book chapter, Remote sensing of land use and land cover: Principles and applications
The historical roots of land-cover mapping reside in the early history of aerial photography and applications spanning forestry, agriculture, urban planning, and water-resources management. Considering this long span of mapping, any attempt to provide an exhaustive treatment of the full history of land-cover mapping will necessarily be incomplete. For that...
Design and quantification of an extreme winter storm scenario for emergency preparedness and planning exercises in California
M. D. Dettinger, Ralph F. Martin, M. Hughes, Tapash Das, P. Neiman, Dale A. Cox, G. Estes, D. Reynolds, R. Hartman, Daniel Cayan, L. Jones
2012, Natural Hazards (60) 1085-1111
The USGS Multihazards Project is working with numerous agencies to evaluate and plan for hazards and damages that could be caused by extreme winter storms impacting California. Atmospheric and hydrological aspects of a hypothetical storm scenario have been quantified as a basis for estimation of human, infrastructure, economic, and environmental...
The paleohydrology of unsaturated and saturated zones at Yucca Mountain, Nevada, and vicinity
James B. Paces, Joseph F. Whelan
John S. Stuckless, editor(s)
2012, Book chapter, Hydrology and geochemistry of Yucca Mountain and vicinity, Southern Nevada and California
Surface, unsaturated-zone, and saturated-zone hydrologic conditions at Yucca Mountain responded to past climate variations and are at least partly preserved by sediment, fossil, and mineral records. Characterizing past hydrologic conditions in surface and subsurface environments helps to constrain hydrologic responses expected under future climate conditions and improve predictions of repository...
Exploring similarities among many species distributions
Scott Simmerman, Jingyuan Wang, James Osborne, Kimberly Shook, Jia Hu, William Godsoe, Theodore R. Simons
2012, Conference Paper, Proceedings of the 1st Conference of the Extreme Science and Engineering Discovery Environment: Bridging from the eXtreme to the campus and beyond
Collecting species presence data and then building models to predict species distribution has been long practiced in the field of ecology for the purpose of improving our understanding of species relationships with each other and with the environment. Due to limitations of computing power as well as limited means of...
Loss and modification of habitat
Francis Lemckert, Stephen Hecnar, David S. Pilliod
John W. Wilkinson, Harold Heatwole, editor(s)
2012, Book chapter, Conservation and decline of amphibians: ecological aspects, effect of humans, and management
Amphibians live in a wide variety of habitats around the world, many of which have been modified or destroyed by human activities. Most species have unique life history characteristics adapted to specific climates, habitats (e.g., lentic, lotic, terrestrial, arboreal, fossorial, amphibious), and local conditions that provide suitable areas for reproduction,...
Structural equation modeling and the analysis of long-term monitoring data
James B. Grace, Jon E. Keeley, Darren J. Johnson, Kenneth A. Bollen
Robert A. Gitzen, Joshua J. Millspaugh, Andrew B. Cooper, Daniel S. Licht, editor(s)
2012, Book chapter, Design and analysis of long-term ecological monitoring studies
Digital elevation models
Karl Heidemann
Michael S. Renslow, editor(s)
2012, Book chapter, Manual of airborne topographic lidar
Mercury and other element exposure in tree swallows nesting at low pH and neutral pH lakes in northern Wisconsin USA
Thomas W. Custer, Christine M. Custer, Wayne E. Thogmartin, Paul M. Dummer, R. Rossmann, K.P. Kenow, M.W. Meyer
2012, Environmental Pollution (163) 68-76
The primary objective of this study was to determine whether tree swallows (Tachycineta bicolor) demonstrate similar responses to lake pH and mercury (Hg) contamination in northern Wisconsin as do common loons (Gavia immer). Similar to common loons, Hg concentrations in the blood of tree swallow nestlings were higher, Hg concentrations...
Subducted seamounts and recent earthquakes beneath the central Cascadia forearc
Anne M. Trehu, Richard J. Blakely, Mark C. Williams
2012, Geology (40) 103-106
Bathymetry and magnetic anomalies indicate that a seamount on the Juan de Fuca plate has been subducted beneath the central Cascadia accretionary complex and is now located ∼45 km landward of the deformation front. Passage of this seamount through the accretionary complex has resulted in a pattern of uplift followed...
Copper(II) binding by dissolved organic matter: Importance of the copper-to-dissolved organic matter ratio and implications for the Biotic Ligand Model
Alison M. Craven, George R. Aiken, Joseph N. Ryan
2012, Environmental Science & Technology (46) 9948-9955
The ratio of copper to dissolved organic matter (DOM) is known to affect the strength of copper binding by DOM, but previous methods to determine the Cu2+–DOM binding strength have generally not measured binding constants over the same Cu:DOM ratios. In this study, we used a competitive ligand exchange–solid-phase extraction...
The General Ensemble Biogeochemical Modeling System (GEMS) and its applications to agricultural systems in the United States: Chapter 18
Shuguang Liu, Zhengxi Tan, Mingshi Chen, Jinxun Liu, Anne Wein, Zhengpeng Li, Shengli Huang, Jennifer Oeding, Claudia Young, Shashi B. Verma, Andrew E. Suyker, Stephen P. Faulkner
2012, Book chapter, Managing agricultural greenhouse gases
The General Ensemble Biogeochemical Modeling System (GEMS) was es in individual models, it uses multiple site-scale biogeochemical models to perform model simulations. Second, it adopts Monte Carlo ensemble simulations of each simulation unit (one site/pixel or group of sites/pixels with similar biophysical conditions) to incorporate uncertainties and variability (as measured...
Identifying fluorescent pulp mill effluent in the Gulf of Maine and its watershed
Kaelin M. Cawley, Kenna D. Butler, George R. Aiken, Laurel G. Larsen, Thomas G. Huntington, Diane M. McKnight
2012, Marine Pollution Bulletin (64) 1678-1687
Using fluorescence spectroscopy and parallel factor analysis (PARAFAC) we characterized and modeled the fluorescence properties of dissolved organic matter (DOM) in samples from the Penobscot River, Androscoggin River, Penobscot Bay, and the Gulf of Maine (GoM). We analyzed excitation-emission matrices (EEMs) using an existing PARAFAC model (Cory and McKnight, 2005)...
Science summary in support of Manatee Protection Area (MPA) design in Puerto Rico
C. Ashton Drew, Louise B. Alexander-Vaughn, Jaime A. Collazo
2012, Cooperator Science Series FWS/CSS-101-2012
The Antillean manatee (Trichechus manatus manatus), a subspecies of the West Indian manatee, is listed as endangered by the US Department of Interior. In accordance with its listing, the U.S. Fish and Wildlife Service’s Caribbean Field Office (USFWS) is mandated to create one or more Manatee Protection Areas (MPAs) for...
A robust method to forecast volcanic ash clouds
Roger P. Denlinger, Michael J. Pavolonis, Justin Sieglaff
2012, Journal of Geophysical Research D: Atmospheres (117) 1-10
Ash clouds emanating from volcanic eruption columns often form trails of ash extending thousands of kilometers through the Earth's atmosphere, disrupting air traffic and posing a significant hazard to air travel. To mitigate such hazards, the community charged with reducing flight risk must accurately assess risk of ash ingestion for...
Listening to the 2011 magnitude 9.0 Tohoku-Oki, Japan, earthquake
Zhigang Peng, Chastity Aiken, Debi Kilb, David R. Shelly, Bogdan Enescu
2012, Seismological Research Letters (83) 287-293
The magnitude 9.0 Tohoku-Oki, Japan, earthquake on 11 March 2011 is the largest earthquake to date in Japan’s modern history and is ranked as the fourth largest earthquake in the world since 1900. This earthquake occurred within the northeast Japan subduction zone (Figure 1), where the Pacific plate is subducting...