Synthesis of the effects to fish species of two management scenarios for the secretarial determination on removal of the lower four dams on the Klamath River
John Hamilton, Dennis W. Rondorf, Mark Hampton, Rebecca Quiñones, Jim Simondet, Terry Smith
2011, Report
For decades the long-standing conflict in the Klamath River Basin over water and fish resources has persisted. In an effort to resolve these disputes, PacifiCorp and interested parties negotiated, wrote, and signed the Klamath Hydroelectric Settlement Agreement (KHSA) in 2010, calling for the potential removal of the four lower dams...
Hydrogeology and water quality of the Floridan aquifer system and effects of Lower Floridan aquifer pumping on the Upper Floridan aquifer at Fort Stewart, Georgia
John S. Clarke, Gregory C. Cherry, Gerard Gonthier
2011, Scientific Investigations Report 2011-5065
Test drilling, field investigations, and digital modeling were completed at Fort Stewart, GA, during 2009?2010, to assess the geologic, hydraulic, and water-quality characteristics of the Floridan aquifer system and evaluate the effect of Lower Floridan aquifer (LFA) pumping on the Upper Floridan aquifer (UFA). This work was performed pursuant to...
The unusual nature of recent snowpack declines in the North American cordillera
Gregory T. Pederson, Stephen T. Gray, C.A. Woodhouse, Julio L. Betancourt, Daniel B. Fagre, Jeremy S. Littell, Emma Watson, B.H. Luckman, Lisa J. Graumlich
2011, Science (333) 332-335
In western North America, snowpack has declined in recent decades, and further losses are projected through the 21st century. Here, we evaluate the uniqueness of recent declines using snowpackreconstructions from 66 tree-ring chronologies in key runoff-generating areas of the Colorado, Columbia, and Missouri River drainages. Over the past millennium, late 20th century <span...
Surface-water, water-quality, and meteorological data for the Cambridge, Massachusetts, drinking-water source area, water years 2007-08
Kirk P. Smith
2011, Open-File Report 2011-1077
Records of water quantity, water quality, and meteorological parameters were continuously collected from three reservoirs, two primary streams, and five subbasin tributaries in the Cambridge, Massachusetts, drinking-water source area during water years 2007-08 (October 2006 through September 2008). Water samples were collected during base-flow conditions and storms in the Cambridge...
Digitized generalized areas where surface-water resources likely or potentially are susceptible to groundwater withdrawals in adjacent valleys, Great Basin National Park area, Nevada
Peggy E. Elliott, David A. Beck, David E. Prudic
2011, Data Series 583
Abstract Polygons delineate generalized areas in and around Great Basin National Park where surface-water resources likely or potentially are susceptible to groundwater withdrawals in adjacent valleys. Purpose This data set was created as part of a U.S. Geological Survey study, done in cooperation with the National Park Service, to characterize surface-water resources in...
Effect of the difference between water-table elevation and hydraulic head on simulation of unconfined aquifers using MODFLOW
Alden M. Provost, Christian D. Langevin
2011, Conference Paper, MODFLOW and More 2011: Integrated Hydrologic Modeling
Decoupled application of the integrated hydrologic model, GSFLOW, to estimate agricultural irrigation in the Santa Rosa Plain, California
Joseph Hevesi, Linda R. Woolfenden, Richard G. Niswonger, R. Steven Regan, Tracy Nishikawa
2011, Conference Paper, Proceedings of the conference MODFLOW and more 2011: Integrated hydrologic modeling
No abstract available....
Bayesian adaptive survey protocols for resource management
Brian J. Halstead, Glenn D. Wylie, Peter S. Coates, Michael L. Casazza
2011, Journal of Wildlife Management (75) 450-457
Transparency in resource management decisions requires a proper accounting of uncertainty at multiple stages of the decision‐making process. As information becomes available, periodic review and updating of resource management protocols reduces uncertainty and improves management decisions. One of the most basic steps to mitigating anthropogenic effects on populations is determining...
Groundwater quality in the Chemung River Basin, New York, 2008
Amy J. Risen, James E. Reddy
2011, Open-File Report 2011-1112
The second groundwater quality study of the Chemung River Basin in south-central New York was conducted as part of the U.S. Geological Survey 305(b) water-quality-monitoring program. Water samples were collected from five production wells and five private residential wells from October through December 2008. The samples were analyzed to characterize...
Estimates of mean-annual streamflow and flow loss for ephemeral channels in the Salt Basin, southeastern New Mexico, 2009
Anne Tillery
2011, Scientific Investigations Report 2011-5062
Magnitude and frequency of floods for rural streams in Florida, 2006
Richard J. Verdi, Joann F. Dixon
2011, Scientific Investigations Report 2011-5034
Methods for estimating the magnitude of floods for selected percent chance exceedance probabilities are presented for ungaged streams in Florida that are not sub stantially affected by regulation, channelization, or urban development. Flood-frequency flows also are presented for 275 Florida streamgages used in the regional regression analysis. Regression relations used...
Geospatial characteristics of Florida's coastal and offshore environments: Coastal habitats, artificial reefs, wrecks, dumping grounds, harbor obstructions and offshore sand resources
Amanda W.J. Demopoulos, Ann M. Foster, Michal L. Jones, Daniel J. Gualtieri
2011, Scientific Investigations Map 3167
The Geospatial Characteristics GeoPDF of Florida's Coastal and Offshore Environments is a comprehensive collection of geospatial data describing the political boundaries and natural resources of Florida. This interactive map provides spatial information on bathymetry, sand resources, coastal habitats, artificial reefs, shipwrecks, dumping grounds, and harbor obstructions. The map should be...
Mars atmospheric surface interactions and the CO2 cycle
Timothy N. Titus, Anthony Colaprete
2011, Eos, Transactions, American Geophysical Union (86)
Mars' northern and southern seasonal polar caps are formed during their respective autumn and winter seasons both by condensation of atmospheric carbon dioxide (CO2) directly onto the surface, and through atmospheric precipitation in the form of CO2 snow. During the polar spring and summer, the seasonal ice sublimes, returning CO2 to the...
Geospatial characteristics of Florida's coastal and offshore environments: Distribution of important habitats for coastal and offshore biological resources and offshore sand resources
Amanda W.J. Demopoulos, Ann M. Foster, Michal L. Jones, Daniel J. Gualtieri
2011, Scientific Investigations Map 3166
The Geospatial Characteristics GeoPDF of Florida's Coastal and Offshore Environments is a comprehensive collection of geospatial data describing the political boundaries and natural resources of Florida. This interactive map provides spatial information on bathymetry, sand resources, and locations of important habitats (for example, Essential Fish Habitats (EFH), nesting areas, strandings)...
Spatially pooled depth-dependent reservoir storage, elevation, and water-quality data for selected reservoirs in Texas, January 1965-January 2010
Thomas E. Burley, William H. Asquith, Donald L. Brooks
2011, Data Series 594
The U.S. Geological Survey (USGS), in cooperation with Texas Tech University, constructed a dataset of selected reservoir storage (daily and instantaneous values), reservoir elevation (daily and instantaneous values), and water-quality data from 59 reservoirs throughout Texas. The period of record for the data is as large as January 1965-January 2010....
Suspended sediment and organic contaminants in the San Lorenzo River, California, water years 2009-2010
Amy E. Draut, Christopher H. Conaway, Kathy R. Echols, Curt D. Storlazzi, Andrew Ritchie
2011, Open-File Report 2011-1120
This report presents analyses of suspended sediment and organic contaminants measured during a two-year study of the San Lorenzo River, central California, which discharges into the Pacific Ocean within the Monterey Bay National Marine Sanctuary. Most suspended-sediment transport occurred during flooding caused by winter storms; 55 percent of the sediment...
Principal facts for gravity stations collected in 2010 from White Pine and Lincoln Counties, east-central Nevada
Edward A. Mankinen, Edwin H. McKee
2011, Open-File Report 2011-1084
Increasing demands on the Colorado River system within the arid Southwestern United States have focused attention on finding new, alternative sources of water. Particular attention is being paid to the eastern Great Basin, where important ground-water systems occur within a regionally extensive sequence of Paleozoic carbonate rocks and in the...
Land area change in coastal Louisiana from 1932 to 2010
Brady R. Couvillion, John A. Barras, Gregory D. Steyer, William Sleavin, Michelle Fischer, Holly Beck, Nadine Trahan, Brad Griffin, David Heckman
2011, Scientific Investigations Map 3164
Coastal Louisiana wetlands make up the seventh largest delta on Earth, contain about 37 percent of the estuarine herbaceous marshes in the conterminous United States, and support the largest commercial fishery in the lower 48 States. These wetlands are in peril because Louisiana currently undergoes about 90 percent of the...
Characterization of geomorphic units in the alluvial valleys and channels of Gulf Coastal Plain rivers in Texas, with examples from the Brazos, Sabine, and Trinity Rivers, 2010
David K. Coffman, Greg Malstaff, Franklin T. Heitmuller
2011, Scientific Investigations Report 2011-5067
The U.S. Geological Survey, in cooperation with the Texas Water Development Board, described and characterized examples of geomorphic units within the channels and alluvial valleys of Texas Gulf Coastal Plain rivers using a geomorphic unit classification scale that differentiates geomorphic units on the basis of their location either outside or...
A habitat overlap analysis derived from maxent for tamarisk and the south-western willow flycatcher
Patricia York, Paul Evangelista, Sunil Kumar, James Graham, Curtis Flather, Thomas Stohlgren
2011, Frontiers of Earth Science (5) 120-129
Biologic control of the introduced and invasive, woody plant tamarisk (Tamarix spp, saltcedar) in south-western states is controversial because it affects habitat of the federally endangered South-western Willow Flycatcher (Empidonax traillii extimus). These songbirds sometimes nest in tamarisk where floodplain-level invasion replaces native habitats. Biologic control, with the saltcedar leaf beetle...
Secretive marsh aird species co-eccurrences and habitat associations across the midwest, USA
Jason R. Bolenbaugh, David G. Krementz, Sarah E. Lehnen
2011, Journal of Fish and Wildlife Management (2) 49-60
Because secretive marsh birds are difficult to detect, population status and habitat use for these birds are not well known. We conducted repeated surveys for secretive marsh birds across 264 sites in the Upper Mississippi River and Great Lakes Joint Venture region to estimate abundance, occupancy, and detection probabilities during...
Using stable isotopes to understand hydrochemical processes in and around a Prairie Pothole wetland in the Northern Great Plains, USA
Christopher T. Mills, Martin B. Goldhaber, Craig A. Stricker, JoAnn M. Holloway, Jean M. Morrison, Karl J. Ellefsen, Donald O. Rosenberry, Roland S. Thurston
2011, Applied Geochemistry (26) S97-S100
Millions of internally drained wetland systems in the Prairie Potholes region of the northern Great Plains (USA and Canada) provide indispensable habitat for waterfowl and a host of other ecosystem services. The hydrochemistry of these systems is complex and a crucial control on wetland function, flora and fauna. Wetland waters...
Demographics and run timing of adult Lost River (Deltistes luxatus) and short nose (Chasmistes brevirostris) suckers in Upper Klamath Lake, Oregon, 2009
David A. Hewitt, Brian S. Hayes, Eric C. Janney, Alta C. Harris, Justin P. Koller, Mark A. Johnson
2011, Open-File Report 2011-1088
Data from a long-term capture-recapture program were used to assess the status and dynamics of populations of two long-lived, federally endangered catostomids in Upper Klamath Lake, Oregon. Lost River suckers (Deltistes luxatus) and shortnose suckers (Chasmistes brevirostris) have been captured and tagged with passive integrated transponder (PIT) tags during their...
Process-based model predictions of hurricane induced morphodynamic change on low-lying barrier islands
Nathaniel G. Plant, David M. Thompson, Edwin Elias
Ping Wang, Julie D. Rosati, Tiffany M. Roberts, editor(s)
2011, Conference Paper, Proceedings of the Coastal Sediments 2011
Using Delft3D, a Chandeleur Island model was constructed to examine the sediment-transport patterns and morphodynamic change caused by Hurricane Katrina and similar storm events. The model setup included a coarse Gulf of Mexico domain and a nested finer-resolution Chandeleur Island domain. The finer-resolution domain resolved morphodynamic processes driven by storms...
The role of critical zone processes in the evolution of the Prairie Pothole Region wetlands
Martin B. Goldhaber, Christopher T. Mills, Craig A. Stricker, Jean M. Morrison
2011, Applied Geochemistry (26) S32-S35
The Prairie Pothole Region, which occupies 900,000 km2 of the north central USA and south central Canada, is one of the most important ecosystems in North America. It is characterized by millions of small wetlands whose chemistry is highly variable over short distances. The study involved the geochemistry of surface...