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Not all publications have extents, not all extents are completely accurate
Current trends and future directions in swan research: Insights from the 6th International Swan Symposium
Kevin Wood, Lei Cao, P. Clausen, Craig R. Ely, L. Luigujoe, Eileen Rees, Jeffrey Snyder, D. Solovyeva, R. Wlodarczyk
2019, Wildfowl
Given their popularity with researchers and public alike, together with their welldocumented importance in aquatic and terrestrial ecosystems, fundamental and applied research on swans continues to develop in the 21st century. The 6th International Swan Symposium (6th ISS), was held at the Estonian University of Life Sciences in Tartu, Estonia,...
Comparison of aquatic invertebrate communities in near-shore areas with high or low boating activity
Bradley Smith, Steven R. Chipps, Jeff Grote, Jake Mecham, Tanner M. Stevens, Tobias Rapp
2019, Journal of Freshwater Ecology (34) 189-198
Lakeshore areas provide important habitat for aquatic invertebrates in shallow lakes. However, these zones are prone to anthropogenic disturbances that include shoreline development, urbanization, nutrient inputs, agricultural and(or) recreational use. Among recreational uses, public access sites are often developed to accommodate boaters and facilitate lake access via...
Leakage and increasing fluid pressure detected in Oklahoma's wastewater disposal reservoir
Andrew J. Barbour, Lian Xu, Evelyn Roeloffs, Justin Rubinstein
2019, Journal of Geophysical Research 2896-2919
The Arbuckle Group is the principal reservoir used for wastewater disposal in Oklahoma. In Osage County—a seismically quiet part of the state—continuous measurements of fluid pressure reveal that pressure in the reservoir is increasing by at least 5 kPa annually and sometimes at a much higher rate. Tidal analysis reveals...
Effects of land use on greenhouse gas flux in playa wetlands and associated watersheds in the High Plains, USA
Dale W. Daniel, Loren M. Smith, Scott T. McMurry, Brian Tangen, Charles F. Dahl, Ned Euliss, Ted LaGrange
2019, Agricultural Sciences (10) 181-201
In the High Plains, U.S., native prairie conversion to cropland agriculture has resulted in a loss of service delivery capabilities from most depressional wetlands as a result of sedimentation. Restoring historic hydrological conditions to affected wetlands may rejuvenate some services, however, there may be tradeoffs due to emissions of CH4 and...
Complete genome sequences of the index isolates of two genotypes of Pacific salmon paramyxovirus
James Winton, William N. Batts, Rachel L. Powers, Maureen K. Purcell
2019, Microbiology Resource Announcements (8) 1-2
We report here the genome sequences of two index strains of Pacific salmon paramyxovirus isolated in 1982 and 1983 from adult salmon in Oregon. The isolates are most closely related to Atlantic salmon paramyxovirus, the type species of the genus Aquaparamyxovirus, but are sufficiently distinct to be considered...
Flood-inundation maps of the Meramec River from Eureka to Arnold, Missouri, 2018
Benjamin J. Dietsch, Kellan R. Strauch
2019, Scientific Investigations Report 2019-5004
Libraries of digital flood-inundation maps that spanned a combined 37.2-mile reach of the Meramec River that extended upstream from Eureka, Missouri, to downstream near the confluence of the Meramec and Mississippi Rivers were created by the U.S. Geological Survey (USGS) in cooperation with the U.S. Army Corps of Engineers, Metropolitan...
Water-balance modeling of selected lakes for evaluating viability as long-term fisheries in Kidder, Logan, and Stutsman Counties, North Dakota
Robert F. Lundgren, Benjamin C. York, Nathan A. Stroh, Aldo V. Vecchia
2019, Scientific Investigations Report 2019-5007
Water levels in lakes and wetlands in the central North Dakota Missouri Coteau region that were either dry or only sporadically held water since before the 1930s have been rising since the early 1990s in response to an extended wet period. The lakes have remained full since the mid-1990s, which...
Assessing hazards and risks at the Department of the Interior—A workshop report
Nathan Wood, Alice Pennaz, Kristin Ludwig, Jeanne Jones, Kevin Henry, Jason Sherba, Peter Ng, Jason Marineau, John Juskie
2019, Circular 1453
On February 27–28, 2018, the U.S. Geological Survey and Department of the Interior (DOI) Office of Emergency Management (OEM) hosted a workshop to gather input from DOI subject matter experts (SMEs), resource managers, facility managers, emergency managers, and law enforcement personnel. Workshop goals were to (1) determine how DOI Bureaus...
Earthquake stress drop and Arias Intensity
Annemarie S. Baltay Sundstrom, Thomas C. Hanks, Norman A. Abrahamson
2019, Journal of Geophysical Research B: Solid Earth (124) 3838-3852
We determine earthquake stress drops directly from the Arias intensity database of NGA-West2. Arias intensity (Arias, 1970) is an engineering measure proportional to the integral of the absolute value of acceleration squared, over the significant duration of the signal. As such, it is closely related to root-mean-square acceleration, and can...
Water quality and hydrology of the Yellow Dog and Salmon Trout Watersheds, Marquette County, Michigan 2013–16
Christopher J. Hoard, Thomas L. Weaver
2019, Scientific Investigations Report 2018-5152
In 2013, the U.S. Geological Survey, in cooperation with the Keweenaw Bay Indian Community, began monitoring the water quality of springs and seeps within the Yellow Dog and Salmon Trout watersheds in Marquette County, Michigan. The objectives of this study were to (1) monitor streamflow and analyze the hydrology of...
Self-organizing maps for compositional data: coal combustion products of a Wyoming power plant
Josep M. Martin-Fernandez, Mark A. Engle, Leslie F. Ruppert, Ricardo A. Olea
2019, Stochastic Environmental Research and Risk Assessment (33) 817-826
A self-organizing map (SOM) is a non-linear projection of a D-dimensional data set, where the distance among observations is approximately preserved on to a lower dimensional space. The SOM arranges multivariate data based on their similarity to each other by allowing pattern recognition leading to easier interpretation of higher dimensional...
Accounting for phenology in the analysis of animal movement
Henry R. Scharf, Mevin Hooten, Ryan R. Wilson, George M. Durner, Todd C. Atwood
2019, Biometrics (75) 810-820
The analysis of animal tracking data provides important scientific understanding and discovery in ecology. Observations of animal trajectories using telemetry devices provide researchers with information about the way animals interact with their environment and each other. For many species, specific geographical features in the landscape can have a strong effect...
Observations on the range and nesting biology of the Mexican endemic rufous-capped brush-finch (Atlapetes Pileatus Pileatus)
Harold F. Greeney, Jeff Port, Charles van Riper III
2019, Ornitología Neotropical (30) 197-204
The Rufous-capped Brush-finch (Atlapetes pileatus) is a species endemic to Mexico, whose breeding biology has received little attention. We studied two nests of the nominate subspecies from the mountains of southern Sonora. Nests were untidy, broad, open cups, placed in low, thick vegetation. Clutch size at one nest consisted of...
Late-Glacial paleoecology of the Middle Susitna Valley, Alaska: Environmental context for human dispersal
Nancy H. Bigelow, Joshua D. Reuther, Kristi L. Wallace, Émilie Saulnier-Talbot, Katherine Mullikey, Matthew Wooller
2019, Frontiers Earth Science Journal (7)
We present here the results of multi-proxy analyses (sediment geochemistry, diatoms, and pollen) from sediment cores collected at four lakes in the middle Susitna Valley, Alaska. These lakes form a transect from the tundra to the boreal forest. The retrieved cores span from ~12,000 cal yr BP to the present,...
Multi-species duck harvesting using dynamic programming and multi-criteria decision analysis
Fred Johnson, Guthrie S. Zimmerman, Min Huang, Paul I. Padding, Greg Balkcom, Michael Runge, Patrick K. Devers
2019, Journal of Applied Ecology 1-13
1.Multiple species are often exposed to a common hunting season, but harvest and population objectives may not be fully achieved if harvest potential varies among species and/or species abundances are not correlated through time. Our goal was to develop an approach for setting a common hunting season that would recognize...
Mississippi river sediment diversions and coastal wetland sustainability: Synthesis of responses to freshwater, sediment, and nutrient inputs
Tracy Elsey-Quirk, Sean A. Graham, Irving A. Mendelssohn, Gregg Snedden, John W. Day, Gary P. Shaffer, Leigh Anne Sharp, Robert R. Twilley, James Pahl, R.R. Lane
2019, Estuarine, Coastal and Shelf Science (221) 170-183
Management and restoration of coastal wetlands require insight into how inundation, salinity, and the availability of mineral sediment and nutrients interact to influence ecosystem functions that control sustainability. The Mississippi River Delta, which ranks among the world's largest and most productive coastal wetland complexes, has experienced extensive deterioration over the...
Stream characteristics associated with feeding type in silver(Ichthyomyzon unicuspis) and northern brook (I. fossor) lampreys and tests for phenotypic plasticity
Fraser Neave, Todd B. Steeves, Thomas C. Pratt, Robert L. McLaughlin, Jean V. Adams, Margaret F. Docker
2019, Environmental Biology of Fishes (102) 615-627
In most lamprey genera, “paired” species exist in which the larvae are morphologically indistinguishable but adult feeding type differs. The lack of diagnostic genetic differences in many pairs has led to suggestions that they constitute a single gene pool with environmentally influenced feeding types. To investigate whether stream characteristics are...
Resource concentration mechanisms facilitate foraging success in simulations of a pulsed oligotrophic wetland
Simeon Yurek, Donald L. DeAngelis
2019, Landscape Ecology (34) 583-601
ContextMovement of prey on hydrologically pulsed, spatially heterogeneous wetlands can result in transient, high prey concentrations, when changes in landscape features such as connectivity between flooded areas alternately facilitate and impede prey movement. Predators track and exploit these concentrations, depleting them as they arise.<div id="ASec2"...
Applying the Community Ice Sheet Model to evaluate PMIP3 LGM climatologies over the North American ice sheets
Jay R. Alder, Steven W. Hostetler
2019, Climate Dynamics (53) 2807-2824
We apply the Community Ice Sheet Model (CISM2) to determine the extent to which the Last Glacial Maximum (LGM) temperature and precipitation climatologies from the Paleoclimate Modelling Intercomparison Project 3 (PMIP3) simulations support the large North American ice sheets that were prescribed as a boundary condition. We force CISM2 with...
The Mw 6.0 South Napa earthquake of August 24, 2014—Observations of surface faulting and ground deformation, with recommendations for improving post-earthquake field investigations
Daniel J. Ponti, Carla M. Rosa, James Luke Blair
2019, Open-File Report 2019-1018
The Mw 6.0 South Napa earthquake of August 24, 2014, produced complex and extensive surface faulting and other ground deformation features. Following the event, geologists made more than 1,200 field observations at locations where tectonic faulting and ground failure produced visible deformation that fractured and disturbed the ground surface. At...
Flooding regimes increase avian predation on wildlife prey in tidal marsh ecosystems
Karen M. Thorne, Kyle A. Spragens, Kevin Buffington, Jordan A. Rosencranz, John Takekawa
2019, Ecology and Evolution (9) 1083-1094
Within isolated and fragmented populations, species interactions such as predation can cause shifts in community structure and demographics in tidal marsh ecosystems. It is critical to incorporate species interactions into our understanding when evaluating the effects of sea‐level rise and storm surges on tidal marshes. In...
An introduced breeding population of Chrysemys picta marginata in the Kaibab National Forest, northern Arizona
Jeffrey E. Lovich, Bruce L. Christman, Kristy L. Cummings, Jenna Norris, Shellie R. Puffer, Christina Jones
2019, Current Herpetology (38) 91-98
The painted turtle (Chrysemys picta) is widely distributed from coast to coast in North America with each of four subspecies generally occupying different regions. In the southwestern USA and northern Mexico, where C. p. bellii is the expected native race, populations are small and widelyscattered. Introduced populations of other painted turtle subspecies...
Ecosystem function and services of aquatic predators in the Anthropocene
Neil Hammerschlag, Oswald J. Schmitz, Alexander S. Flecker, Kevin D. Lafferty, Andrew Sih, Trisha B. Atwood, Austin J. Gallagher, Duncan J. Irschick, Rachel Skubel, Steven J. Cooke
Austin J. Gallagher, editor(s)
2019, Trends in Ecology and Evolution (33) 369-383
Arguments for the need to conserve aquatic predator (AP) populations often focuses on the ecological and socio-economic roles they play. Here, we summarize the diverse ecosystem functions and services connected to APs, including regulating food webs, cycling nutrients, engineering habitat, transmitting diseases/parasites, mediating ecological invasions, effecting climate, supporting fisheries, generating...
Seismic hazard assessment at the Fallon, Nevada, Frontier Observatory for Research in Geothermal Energy site
J. Ole Kaven, Ernest L. Majer, William Foxall, Eric L. Sonnenthal, William Pettitt
2019, Open-File Report 2019-1020
Enhanced geothermal systems (EGS) technology aims to engineer a productive geothermal reservoir in regions of hot, but low permeability, rocks. In any EGS operation, the rock mass requires stimulation by high pressure injection of fluids, which has the potential to induce seismicity. To address the seismic hazard specifically, a probabilistic seismic...