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Not all publications have extents, not all extents are completely accurate
Analyses of potential factors affecting survival of juvenile salmonids volitionally passing through turbines at McNary and John Day Dams, Columbia River
John Beeman, Hal Hansel, Russell Perry, Eric Hockersmith, Ben Sandford
2011, Open-File Report 2011-1227
This report describes analyses of data from radio- or acoustic-tagged juvenile salmonids passing through hydro-dam turbines to determine factors affecting fish survival. The data were collected during a series of studies designed to estimate passage and survival probabilities at McNary (2002-09) and John Day (2002-03) Dams on the Columbia River...
Simulation of branched serial first-order decay of atrazine and metabolites in adapted and nonadapted soils
Richard M. Webb, Mark W. Sandstrom, L. Jason Krutz, Dale L. Shaner
2011, Environmental Toxicology and Chemistry (30) 1973-1981
In the present study a branched serial first-order decay (BSFOD) model is presented and used to derive transformation rates describing the decay of a common herbicide, atrazine, and its metabolites observed in unsaturated soils adapted to previous atrazine applications and in soils with no history of atrazine applications. Calibration of...
Abbreviated bibliography on energy development—A focus on the Rocky Mountain Region
Jessica M. Montag, Carolyn J. Willis, Levi W. Glavin
2011, Open-File Report 2011-1206
Energy development of all types continues to grow in the Rocky Mountain Region of the western United States. Federal resource managers increasingly need to balance energy demands, effects on the natural landscape and public perceptions towards these issues. To assist in efficient access to valuable information, this abbreviated bibliography provides...
Landscape unit based digital elevation model development for the freshwater wetlands within the Arthur C. Marshall Loxahatchee National Wildlife Refuge, Southeastern Florida
Zhixiao Xie, Zhongwei Liu, John Jones, Aaron L. Higer, Pamela A. Telis
2011, Applied Geography (31) 401-412
The hydrologic regime is a critical limiting factor in the delicate ecosystem of the greater Everglades freshwater wetlands in south Florida that has been severely altered by management activities in the past several decades. "Getting the water right" is regarded as the key to successful restoration of this unique wetland...
Small-scale sediment transport patterns and bedform morphodynamics: New insights from high resolution multibeam bathymetry
Patrick L. Barnard, Li H. Erikson, Rikk G. Kvitek
2011, Geo-Marine Letters (31) 227-236
New multibeam echosounder and processing technologies yield sub-meter-scale bathymetric resolution, revealing striking details of bedform morphology that are shaped by complex boundary-layer flow dynamics at a range of spatial and temporal scales. An inertially aided post processed kinematic (IAPPK) technique generates a smoothed best estimate trajectory (SBET) solution to tie...
Adaptive resource management and the value of information
Byron K. Williams, Mitchell J. Eaton, David R. Breininger
2011, Ecological Modelling (222) 3429-3436
The value of information is a general and broadly applicable concept that has been used for several decades to aid in making decisions in the face of uncertainty. Yet there are relatively few examples of its use in ecology and natural resources management, and almost none that are framed in...
The Holocene history of Nares Strait: Transition from glacial bay to Arctic-Atlantic throughflow
Anne E. Jennings, Christina Sheldon, Thomas M. Cronin, Pierre Francus, Joseph Stoner, John Andrews
2011, Oceanography (24) 26-41
Retreat of glacier ice from Nares Strait and other straits in the Canadian Arctic Archipelago after the end of the last Ice Age initiated an important connection between the Arctic and the North Atlantic Oceans, allowing development of modern ocean circulation in Baffin Bay and the Labrador Sea. As low-salinity,...
Methyl mercury dynamics in a tidal wetland quantified using in situ optical measurements
B.A. Bergamaschi, J.A. Fleck, B.D. Downing, E. Boss, B. Pellerin, N. K. Ganju, D. H. Schoellhamer, A.A. Byington, W.A. Heim, M. Stephenson, R. Fujii
2011, Limnology and Oceanography (56) 1355-1371
We assessed monomethylmercury (MeHg) dynamics in a tidal wetland over three seasons using a novel method that employs a combination of in situ optical measurements as concentration proxies. MeHg concentrations measured over a single spring tide were extended to a concentration time series using in situ optical measurements. Tidal fluxes...
Local richness along gradients in the Siskiyou herb flora: R. H. Whittaker revisited
James B. Grace, Susan Harrison, Ellen Ingman Damschen
2011, Ecology (92) 108-120
In his classic study in the Siskiyou Mountains (Oregon, USA), one of the most botanically rich forested regions in North America, R. H. Whittaker (1960) foreshadowed many modern ideas on the multivariate control of local species richness along environmental gradients related to productivity. Using a structural equation model...
A digital model for planning water management at Benton Lake National Wildlife Refuge, west-central Montana
David A. Nimick, Peter McCarthy, Vanessa Fields
2011, Scientific Investigations Report 2011-5133
Benton Lake National Wildlife Refuge is an important area for waterfowl production and migratory stopover in west-central Montana. Eight wetland units covering about 5,600 acres are the essential features of the refuge. Water availability for the wetland units can be uncertain owing to the large natural variations in precipitation and...
Floor of Lake Tahoe, California and Nevada
Peter Dartnell, Helen Gibbons
2011, General Information Product 132
Lake-floor depths shown by color, from light tan (shallowest) to blue (deepest). Arrows on map (C) show orientations of perspective views. A, view toward McKinney Bay over blocks tumbled onto the lake floor by a massive landslide 10s to 100s of thousands of years ago; dark triangular block near center...
Limnogeology in Brazil's "forgotten wilderness": A synthesis from the large floodplain lakes of the Pantanal
Michael M. McGlue, Aguinaldo Silva, Fabricio A. Corradini, Hiran Zani, Mark A. Trees, Geoffrey S. Ellis, Mauro Parolin, Peter W. Swarzenski, Andrew S. Cohen, Mario L. Assine
2011, Journal of Paleolimnology (46) 273-289
Sediment records from floodplain lakes have a large and commonly untapped potential for inferring wetland response to global change. The Brazilian Pantanal is a vast, seasonally inundated savanna floodplain system controlled by the flood pulse of the Upper Paraguay River. Little is known, however, about how floodplain lakes within the...
Increasing accuracy of dispersal kernels in grid-based population models
D. H. Slone
2011, Ecological Modelling (222) 573-579
Dispersal kernels in grid-based population models specify the proportion, distance and direction of movements within the model landscape. Spatial errors in dispersal kernels can have large compounding effects on model accuracy. Circular Gaussian and Laplacian dispersal kernels at a range of spatial resolutions were investigated, and methods for minimizing errors...
Mapping permeability over the surface of the Earth
Tom Gleeson, Leslie Smith, Nils Moosdorf, Jens Hartmann, Hans H. Durr, Andrew H. Manning, Ludovicus P. H. van Beek, A. Mark Jellinek
2011, Geophysical Research Letters (38)
Permeability, the ease of fluid flow through porous rocks and soils, is a fundamental but often poorly quantified component in the analysis of regional‐scale water fluxes. Permeability is difficult to quantify because it varies over more than 13 orders of magnitude and is heterogeneous and dependent on flow direction. Indeed,...
Learning and adaptation in the management of waterfowl harvests
Fred A. Johnson
2011, Journal of Environmental Management (92) 1385-1394
A formal framework for the adaptive management of waterfowl harvests was adopted by the U.S. Fish and Wildlife Service in 1995. The process admits competing models of waterfowl population dynamics and harvest impacts, and relies on model averaging to compute optimal strategies for regulating harvest. Model weights, reflecting the relative...
The interactions between vegetation and erosion: new directions for research at the interface of ecology and geomorphology
Waite Osterkamp, Cliff R. Hupp, M. Stoffel
2011, Earth Surface Processes and Landforms 23-36
Vegetation and processes of erosion and deposition are interactive. An objective of this paper is to review selected studies that emphasize the interdependencies. The reviews suggest new directions for research uniting ecology and geomorphology – the sub‐discipline of biogeomorphology. The research, which recently has become vigorous, includes the sources, movement,...
Landscape matrix mediates occupancy dynamics of Neotropical avian insectivores
Christina M. Kennedy, Evan H. Campbell Grant, Maile C. Neel, William F. Fagan, Peter P. Marra
2011, Ecological Applications (21) 1837-1850
In addition to patch‐level attributes (i.e., area and isolation), the nature of land cover between habitat patches (the matrix) may drive colonization and extinction dynamics in fragmented landscapes. Despite a long‐standing recognition of matrix effects in fragmented systems, an understanding of the relative impacts of different types of land cover...
Land use and climate influences on waterbirds in the Prairie Potholes
Greg M. Forcey, Wayne E. Thogmartin, George M. Linz, William J. Bleier, Patrick C. McKann
2011, Journal of Biogeography (38) 1694-1707
Aim We examined the influences of regional climate and land‐use variables on mallard (Anas platyrhynchos), blue‐winged teal (Anas discors), ruddy duck (Oxyura jamaicensis) and pied‐billed grebe (Podilymbus podiceps) abundances to inform conservation planning in the Prairie Pothole Region of the United States.Location The US portion of Bird Conservation Region 11 (US‐BCR11, the...
Summary report of responses of key resources to the 2000 Low Steady Summer Flow experiment, along the Colorado River downstream from Glen Canyon Dam, Arizona
Barbara E. Ralston
2011, Open-File Report 2011-1220
In the spring and summer of 2000, a series of steady discharges of water from Glen Canyon Dam on the Colorado River were used to evaluate the effects of aquatic habitat stability and water temperatures on native fish growth and survival, with a special focus on the endangered humpback chub...
Detection biases yield misleading patterns of species persistence and colonization in fragmented landscapes
Viviana Ruiz-Gutierrez, Elise F. Zipkin
2011, Ecosphere (2) 1-14
Species occurrence patterns, and related processes of persistence, colonization and turnover, are increasingly being used to infer habitat suitability, predict species distributions, and measure biodiversity potential. The majority of these studies do not account for observational error in their analyses despite growing evidence suggesting that the sampling process can significantly...
Probability and volume of potential postwildfire debris flows in the 2011 Wallow burn area, eastern Arizona
Barbara C. Ruddy
2011, Open-File Report 2011-1214
This report presents a preliminary emergency assessment of the debris-flow hazards from drainage basins burned in 2011 by the Wallow wildfire in eastern Arizona. Empirical models derived from statistical evaluation of data collected from recently burned drainage basins throughout the intermountain western United States were used to estimate the probability...
Incorporating parametric uncertainty into population viability analysis models
Conor P. McGowan, Michael C. Runge, Michael A. Larson
2011, Biological Conservation (144) 1400-1408
Uncertainty in parameter estimates from sampling variation or expert judgment can introduce substantial uncertainty into ecological predictions based on those estimates. However, in standard population viability analyses, one of the most widely used tools for managing plant, fish and wildlife populations, parametric uncertainty is often ignored in or discarded from...
Digital hydrologic networks supporting applications related to spatially referenced regression modeling
John W. Brakebill, David M. Wolock, Silvia Terziotti
2011, Journal of the American Water Resources Association (47) 916-932
Digital hydrologic networks depicting surface-water pathways and their associated drainage catchments provide a key component to hydrologic analysis and modeling. Collectively, they form common spatial units that can be used to frame the descriptions of aquatic and watershed processes. In addition, they provide the ability to simulate and route the...
A multi-species framework for landscape conservation planning
W. Scott Schwenk, Therese Donovan
2011, Conservation Biology (25) 1010-1021
 Rapidly changing landscapes have spurred the need for quantitative methods for conservation assessment and planning that encompass large spatial extents. We devised and tested a multispecies framework for conservation planning to complement single-species assessments and ecosystem-level approaches. Our framework consisted of 4 elements: sampling to effectively estimate population parameters, measuring...