Native Americans, regional drought and tree Island evolution in the Florida Everglades
C. Bernhardt
2011, Holocene (21) 967-978
This study uses palynologic data to determine the effects of regional climate variability and human activity on the formation and development of tree islands during the last ~4000 years. Although prolonged periods of aridity have been invoked as one mechanism for their formation, Native American land use has also been...
Temperature-associated population diversity in salmon confers benefits to mobile consumers
Casey P. Ruff, Daniel E. Schindle, Jonathan B. Armstrong, Kale T. Bentle, Gabriel T. Brooks, Gordon W. Holtgrieve, Molly T. McGlauflin, Christian E. Torgersen, James E. Seeb
2011, Ecology (92) 2073-2084
Habitat heterogeneity can generate intraspecific diversity through local adaptation of populations. While it is becoming increasingly clear that population diversity can increase stability in species abundance, less is known about how population diversity can benefit consumers that can integrate across population diversity in their prey. Here we demonstrate cascading effects...
Remote sensing of soil moisture using airborne hyperspectral data
M. Finn, M. Lewis, D. Bosch, Mario Giraldo, K. Yamamoto, D. Sullivan, R. Kincaid, R. Luna, G. Allam, Craig Kvien, Murray Williams
2011, GIScience and Remote Sensing (48) 522-540
Landscape assessment of soil moisture is critical to understanding the hydrological cycle at the regional scale and in broad-scale studies of biophysical processes affected by global climate changes in temperature and precipitation. Traditional efforts to measure soil moisture have been principally restricted to in situ measurements, so remote sensing techniques...
Factors affecting stream nutrient loads: A synthesis of regional SPARROW model results for the continental United States
Stephen D. Preston, Richard B. Alexander, Gregory E. Schwarz, Charles G. Crawford
2011, Journal of the American Water Resources Association (47) 891-915
We compared the results of 12 recently calibrated regional SPARROW (SPAtially Referenced Regressions On Watershed attributes) models covering most of the continental United States to evaluate the consistency and regional differences in factors affecting stream nutrient loads. The models – 6 for total nitrogen and 6 for total phosphorus –...
Classifying the hydrologic function of prairie potholes with remote sensing and GIS
Jennifer R. Rover, C.K. Wright, Ned H. Euliss Jr., David M. Mushet, Bruce K. Wylie
2011, Wetlands (31) 319-327
A sequence of Landsat TM/ETM+ scenes capturing the substantial surface water variations exhibited by prairie pothole wetlands over a drought to deluge period were analyzed in an attempt to determine the general hydrologic function of individual wetlands (recharge, flow-through, and discharge). Multipixel objects (water bodies) were clustered according to their...
Evidence for predatory control of the invasive round goby
C.P. Madenjian, M.A. Stapanian, L.D. Witzel, D.W. Einhouse, S.A. Pothoven, H.L. Whitford
2011, Biological Invasions (13) 987-1002
We coupled bioenergetics modeling with bottom trawl survey results to evaluate the capacity of piscivorous fish in eastern Lake Erie to exert predatory control of the invading population of round goby Neogobius melanostomus. In the offshore (>20 m deep) waters of eastern Lake Erie, burbot Lota lota is a native...
A comparison of recharge rates in aquifers of the United States based on groundwater-age data
P.B. McMahon, Niel Plummer, J.K. Böhlke, S.D. Shapiro, S.R. Hinkle
2011, Hydrogeology Journal (19) 779-800
An overview is presented of existing groundwater-age data and their implications for assessing rates and timescales of recharge in selected unconfined aquifer systems of the United States. Apparent age distributions in aquifers determined from chlorofluorocarbon, sulfur hexafluoride, tritium/helium-3, and radiocarbon measurements from 565 wells in 45 networks were used to...
Geochemical and isotopic study of soils and waters from an Italian contaminated site: Agro Aversano (Campania)
M.A. Bove, R. A. Ayuso, B. de Vivo, A. Lima, S. Albanese
2011, Journal of Geochemical Exploration (109) 38-50
Lead isotope applications have been widely used in recent years in environmental studies conducted on different kinds of sampled media. In the present paper, Pb isotope ratios have been used to determine the sources of metal pollution in soils and waters in the Agro Aversano area. During three different sampling...
Radionuclides, trace elements, and radium residence in phosphogypsum of Jordan
R. A. Zielinski, M. S. Al-Hwaiti, J. R. Budahn, J. F. Ranville
2011, Environmental Geochemistry and Health (33) 149-165
Voluminous stockpiles of phosphogypsum (PG) generated during the wet process production of phosphoric acid are stored at many sites around the world and pose problems for their safe storage, disposal, or utilization. A major concern is the elevated concentration of long-lived 226Ra (half-life = 1,600 years) inherited from the processed...
Evaluating the growth potential of sea lampreys (Petromyzon marinus) feeding on siscowet lake trout (Salvelinus namaycush) in Lake Superior
E.K. Moody, B.C. Weidel, T.D. Ahrenstorff, W.P. Mattes, J.F. Kitchell
2011, Journal of Great Lakes Research (37) 343-348
Differences in the preferred thermal habitat of Lake Superior lake trout morphotypes create alternative growth scenarios for parasitic sea lamprey (Petromyzon marinus) attached to lake trout hosts. Siscowet lake trout (Salvelinus namaycush) inhabit deep, consistently cold water (4–6 °C) and are more abundant than lean lake trout (Salvelinus namaycush) which...
Abundance, stock origin, and length of marked and unmarked juvenile Chinook salmon in the surface waters of greater Puget Sound
C. A. Rice, C.M. Greene, P. Moran, D.J. Teel, D.R. Kuligowski, Reginald R. Reisenbichler, E.M. Beamer, J.R. Karr, K.L. Fresh
2011, Transactions of the American Fisheries Society (140) 170-189
This study focuses on the use by juvenile Chinook salmon Oncorhynchus tshawytscha of the rarely studied neritic environment (surface waters overlaying the sublittoral zone) in greater Puget Sound. Juvenile Chinook salmon inhabit the sound from their late estuarine residence and early marine transition to their first year at sea. We measured the...
An index of reservoir habitat impairment
L.E. Miranda, K.M. Hunt
2011, Environmental Monitoring and Assessment (172) 225-234
Fish habitat impairment resulting from natural and anthropogenic watershed and in-lake processes has in many cases reduced the ability of reservoirs to sustain native fish assemblages and fisheries quality. Rehabilitation of impaired reservoirs is hindered by the lack of a method suitable for scoring impairment status. To address this limitation,...
Equilibrium shoreline response of a high wave energy beach
M.L. Yates, R.T. Guza, W. C. O’Reilly, J.E. Hansen, P.L. Barnard
2011, Journal of Geophysical Research C: Oceans (116)
Four years of beach elevation surveys at Ocean Beach, San Francisco, California, are used to extend an existing equilibrium shoreline change model, previously calibrated with fine sand and moderate energy waves, to medium sand and higher-energy waves. The shoreline, characterized as the cross-shore location of the mean high water contour,...
Sources and physical processes responsible for OH/H2O in the lunar soil as revealed by the Moon Mineralogy Mapper (M3)
T. B. McCord, L.A. Taylor, J. #NAME? Combe, G. Kramer, C.M. Pieters, J.M. Sunshine, R. N. Clark
2011, Journal of Geophysical Research E: Planets (116)
Analysis of two absorption features near 3 m in the lunar reflectance spectrum, observed by the orbiting M3 spectrometer and interpreted as being due to OH and H2O, is presented, and the results are used to discuss the processes producing these molecules. This analysis focuses on the dependence of the...
Implementing telemetry on new species in remote areas: Recommendations from a large-scale satellite tracking study of African waterfowl
J. Cappelle, S. A. Iverson, John Y. Takekawa, S. H. Newman, T. Dodman, N. Gaidet
2011, Ostrich (82) 17-26
We provide recommendations for implementing telemetry studies on waterfowl on the basis of our experience in a tracking study conducted in three countries of sub-Saharan Africa. The aim of the study was to document movements by duck species identified as priority candidates for the potential spread of avian influenza. Our...
Drought effect on selection of conservation reserve program grasslands by white-tailed deer on the Northern Great Plains
T.W. Grovenburg, C.N. Jacques, R. W. Klaver, J.A. Jenks
2011, American Midland Naturalist (166) 147-162
Limited information exists regarding summer resource selection of white-tailed deer (Odocoileus virginianus) in grassland regions of the Northern Great Plains. During summers 2005-2006, we analyzed habitat selection of adult female white-tailed deer in north-central South Dakota. We collected 1905 summer locations and used 21 and 30 home ranges during 2005...
Islands at bay: Rising seas, eroding islands, and waterbird habitat loss in Chesapeake Bay (USA)
R. Michael Erwin, D.F. Brinker, B.D. Watts, G.R. Costanzo, D.D. Morton
2011, Journal of Coastal Conservation (15) 51-60
Like many resources in the Chesapeake Bay region of the U.S., many waterbird nesting populations have suffered over the past three to four decades. In this study, historic information for the entire Bay and recent results from the Tangier Sound region were evaluated to illustrate patterns of island erosion and...
Estimation of suspended-sediment concentration from total suspended solids and turbidity data for Kentucky, 1978-1995
Tanja N. Williamson, Charles G. Crawford
2011, Journal of the American Water Resources Association (47) 739-749
Suspended sediment is a constituent of water quality that is monitored because of concerns about accelerated erosion, nonpoint contamination of water resources, and degradation of aquatic environments. In order to quantify the relationship among different sediment parameters for Kentucky streams, long‐term records were obtained from the National Water Information System...
Viruses and bacteria in karst and fractured rock aquifers in east Tennessee, USA
T.B. Johnson, L.D. McKay, A.C. Layton, S.W. Jones, G.C. Johnson, J.L. Cashdollar, D.R. Dahling, L.F. Villegas, G.S. Fout, D.E. Williams, G. Sayler
2011, Ground Water (49) 98-110
A survey of enteric viruses and indicator bacteria was carried out in eight community water supply sources (four wells and four springs) in East Tennessee. Seven sites derived their water from carbonate aquifers and one from fractured sandstone. Four of the sites were deemed "low-risk" based on prior monitoring of...
Mercury trends in fish from rivers and lakes in the United States, 1969-2005
A.T. Chalmers, D.M. Argue, D.A. Gay, M. E. Brigham, C. J. Schmitt, D. L. Lorenz
2011, Environmental Monitoring and Assessment (175) 175-191
A national dataset on concentrations of mercury in fish, compiled mainly from state and federal monitoring programs, was used to evaluate trends in mercury (Hg) in fish from US rivers and lakes. Trends were analyzed on data aggregated by site and by state, using samples of the same fish species...
Movement Patterns of American Shad Transported Upstream of Dams on The Roanoke River, North Carolina and Virginia
Julianne E. Harris, J.E. Hightower
2011, North American Journal of Fisheries Management (31) 240-256
American shad Alosa sapidissima are in decline throughout much of their native range as a result of overfishing, pollution, and habitat alteration in coastal rivers where they spawn. One approach to restoration in regulated rivers is to provide access to historical spawning habitat above dams through a trap-and-transport program. We examined the...
Methane hydrate-bearing seeps as a source of aged dissolved organic carbon to the oceans
J. W. Pohlman, J.E. Bauer, W.F. Waite, C.L. Osburn, N.R. Chapman
2011, Nature Geoscience (4) 37-41
Marine sediments contain about 500-10,000 Gt of methane carbon, primarily in gas hydrate. This reservoir is comparable in size to the amount of organic carbon in land biota, terrestrial soils, the atmosphere and sea water combined, but it releases relatively little methane to the ocean and atmosphere. Sedimentary microbes convert...
Factors Controlling Pre-Columbian and Early Historic Maize Productivity in the American Southwest, Part 1: The Southern Colorado Plateau and Rio Grande Regions
L. V. Benson
2011, Journal of Archaeological Method and Theory (18) 1-60
Maize is the New World's preeminent grain crop and it provided the economic basis for human culture in many regions within the Americas. To flourish, maize needs water, sunlight (heat), and nutrients (e. g., nitrogen). In this paper, climate and soil chemistry data are used to evaluate the potential for...
Classification of Thermal Patterns at Karst Springs and Cave Streams
A.J. Luhmann, M.D. Covington, Albert J. Peters, S.C. Alexander, C.T. Anger, J.A. Green, Anthony C. Runkel, E.C. Alexander
2011, Ground Water (49) 324-335
Thermal patterns of karst springs and cave streams provide potentially useful information concerning aquifer geometry and recharge. Temperature monitoring at 25 springs and cave streams in southeastern Minnesota has shown four distinct thermal patterns. These patterns can be divided into two types: those produced by flow paths with ineffective heat...
Trophic magnification of PCBs and its relationship to the octanol-water partition coefficient
D.M. Walters, M.A. Mills, B.S. Cade, L.P. Burkard
2011, Environmental Science & Technology (45) 3917-3924
We investigated polychlorinated biphenyl (PCB) bioaccumulation relative to octanol-water partition coefficient (KOW) and organism trophic position (TP) at the Lake Hartwell Superfund site (South Carolina). We measured PCBs (127 congeners) and stable isotopes (??15N) in sediment, organic matter, phytoplankton, zooplankton, macroinvertebrates, and fish. TP, as calculated from ??15N, was significantly,...