The evolutionary consequences for seawater performance and its hormonal control when anadromous Atlantic salmon become landlocked
Stephen D. McCormick, Amy M. Regish, William R. Ardren, Bjorn Thrandur Bjornsson, Nicholas J. Bernier
2019, Scientific Reports (9)
Populations of anadromous fish have become landlocked in relatively recent geological history (<14,000 years), but the evolutionary impacts of this altered lifecycle on traits underlying seawater performance have not been established. In order to examine the effects of relaxed selection on seawater traits, anadromous and landlocked Atlantic salmon...
Partitioning global change: Assessing the relative importance of changes in climate and land cover for changes in avian distribution
Matthew J. Clement, James D. Nichols, Jaime A. Collazo, Adam Terando, James E. Hines, Steven G. Williams
2019, Ecology and Evolution (9) 1985-2003
Understanding the relative impact of climate change and land cover change on changes in avian distribution has implications for the future course of avian distributions and appropriate management strategies. Due to the dynamic nature of climate change, our goal was to investigate the processes that shape species distributions, rather than...
West Florida shelf pipeline serves as sea turtle benthic habitat based on in-situ towed camera observations
Heather A. Broadbent, Sarah E. Grasty, Robert F. Hardy, Margaret M. Lamont, Kristen M. Hart, Chad Lembke, Jennifer L. Brizzolara, Steven A. Murawski
2019, Aquatic Biology (29) 17-31
The use of marine offshore benthic habitats by sea turtles is poorly characterized due to the difficulty of obtaining in situ data. Understanding benthic habitat use that is important to the species’ reproduction, foraging, and migrations is critical for guiding management decisions. A towed camera-based assessment survey system (C-BASS) equipped...
Life-history variation of two inland salmonids revealed through otolith microchemistry analysis
Lindsy R. Ciepiela, Annika W. Walters
2019, Canadian Journal of Fisheries and Aquatic Sciences (76) 1971-1981
Increasingly, otolith microchemistry analysis is used as a tool to trace fish migrations, especially migrations of diadromous fishes. Yet, few studies have used otolith microchemistry to trace migrations in small inland watersheds, leaving major knowledge gaps in our understanding of inland fish spatial ecology. Here, we evaluate the use of...
Bidirectional connectivity via fish ladders in a large Neotropical river
L.F. Celestino, F.J. Sanz-Ronda, Leandro E. Miranda, M.C. Makrakis, J.H. Pinheiro Dias, S. Makrakis
2019, River Research and Applications (35) 236-246
The conservation of potamodromous species worldwide has been threatened by the loss of longitudinal connectivity caused by dams intercepting large rivers. One environmental management strategy for reestablishing connectivity is providing passage through fish ladders. However, ladders in Neotropical rivers have been described as ascending one-way routes. We analyzed the movements...
The Shumagin seismic gap structure and associated tsunami hazards, Alaska convergent margin
Roland E. von Huene, John J. Miller, Anne Krabbenhoeft
Shane T. Detweiler, editor(s)
2019, Geosphere (15) 324-341
The potential for a major earthquake in the Shumagin seismic gap, and the tsunami it could generate, was reported in 1971. However, while potentially tsunamigenic splay faults in the adjacent Unimak and Semidi earthquake segments are known, such features along the Shumagin segment were undocumented until recently. To investigate margin...
Seismic velocity structure across the 2013 Craig, Alaska rupture from aftershock tomography: Implications for seismogenic conditions
Maureen A. L. Walton, Emily C. Roland, Jacob I. Walter, Sean P. S. Gulick, Peter J. Dotray
2019, Earth and Planetary Science Letters (507) 94-104
The 2013 Craig, Alaska MW 7.5 earthquake ruptured along ∼150 km of the Queen Charlotte Fault (QCF), a right-lateral strike-slip plate boundary fault separating the Pacific and North American plates. Regional shear wave analyses suggest that the Craig earthquake rupturepropagated in the northward direction faster than the S-wave (supershear). Theoretical studies suggest that a bimaterial interface, such as that along the QCF, which...
Proposed attributes of national wildlife health programmes
Craig Stephen, Jonathan M. Sleeman, Natalie T. Nguyen, P. Zimmer, J. P. Duff, D. Gavier-Widen, T. Grillo, H. Lee, J. Rijks, Marie-Pierre Ryser-Degiorgis, T. Tana, M. Uhart
2019, Scientific and Technical Review (37) 925-936
Wildlife health is important for conservation, healthy ecosystems, sustainable development, and biosecurity. It presents unique challenges for national programme governance and delivery because wildlife health crosses not only jurisdictional responsibilities and authorities but also inherently spans multiple sectors of expertise. The World Organisation for Animal Health (OIE) encourages its Members...
Linking the agricultural landscape of the Midwest to stream health with structural equation modeling
Travis S. Schmidt, Peter C. Van Metre, Daren Carlisle
2019, Environmental Science & Technology (53) 452-462
Multiple physical and chemical stressors can simultaneously affect the biological condition of streams. To better understand the complex interactions of land-use practices, water quality, and ecological integrity of streams, the U.S. Geological Survey National Water Quality Assessment Project is conducting regional-scale assessments of stream condition across the United States. In...
Widespread loss of lake ice around the Northern Hemisphere in a warming world
Sapna Sharma, Kevin Blagrave, John J. Magnuson, Catherine M. O’Reilly, Samantha K. Oliver, Ryan D. Batt, Madeline R. Magee, Dietmar Straile, Gesa A. Weyhenmeyer, Luke A. Winslow, R. Iestyn Woolway
2019, Nature Climate Change (9) 227-231
Ice provides a range of ecosystem services—including fish harvest, cultural traditions, transportation, recreation and regulation of the hydrological cycle—to more than half of the world’s 117 million lakes. One of the earliest observed impacts of climatic warming has been the loss of freshwater ice, with corresponding climatic and ecological consequences. However,...
Hydrogen isotopes in high 3He/4He submarine basalts: Primordial vs. recycled water and the veil of mantle enrichment
Matthew W. Loewen, David W. Graham, Ilya N. Bindeman, John E. Lupton, Michael O. Garcia
2019, Earth and Planetary Science Letters (508) 62-73
The hydrogen isotope value (δD) of water indigenous to the mantle is masked by the early degassing and recycling of surface water through Earth's history. High 3He/4He ratios in some ocean island basalts, however, provide a clear geochemical signature of deep, primordial mantle that has been isolated within the Earth's interior from melting, degassing, and convective...
Compounding effects of climate change reduce population viability of a montane amphibian
Amanda M. Kissel, Wendy J. Palen, Maureen E. Ryan, Michael J. Adams
2019, Ecological Applications (29) 1-12
Anthropogenic climate change presents challenges and opportunities to the growth, reproduction, and survival of individuals throughout their life cycles. Demographic compensation among life‐history stages has the potential to buffer populations from decline, but alternatively, compounding negative effects can lead to accelerated population decline and extinction. In montane ecosystems of the...
Implications of introgression for wildlife translocations: the case of North American martens
Jocelyn P. Colella, Robert E. Wilson, Sandra L. Talbot, Joseph A. Cook
2019, Conservation Genetics (20) 153-166
The evolutionary consequences of natural introgression provide a rare opportunity to retrospectively evaluate how the introduction of exotics or genetic rescue efforts may impact endemic faunas. Phylogeographic structure among mainland, endemic insular, and introduced North American marten (Martes americana and M. caurina) populations have been shaped by a...
Behavioral effects of copper on larval white sturgeon
Holly J. Puglis, Robin D. Calfee, Edward E. Little
2019, Environmental Toxicology and Chemistry (38) 132-144
Early–life stage white sturgeon are sensitive to copper (Cu), with adverse behavioral responses observed during previous studies. The objectives of the present study were to quantify the effects of Cu exposure on white sturgeon swimming and feeding behaviors and determine their time to response. Larval sturgeon (1–2, 28, or 35...
Iterative models for early detection of invasive species across spread pathways
Gericke Cook, Catherine S. Jarnevich, Melissa Warden, Marla Downing, John Withrow, I. Leinwand
2019, Forests (10)
Species distribution models can be used to direct early detection of invasive species, if they include proxies for invasion pathways. Due to the dynamic nature of invasion, these models violate assumptions of stationarity across space and time. To compensate for issues of stationarity, we iteratively update regionalized species distribution models...
Size distributions of Arctic waterbodies reveal consistent relations in their statistical moments in space and time
Sina Muster, William J. Riley, Kurt Roth, Moritz Langer, Fabio Cresto Aleina, Charles D. Koven, Stephan Lange, Annett Bartsch, Guido Grosse, C. J. Wilson, Benjamin M. Jones, Julia Boike
2019, Frontiers Earth Science Journal (7)
Arctic lowlands are characterized by large numbers of small waterbodies, which are known to affect surface energy budgets and the global carbon cycle. Statistical analysis of their size distributions has been hindered by the shortage of observations at sufficiently high spatial resolutions. This situation has now changed with the high-resolution...
An old tree and its many‐shaped leaves
Quan Dong, Jonathan M. Friedman, Honghua Zhou
2019, Frontiers in Ecology and the Environment (17) 15-15
Plant leaf shape is highly variable. The beauty of leaves can be purely aesthetic, but also derives from the mystery of adaptive significance. This mystery is especially compelling for species with strongly varying leaf shape on a single tree. The desert poplar (Populus euphratica Oliv.) is an ancient and protected...
Mercury contamination in resident and migrant songbirds and potential effects on body condition
Joshua T. Ackerman, C. Alex Hartman, Mark P. Herzog
2019, Environmental Pollution (246) 797-810
Methlymercury is a significant risk to environmental health globally. We examined the ecological drivers of methylmercury bioaccumulation in songbirds and its effect on body condition while experimentally removing the potentially confounding and predominant effects of site and habitat. We measured blood and feather mercury concentrations and body condition in nearly 1200 individuals representing resident or migrant songbirds of...
Elevated manganese concentrations in United States groundwater, role of land surface–soil–aquifer connections
Peter B. McMahon, Kenneth Belitz, James E. Reddy, Tyler D. Johnson
2019, Environmental Science & Technology (53) 29-38
Chemical data from 43 334 wells were used to examine the role of land surface–soil–aquifer connections in producing elevated manganese concentrations (>300 μg/L) in United States (U.S.) groundwater. Elevated concentrations of manganese and dissolved organic carbon (DOC) in groundwater are associated with shallow, anoxic water tables and soils enriched in organic...
Investigating lake-area dynamics across a permafrost-thaw spectrum using airborne electromagnetic surveys and remote sensing time-series data in Yukon Flats, Alaska
David M. Rey, Michelle Ann Walvoord, Burke Minsley, Jennifer Rover, Kamini Singha
2019, Environmental Research Letters (14) 1-13
Lakes in boreal lowlands cycle carbon and supply an important source of freshwater for wildlife and migratory waterfowl. The abundance and distribution of these lakes are supported, in part, by permafrost distribution, which is subject to change. Relationships between permafrost thaw and lake dynamics remain poorly known in most boreal...
Preface to historic and paleoflood analyses: New perspectives on climate, extreme flood risk, and the geomorphic effects of large floods
Lisa Davis, Tessa M. Harden, Samuel E. Munoz, Jeanne E. Godaire, Jim E. O'Connor
2019, Geomorphology (327) 610-612
Paleofloods are flood events that occurred prior to instrumented records that are discerned from sedimentary evidence. Historic floods are flood events that predate the instrumented record that have been reconstructed based on evidence provided by historical sources. This special issue presents papers on historic and paleoflood analyses that stemmed from...
Multi-country willingness to pay for transborder migratory species conservation: A case study of Northern Pintails
Michelle Haefele, John B. Loomis, Aaron M. Lien, James A. Dubovsky, Robert W. Merideth, Kenneth J. Bagstad, Ta-Ken Huang, Brady J. Mattsson, Darius J. Semmens, Wayne E. Thogmartin, Ruscena Wiederholt, James E. Diffendorfer, Laura Lopez-Hoffman
2019, Ecological Economics (157) 321-331
Using contingent valuation, we estimated willingness to pay (WTP) in Canada, Mexico, and the United States to protect habitat for Northern Pintails (hereafter pintails), a migratory waterfowl species that provides benefits to and requires habitat in the three countries. Our study contributes to research on spatial subsidies by measuring the value of migratory species habitat. While WTP to protect...
Ecosystem service flows from a migratory species: Spatial subsidies of the northern pintail
Kenneth J. Bagstad, Darius J. Semmens, James E. Diffendorfer, Brady J. Mattsson, James A. Dubovsky, Wayne E. Thogmartin, Ruscena Wiederholt, John B. Loomis, Joanna A. Bieri, Christine Sample, Joshua Goldstein, Laura Lopez-Hoffman
2019, Ambio (48) 61-73
Migratory species provide important benefits to society, but their cross-border conservation poses serious challenges. By quantifying the economic value of ecosystem services (ESs) provided across a species’ range and ecological data on a species’ habitat dependence, we estimate spatial subsidies—how different regions support ESs provided by a species across...
Social equity shapes zone-selection: Balancing aquatic biodiversity conservation and ecosystem services delivery in the transboundary Danube River Basin
Sami Domisch, Karan Kakouei, Javier Martinez-Lopez, Kenneth J. Bagstad, Ainhoa Magrach, Stefano Balbi, Ferdinando Villa, Andrea Funk, Thomas Hein, Florian Borgwardt, Virgilio Hermoso, Sonja C. Jahnig, Simone D. Langhans
2019, Science of the Total Environment (656) 797-807
Freshwater biodiversity is declining, despite national and international efforts to manage and protect freshwater ecosystems. Ecosystem-based management (EBM) has been proposed as an approach that could more efficiently and adaptively balance ecological and societal needs. However, this raises the question of how social and ecological objectives can be included in an integrated management plan. Here,...
Chlorinated byproducts of neonicotinoids and their metabolites: An unrecognized human exposure potential?
Kathryn L. Klarich Wong, Danielle T. Webb, Matthew R. Nagorzanski, Dana W. Kolpin, Michelle L. Hladik, David M. Cwiertny, Gregory H. LeFevre
2019, Environmental Science & Technology Letters (6) 98-105
We recently reported the initial discovery of neonicotinoid pesticides in drinking water and their potential for transformation through chlorination and alkaline hydrolysis during water treatment. The objectives of this research were: (1) to determine if neonicotinoid metabolites are relevant to drinking water exposure and (2) to identify the products formed...