Using models for the optimization of hydrologic monitoring
Michael N. Fienen, Randall J. Hunt, John E. Doherty, Howard W. Reeves
2011, Fact Sheet 2011-3014
Hydrologists are often asked what kind of monitoring network can most effectively support science-based water-resources management decisions. Currently (2011), hydrologic monitoring locations often are selected by addressing observation gaps in the existing network or non-science issues such as site access. A model might then be calibrated to available data and...
Seeing the forest and the trees: USGS scientist links local changes to global scale
Jim Wilson, Craig D. Allen
2011, Report
The recent recipient of two major awards, Craig D. Allen, a research ecologist with the U.S. Geological Survey Fort Collins Science Center, has loved trees since childhood. He is now considered an expert of world renown on the twin phenomena of forest changes and tree mortality resulting from climate warming...
The dynamics of fine-grain sediment dredged from Santa Cruz Harbor
Curt D. Storlazzi, Christopher H. Conaway, M. Katherine Presto, Joshua B. Logan, Katherine Cronin, Maarten van Ormondt, Jamie Lescinski, E. Lynne Harden, Jessica R. Lacy, Pieter K. Tonnon
2011, Open-File Report 2011-1045
In the fall and early winter of 2009, a demonstration project was done at Santa Cruz Harbor, California, to determine if 450 m3/day of predominantly (71 percent) mud-sized sediment could be dredged from the inner portion of the harbor and discharged to the coastal ocean without significant impacts to the...
Borehole geophysical investigation of a formerly used defense site, Machiasport, Maine, 2003-2006
Carole D. Johnson, Remo A. Mondazzi, Peter K. Joesten
2011, Scientific Investigations Report 2009-5120
The U.S. Geological Survey, in cooperation with the U.S. Army Corps of Engineers, collected borehole geophysical logs in 18 boreholes and interpreted the data along with logs from 19 additional boreholes as part of an ongoing, collaborative investigation at three environmental restoration sites in Machiasport, Maine. These sites, located on...
Social network models predict movement and connectivity in ecological landscapes
Robert J. Fletcher Jr., M.A. Acevedo, Brian E. Reichert, Kyle E. Pias, Wiley M. Kitchens
2011, Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences of the United States of America (108) 19282-19287
Network analysis is on the rise across scientific disciplines because of its ability to reveal complex, and often emergent, patterns and dynamics. Nonetheless, a growing concern in network analysis is the use of limited data for constructing networks. This concern is strikingly relevant to ecology and conservation biology, where network...
MODFLOW-NWT, a Newton formulation for MODFLOW-2005
Richard G. Niswonger, Sorab Panday, Motomu Ibaraki
2011, Techniques and Methods 6-A37
This report documents a Newton formulation of MODFLOW-2005, called MODFLOW-NWT. MODFLOW-NWT is a standalone program that is intended for solving problems involving drying and rewetting nonlinearities of the unconfined groundwater-flow equation. MODFLOW-NWT must be used with the Upstream-Weighting (UPW) Package for calculating intercell conductances in a different manner than is...
Locations and attributes of wind turbines in Colorado, 2009
Natasha B. Carr, Jay E. Diffendorfer, Tammy S. Fancher, Natalie E. Latysh, Kenneth J. Leib, Anne-Marie Matherne, Christine Turner
2011, Data Series 597
The Colorado wind-turbine data series provides geospatial data for all wind turbines established within the State as of August 2009. Attributes specific to each turbine include: turbine location, manufacturer and model, rotor diameter, hub height, rotor height, potential megawatt output, land ownership, and county. Wind energy facility data for each...
Locations and attributes of wind turbines in New Mexico, 2009
Natasha B. Carr, Jay E. Diffendorfer, Tammy S. Fancher, Natalie E. Latysh, Kenneth J. Leib, Anne-Marie Matherne, Christine Turner
2011, Data Series 596
The New Mexico wind-turbine data series provides geospatial data for all wind turbines established within the State as of August 2009. Attributes specific to each turbine include: turbine location, manufacturer and model, rotor diameter, hub height, rotor height, potential megawatt output, land ownership, and county. Wind energy facility data for...
Avian community responses to juniper woodland structure and thinning treatments on the Colorado Plateau
Claire Crow, Charles van Riper III
2011, Open-File Report 2011-1109
Federal land managers are increasingly implementing fuels-reduction treatments throughout the western United States with objectives of ecological restoration and fire hazard reduction in pinyon-juniper (Pinus spp.-Juniperus spp.) woodlands. The pinyon-juniper woodland ecosystem complex is highly variable across the western landscape, as is bird community composition. We investigated relations between...
Effects of recreational flow releases on natural resources of the Indian and Hudson Rivers in the Central Adirondack Mountains, New York, 2004-06
Barry P. Baldigo, C.I. Mulvihill, A.G. Ernst, B.A. Boisvert
2011, Scientific Investigations Report 2010-5223
The U.S. Geological Survey (USGS), the New York State Department of Environmental Conservation (NYSDEC), and Cornell University carried out a cooperative 2-year study from the fall of 2004 through the fall of 2006 to characterize the potential effects of recreational-flow releases from Lake Abanakee on natural resources in the Indian...
Seasonal distribution and aerial surveys of mountain goats in Mount Rainier, North Cascades, and Olympic National Parks, Washington
Kurt Jenkins, Katherine Beirne, Patricia Happe, Roger Hoffman, Cliff Rice, Jim Schaberl
2011, Open-File Report 2011-1107
We described the seasonal distribution of Geographic Positioning System (GPS)-collared mountain goats (Oreamnos americanus) in Mount Rainier, North Cascades, and Olympic National Parks to evaluate aerial survey sampling designs and provide general information for park managers. This work complemented a companion study published elsewhere of aerial detection biases of mountain...
Monitoring CO2 emissions in tree kill areas near the resurgent dome at Long Valley Caldera, California
D. Bergfeld, William C. Evans
2011, Scientific Investigations Report 2011-5038
We report results of yearly measurements of the diffuse CO2 flux and shallow soil temperatures collected since 2006 across two sets of tree-kill areas at Long Valley Caldera, California. These data provide background information about CO2 discharge during a period with moderate seismicity, but little to no deformation. The tree...
ModelMate - A graphical user interface for model analysis
Edward R. Banta
2011, Techniques and Methods 6-E4
ModelMate is a graphical user interface designed to facilitate use of model-analysis programs with models. This initial version of ModelMate supports one model-analysis program, UCODE_2005, and one model software program, MODFLOW-2005. ModelMate can be used to prepare input files for UCODE_2005, run UCODE_2005, and display analysis results. A link to...
Evaluation of hypotheses for explaining temporal trends in Atlantic salmon parr densities in Northeast U.S. Rivers
Tyler Wagner, John A. Sweka
2011, North American Journal of Fisheries Management (31) 340-351
Atlantic salmon Salmo salar in the USA have declined dramatically and their persistence is heavily dependent on stocking juvenile fish, predominantly fry. The success of stocking hatchery fry is evaluated annually throughout New England by electrofishing surveys targeting age-1 parr. The objective of this study was to examine temporal trends in Atlantic...
Does littoral sand bypass the head of Mugu Submarine Canyon? - a modeling study
Jingping Xu, Edwin Elias, Nicole Kinsman
Ping Wang, Julie D. Rosati, Tiffany M. Roberts, editor(s)
2011, Conference Paper, Proceedings of the Coastal Sediments 2011
A newly developed sand-tracer code for the process-based model Delft3D (Deltares, The Netherlands) was used to simulate the littoral transport near the head of the Mugu Submarine Canyon in California, USA. For westerly swells, which account for more than 90% of the wave conditions in the region, the sand tracers...
The influence of sea-level rise on fringing reef sediment dynamics: field observations and numerical modeling
Curt D. Storlazzi, Michael E. Field, Edwin Elias, M. Katherine Presto
2011, Conference Paper, The proceedings of the Coastal Sediments 2011
While most climate projections suggest that sea level may rise on the order of 0.5-1.0 m by 2100, it is not clear how fluid flow and sediment transport on fringing reefs might change in response to this rapid sea-level rise. Field observations and numerical modeling suggest that an increase in...
Recent scientific advances and their implications for sand management near San Francisco, California: The influences of the ebb tidal delta
Daniel M. Hanes, Patrick L. Barnard, Kate Dallas, Edwin Elias, Li H. Erikson, Jodi Eshleman, Jeff Hansen, Tian Jian Hsu, Fengyan Shi
2011, Conference Paper, The proceedings of the Coastal Sediments 2011
Recent research in the San Francisco, California, U.S.A., coastal region has identified the importance of the ebb tidal delta to coastal processes. A process-based numerical model is found to qualitatively reproduce the equilibrium size and shape of the delta. The ebb tidal delta itself has been contracting over the past...
Recent wetland land loss due to hurricanes: Improved estimates based upon multiple source images
Monica Palaseanu-Lovejoy, Christine J. Kranenburg, John Brock, John Barras
2011, Conference Paper, Proceedings of the Coastal Sediments 2011
The objective of this study was to provide a moderate resolution 30-m fractional water map of the Chenier Plain for 2003, 2006 and 2009 by using information contained in high-resolution satellite imagery of a subset of the study area. Indices and transforms pertaining to vegetation and water were created using...
Limnological Conditions and Occurrence of Taste-and-Odor Compounds in Lake William C. Bowen and Municipal Reservoir #1, Spartanburg County, South Carolina, 2006-2009
Celeste A. Journey, Jane M. Arrington, Karen M. Beaulieu, Jennifer L. Graham, Paul M. Bradley
2011, Scientific Investigations Report 2011-5060
Limnological conditions and the occurrence of taste-and-odor compounds were studied in two reservoirs in Spartanburg County, South Carolina, from May 2006 to June 2009. Lake William C. Bowen and Municipal Reservoir #1 are relatively shallow, meso-eutrophic, warm monomictic, cascading impoundments on the South Pacolet River. Overall, water-quality conditions and phytoplankton...
Water and rock geochemistry, geologic cross sections, geochemical modeling, and groundwater flow modeling for identifying the source of groundwater to Montezuma Well, a natural spring in central Arizona
Raymond H. Johnson, Ed DeWitt, Laurie Wirt, L. Rick Arnold, John D. Horton
2011, Open-File Report 2011-1063
The National Park Service (NPS) seeks additional information to better understand the source(s) of groundwater and associated groundwater flow paths to Montezuma Well in Montezuma Castle National Monument, central Arizona. The source of water to Montezuma Well, a flowing sinkhole in a desert setting, is poorly understood. Water emerges from...
Selected Images of the Effects of the October 15, 2006, Kiholo Bay-Mahukona, Hawai'i, Earthquakes and Recovery Efforts
Taeko Jane Takahashi, Nancy A. Ikeda, Paul G. Okubo, Maurice K. Sako, David C. Dow, Anna M. Priester, Nolan A. Steiner
2011, Data Series 506
Early on the morning of October 15, 2006, two moderate earthquakes—the largest in decades—struck the Island of Hawai‘i. The first of these, which occurred at 7:07 a.m., HST (1707 UTC), was a magnitude (M) 6.7 earthquake, centered beneath Kīholo Bay on the northwestern coast of the island (19.878°N, 155.935°W), at...
Geologic framework and hydrogeology of the middle Carson River Basin, Eagle, Dayton, and Churchill Valleys, West-Central Nevada
Douglas K. Maurer
2011, Scientific Investigations Report 2011-5055
Changes in land use and water use and increasing development of water resources in the middle Carson River basin may affect flow of the river and, in turn, affect downstream water users dependent on sustained river flows to Lahontan Reservoir. The U.S. Geological Survey, in cooperation with the Bureau of...
Inner shelf morphologic controls on the dynamics of the beach and bar system, Fire Island, New York
Cheryl J. Hapke, William C. Schwab, Paul T. Gayes, Clay McCoy, Richard Viso, Erika E. Lentz
Julie D. Rosati, Ping Wang, Tiffany M. Roberts, editor(s)
2011, Conference Paper, The proceedings of the Coastal Sediments 2011
The mechanism of sediment exchange between offshore sand ridges and the beach at Fire Island, New York is largely unknown. However, recent evidence from repeat nearshore bathymetry surveys, coupled with the complex but consistent bar morphology and patterns of shoreline change demonstrate that there is a feedback occurring between the...
Growth characteristics and Otolith analysis on Age-0 American Shad
Sally T. Sauter, Lisa A. Wetzel
2011, Report, Impact of American Shad in the Columbia River
Otolith microstructure analysis provides useful information on the growth history of fish (Campana and Jones 1992, Bang and Gronkjaer 2005). Microstructure analysis can be used to construct the size-at-age growth trajectory of fish, determine daily growth rates, and estimate hatch date and other ecologically important life history events (Campana and...
Verification of a ‘freshwater-type’ life history variant of juvenile American shad in the Columbia River
Lisa A. Wetzel, Kimberly A. Larsen, Michael J. Parsley, Christian E. Zimmerman
2011, Report
American shad are native to the Atlantic coast of North America and were successfully introduced to the Pacific coast in the 1870s. They are now more abundant in the Columbia River than are its native salmon. As in their native range, Columbia River American shad are anadromous and have been...