Life histories, salinity zones, and sublethal contributions of contaminants to pelagic fish declines illustrated with a case study of San Francisco Estuary, California, USA
Marjorie L. Brooks, Erica Fleishman, Larry R. Brown, Peggy W. Lehman, Inge Werner, Nathaniel Scholz, Carys Michelmore, James R. Loworn, Michael L. Johnson, Daniel Schlenk
2012, Estuaries and Coasts (35) 603-621
Human effects on estuaries are often associated with major decreases in abundance of aquatic species. However, remediation priorities are difficult to identify when declines result from multiple stressors with interacting sublethal effects. The San Francisco Estuary offers a useful case study of the potential role of contaminants in declines of...
Oceanographic gradients and seabird prey community dynamics in glacial fjords
Mayumi L. Arimitsu, John F. Piatt, Erica N. Madison, Jeffrey S. Conaway, N. Hillgruber
2012, Fisheries Oceanography (21) 148-169
Glacial fjord habitats are undergoing rapid change as a result of contemporary global warming, yet little is known about how glaciers influence marine ecosystems. These ecosystems provide important feeding, breeding and rearing grounds for a wide variety of marine organisms, including seabirds of management concern. To characterize ocean conditions and...
Will a changing climate increase interaction between rare and non-native plant species in Alaska?
Lindsey Flagstad, Matthew L. Carlson, Helen Cortes-Burnes, Catherine Jarnevich, Tracy Holcombe
Wendy J. Gibble, Julie K. Combs, Sarah H. Reichard, editor(s)
2012, Conference Paper, Conserving plant biodiversity in a changing world: A view from northwestern North America
No abstract available....
Fish species of greatest conservation need in wadeable Iowa streams: current status and effectiveness of Aquatic Gap Program distribution models
Anthony R. Sindt, Clay Pierce, Michael C. Quist
2012, North American Journal of Fisheries Management (32) 135-146
Effective conservation of fish species of greatest conservation need (SGCN) requires an understanding of species–habitat relationships and distributional trends. Thus, modeling the distribution of fish species across large spatial scales may be a valuable tool for conservation planning. Our goals were to evaluate the status of 10 fish SGCN in...
On the relationship between sea level and Spartina alterniflora production
Matthew L. Kirwan, Robert R. Christian, Linda K. Blum, Mark M. Brinson
2012, Ecosystems (15) 140-147
A positive relationship between interannual sea level and plant growth is thought to stabilize many coastal landforms responding to accelerating rates of sea level rise. Numerical models of delta growth, tidal channel network evolution, and ecosystem resilience incorporate a hump-shaped relationship between inundation and plant primary production, where vegetation growth...
Review of rare earth element concentrations in oil shales of the Eocene Green River Formation
Justin E. Birdwell
2012, Open-File Report 2012-1016
Concentrations of the lanthanide series or rare earth elements and yttrium were determined for lacustrine oil shale samples from the Eocene Green River Formation in the Piceance Basin of Colorado and the Uinta Basin of Utah. Unprocessed oil shale, post-pyrolysis (spent) shale, and leached shale samples were examined to determine...
Selection indicates preference in diverse habitats: A ground-nesting bird (Charadrius melodus) using reservoir shoreline
Michael J. Anteau, Mark H. Sherfy, Mark T. Wiltermuth
2012, PLoS ONE (7) e30347
Animals use proximate cues to select resources that maximize individual fitness. When animals have a diverse array of available habitats, those selected could give insights into true habitat preferences. Since the construction of the Garrison Dam on the Missouri River in North Dakota, Lake Sakakawea (SAK) has become an important...
Miocene magmatism in the Bodie Hills volcanic field, California and Nevada: A long-lived eruptive center in the southern segment of the ancestral Cascades arc
David A. John, Edward A. du Bray, Richard J. Blakely, Robert J. Fleck, Peter G. Vikre, Stephen E. Box, Barry C. Moring
2012, Geosphere (8) 44-97
The Middle to Late Miocene Bodie Hills volcanic field is a >700 km2, long-lived (∼9 Ma) but episodic eruptive center in the southern segment of the ancestral Cascades arc north of Mono Lake (California, U.S.). It consists of ∼20 major eruptive units, including 4 trachyandesite stratovolcanoes emplaced along the...
Occupancy modeling and estimation of the holiday darter species complex within the Etowah River system
Gregory B. Anderson, Mary Freeman, Megan M. Hagler, Byron J. Freeman
2012, Transactions of the American Fisheries Society (141) 34-45
Documenting the status of rare fishes is a crucial step in effectively managing populations and implementing regulatory mechanisms of protection. In recent years, site occupancy has become an increasingly popular metric for assessing populations, but species distribution models that do not account for imperfect detection can underestimate the proportion of...
The paradox of extreme high-altitude migration in bar-headed geese Anser indicus
L.A. Hawkes, S. Balachandran, N. Batbayar, P.J. Butler, B. Chua, David C. Douglas, P.B. Frappell, Y. Hou, W.K. Milsom, S. H. Newman, D.J. Prosser, P. Sathiyaselvam, G. R. Scott, John Y. Takekawa, T. Natsagdorj, M. Wikelski, M.J. Witt, B. Yan, C.M. Bishop
2012, Proceedings of the Royal Society B (280)
Bar-headed geese are renowned for migratory flights at extremely high altitudes over the world's tallest mountains, the Himalayas, where partial pressure of oxygen is dramatically reduced while flight costs, in terms of rate of oxygen consumption, are greatly increased. Such a mismatch is paradoxical, and it is not clear why...
Reoccurrence of 'Ōma'o in leeward woodland habitat and their distribution in alpine habitat on Hawai'i island
Seth W. Judge, Jacqueline M. Gaudioso, P. Marcos Gorresen, Richard J. Camp
2012, Wilson Journal of Ornithology (124) 675-681
The endemic solitaire, 'Oma'o (Myadestes obscurus), is common in windward forests of Hawai'i Island, but has been historically extirpated from leeward forests. The last detections of 'Oma'o on the leeward side of the island were in woodland habitat on the western flank of Mauna Loa in 1978. 'Oma'o were detected...
Report on the reptiles of Upland Savai’i
Robert N. Fisher, Moeumu Uili
James Atherton, Bruce Jefferies, editor(s)
2012, Report, Rapid biodiversity assessment of Upland Savai'i, Samoa
The reptile team conducted a 21 kilometre transect from the coast east of Asau to the uplands ending near Mauga Silisili at over 1720 m elevation. This transect covered the main habitats on Savai’i and allowed the team to determine where various reptile species and invasive species occurred across this...
Ordovician of the Sauk megasequence in the Ozark region of northern Arkansas and parts of Missouri and adjacent states
Raymond L. Ethington, John E. Repetski, James R. Derby
2012, AAPG Memoir (98) 275-300
Exposures of Ordovician rocks of the Sauk megasequence in Missouri and northern Arkansas comprise Ibexian and lower Whiterockian carbonates with interspersed sandstones. Subjacent Cambrian strata are exposed in Missouri but confined to the subsurface in Arkansas. The Sauk-Tippecanoe boundary in this region is at the base of the St. Peter...
Ore genesis constraints on the Idaho Cobalt Belt from fluid inclusion gas, noble gas isotope, and ion ratio analyses
Albert H. Hofstra, Gary P. Landis
2012, Economic Geology (107) 1189-1205
The Idaho cobalt belt is a 60-km-long alignment of deposits composed of cobaltite, Co pyrite, chalcopyrite, and gold with anomalous Nb, Y, Be, and rare-earth elements (REEs) in a quartz-biotite-tourmaline gangue hosted in Mesoproterozoic metasedimentary rocks of the Lemhi Group. It is the largest cobalt resource in the United States...
SHRIMP U-Pb ages of xenotime and monazite from the Spar Lake red bed-associated Cu-Ag deposit, western Montana: Implications for ore genesis
John N. Aleinikoff, Timothy S. Hayes, Karl V. Evans, Frank K. Mazdab, Renee M. Pillers, C. Mark Fanning
2012, Economic Geology (107) 1251-1274
Xenotime occurs as epitaxial overgrowths on detrital zircons in the Mesoproterozoic Revett Formation (Belt Supergroup) at the Spar Lake red bed-associated Cu-Ag deposit, western Montana. The deposit formed during diagenesis of Revett strata, where oxidizing metal-bearing hydrothermal fluids encountered a reducing zone. Samples for geochronology were collected from several mineral...
Wildlife forestry
Daniel J. Twedt
Clement A. Okia, editor(s)
2012, Book chapter, Global perspectives on sustainable forest management
Wildlife forestry is management of forest resources, within sites and across landscapes, to provide sustainable, desirable habitat conditions for all forest-dependent (silvicolous) fauna while concurrently yielding economically viable, quality timber products. In practice, however, management decisions associated with wildlife forestry often reflect a desire to provide suitable habitat for rare...
Hierarchical spatial structure of stream fish colonization and extinction
N.P. Hitt, J.H. Roberts
2012, Oikos (121) 127-137
Spatial variation in extinction and colonization is expected to influence community composition over time. In stream fish communities, local species richness (alpha diversity) and species turnover (beta diversity) are thought to be regulated by high extinction rates in headwater streams and high colonization rates in downstream areas. We evaluated the...
Use of occupancy models to evaluate expert knowledge-based species-habitat relationships
Monica N. Iglecia, Jaime A. Collazo, Alexa McKerrow
2012, Avian Conservation and Ecology (7) 1-13
Expert knowledge-based species-habitat relationships are used extensively to guide conservation planning, particularly when data are scarce. Purported relationships describe the initial state of knowledge, but are rarely tested. We assessed support in the data for suitability rankings of vegetation types based on expert knowledge for three terrestrial avian species in...
Climatic forcing of Quaternary deep-sea benthic communities in the North Pacific Ocean
Moriaki Yasuhara, G. Hunt, T. M. Cronin, N. Hokanishi, H. Kawahata, Akira Tsujimoto, M. Ishitake
2012, Paleobiology (38) 162-179
There is growing evidence that changes in deep-sea benthic ecosystems are modulated by climate changes, but most evidence to date comes from the North Atlantic Ocean. Here we analyze new ostracod and published foraminiferal records for the last 250,000 years on Shatsky Rise in the North Pacific Ocean. Using linear...
The effect of diagenesis and fluid migration on rare earth element distribution in pore fluids of the northern Cascadia accretionary margin
Ji-Hoon Kim, Marta E. Torres, Brian A. Haley, Miriam Kastner, John W. Pohlman, Michael Riedel, Young-Joo Lee
2012, Chemical Geology (291) 152-165
Analytical challenges in obtaining high quality measurements of rare earth elements (REEs) from small pore fluid volumes have limited the application of REEs as deep fluid geochemical tracers. Using a recently developed analytical technique, we analyzed REEs from pore fluids collected from Sites U1325 and U1329, drilled on the northern...
Selection indicates preference in diverse habitats: A Ground-Nesting bird (charadrius melodus) using reservoir shoreline
M.J. Anteau, M. H. Sherfy, M.T. Wiltermuth
2012, PLoS ONE (7)
Animals use proximate cues to select resources that maximize individual fitness. When animals have a diverse array of available habitats, those selected could give insights into true habitat preferences. Since the construction of the Garrison Dam on the Missouri River in North Dakota, Lake Sakakawea (SAK) has become an important...
A riverscape perspective of Pacific salmonids and aquatic habitats prior to large-scale dam removal in the Elwha River, Washington, USA
S.J. Brenkman, J.J. Duda, C.E. Torgersen, E. Welty, G.R. Pess, R. Peters, M.L. McHenry
2012, Fisheries Management and Ecology (19) 36-53
Dam removal has been increasingly proposed as a river restoration technique. In 2011, two large hydroelectric dams will be removed from Washington State’s Elwha River. Ten anadromous fish populations are expected to recolonise historical habitats after dam removal. A key to understanding watershed recolonisation is the collection of spatially continuous...
Planet-wide sand motion on mars
N.T. Bridges, M.C. Bourke, Paul E. Geissler, M. E. Banks, C. Colon, S. Diniega, M.P. Golombek, C.J. Hansen, S. Mattson, A. S. McEwen, M. T. Mellon, N. Stantzos, B.J. Thomson
2012, Geology (40) 31-34
Prior to Mars Reconnaissance Orbiter data, images of Mars showed no direct evidence for dune and ripple motion. This was consistent with climate models and lander measurements indicating that winds of sufficient intensity to mobilize sand were rare in the low-density atmosphere. We show that many sand ripples and dunes...
Distribution and geochemistry of selected trace elements in the Sacramento River near Keswick Reservoir
Ronald C. Antweiler, Howard E. Taylor, Charles N. Alpers
2012, Chemical Geology (298-299) 70-78
The effect of heavy metals from the Iron Mountain Mines (IMM) Superfund site on the upper Sacramento River is examined using data from water and bed sediment samples collected during 1996–97. Relative to surrounding waters, aluminum, cadmium, cobalt, copper, iron, lead, manganese, thallium, zinc and the rare-earth elements (REE)...
Strata-bound Fe-Co-Cu-Au-Bi-Y-REE deposits of the Idaho Cobalt Belt: Multistage hydrothermal mineralization in a magmatic-related iron oxide copper-gold system
John F. Slack
2012, Economic Geology (107) 1089-1113
Mineralogical and geochemical studies of strata-bound Fe-Co-Cu-Au-Bi-Y-rare-earth element (REE) deposits of the Idaho cobalt belt in east-central Idaho provide evidence of multistage epigenetic mineralization by magmatic-hydrothermal processes in an iron oxide copper-gold (IOCG) system. Deposits of the Idaho cobalt belt comprise three types: (1) strata-bound sulfide lenses in the...