Survival of white-tailed deer neonates in Minnesota and South Dakota
T.W. Grovenburg, C. C. Swanson, C.N. Jacques, R. W. Klaver, T.J. Brinkman, B.M. Burris, C.S. Deperno, J.A. Jenks
2011, Journal of Wildlife Management (75) 213-220
Understanding the influence of intrinsic (e.g., age, birth mass, and sex) and habitat factors on survival of neonate white-tailed deer improves understanding of population ecology. During 2002–2004, we captured and radiocollared 78 neonates in eastern South Dakota and southwestern Minnesota, of which 16 died before 1 September. Predation accounted for...
Tsunami modelling with adaptively refined finite volume methods
R.J. LeVeque, D.L. George, M.J. Berger
2011, Acta Numerica (20) 211-289
Numerical modelling of transoceanic tsunami propagation, together with the detailed modelling of inundation of small-scale coastal regions, poses a number of algorithmic challenges. The depth-averaged shallow water equations can be used to reduce this to a time-dependent problem in two space dimensions, but even so it is crucial to use...
Probabilistic fault displacement hazards for the southern san andreas fault using scenarios and empirical slips
R. Chen, M.D. Petersen
2011, Earthquake Spectra (27) 293-313
We apply a probabilistic method to develop fault displacement hazard maps and profiles for the southern San Andreas Fault. Two slip models are applied: (1) scenario slip, defined by the ShakeOut rupture model, and (2) empirical slip, calculated using regression equations relating global slip to earthquake magnitude and distance along...
Adaptive management in the U.S. National Wildlife Refuge System: Science-management partnerships for conservation delivery
C. T. Moore, E. V. Lonsdorf, M. G. Knutson, H. P. Laskowski, S. K. Lor
2011, Journal of Environmental Management (92) 1395-1402
Adaptive management is an approach to recurrent decision making in which uncertainty about the decision is reduced over time through comparison of outcomes predicted by competing models against observed values of those outcomes. The National Wildlife Refuge System (NWRS) of the...
Estimating surface faulting impacts from the shakeout scenario earthquake
J.A. Treiman, D.J. Pontib
2011, Earthquake Spectra (27) 315-330
An earthquake scenario, based on a kinematic rupture model, has been prepared for a Mw 7.8 earthquake on the southern San Andreas Fault. The rupture distribution, in the context of other historic large earthquakes, is judged reasonable for the purposes of this scenario. This model is used as the basis...
Monitoring a large volume CO2 injection: Year two results from SECARB project at Denbury’s Cranfield, Mississippi, USA
Susan D. Hovorka, Timothy A. Meckel, Ramon H. Trevino, Jiemin Lu, Jean-Philippe Nicot, Jong-Won Choi, David Freeman, Paul Cook, Thomas M. Daley, Jonathan B. Ajo-Franklin, Barry M. Freifeild, Christine Doughty, Charles R. Carrigan, Doug La Brecque, Yousif K. Kharaka, James J. Thordsen, Tommy J. Phelps, Changbing Yang, Katherine D. Romanak, Tongwei Zhang, Robert M. Holt, Jeffery S. Lindler, Robert J. Butsch
2011, Energy Procedia (4) 3478-3485
The Southeast Regional Carbon Sequestration Partnership (SECARB) early project in western Mississippi has been testing monitoring tools and approaches to document storage efficiency and storage permanence under conditions of CO2 EOR as well as downdip injection into brine. Denbury Onshore LLC is host for the study and has brought a...
An ecosystem-scale model for the spread of a host-specific forest pathogen in the Greater Yellowstone Ecosystem
J.A. Hatala, M.C. Dietze, R.L. Crabtree, Katherine C. Kendall, D. Six, P.R. Moorcroft
2011, Ecological Applications (21) 1138-1153
The introduction of nonnative pathogens is altering the scale, magnitude, and persistence of forest disturbance regimes in the western United States. In the high-altitude whitebark pine (Pinus albicaulis) forests of the Greater Yellowstone Ecosystem (GYE), white pine blister rust (Cronartium ribicola) is an introduced fungal pathogen that is...
Process-based, morphodynamic hindcast of decadal deposition patterns in San Pablo Bay, California, 1856-1887
M. van der Wegen, B. E. Jaffe, J.A. Roelvink
2011, Journal of Geophysical Research F: Earth Surface (116)
This study investigates the possibility of hindcasting-observed decadal-scale morphologic change in San Pablo Bay, a subembayment of the San Francisco Estuary, California, USA, by means of a 3-D numerical model (Delft3D). The hindcast period, 1856-1887, is characterized by upstream hydraulic mining that resulted in a high sediment input to the...
Using multi-source satellite data for lake level modelling in ungauged basins: A case study for Lake Turkana, East Africa
N.M. Velpuri, G.B. Senay, K.O. Asante
2011, Hydrology and Earth System Sciences Discussions (8) 4851-4890
Managing limited surface water resources is a great challenge in areas where ground-based data are either limited or unavailable. Direct or indirect measurements of surface water resources through remote sensing offer several advantages of monitoring in ungauged basins. A physical based hydrologic technique to monitor lake water levels in ungauged...
Field flume reveals aquatic vegetation's role in sediment and particulate phosphorus transport in a shallow aquatic ecosystem
J. W. Harvey, G.B. Noe, L. G. Larsen, D.J. Nowacki, L.E. McPhillips
2011, Geomorphology (126) 297-313
Flow interactions with aquatic vegetation and effects on sediment transport and nutrient redistribution are uncertain in shallow aquatic ecosystems. Here we quantified sediment transport in the Everglades by progressively increasing flow velocity in a field flume constructed around undisturbed bed sediment and emergent macrophytes. Suspended sediment < 100 μm was...
An inexpensive instrument for measuring wave exposure and water velocity
J.D. Figurski, D. Malone, J.R. Lacy, M. Denny
2011, Limnology and Oceanography: Methods (9) 204-214
Ocean waves drive a wide variety of nearshore physical processes, structuring entire ecosystems through their direct and indirect effects on the settlement, behavior, and survivorship of marine organisms. However, wave exposure remains difficult and expensive to measure. Here, we report on an inexpensive and easily constructed instrument for measuring wave-induced...
Effects of human-induced alteration of groundwater flow on concentrations of naturally-occurring trace elements at water-supply wells
J. D. Ayotte, Z. Szabo, M. J. Focazio, S. M. Eberts
2011, Applied Geochemistry (26) 747-762
The effects of human-induced alteration of groundwater flow patterns on concentrations of naturally-occurring trace elements were examined in five hydrologically distinct aquifer systems in the USA. Although naturally occurring, these trace elements can exceed concentrations that are considered harmful to human health. The results show that pumping-induced hydraulic gradient changes...
Calibration of models using groundwater age
Ward E. Sanford
2011, Hydrogeology Journal (19) 13-16
There have been substantial efforts recently by geochemists to determine the age of groundwater (time since water entered the system) and its uncertainty, and by hydrologists to use these data to help calibrate groundwater models. This essay discusses the calibration of models using groundwater age, with conclusions that emphasize what...
A Bayesian network to predict coastal vulnerability to sea level rise
B.T. Gutierrez, N.G. Plant, E.R. Thieler
2011, Journal of Geophysical Research F: Earth Surface (116)
Sea level rise during the 21st century will have a wide range of effects on coastal environments, human development, and infrastructure in coastal areas. The broad range of complex factors influencing coastal systems contributes to large uncertainties in predicting long-term sea level rise impacts. Here we explore and demonstrate the...
Predicting community responses to perturbations in the face of imperfect knowledge and network complexity
M. Novak, J.T. Wootton, D.F. Doak, M. Emmerson, J. A. Estes, M. T. Tinker
2011, Ecology (92) 836-846
How best to predict the effects of perturbations to ecological communities has been a long-standing goal for both applied and basic ecology. This quest has recently been revived by new empirical data, new analysis methods, and increased computing speed, with the promise that ecologically important insights may be obtainable from...
Using a genetic mixture model to study phenotypic traits: Differential fecundity among Yukon river Chinook Salmon
Jeffrey F. Bromaghin, D.F. Evenson, T.H. McLain, Blair G. Flannery
2011, Transactions of the American Fisheries Society (140) 235-249
Fecundity is a vital population characteristic that is directly linked to the productivity of fish populations. Historic data from Yukon River (Alaska) Chinook salmon Oncorhynchus tshawytscha suggest that length‐adjusted fecundity differs among populations within the drainage and either is temporally variable or has declined. Yukon River Chinook salmon have been harvested in...
Modeling PSInSAR time series without phase unwrapping
L. Zhang, X. Ding, Z. Lu
2011, IEEE Transactions on Geoscience and Remote Sensing (49) 547-556
In this paper, we propose a least-squares-based method for multitemporal synthetic aperture radar interferometry that allows one to estimate deformations without the need of phase unwrapping. The method utilizes a series of multimaster wrapped differential interferograms with short baselines and focuses on arcs at which there are no phase ambiguities....
Rock formation characterization for CO2-EOR and carbon geosequestration; 3D seismic amplitude and coherency anomalies, Wellington Field, Kansas, USA
D. Ohl, A. Raef, L. Watnef, S. Bhattacharya
2011, SEG Technical Program Expanded Abstracts (30) 1978-1983
In this paper, we present a workflow for a Mississipian carbonates characterization case-study integrating post-stack seismic attributes, well-logs porosities, and seismic modeling to explore relating changes in small-scale "lithofacies" properties and/or sub-seismic resolution faulting to key amplitude and coherency 3D seismic attributes. The main objective of this study is to...
Consequences of increasing bioenergy demand on wood and forests: An application of the Global Forest Products Model
J. Buongiorno, R. Raunikar, S. Zhu
2011, Journal of Forest Economics (17) 214-229
The Global Forest Products Model (GFPM) was applied to project the consequences for the global forest sector of doubling the rate of growth of bioenergy demand relative to a base scenario, other drivers being maintained constant. The results showed that this would lead to the convergence of the price of...
Polar bear population status in the northern Beaufort Sea, Canada, 1971-2006
I. Stirling, T. L. McDonald, E.S. Richardson, E.V. Regehr, Steven C. Amstrup
2011, Ecological Applications (21) 859-876
Polar bears (Ursus maritimus) of the northern Beaufort Sea (NB) population occur on the perimeter of the polar basin adjacent to the northwestern islands of the Canadian Arctic Archipelago. Sea ice converges on the islands through most of the year. We used open-population capture–recapture models to estimate population size...
Study on a pattern classification method of soil quality based on simplified learning sample dataset
Jiahua Zhang, S. Liu, Y. Hu, Y. Tian
2011, Conference Paper, Proceedings - 4th International Conference on Intelligent Computation Technology and Automation, ICICTA 2011
Based on the massive soil information in current soil quality grade evaluation, this paper constructed an intelligent classification approach of soil quality grade depending on classical sampling techniques and disordered multiclassification Logistic regression model. As a case study to determine the learning sample capacity under certain confidence level and estimation...
Modifications to existing ground-motion prediction equations in light of new data
G. M. Atkinson, D.M. Boore
2011, Bulletin of the Seismological Society of America (101) 1121-1135
We compare our recent ground-motion prediction equations (GMPEs) for western North America (WNA; Boore and Atkinson, 2008 [BA08]) and eastern North America (ENA; Atkinson and Boore, 2006 [AB06]; Atkinson, 2008 [A08]) to newly available ground-motion data. Based on these comparisons, we suggest revisions to our GMPEs for both WNA and...
Cumulative effects of restoration efforts on ecological characteristics of an open water area within the Upper Mississippi River
B. R. Gray, W. Shi, J.N. Houser, J. T. Rogala, Z. Guan, J. L. Cochran-Biederman
2011, River Research and Applications (27) 537-549
Ecological restoration efforts in large rivers generally aim to ameliorate ecological effects associated with large-scale modification of those rivers. This study examined whether the effects of restoration efforts-specifically those of island construction-within a largely open water restoration area of the Upper Mississippi River (UMR) might be seen at the spatial...
An enhanced TIMESAT algorithm for estimating vegetation phenology metrics from MODIS data
B. Tan, J.T. Morisette, R.E. Wolfe, F. Gao, G.A. Ederer, J. Nightingale, J.A. Pedelty
2011, Conference Paper, IEEE Journal of Selected Topics in Applied Earth Observations and Remote Sensing
An enhanced TIMESAT algorithm was developed for retrieving vegetation phenology metrics from 250 m and 500 m spatial resolution Moderate Resolution Imaging Spectroradiometer (MODIS) vegetation indexes (VI) over North America. MODIS VI data were pre-processed using snow-cover and land surface temperature data, and temporally smoothed with the enhanced TIMESAT algorithm....
Search behavior of arboreal insectivorous migrants at gulf coast stopover sites in spring
Chao-Chieh Chen, W.C. Barrow Jr., K. Ouchley, R.B. Hamilton
2011, Wilson Journal of Ornithology (123) 347-359
Search behavior of arboreal insectivorous migrants was studied at three stopover sites along the northern coast of the Gulf of Mexico during spring migrations, 1993–1995. We examined if search behavior was affected by phylogeny, or by environmental factors. A sequence of search movements (hop, flutter, or flight) in a foraging...