Labile Fe(II) concentrations in the Atlantic sector of the Southern Ocean along a transect from the subtropical domain to the Weddell Sea Gyre
G. Sarthou, E. Bucciarelli, F. Chever, S.P. Hansard, M. Gonzalez-Davila, J. M. Santana-Casiano, F. Planchon, S. Speich
2011, Biogeosciences Discussions (8) 4163-4208
Labile Fe(II) distributions were investigated in the Sub-Tropical South Atlantic and the Southern Ocean during the BONUS-GoodHope cruise from 34 to 57?? S (February-March 2008). Concentrations ranged from below the detection limit (0.009 nM) to values as high as 0.125 nM. In the surface mixed layer, labile Fe(II) concentrations were...
A model for seasonal changes in GPS positions and seismic wave speeds due to thermoelastic and hydrologic variations
V.C. Tsai
2011, Journal of Geophysical Research B: Solid Earth (116)
It is known that GPS time series contain a seasonal variation that is not due to tectonic motions, and it has recently been shown that crustal seismic velocities may also vary seasonally. In order to explain these changes, a number of hypotheses have been given, among which thermoelastic and hydrology-induced...
A conduit dilation model of methane venting from lake sediments
B.P. Scandella, C. Varadharajan, Harold F. Hemond, C. Ruppel, R. Juanes
2011, Geophysical Research Letters (38)
Methane is a potent greenhouse gas, but its effects on Earth's climate remain poorly constrained, in part due to uncertainties in global methane fluxes to the atmosphere. An important source of atmospheric methane is the methane generated in organic-rich sediments underlying surface water bodies, including lakes, wetlands, and the ocean....
Projected changes to growth and mortality of Hawaiian corals over the next 100 years
R.K. Hoeke, P. L. Jokiel, R. W. Buddemeier, R.E. Brainard
2011, PLoS ONE (6)
Background: Recent reviews suggest that the warming and acidification of ocean surface waters predicated by most accepted climate projections will lead to mass mortality and declining calcification rates of reef-building corals. This study investigates the use of modeling techniques to quantitatively examine rates of coral cover change due to these...
Nutrient sources and transport in the Missouri River Basin, with emphasis on the effects of irrigation and reservoirs
J.B. Brown, L.A. Sprague, J.A. Dupree
2011, Journal of the American Water Resources Association (47) 1034-1060
SPAtially Referenced Regressions On Watershed attributes (SPARROW) models were used to relate instream nutrient loads to sources and factors influencing the transport of nutrients in the Missouri River Basin. Agricultural inputs from fertilizer and manure were the largest nutrient sources throughout a large part of the basin, although atmospheric and...
Allelopathic cover crop prior to seeding is more important than subsequent grazing/mowing in Grassland establishment
D.G. Milchunas, Mark W. Vandever, L.O. Ball, S. Hyberg
2011, Rangeland Ecology and Management (64) 291-300
The effects of grazing, mowing, and type of cover crop were evaluated in a previous winter wheat–fallow cropland seeded to grassland under the Conservation Reserve Program in eastern Colorado. Prior to seeding, the fallow strips were planted to forage sorghum or wheat in alternating strips (cover crops), with no grazing, moderate to...
Effects of simultaneous climate change and geomorphic evolution on thermal characteristics of a shallow Alaskan lake
Jennifer R. Griffiths, Daniel E. Schindler, Laurie S. Balistrieri, Gregory T. Ruggerone
2011, Limnology and Oceanography (56) 193-205
We used a hydrodynamics model to assess the consequences of climate warming and contemporary geomorphic evolution for thermal conditions in a large, shallow Alaskan lake. We evaluated the effects of both known climate and landscape change, including rapid outlet erosion and migration of the principal inlet stream, over the past...
Landscape drivers of regional variation in the relationship between total phosphorus and chlorophyll in lakes
Tyler Wagner, Patricia A. Soranno, Katherine E. Webster, Kendra Spence Cheruvelil
2011, Freshwater Biology (56) 1811-1824
1. For north temperate lakes, the well-studied empirical relationship between phosphorus (as measured by total phosphorus, TP), the most commonly limiting nutrient and algal biomass (as measured by chlorophyll a, CHL) has been found to vary across a wide range of landscape settings. Variation in the parameters of these TP–CHL regressions has...
Modeling regional coral reef responses to global warming and changes in ocean chemistry: Caribbean case study
R. W. Buddemeier, D.R. Lane, J.A. Martinich
2011, Climatic Change (109) 375-397
Climatic change threatens the future of coral reefs in the Caribbean and the important ecosystem services they provide. We used a simulation model [COMBO (“COral Mortality and Bleaching Output”)] to estimate future coral cover in the part of the eastern Caribbean impacted by a massive coral bleaching event in 2005....
A Comparison of seismic instrument noise coherence analysis techniques
A. T. Ringler, C. R. Hutt, J.R. Evans, L.D. Sandoval
2011, Bulletin of the Seismological Society of America (101) 558-567
The self-noise of a seismic instrument is a fundamental characteristic used to evaluate the quality of the instrument. It is important to be able to measure this self-noise robustly, to understand how differences among test configurations affect the tests, and to understand how different processing techniques and isolation methods (from...
Experimental and simulation studies of iron oxides for geochemical fixation of CO2-SO2 gas mixtures
Susana Garcia, Robert J. Rosenbauer, James Palandri, M. Mercedes Maroto-Valer
2011, Energy Procedia (4) 5108-5113
Iron-bearing minerals are reactive phases of the subsurface environment and could potentially trap CO2–SO2gas mixtures derived from fossil fuel combustion processes by their conversion to siderite (FeCO3) and dissolved sulfate. Changes in fluid and mineral compositions resulting from reactions, involving the co-injection of SO2 with CO2 were observed both theoretically...
Sexual difference in mercury concentrations of lake trout (Salvelinus namaycush) from Lake Ontario
C.P. Madenjian, M.J. Keir, D.M. Whittle
2011, Chemosphere (83) 903-908
We determined total mercury (Hg) concentrations in 50 female lake trout (Salvelinus namaycush) and 69 male lake trout from Lake Ontario (Ontario, Canada and New York, United States). Results showed that, on average, males were 8% higher in Hg concentration than females in Lake Ontario. We also used bioenergetics modeling...
Evidence for mechanical and chemical alteration of iron-nickel meteorites on Mars: Process insights for Meridiani Planum
James W. Ashley, M.P. Golombek, P. R. Christensen, S. W. Squyres, T.J. McCoy, C. Schroder, I. Fleischer, J. R. Johnson, Kenneth E. Herkenhoff, T. J. Parker
2011, Journal of Geophysical Research E: Planets (116)
The weathering of meteorites found on Mars involves chemical and physical processes that can provide clues to climate conditions at the location of their discovery. Beginning on sol 1961, the Opportunity rover encountered three large iron meteorites within a few hundred meters of each other. In order of discovery, these...
Paleoceanographic changes on the Farallon Escarpment off central California during the last 16,000 years
M. McGann
2011, Quaternary International (235) 26-39
New benthic and planktic foraminiferal assemblage census data and Benthic Foraminiferal Oxygen Index (BFOI) values, previously published marine climate proxy data (stable isotopes and Ca/Cd), and unpublished results of total carbon, organic carbon, and calcium carbonate analyses of sediments recovered off central California on the Farallon Escarpment (1605m water depth;...
LiDAR-Assisted identification of an active fault near Truckee, California
L. E. Hunter, J. F. Howle, R.S. Rose, G.W. Bawden
2011, Bulletin of the Seismological Society of America (101) 1162-1181
We use high-resolution (1.5-2.4 points/m2) bare-earth airborne Light Detection and Ranging (LiDAR) imagery to identify, map, constrain, and visualize fault-related geomorphology in densely vegetated terrain surrounding Martis Creek Dam near Truckee, California. Bare-earth LiDAR imagery reveals a previously unrecognized and apparently youthful right-lateral strike-slip fault that exhibits laterally continuous tectonic...
Modeling routes of chronic wasting disease transmission: Environmental prion persistence promotes deer population decline and extinction
Emily S. Almberg, Paul C. Cross, Christopher J. Johnson, Dennis M. Heisey, Bryan J. Richards
2011, PLoS ONE (6)
Chronic wasting disease (CWD) is a fatal disease of deer, elk, and moose transmitted through direct, animal-to-animal contact, and indirectly, via environmental contamination. Considerable attention has been paid to modeling direct transmission, but despite the fact that CWD prions can remain infectious in the environment for years, relatively little information...
A decision-analytic approach to the optimal allocation of resources for endangered species consultation
Sarah J. Converse, Kevin J. Shelley, Steve Morey, Jeffrey Chan, Andrea LaTier, Carolyn Scafidi, Deborah T. Crouse, Michael C. Runge
2011, Biological Conservation (144) 319-329
The resources available to support conservation work, whether time or money, are limited. Decision makers need methods to help them identify the optimal allocation of limited resources to meet conservation goals, and decision analysis is uniquely suited to assist with the development of such methods. In recent years, a number...
Growth rates of rainbow smelt in Lake Champlain: Effects of density and diet
Thomson J.L. Stritzel, D.L. Parrish, S. L. Parker-Stetter, L. G. Rudstam, P.J. Sullivan
2011, Ecology of Freshwater Fish (20) 503-512
We estimated the densities of rainbow smelt (Osmerus mordax) using hydroacoustics and obtained specimens for diet analysis and groundtruthed acoustics data from mid‐water trawl sampling in four areas of Lake Champlain, USA–Canada. Densities of rainbow smelt cohorts alternated during the 2‐year study; age‐0 rainbow smelt were very abundant in 2001...
Lunar mare deposits associated with the Orientale impact basin: New insights into mineralogy, history, mode of emplacement, and relation to Orientale Basin evolution from Moon Mineralogy Mapper (M3) data from Chandrayaan-1
J. Whitten, J.W. Head, M. Staid, C.M. Pieters, J. Mustard, R. Clark, J. Nettles, R.L. Klima, L. Taylor
2011, Journal of Geophysical Research E: Planets (116) 1-33
Moon Mineralogy Mapper (M3) image and spectral reflectance data are combined to analyze mare basalt units in and adjacent to the Orientale multiring impact basin. Models are assessed for the relationships between basin formation and mare basalt emplacement. Mare basalt emplacement on the western nearside limb began prior to the...
The ShakeOut scenario: A hypothetical Mw7.8 earthquake on the Southern San Andreas Fault
K. Porter, L. Jones, D. Cox, J. Goltz, K. Hudnut, D. Mileti, S. Perry, D. Ponti, M. Reichle, A.Z. Rose, C.R. Scawthorn, H.A. Seligson, K.I. Shoaf, J. Treiman, A. Wein
2011, Earthquake Spectra (27) 239-261
In 2008, an earthquake-planning scenario document was released by the U.S. Geological Survey (USGS) and California Geological Survey that hypothesizes the occurrence and effects of a Mw7.8 earthquake on the southern San Andreas Fault. It was created by more than 300 scientists and engineers. Fault offsets reach 13 m and...
Hierarchical modeling of an invasive spread: The eurasian collared-dove streptopelia decaocto in the United States
F. Bled, J. Andrew Royle, E. Cam
2011, Ecological Applications (21) 290-302
Invasive species are regularly claimed as the second threat to biodiversity. To apply a relevant response to the potential consequences associated with invasions (e.g., emphasize management efforts to prevent new colonization or to eradicate the species in places where it has already settled), it is essential to understand invasion mechanisms...
Redefinition of the crater-density and absolute-age boundaries for the chronostratigraphic system of Mars
S.C. Werner, K. L. Tanaka
2011, Icarus (215) 603-607
For the boundaries of each chronostratigraphic epoch on Mars, we present systematically derived crater-size frequencies based on crater counts of geologic referent surfaces and three proposed “standard” crater size–frequency production distributions as defined by (a) a simple −2 power law, (b) Neukum and Ivanov, (c) Hartmann. In turn, these crater...
Detecting post-fire burn severity and vegetation recovery using multitemporal remote sensing spectral indices and field-collected composite burn index data in a ponderosa pine forest
Xuexia Chen, James E. Vogelmann, Matt Rollins, Donald Ohlen, Carl H. Key, Limin Yang, Chengquan Huang, Hua Shi
2011, International Journal of Remote Sensing (32) 7905-7927
It is challenging to detect burn severity and vegetation recovery because of the relatively long time period required to capture the ecosystem characteristics. Multitemporal remote sensing data can providemultitemporal observations before, during and after a wildfire, and can improve the change detection accuracy. The goal of this study is to...
Anthropogenic influences on shoreline and nearshore evolution in the San Francisco Bay coastal system
K.L. Dallas, P.L. Barnard
2011, Estuarine, Coastal and Shelf Science (92) 195-204
Analysis of four historical bathymetric surveys over a 132-year period has revealed significant changes to the morphology of the San Francisco Bar, an ebb-tidal delta at the mouth of San Francisco Bay estuary. From 1873 to 2005 the San Francisco Bar vertically-eroded an average of 80 cm over a 125...
Managing and learning with multiple models: Objectives and optimization algorithms
William J. M. Probert, C.E. Hauser, E. McDonald-Madden, M.C. Runge, P.W.J. Baxter, H.P. Possingham
2011, Biological Conservation (144) 1237-1245
The quality of environmental decisions should be gauged according to managers' objectives. Management objectives generally seek to maximize quantifiable measures of system benefit, for instance population growth rate. Reaching these goals often requires a certain degree of learning about the system. Learning can occur by using management action in combination...