Scientific integrity issues in environmental toxicology and chemistry: Improving research transparency, reproducibility, and credibility
Christopher A. Mebane, Anne Fairbrother, Thomas Augspurger, Timothy J. Canfield, William Goodfellow, Patrick Guiney, Anne LeHuray, Lorraine Maltby, David Mayfield, Michael McLaughlin, Lisa Ortego, Tamar Schlekat, Richard P. Scroggins, John Sumpter, Tim Verslycke
2019, Integrated Environmental Assessment and Management (15) 320-344
High‐profile reports of detrimental scientific practices leading to retractions in the scientific literature contribute to lack of trust in scientific experts. Although the bulk of these have been in the literature of other disciplines, environmental toxicology and chemistry are not free from problems. While we believe that egregious misconduct such...
Main stem and off-channel habitat use by juvenile Chinook salmon in a sub-Arctic riverscape
Brock M. Huntsman, Jeffrey A. Falke
2019, Freshwater Biology (64) 433-446
Poor growth and survival in freshwater and marine environments have been implicated as responsible for Chinook salmon (Oncorhynchus tshawytscha) declines across Alaska.Lateral connectivity of river main stems with off-channel habitats may play an integral role in sustaining Alaskan salmonid populations because off-channel habitats commonly provide greater growth opportunities than...
Warming effects of spring rainfall increase methane emissions from thawing permafrost
Rebecca B. Neumann, C.J. Moorberg, J.D. Lundquist, J.C. Turner, Mark P. Waldrop, Jack W. McFarland, E.S. Euskirchen, C.W. Edgar, M. R. Turetsky
2019, Geophysical Research Letters (46) 1393-1401
Methane emissions regulate the near‐term global warming potential of permafrost thaw, particularly where loss of ice‐rich permafrost converts forest and tundra into wetlands. Northern latitudes are expected to get warmer and wetter, and while there is consensus that warming will increase thaw and methane emissions, effects of increased precipitation are...
Geochemical and petrological diversity of mafic magmas from Mount St. Helens
Maren Wanke, Olivier Bachmann, Albrecht von Quadt Wykradt-Huchtenbruck, Torsten W. Vennemann, Michael A. Clynne
2019, Contributions to Mineralogy and Petrology (174)
Quaternary eruptive products in the Cascade arc include a variety of different basalt types. At Mount St. Helens (MSH), the most active volcano in the Cascades throughout the last 35 ka, three different mafic endmembers erupted at the end of the Castle Creek period (1900–1700 years B.P.): (1) high-field strength element (HFSE)-rich...
Multiple approaches to surface water quality assessment provide insight for small streams experiencing oil and natural gas development
Annika W. Walters, Carlin Girard, Richard H. Walker, Aida Farag, David A. Alvarez
2019, Integrated Environmental Assessment and Management (15) 385-397
Historic, current, and future oil and natural gas development can affect water quality in streams flowing through developed areas. We compared small stream drainages in a semi-arid landscape with varying amounts of disturbance from oil and natural gas development to examine potential effects of this development on surface water quality....
Landscape evolution of a fluvial sediment-rich Avicennia marina mangrove forest: Insights from seasonal and inter-annual surface-elevation dynamics
Andrew Swales, Glen Reeve, Donald R. Cahoon, Catherine Lovelock
2019, Ecosystems (22) 1232-1255
Mangrove forests are vulnerable to accelerated sea-level rise associated with climate warming because they occupy a relatively narrow zone on the mid-to-upper-intertidal flats. The fate of these ecosystems largely depends on their capacity to accrete sediment at a rate sufficient to maintain their elevation relative to sea level. We investigated...
Gradients in fish feeding guilds along a reservoir cascade
Leandro E. Miranda, R.V. Granzotti, D.J. Dembkowski
2019, Aquatic Sciences (81)
The river continuum concept predicts a longitudinal gradient in the structure and functioning of rivers. Impoundments potentially change this continuum by reorganizing nutrient transport and storage in the system. To determine if predictions made by the river continuum concept relative to fish assemblage trophic structure hold for a temperate river...
The NASA Roadmap to Ocean Worlds
A. Noble Hendrix, T. Hurford, L.M. Barge, Michael T. Bland, J.S. Bowman, W. Brinckerhoff, B. J. Buratti, M. Cable, J. C. Castillo-Rogez, G. C. Collins, S. Diniega, C.R. German, A.G. Hayes, T.M. Hoehler, S. Mehran Hosseini, C. Howett, A.S. McEwen, C. Neish, M. Neveu, T.A. Nordheim, G.W. Patterson, Donald A. Patthoff, C. Phillips, A. Rhoden, B. Schmidt, K. Singer, J. M. Soderblom, S.D. Vance
2019, Astrobiology (19)
In this article, we summarize the work of the NASA Outer Planets Assessment Group (OPAG) Roadmaps to Ocean Worlds (ROW) group. The aim of this group is to assemble the scientific framework that will guide the exploration of ocean worlds, and to identify and prioritize science objectives...
Late-Quaternary vegetation, climate, and fire history of the Southeast Atlantic Coastal Plain based on a 30,000-yr multiple-proxy record from White Pond, South Carolina (USA)
Teresa R. Krause, James M. Russell, Rui Zhang, John W. Williams, Stephen Jackson
2019, Quaternary Research 861-880
The patterns and drivers of late Quaternary vegetation dynamics in the southeastern United States are poorly understood due to low site density, problematic chronologies, and a paucity of independent paleoclimate proxy records. We present a well-dated (15 accelerator mass spectrometry 14C dates)...
A preliminary report of ongoing research of the ecology of Black-capped Petrel (Pterodroma hasitata) in Sierra de Bahoruco, Dominican Republic – I: GPS tracking of breeding adults
Yvan G. Satge, Ernst Rupp, Patrick G.R. Jodice
2019, Report
The Black-capped Petrel (also known regionally as Diablotin) is a gadfly petrel endemic to the Caribbean. Population estimates based on at-sea observations range from 2,000 to 4,000 individuals, with a fragmented breeding population estimated at 500 to 1,000 pairs. At sea, the expansive marine range of the species exposes it...
Natural resource management decision-making under climate uncertainty: Building social-ecological resilience in southwestern Colorado
Nina Burkardt, Marcie Bidwell, Katherine Clifford, Betsy Neely, Patricia Orth, Imtiaz Rangwala, Renee Rondeau, Carina Wyborn, Laurie Yung
2019, Report
The goal of this project was to facilitate climate change adaptation that contributes to social-ecological resilience, ecosystem and species conservation, and sustainable human communities in southwestern Colorado. The team developed and piloted integrated adaptation planning tools and principles that merge the strengths of the iterative scenario process, the Adaptation for...
Demographic and genetic description of Greenland’s only indigenous Atlantic salmon Salmo salar population
Jo Vegar Arnekleiv, Jan Grimsrud Davidsen, Timothy F Sheehan, Sarah J Lehnert, Ian R Bradbury, L Ronning, Aslak Darre Sjursen, G Kjaerstad, Barbara A. Lubinski, Kjell J Nilssen
2019, Journal of Fish Biology (94) 154-164
A survey of the Kapisillit River system was conducted in 2005 and 2012 to study the only indigenous Atlantic salmon Salmo salar population in Greenland. Little is known about its characteristics or its relationship with other S. salar populations across the species range. Juvenile S. salar were captured in all...
Quarterly wildlife mortality report January 2019
Bryan J. Richards, Barbara L. Bodenstein, Robert J. Dusek, Tonie E. Rocke, Katherine L. D. Richgels
2019, Wildlife Disease Association Newsletter 22-23
The USGS National Wildlife Health Center (NWHC) Quarterly Mortality Report provides brief summaries of epizootic mortality and morbidity events by quarter. The write-ups, highlighting epizootic events and other wildlife disease topics of interest, are published in the Wildlife Disease Association quarterly newsletter. A link is provided in this WDA newsletter...
Eruption and fountaining dynamics of selected 1985–1986 high fountaining episodes at Kīlauea volcano, Hawai'i, from quantitative vesicle microtexture analysis
S. J. Holt, R. J. Carey, B. F. Houghton, Tim R. Orr, J. McPhie, S. Feig
2019, Journal of Volcanology and Geothermal Research (369) 21-34
Tephra from the early Hawaiian fountaining episodes of the ongoing eruption of Pu'u 'Ō'ō in the East Rift Zone (ERZ) of Kīlauea provides an opportunity to study the vesicle microtextures of pyroclasts erupted from a single vent over a prolonged period of time. We report the results of microtextural analysis of pyroclasts from...
Trophic plasticity and the invasion of a renowned piscivore: A diet synthesis of northern pike (Esox lucius) from the native and introduced ranges in Alaska, U.S.A.
C. Nathan Cathcart, Kristine J. Dunker, Thomas P. Quinn, Adam J. Sepulveda, Frank A. von Hippel, Andrew Wizik, Daniel Young, Peter A.H. Westley
2019, Biological Invasions (21) 1379-1392
The invasion of non-native fishes is a leading cause of extinction and imperilment of native freshwater fishes. Evidence suggests that introduced species with generalist diets have the potential for greatest impacts through competition and predation even though populations are often comprised of specialist individuals. The northern pike (Esox lucius), a...
Satellite tracking of hawksbill turtles nesting at Buck Island Reef National Monument, US Virgin Islands: Inter-nesting and foraging period movements and migrations
Kristen M. Hart, Autumn Iverson, Allison Benscoter, Ikuko Fujisaki, Michael S. Cherkiss, Clayton Pollock, Ian Lundgren, Zandy Hillis-Starr
2019, Biological Conservation (229) 1-13
To conserve imperiled marine species, an understanding of high-density use zones is necessary prior to designing and evaluating management strategies that improve their survival. We satellite-tracked turtles captured after nesting at Buck Island ReefNational Monument (BIRNM), St. Croix, US Virgin Islands to determine habitat-use patterns of endangered adult female hawksbills (Eretmochelys imbricata). For 31 turtles captured between 2011 and 2014,...
Economic Impacts of Restoration in National Parks
Catherine Cullinane Thomas, Noah Van Gilder, Mark VanMouwerik
2019, Report
The National Park Service’s (NPS) Resource Protection Branch (RPB) works with parks under the authority of the System Unit Resource Protection Act (SURPA) and the Oil Pollution Act, among others, to conduct damage assessment and restoration activities for NPS resources that have been injured. Funds used for restoration support jobs...
Thermal, deformation, and degassing remote sensing time-series (A.D. 2000-2017) at the 47 most active volcanoes in Latin America: Implications for volcanic systems
Kevin Reath, Matthew Pritchard, Michael P. Poland, F. Delgado, S. Carn, D. Coppola, B. J. Andrews, S.K. Ebmeier, M. Elise Rumpf, S. Henderson, S. Baker, P. Lundgren, R. Erik Wright, J. Biggs, T. Lopez, C. Wauthier, S. Moruzzi, A. Alcott, Rick Wessels, Julia P. Griswold, Sarah E. Ogburn, S. C. Loughlin, F. Meyer, R. Greg Vaughan, M. Bagnardi
2019, Journal of Geophysical Research (124) 195-218
Volcanoes are hazardous to local and global populations, but only a fraction are continuously monitored by ground-based sensors. For example, in Latin America, more than 60% of Holocene volcanoes are unmonitored, meaning long-term multi-parameter datasets of volcanic activity are rare and sparse. We use satellite observations of degassing, thermal anomalies,...
The shifting saltmarsh-mangrove ecotone in Australasia and the Americas
Neil Saintilan, Kerrylee Rogers, Karen L. McKee
2019, Book chapter, Coastal wetlands: an integrated ecosystem approach (second edition)
Mangroves and saltmarshes coexist in the intertidal wetlands of many temperate and subtropical coastlines. In these settings, mangroves may be close to physiological limits of tolerance in relation to a range of environmental variables, including temperature, salinity, aridity, and inundation frequency. Changes in the distribution of mangrove and saltmarsh might...
Erratics and other evidence of late Wisconsin Missoula outburst floods in lower Wenatchee and Columbia valleys, Washington
Richard B. Waitt, William Long, Kelsay M. Stanton
2019, Northwest Science (92) 318-337
The Pleistocene Missoula floods through eastern and central Washington are by peak flow rate (discharge) the greatest freshwater cataclysms known on Earth. Newly explored features along the Wenatchee reach of Columbia valley give new evidence and revise earlier interpretations of size, frequency, and routing of megafloods.Crystalline-rock erratics...
Exploring relationships of spring green-up to moisture and temperature across Wyoming, U.S.A
Jesslyn F. Brown, Lei Ji, Alisa L. Gallant, Matthew J. Kauffman
2019, International Journal of Remote Sensing (40) 956-984
Vegetation green-up signals the timing of available nutritious plants and shrubs providing high-quality forage for ungulates. In this study, we characterized spatial and temporal patterns of spring phenology and explored how they were related to preceding temperature and moisture conditions. We tested correlations between late winter weather and indicators of...
Using remote sensing to quantify ecosystem site potential community structure and deviation in the Great Basin, United States
Matthew B. Rigge, Collin G. Homer, Bruce K. Wylie, Yingxin Gu, Hua Shi, George Z. Xian, Debra K. Meyer, Brett Bunde
2019, Ecological Indicators (96) 516-531
The semi-arid Great Basin region in the Northwest U.S. is impacted by a suite of change agents including fire, grazing, and climate variability to which native vegetation can have low resilience and resistance. Assessing ecosystem condition in relation to these change agents is difficult due to a lack of a...
Conceptualizing ecological responses to dam removal: If you remove it, what's to come?
J. Ryan Bellmore, George R. Pess, Jeffrey J. Duda, Jim E. O'Connor, Amy E. East, Melissa M. Foley, Andrew C. Wilcox, Jon J. Major, Patrick B. Shafroth, Sarah A. Morley, Christopher S. Magirl, Chauncey W. Anderson, James E. Evans, Christian E. Torgersen, Laura S. Craig
2019, BioScience (69) 26-39
One of the desired outcomes of dam decommissioning and removal is the recovery of aquatic and riparian ecosystems. To investigate this common objective, we synthesized information from empirical studies and ecological theory into conceptual models that depict key physical and biological links driving ecological responses to removing dams. We define...
Volcanic ash resuspension from the Katmai Region
Kristi L. Wallace, Hans Schwaiger
2019, Park Science
Volcanic ash is not only a hazard during an eruptive event; in strong winds, previously deposited loose volcanic ash can be picked up and reworked into dust clouds. Resuspension and transport of fine-grained volcanic ash from Katmai National Park and Preserve, Alaska has been observed and documented many times over...
Recent outer-shelf foraminiferal assemblages on the Carnarvon Ramp and Northwestern Shelf of Western Australia
Christian Haller, Pamela Hallock, Albert C. Hine, Christopher G. Smith
2019, Book chapter, Geologic problem solving with microfossils IV
The carbonate sediments of the Western Australian shelf in the Indian Ocean host diverse assemblages of benthic foraminifera. Environments of the shelf are dominated by the southward-flowing Leeuwin Current, which impacts near-surface circulation and influences biogeographic ranges of Indo-Pacific warm-water foraminifera. Analyses of outer ramp to upper slope sediments (127–264...