Native and exotic plants of fragments of sagebrush steppe produced by geomorphic processes versus land use
N. Huntly, R. Bangert, S.E. Hanser
2011, Plant Ecology (212) 1549-1561
Habitat fragmentation and invasion by exotic species are regarded as major threats to the biodiversity of many ecosystems. We surveyed the plant communities of two types of remnant sagebrush-steppe fragments from nearby areas on the Snake River Plain of southeastern Idaho, USA. One type resulted from land use (conversion to...
Pseudospectral modeling and dispersion analysis of Rayleigh waves in viscoelastic media
K. Zhang, Y. Luo, J. Xia, C. Chen
2011, Soil Dynamics and Earthquake Engineering (31) 1332-1337
Multichannel Analysis of Surface Waves (MASW) is one of the most widely used techniques in environmental and engineering geophysics to determine shear-wave velocities and dynamic properties, which is based on the elastic layered system theory. Wave propagation in the Earth, however, has been recognized as viscoelastic and the propagation of...
The role of model dynamics in ensemble Kalman filter performance for chaotic systems
G.-H.C. Ng, D. McLaughlin, D. Entekhabi, A. Ahanin
2011, Tellus, Series A: Dynamic Meteorology and Oceanography (63) 958-977
The ensemble Kalman filter (EnKF) is susceptible to losing track of observations, or ‘diverging’, when applied to large chaotic systems such as atmospheric and ocean models. Past studies have demonstrated the adverse impact of sampling error during the filter’s update step. We examine how system dynamics affect EnKF performance, and...
Simulation of branched serial first-order decay of atrazine and metabolites in adapted and nonadapted soils
R. M. Webb, Mark W. Sandstrom, L.J. Krutz, D. L. Shaner
2011, Environmental Toxicology and Chemistry (30) 1973-1981
In the present study a branched serial first‐order decay (BSFOD) model is presented and used to derive transformation rates describing the decay of a common herbicide, atrazine, and its metabolites observed in unsaturated soils adapted to previous atrazine applications and in soils with no history of atrazine applications. Calibration of...
Interactions between natural-occurring landscape conditions and land use influencing the abundance of riverine smallmouth bass, micropterus dolomieu
S.K. Brewer, C.F. Rabeni
2011, Canadian Journal of Fisheries and Aquatic Sciences (68) 1922-1933
This study examined how interactions between natural landscape features and land use influenced the abundance of smallmouth bass, Micropterus dolomieu, in Missouri, USA, streams. Stream segments were placed into one of four groups based on natural-occurring watershed characteristics (soil texture and soil permeability) predicted to relate to smallmouth bass abundance....
Assessing the detail needed to capture rainfall-runoff dynamics with physics-based hydrologic response simulation
B.B. Mirus, B.A. Ebel, C.S. Heppner, K. Loague
2011, Water Resources Research (47)
Concept development simulation with distributed, physics-based models provides a quantitative approach for investigating runoff generation processes across environmental conditions. Disparities within data sets employed to design and parameterize boundary value problems used in heuristic simulation inevitably introduce various levels of bias. The objective was to evaluate the impact of boundary...
Analysis of dispersion and attenuation of surface waves in poroelastic media in the exploration-seismic frequency band
Y. Zhang, Y. Xu, J. Xia
2011, Geophysical Journal International (187) 871-888
We analyse dispersion and attenuation of surface waves at free surfaces of possible vacuum/poroelastic media: permeable-‘open pore’, impermeable-‘closed pore’ and partially permeable boundaries, which have not been previously reported in detail by researchers, under different surface-permeable, viscous-damping, elastic and fluid-flowing conditions. Our discussion is focused on their characteristics in...
Loss of volatile hydrocarbons from an LNAPL oil source
Mary Jo Baedecker, Robert P. Eganhouse, Barbara A. Bekins, Geoffrey N. Delin
2011, Journal of Contaminant Hydrology (126) 140-152
The light nonaqueous phase liquid (LNAPL) oil pool in an aquifer that resulted from a pipeline spill near Bemidji, Minnesota, was analyzed for volatile hydrocarbons (VHCs) to determine if the composition of the oil remains constant over time. Oil samples were obtained from wells at five locations in the oil...
Geochemistry of environmentally sensitive trace elements in Permian coals from the Huainan coalfield, Anhui, China
J. Chen, Gaisheng Liu, M. Jiang, C. L. Chou, H. Li, B. Wu, Lingyun Zheng, D. Jiang
2011, International Journal of Coal Geology (88) 41-54
To study the geochemical characteristics of 11 environmentally sensitive trace elements in the coals of the Permian Period from the Huainan coalfield, Anhui province, China, borehole samples of 336 coals, two partings, and four roof and floor mudstones were collected from mineable coal seams. Major elements and selected trace elements were determined by inductively coupled plasma optical emission spectrometry (ICP-OES), inductively coupled...
Mortality of Siberian polecats and black-footed ferrets released onto prairie dog colonies
E. Biggins, B.J. Miller, Louis R. Hanebury, R. A. Powell
2011, Journal of Mammalogy (92) 721-731
Black-footed ferrets (Mustela nigripes) likely were extirpated from the wild in 1985–1986, and their repatriation depends on captive breeding and reintroduction. Postrelease survival of animals can be affected by behavioral changes induced by captivity. We released neutered Siberian polecats (M. eversmanii), close relatives of ferrets, in 1989–1990 on black-tailed prairie...
Monitoring and inversion on land subsidence over mining area with InSAR technique
Y. Wang, Q. Zhang, C. Zhao, Z. Lu, X. Ding
2011, Conference Paper, Proceedings of SPIE - The International Society for Optical Engineering
The Wulanmulun town, located in Inner Mongolia, is one of the main mining areas of Shendong Company such as Shangwan coal mine and Bulianta coal mine, which has been suffering serious mine collapse with the underground mine withdrawal. We use ALOS/PALSAR data to extract land deformation under these regions, in...
Late Pleistocene dune activity in the central Great Plains, USA
J.A. Mason, J. B. Swinehart, P.R. Hanson, D.B. Loope, R.J. Goble, X. Miao, R.L. Schmeisser
2011, Quaternary Science Reviews (30) 3858-3870
Stabilized dunes of the central Great Plains, especially the megabarchans and large barchanoid ridges of the Nebraska Sand Hills, provide dramatic evidence of late Quaternary environmental change. Episodic Holocene dune activity in this region is now well-documented, but Late Pleistocene dune mobility has remained poorly documented, despite early interpretations of...
Implementation and modification of a three-dimensional radiation stress formulation for surf zone and rip-current applications
N. Kumar, G. Voulgaris, John C. Warner
2011, Coastal Engineering (58) 1097-1117
Regional Ocean Modeling System (ROMS v 3.0), a three-dimensional numerical ocean model, was previously enhanced for shallow water applications by including wave-induced radiation stress forcing provided through coupling to wave propagation models (SWAN, REF/DIF). This enhancement made it suitable for surf zone applications as demonstrated using examples of obliquely incident...
Comparison of two methods used to model shape parameters of Pareto distributions
C. Liu, Ronald R. Charpentier, J. Su
2011, Mathematical Geosciences (43) 847-859
Two methods are compared for estimating the shape parameters of Pareto field-size (or pool-size) distributions for petroleum resource assessment. Both methods assume mature exploration in which most of the larger fields have been discovered. Both methods use the sizes of larger discovered fields to estimate the numbers and sizes of...
Controls on large landslide distribution and implications for the geomorphic evolution of the southern interior Columbia River basin
E.B. Safran, S.W. Anderson, M. Mills-Novoa, P.K. House, L. Ely
2011, Geological Society of America Bulletin (123) 1851-1862
Large landslides (>0.1 km2) are important agents of geomorphic change. While most common in rugged mountain ranges, large landslides can also be widespread in relatively low-relief (several 100 m) terrain, where their distribution has been relatively little studied. A fuller understanding of the role of large landslides in landscape evolution...
An equation of state for hypersaline water in Great Salt Lake, Utah, USA
D. L. Naftz, F.J. Millero, B.F. Jones, W. R. Green
2011, Aquatic Geochemistry (17) 809-820
Great Salt Lake (GSL) is one of the largest and most saline lakes in the world. In order to accurately model limnological processes in GSL, hydrodynamic calculations require the precise estimation of water density (ρ) under a variety of environmental conditions. An equation of state was developed with water samples...
Short-term survival and effects of transmitter implantation into western grebes using a modified surgical procedure
Joseph K. Gaydos, J. Gregory Massey, Daniel M. Mulcahy, Lori A. Gaskins, David Nysewander, Joseph Evenson, Paul B. Siegel, Michael H. Ziccardi
2011, Journal of Zoo and Wildlife Medicine (42) 414-425
Two pilot trials and one study in a closely related grebe species suggest that Western grebes (Aechmophorus occidentalis) will not tolerate intracoelomic transmitter implantation with percutaneous antennae and often die within days of surgery. Wild Western grebes (n = 21) were captured to evaluate a modified surgical technique. Seven birds...
Prototyping an online wetland ecosystem services model using open model sharing standards
M. Feng, S. Liu, N.H. Euliss, Caitlin Young, D.M. Mushet
2011, Environmental Modelling and Software (26) 458-468
Great interest currently exists for developing ecosystem models to forecast how ecosystem services may change under alternative land use and climate futures. Ecosystem services are diverse and include supporting services or functions (e.g., primary production, nutrient cycling), provisioning services (e.g., wildlife, groundwater), regulating services (e.g., water purification, floodwater retention), and...
A multispecies framework for landscape conservation planning
W.S. Schwenk, T.M. Donovan
2011, Conservation Biology (25) 1010-1021
Rapidly changing landscapes have spurred the need for quantitative methods for conservation assessment and planning that encompass large spatial extents. We devised and tested a multispecies framework for conservation planning to complement single‐species assessments and ecosystem‐level approaches. Our framework consisted of 4 elements: sampling to effectively estimate population parameters, measuring...
The dark side of the hyporheic zone: Depth profiles of nitrogen and its processing in stream sediments
R.S. Stelzer, L.A. Bartsch, W. B. Richardson, E.A. Strauss
2011, Freshwater Biology (56) 2021-2033
1. Although it is well known that sediments can be hot spots for nitrogen transformation in streams, many previous studies have confined measurements of denitrification and nitrate retention to shallow sediments (<5 cm deep). We determined the extent of nitrate processing in deeper sediments of a sand plains stream (Emmons Creek)...
Fluoride geochemistry of thermal waters in Yellowstone National Park: I. Aqueous fluoride speciation
Y. Deng, D. Kirk Nordstrom, R. Blaine McCleskey
2011, Geochimica et Cosmochimica Acta (75) 4476-4489
Thermal water samples from Yellowstone National Park (YNP) have a wide range of pH (1–10), temperature, and high concentrations of fluoride (up to 50 mg/l). High fluoride concentrations are found in waters with field pH higher than 6 (except those in Crater Hills) and temperatures higher than 50 °C based on data...
Sparrow modeling to understand water-quality conditions in major regions of the United States: A featured collection introduction
S. D. Preston, R. B. Alexander, D.M. Wolock
2011, Journal of the American Water Resources Association (47) 887-890
No abstract available....
Investigating the spatial distribution of water levels in the Mackenzie Delta using airborne LiDAR
C. Hopkinson, N. Crasto, P. Marsh, D. Forbes, L. Lesack
2011, Hydrological Processes (25) 2995-3011
Airborne light detection and ranging (LiDAR) data were used to map water level (WL) and hydraulic gradients (δH/δx) in the Mackenzie Delta. The LiDAR WL data were validated against eight independent hydrometric gauge measurements and demonstrated mean offsets from − 0·22 to + 0·04 m (σ< 0·11). LiDAR‐based WL gradients...
Hillslope chemical weathering across Paraná, Brazil: a data mining-GIS hybrid approach
Fabio Iwashita, Michael J. Friedel, Carlos Roberto de Souza Filho, Stephen J. Fraser
2011, Geomorphology (132) 167-175
Self-organizing map (SOM) and geographic information system (GIS) models were used to investigate the nonlinear relationships associated with geochemical weathering processes at local (~100 km2) and regional (~50,000 km2) scales. The data set consisted of 1) 22 B-horizon soil variables: P, C, pH, Al, total acidity, Ca, Mg, K, total cation exchange...
Nutrient loadings to streams of the Continental United States from municipal and industrial effluent
M.A. Maupin, T. Ivahnenko
2011, Journal of the American Water Resources Association (47) 950-964
Data from the United States Environmental Protection Agency Permit Compliance System national database were used to calculate annual total nitrogen (TN) and total phosphorus (TP) loads to surface waters from municipal and industrial facilities in six major regions of the United States for 1992, 1997, and 2002. Concentration and effluent...