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Publication Extents

Not all publications have extents, not all extents are completely accurate
Lake sediment fecal and biomass burning biomarkers provide direct evidence for prehistoric human-lit fires in New Zealand
Elena Argiriadis, Dario Battistel, David B. McWethy, Marco Vecchiato, Torben Kirchgeorg, Natalie M. Kehrwald, Cathy Whitlock, Janet M. Wilmshurst, Carlo Barbante
2018, Scientific Reports (8)
Deforestation associated with the initial settlement of New Zealand is a dramatic example of how humans can alter landscapes through fire. However, evidence linking early human presence and land-cover change is inferential in most continental sites. We employed a multi-proxy approach to reconstruct anthropogenic land use in New Zealand’s South...
Efficiency of sampling sunfishes using snorkeling in clear, warmwater streams of the south-central United States
Robert Mollenhauer, Shannon K. Brewer
2018, Journal of Fish and Wildlife Management (9) 602-609
The continued evaluation of fish-sampling gears and methods is essential to identify their applicability across environmental conditions and among species. Although limited by visibility, snorkeling has potential advantages relative to other fish-sampling gears in wadeable streams (e.g., minimally intrusive, cost effective, and appropriate in deeper areas). Clear water is common...
Probabilistic models of seafloor composition using multispectral acoustic backscatter: The benthic detectorists
Daniel D. Buscombe, Paul E. Grams, Matthew Kaplinski
2018, Conference Paper
We describe and compare two probabilistic models for task-specific seafloor characterization based on multispectral backscatter. We examine whether generative or discriminative approaches to supervised seafloor characterization do better at harnessing the greatly increased information about seafloor substrate composition that is encoded in the backscattering response across multiple frequencies. A Gaussian mixture model (GMM) is proposed as a...
Liverworts from Attu Island, Near Islands, Aleutian Islands, Alaska (USA) with comparison to the Commander Islands (Russia)
Stephen S. Talbot, Wilfred B. Schofield, Jiri Vana, Sandra L. Talbot
2018, Botanica Pacifica (7) 127-141
The liverwort flora of Attu Island, the westernmost Aleutian Island in the United States, was studied to assess species diversity in the hyperoceanic sector of the northern boreal subzone. The field study was undertaken in sites selected to represent a spectrum of environmental variation, primarily within the eastern part of...
Promoting synergy in the innovative use of environmental data—Workshop summary
Healy Hamilton, Gerald F. Guala, Annie Simpson
2018, Open-File Report 2018-1104
From December 2 to 4, 2015, NatureServe and the U.S. Geological Survey organized and hosted a biodiversity and ecological informatics workshop at the U.S. Department of the Interior in Washington, D.C. The workshop objective was to identify user-driven future directions and areas of collaboration in advanced applications of environmental data...
Herbicides and herbivory interact to drive plant community and crop‐tree establishment
Thomas D. Stokely, Jake Verschuyl, Joan Hagar, Matthew G. Betts
2018, Ecological Applications (28) 2011-2023
Land management practices often directly alter vegetation structure and composition, but the degree to which ecological processes such as herbivory interact with management to influence biodiversity is less well understood. We hypothesized that large herbivores compound the effects of intensive forest management on early seral plant communities and plantation establishment...
Field evaluation of carbon dioxide as a fish deterrent at a water management structure along the Illinois River
Aaron R. Cupp, Justin Smerud, John Tix, Susan M. Schleis, Kim T. Fredricks, Richard A. Erickson, Jon Amberg, William S. Morrow, Carolyn M. Koebel, Elizabeth A. Murphy, Chad Vishy, K. Douglas Blodgett
2018, Management of Biological Invasions (9) 299-308
Construction of a water management structure (WMS) in the levee surrounding The Nature Conservancy’s Emiquon Preserve (Havana, Illinois, USA) created a new hydrological connection and potential aquatic invasive species pathway between the Illinois River and a large conservation wetland complex. Site managers need a control tool that deters the upstream...
An interferometric synthetic aperture radar (InSAR) habitat suitability model to identify overwinter conditions for coregonine whitefishes in Arctic lagoons
Marguerite Tibbles, Jeffrey A. Falke, Andrew R. Mahoney, Martin D. Robards, Andrew C. Seitz
2018, Transactions of the American Fisheries Society (147) 1167-1178
Lagoons provide critical habitats for many fishes, including coregonine whitefishes, which are a mainstay in many subsistence fisheries of rural communities in Arctic Alaska. Despite their importance, little is known about the overwintering habits of whitefishes in Arctic Alaska due to the challenges associated with sampling during winter. We developed...
An evaluation of three fish surveys in the San Francisco Estuary, 1995–2015
James Peterson, Miguel F. Barajas
2018, San Francisco Estuary and Watershed Science (16)
Resource managers rely on long-term monitoring surveys conducted in the San Francisco Estuary to evaluate the status and trends of resident fish populations in this important region. These surveys are potentially confounded because of the incomplete detection of individuals and species, the magnitude of which is often related to the...
Near-solidus melts of MORB + 4 wt% H2O at 0.8 – 2.8 GPa applied to issues of subduction magmatism and continent formation
Thomas W. Sisson, Peter B. Kelemen
2018, Contributions to Mineralogy and Petrology (173)
Experiments on MORB + 4 wt% H2O at 0.8–2.8 GPa and 700–950 °C (Liu in High pressure phase equilibria involving the amphibolite–eclogite transformation. PhD dissertation, Stanford University, Stanford, California, 1997; Liu et al. in Earth Planet Sci Lett 143:161–171, 1996) were reexamined for their major and trace element melt compositions and melting relations. Degree of...
Millennial soil retention of terrestrial organic matter deposited in the Bengal Fan
Katherine L. French, Christopher Hein, Negar Haghipour, Lukas Wacker, Hermann Kudrass, Timothy Eglinton, Valier Galy
2018, Scientific Reports (8) 1-8
The abundance of organic carbon (OC) in vegetation and soils (~2,600 PgC) compared to carbon in the atmosphere (~830 PgC) highlights the importance of terrestrial OC in global carbon budgets. The residence time of OC in continental reservoirs, which sets the rates of carbon exchange between land and atmosphere, represents...
Biological and ecological science for Ohio—The Buckeye State
U.S. Geological Survey
2018, Fact Sheet 2018-3034
Ohio is home to lakes, rivers, streams, wetlands, forests, prairies, and 312 miles of Lake Erie shoreline. These resources sustain Ohio’s communities by supporting vital sectors of the economy and cultural heritage such as fishing, hunting, and other outdoor recreation. Lake Erie provides drinking water for 3 million Ohioans,...
Macrobenthic infaunal communities associated with deep‐sea hydrocarbon seeps in the northern Gulf of Mexico
Travis W. Washburn, Amanda W.J. Demopoulos, Paul A. Montagna
2018, Marine Ecology (39)
There are thousands of seeps in the deep ocean worldwide; however, many questions remain about their contributions to global biodiversity and the surrounding deep‐sea environment. In addition to being globally distributed, seeps provide several benefits to humans such as unique habitats, organisms with novel genes, and carbon regulation. The purpose...
State-level freshwater mussel programs: Current status and a research framework to aid in mussel management and conservation
Kristen L. Bouska, Amanda E. Rosenberger, Stephen E. McMurray, Garth A. Lindner, Kayla N. Key
2018, Fisheries (43) 345-360
Despite increased focus on their ecology and conservation, freshwater mussels remain one of the most imperiled groups of aquatic organisms. We documented current management actions, resources, and challenges in managing freshwater mussels in the United States through a survey of state natural resource agencies. Approximately 85% of surveyed states (N = 40)...
Classifying physiographic regimes on terrain and hydrologic factors for adaptive generalization of stream networks
Larry V. Stanislawski, Michael P. Finn, Barbara P. Buttenfield
2018, International Journal of Cartography (1) 4-21
Automated generalization software must accommodate multi-scale representations of hydrographic networks across a variety of geographic landscapes, because scale-related hydrography differences are known to vary in different physical conditions. While generalization algorithms have been tailored to specific regions and landscape conditions by several researchers in recent years, the selection and characterization...
Stream‐centric methods for determining groundwater contributions in karst mountain watersheds
Bethany Neilson, Hyrum Tennant, Michelle Barnes, Trinity Stout, Matthew P. Miller, Rachel S. Gabor, Yusef Jameel, Mallory Millington, Andrew Gelderloos, Gabriel J. Bowen, Paul D. Brooks
2018, Water Resources Research (54) 6708-6724
Climate change influences on mountain hydrology are uncertain, but likely to be mediated through changes in subsurface hydrologic residence times and flowpaths. The heterogeneity of karst aquifers add complexity in assessing the resiliency of these water sources to perturbation, suggesting a clear need to quantify contributions from and losses to...
Effect of spatial and temporal scale on simulated groundwater recharge investigations
Fred D. Tillman, Tom Pruitt, Subhrendu Gangopadhyay
2018, Advances in Water Resources (119) 257-270
Hydrologic model input datasets such as climate, land use, elevation, soil, and geology information are available in a range of scales for use in water resources investigations. Smaller spatial and temporal scale input data allow groundwater recharge models to simulate more physically realistic processes and presumably result in more accurate...
Implications of spatially variable costs and habitat conversion risk in landscape-scale conservation planning
Max Post van der Burg, Neil Chartier, Ryan G. Drum
2018, Journal of Fish and Wildlife Management (9) 402-414
“Strategic habitat conservation” refers to a process used by the U.S. Fish and Wildlife Service to develop cost-efficient strategies for conserving wildlife populations and their habitats. Strategic habitat conservation focuses on resolving uncertainties surrounding habitat conservation to meet specific wildlife population objectives (i.e., targets) and...
Eruptive history of Middle Sister, Oregon Cascades-Product of a late Pleistocene eruptive episode
Andrew T. Calvert, Judith E. Fierstein, Wes Hildreth
2018, Geosphere (14) 2118-2139
New mapping, geochemistry, and argon geochronology illuminate a brief, remarkably silicic episode set in a mafic segment of the Cascade arc. Middle Sister was constructed during a 35-k.y. episode in the late Pleistocene from mafic, intermediate, and silicic eruptions adjacent to the primarily rhyolitic South Sister. Eruptions in the Three...
Mercury methylation and bioaccumulation in Sinclair Inlet, Kitsap County, Washington
A.J. Paulson, M.C. Marvin-DiPasquale, P.W. Moran, A.R. Stewart, J.F. DeWild, J. Toft, J.L. Agee, E. Kakouros, Le H. Kieu, B. Carter, R.W. Sheibley, J. Cordell, David P. Krabbenhoft
2018, Scientific Investigations Report 2018-5063
The U.S. Geological Survey evaluated the transformation of mercury to bioavailable methylmercury in Sinclair Inlet, Kitsap County, Washington, and assessed the effect of the transformation processes on the mercury burden in marine organisms and sediment. In August 2008, samples of sediment, water, and biota from six sites in Sinclair...
Assessment of undiscovered continuous oil and gas resources in the Upper Cretaceous Tuscaloosa marine shale of the U.S. Gulf Coast, 2018
Paul C. Hackley, Catherine B. Enomoto, Brett J. Valentine, William A. Rouse, Celeste D. Lohr, Frank T. Dulong, Javin J. Hatcherian, Sean T. Brennan, William H. Craddock, Thomas M. Finn, Stephanie B. Gaswirth, Phuong A. Le, Heidi M. Leathers-Miller, Kristen R. Marra, Tracey J. Mercier, Stanley T. Paxton, Katherine J. Whidden, Cheryl A. Woodall, Christopher J. Schenk
2018, Fact Sheet 2018-3043
Using a geology-based assessment methodology, the U.S. Geological Survey assessed mean undiscovered, technically recoverable continuousresources of 1.5 billion barrels of oil and 4.6 trillion cubic feet of gas in the Upper Cretaceous Tuscaloosa marine shale in onshore and State waters ofLouisiana, Mississippi, Alabama, and Florida in the U.S. Gulf Coast...
Slab2, a comprehensive subduction zone geometry model
Gavin P. Hayes, Ginevra Moore, Daniel E. Portner, Mike Hearne, Hanna E. Flamme, Maria Furtney, Gregory M. Smoczyk
2018, Science (362) 58-61
Subduction zones are home to the most seismically active faults on the planet. The shallow megathrust interfaces of subduction zones host our largest earthquakes and are likely the only faults capable of magnitude 9+ ruptures. Despite these facts, our knowledge of subduction zone geometry—which likely plays a key role in...
Prepublication communication of research results
M. J. Adams, Reid N. Harris, Evan H. Campbell Grant, Matthew J. Gray, M. Camille Hopkins, Samuel A. Iverson, Robert Likens, Mark Mandica, D.H. Olson, Alex Shepack, Hardin Waddle
2018, EcoHealth (15) 478-481
Publishing of scientific findings is central to the scientific process, and it is traditional to consider findings “provisional” until accepted by a peer-reviewed journal. Until publication, communication of provisional findings beyond participants in the study is typically limited. This practice helps assure scientific integrity. However, a dilemma arises when a...
An introduction and practical guide to use of the Soil-Vegetation Inventory Method (SVIM) data
Brittany S. Barker, David S. Pilliod, Justin L. Welty, Robert S. Arkle, Michael G. Karl, Gordon Toevs
2018, Rangeland Ecology and Management (71) 671-680
Long-term vegetation dynamics across public rangelands in the western United States are not well understood because of the lack of large-scale, readily available historic datasets. The Bureau of Land Management’s Soil-Vegetation Inventory Method (SVIM) program was implemented between 1977 and 1983 across 14 western states, but the data have not been easily accessible. We...
Evaluation of the effects of changes in the timing of water-level drawdowns on the export of phosphorus from Little St. Germain Lake, Wisconsin
Eric D. Dantoin, Dale M. Robertson
2018, Scientific Investigations Report 2018-5078
Little St. Germain Lake is a 978-acre, multibasin lake in Vilas County, Wisconsin. In the interest of improving its water quality, the Little St. Germain Lake Protection and Rehabilitation District initiated a cooperative study with the U.S. Geological Survey to describe the current phosphorus input into and export from Little...