User needs for future Landsat missions
Zhuoting Wu, Gregory Snyder, Carolyn M. Vadnais, Rohit Arora, Michael Babcock, Gregory L. Stensaas, Peter Doucette, Timothy Newman
2019, Remote Sensing of Environment (231)
Landsat satellites have been operating since 1972, providing the longest continuous observation record of the Earth’s land surface. Over the past half century, the Landsat user community has grown exponentially, encompassing more diverse and evolving scientific research and operational uses. Understanding current and future user needs is crucial to informing...
The integrated monarch monitoring program: From design to implementation
Alison B Cariveau, Holly L Holt, James P Ward, Laura Lukens, Kyle Kasten, Jennifer Thieme, Wendy Caldwell, Karen Tuerk, Kristen A Baum, Pauline Drobney, Ryan G. Drum, Ralph Grundel, Keith Hamilton, Cindy Hoang, Karen Kinkead, Julie McIntyre, Wayne E. Thogmartin, Tenlea Turner, Emily L. Weiser, Karen Oberhauser
2019, Frontiers in Ecology and Evolution (29)
Steep declines in North American monarch butterfly (Danaus plexippus) populations have prompted continent-wide conservation efforts. While monarch monitoring efforts have existed for years, we lack a comprehensive approach to monitoring population vital rates integrated with habitat quality to inform adaptive management and effective conservation strategies. Building a geographically and ecologically...
Landsat-8 on-orbit and Landsat-9 pre-launch sensor radiometric characterization
Brian L. Markham, Julia A Barsi, Matthew Montanaro, Joel T McCorkel, Aaron Gerace, Jeffrey A. Pedelty, Simon J Hook, Nina G. Raqueno, Cody Anderson, Obaidul Haque
2018, Conference Paper, Proceedings of SPIE
Landsat-8 has been operating on-orbit for 5+ years. Its two sensors, the Operational Land Imager (OLI) and Thermal Infrared Sensor (TIRS), are continuing to produce high quality data. The OLI has been radiometrically stable at the better than 0.3% level on a band average basis for all but the shortest...
Fish misidentification and potential implications to monitoring within the San Francisco Estuary, California
J. E. Kirsch, J. L. Day, James T. Peterson, D. K. Fullerton
2018, Journal of Fish and Wildlife Management (9) 467-485
Fish monitoring programs often rely on the collection, species identification, and counting of individual fish over time to inform natural resource management decisions. Thus, the utility of the data used to inform these decisions can be negatively affected by species misidentification. Fish species misidentification bias can be minimized by confirming...
Predicting spatial factors associated with cattle depredations by the Mexican wolf (Canis lupus baileyi) with recommendations for depredation risk modeling
Reza Goljani Amirkhiz, Jennifer K. Frey, James W. Cain III, Stewart W. Breck, David L. Bergman
2018, Biological Conservation (224) 327-335
AimPredation on livestock is one of the primary concerns for Mexican wolf (Canis lupus baileyi) recovery because it causes economic losses and negative attitudes toward wolves. Our objectives were to develop a...
How well do proxy species models inform conservation of surrogate species?
Zachary. G. Loman, William V. Deluca, Daniel J. Harrison, Cyndy Loftin, W. Scott Schwenk, Petra B. Wood
2018, Landscape Ecology (36) 2863-2877
ContextProxy species, which represent suites of organisms with similar habitat requirements, are common in conservation. Landscape Capability (LC) models aim to quantify the spatially-explicit capability of landscapes to support proxy species that represent suites of forest birds.ObjectivesWe evaluated the North Atlantic Landscape...
DOI/GTN-P climate and active-layer data acquired in the National Petroleum Reserve-Alaska and the Arctic National Wildlife Refuge, 1998-2019
Frank E. Urban, Gary D. Clow
2018, Data Series 1092
This report provides data collected by the climate monitoring array of the U.S. Department of the Interior on Federal lands in Arctic Alaska over the period August 1998 to July 2019; this array is part of the Global Terrestrial Network for Permafrost (DOI/GTN-P). In addition to presenting data, this report...
What specific costs and risks do we face from climate change?
Alexa Jay, Ben DeAngelo, Dan Barrie, David Reidmiller
2018, Eos Science News (99)
A new U.S. government report finds that climate change is already increasing risks to health, the economy, and ecosystems across the United States. These risks are expected to grow in the coming decades....
Comparison of regression relations of bankfull discharge and channel geometry for the glaciated and nonglaciated settings of Pennsylvania and southern New York
John W. Clune, Jeffrey J. Chaplin, Kirk E. White
2018, Scientific Investigations Report 2018-5066
Streambank erosion in areas of past glacial deposition has been shown to be a dominant source of sediment to streams. Water resource managers are faced with the challenge of developing long and short term (emergency) stream restoration efforts that rely on the most suitable channel geometry for project design. A...
State of the network: Long-term, high-frequency flow and water quality data in the San Francisco Estuary, California
Paul A. Work, Maureen A. Downing-Kunz
2018, Interagency Ecological Program (IEP) Newsletter (32) 59-64
The USGS California Water Science Center is heavily involved in the measurement of flow and water quality parameters in the San Francisco Estuary, with support from many partner agencies. The California Department of Water Resources (DWR), through the Interagency Ecological Program (IEP) is one of those agencies. This article describes...
Characterization of stormwater runoff from bridge decks in eastern Massachusetts, 2014–16
Kirk P. Smith, Jason R. Sorenson, Gregory E. Granato
2018, Scientific Investigations Report 2018-5033
The quality of stormwater runoff from bridge decks (hereafter referred to as “bridge-deck runoff”) was characterized in a field study from August 2014 through August 2016 in which concentrations of suspended sediment (SS) and total nutrients were monitored. These new data were collected to supplement existing highway-runoff data collected in...
Simulated effects of groundwater withdrawals from the Kirkwood-Cohansey aquifer system and Piney Point aquifer, Maurice and Cohansey River Basins, Cumberland County and vicinity, New Jersey
Alison D. Gordon, Debra E. Buxton
2018, Scientific Investigations Report 2017-5144
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Late Neogene–Quaternary tephrochronology, stratigraphy, and paleoclimate of Death Valley, California, USA
Jeffrey R. Knott, Michael N Machette, Elmira Wan, Ralph E. Klinger, Joseph C Liddicoat, Andrei M. Sarna-Wojcicki, Robert J. Fleck, Alan L. Deino, John W Geissman, Janet L. Slate, David Wahl, Brian P. Wernicke, Stephen G. Wells, John C. Tinsley, Jeffrey C Hathaway, Veva M. Weamer
2018, Geological Society of America Bulletin (130)
Sedimentary deposits in midlatitude continental basins often preserve a paleoclimate record complementary to marine-based records. However, deriving that paleoclimate record depends on having well-exposed deposits and establishing a sufficiently robust geochronology. After decades of research, we have been able to correlate 77...
Lake trout spawning and habitat assessment at Stony Island Reef
Stacy Furgal, Brian F. Lantry, Brian Weidel, John M. Farrell, Dimitry Gorsky, Zy Biesinger
2018, Book chapter, NYSDEC Lake Ontario annual report 2018
Lake trout stocking began in the 1970s as part of a binational effort to restore a self-sustaining population of lake trout in Lake Ontario. Despite 48 years of restoration stocking, lake trout in Lake Ontario have not reestablished a self-sustaining population. Spawning surveys done at Stony Island Reef (SIR) in...
A practical primer on geostatistics
Ricardo A. Olea
2018, Open-File Report 2009-1103
IntroductionThe Challenge—Most geological phenomena are extraordinarily complex in their interrelationships and vast in their geographical extension. Ordinarily, engineers and geoscientists are faced with corporate or scientific requirements to properly prepare geological models with measurements involving a small fraction of the entire area or volume of interest. Exact description of a...
Batrachochytrium salamandriovrans (Bsal) in Appalachia—Using scenario building to proactively prepare for a wildlife disease outbreak caused by an invasive amphibian chytrid fungus
M. Camille Hopkins, M. J. Adams, P.E. Super, D.H. Olson, C.R. Hickman, P. English, L. Sprague, I.B. Maska, A.B. Pennaz, K. A. Ludwig
2018, Open-File Report 2018-1150
Batrachochytrium salamandrivorans (Bsal), a pathogenic chytrid fungus, is nonnative to the United States and poses a disease threat to vulnerable amphibian hosts. The Bsal fungus may lead to increases in threatened, endangered, and sensitive status listings at State, Tribal, and Federal levels, resulting in financial costs associated with implementing the...
Comparison of U.S. Geological Survey and Bureau of Reclamation water-use reporting in the Colorado River Basin
Breton Bruce, James Prairie, Molly A. Maupin, Jeremy Dodds, David Eckhardt, Tamara I. Ivahnenko, Paul Matuska, Eric Evenson, Alan Harrison
2018, Scientific Investigations Report 2018-5021
The use of water in the United States is arguably one of the most important factors determining water availability at any specific place and time. Numerous local, State, and Federal entities develop, compile, and report water-use data, which can lead to confusing or conflicting information. This report was authored jointly...
Morphodynamic evolution following sediment release from the world’s largest dam removal
Andrew C. Ritchie, Jonathan A. Warrick, Amy E. East, Christopher S. Magirl, Andrew W. Stevens, Jennifer A. Bountry, Timothy J. Randle, Christopher A. Curran, Robert C. Hilldale, Jeffrey J. Duda, Ian M. Miller, George R. Pess, Emily Eidam, Melissa M. Foley, Randall McCoy, Andrea S. Ogston
2018, Scientific Reports (8)
Sediment pulses can cause widespread, complex changes to rivers and coastal regions. Quantifying landscape response to sediment-supply changes is a long-standing problem in geomorphology, but the unanticipated nature of most sediment pulses rarely allows for detailed measurement of associated landscape processes and evolution. The intentional removal of two large dams...
Thresholds of lake and reservoir connectivity in river networks control nitrogen removal
Noah M. Schmadel, Judson Harvey, Richard Alexander, Gregory E. Schwarz, Richard Moore, Ken Eng, Jesus D. Gomez-Velez, Elizabeth W. Boyer, Durelle Scott
2018, Nature Communications (9)
Lakes, reservoirs, and other ponded waters are ubiquitous features of the aquatic landscape, yet their cumulative role in nitrogen removal in large river basins is often unclear. Here we use predictive modeling, together with comprehensive river water quality, land use, and hydrography datasets, to examine and explain the influences of...
Guidelines for determining flood flow frequency — Bulletin 17C
John F. England Jr., Timothy A. Cohn, Beth A. Faber, Jery R. Stedinger, Wilbert O. Thomas Jr., Andrea G. Veilleux, Julie E. Kiang, Robert R. Mason, Jr.
2018, Techniques and Methods 4-B5
Accurate estimates of flood frequency and magnitude are a key component of any effective nationwide flood risk management and flood damage abatement program. In addition to accuracy, methods for estimating flood risk must be uniformly and consistently applied because management of the Nation’s water and related land resources is a...
Drain tiles and groundwater resources: Understanding the relations
Erik A. Smith, Timothy Gillette, Kristen Blann, Mary Coburn, Bryce Hoppie, Suzanne Rhees
2018, Report
Executive SummaryDrainage for agricultural production over the past 150 years has been an integral component of human-driven change to Minnesota’s rural landscapes.Benefits of drainageHistorically, poorly drained soils across much of the State would often remain saturated or flooded after spring snowmelt, preventing timely farm operations such...
Mapping interactive geospatial linked data
William Baumer, Logan J. Powell, Dalia E. Varanka
2018, Conference Paper, Free and Open Source Software for Geospatial (FOSS4G)
No abstract available....
Water use in Louisiana, 2015
Angela L. Robinson, B. Pierre Sargent
2018, Water Resources Special Report 18
In 2015, approximately 8,720 million gallons per day (Mgal/d) of water was withdrawn from groundwater and surface-water sources in Louisiana, a 2.6 percent increase from 2010. Total groundwater withdrawals were about 1,750 Mgal/d, an increase of 12 percent from 2010, and total surface-water withdrawals were about 6,970 Mgal/d, an increase...
Surficial materials of Massachusetts—A 1:24,000-scale geologic map database
2018, Scientific Investigations Map 3402
The surficial materials geologic map database defines the distribution of nonlithified earth materials at the land surface in the 189 7.5-minute, 1:24,000-scale quadrangles that cover the Commonwealth of Massachusetts (index map). Across the State, these materials range in thickness from a few feet to more than 500 feet (ft). In...
Correlation of the Tuscaloosa marine shale in Mississippi, Louisiana, and east Texas, U.S.A.
William A. Rouse, Catherine B. Enomoto, Nicholas J. Gianoutsos
2018, GCAGS Transactions (68) 461-476
The U.S. Geological Survey (USGS) completed an assessment of undiscovered, technically recoverable unconventional petroleum resources in the Upper Cretaceous marine shale of the Tuscaloosa Group (Tuscaloosa marine shale; TMS) in 2018. As part of the geologic characterization in preparation for the assessment, a series of wireline log cross sections...