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Page 8, results 176 - 200

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Sources of water and salts for the Zuni Salt Lake in west-central New Mexico
Andrew J. Robertson, Jeff D. Pepin, Erin L. Gray, Jake W. Collison, Jeb E. Brown, Andre Ritchie, Grady Ball
2025, Scientific Investigations Report 2025-5057
The Zuni Salt Lake is located in a maar in west-central New Mexico and contains hypersaline water that has long been used by Native Americans for religious purposes and the collection of salt. There have been several investigations suggesting different sources for the water and salt to the lake. Springs,...
Energetic value of Arctic forage-sized fish with implications for a nearshore seabird predator
Ashley E. Stanek, Brian D. Uher-Koch, Kenneth H. Dunton, Vanessa R. von Biela
2025, Marine Biology (172)
Arctic cod (Boreogadus saida, also called polar cod) are considered the single most important Arctic forage fish due to their high abundance and nutritional quality. Because Arctic cod are strongly ice associated and prefer colder waters, their frequency in coastal waters has declined with warming, decreasing availability to nearshore predators....
Variation and controls of sediment oxygen demand in backwater lakes of the Upper Mississippi River during winter
Patrik Mathis Perner, Rebecca M. Kreiling, Kathi Jo Jankowski, Eric A. Strauss
2025, River Research and Applications (41) 2189-2204
Many ecological processes affect the availability of winter dissolved oxygen (DO) concentrations in rivers, a key feature of overwintering fish habitat. Sediment oxygen demand (SOD) contributes to DO depletion, particularly during ice-covered periods, and may cause hypoxic conditions in backwater lakes, affecting the availability of suitable overwintering...
Hydrologic connectivity in floodplain systems: A multiscale review of concepts, metrics and management
Hafez Ahmad, Leandro E. Miranda, Corey Garland Dunn, Melanie R. Boudreau, Michael E. Colvin
2025, Hydrological Processes (39)
Hydrologic connectivity (HC), particularly in floodplain systems, is pivotal in regulating ecosystem services by facilitating the movement of nutrients, sediments, chemicals, and biota. However, human interventions such as dam construction, levee installation, water management practices, and alterations in vegetation have significantly disrupted natural HC patterns globally. To provide a structured entry...
Using satellite imagery and soil data to understand occurrences and migration of soil conditions harmful to archaeological sites on Jamestown Island, Virginia
Samuel H. Caldwell
2025, Scientific Investigations Report 2025-5074
Many know Jamestown Island, Virginia, hereafter referred to as “the Island,” located near the mouth of the James River into the Chesapeake Bay, as the home of the first permanent English settlement in North America. However, the Island is home to 15,000 years’ worth of cultural artifacts and archaeological sites....
Model‐based decomposition of spatially varying temporal shifts in seasonal streamflow across north temperate US rivers.
Kevin M. Collins, Erin M. Schliep, Tyler Wagner, Christopher K. Wikle
2025, Water Resources Research (61)
Anthropogenically forced climate shifts disrupt the seasonal behavior of climatic and hydrologic processes. The seasonality of streamflow has significant implications for the ecology of riverine ecosystems and for meeting societal demands for water resources. We develop a hierarchical Bayesian model of daily streamflow to quantify how the...
Potential for hydroacoustic technology to describe physical habitat for imperilled native freshwater mussels
Jenny L. Hanson, Jayme Stone, Lisie Kitchel, Jesse Weinzinger, Teresa J. Newton
2025, Ecohydrology (18)
The lack of information on what constitutes suitable habitat for native freshwater mussels can limit restoration efforts. While many species reside in silt–sand–gravel substrates, species such as the Spectaclecase (Cumberlandia monodonta) and Salamander (Simpsonaias ambigua) mussels are thought to be associated with rock structures (e.g., wing dams...
Water temperature regimes and thermal drivers in semi-natural and flow-regulated rivers of the northern Great Plains
Patrick Braaten, T. David Ritter, Tyler M. Haddix, David B. Fuller, John R. Hunziker, John G. Hargrave
2025, River Research and Applications (41) 2073-2091
Rivers of the northern Great Plains have lacked long-term, continuous water temperature assessments, and there is limited information on thermal regimes of these systems and factors driving water temperature. We collected and assembled 2001–2022 water temperature data from 18 sites on four reaches of three rivers that differ in anthropogenic...
Hyperspectral imaging of river bathymetry using an ensemble of regression trees
Carl J. Legleiter, Paul J. Kinzel, Brandon Overstreet, Lee R. Harrison
2025, Earth Surface Processes and Landforms (50)
Remote sensing has emerged as an effective tool for characterizing river systems, and machine learning (ML) techniques could make this approach even more powerful. To explore this possibility, we developed an ML-based workflow for hyperspectral imaging of river bathymetry using an ensemble of regression trees (HIRBERT). This approach involves using...
Evaluation of the acute toxicity of the piscicide TFM to Burbot
Nicholas Schloesser, James A. Luoma, Courtney Kirkeeng, Samantha L. Wolfe, Justin Schueller, Hannah Mann Thompson
2025, Journal of Wildlife Management (89)
Non-target animal sensitivity remains a concern when treating Laurentian Great Lakes streams with 4-nitro-3-(trifluoromethyl)phenol (TFM), the main pesticide used to control Sea Lamprey Petromyzon marinus as part of the bi-national Great Lakes Fishery Commission's Sea Lamprey Control Program. Populations of Burbot Lota lota, a historically and culturally important fish, inhabit some of the...
Uppermost Oligocene and Miocene diatom biostratigraphy of Ocean Drilling Program Sites 682 and 688 from the Peru Margin
Jason Coenen, John A. Barron, Thomas J. DeVries
2025, Stratigraphy (22) 155-180
The diatom biochronology of ODP (Ocean Drilling Program) Holes 682A and 688E provides a detailed framework for refiningMiocene diatom zonation in the East Pisco Basin of southern Peru, establishing both a nearly complete offshore reference section and a correlation tool for the fragmentary onshore vertebrate-bearing deposits. This new biostratigraphic record...
Calcareous nannofossil biostratigraphy and floral response to environmental changes recorded in the Pliocene Yorktown Formation, southeastern Virginia, USA
Masayuki Utsunomiya, Harry J. Dowsett
2025, Stratigraphy (22) 181-193
The Pliocene Yorktown Formation, deposited on the U.S. Mid-Atlantic Coastal Plain, has played an important role in advancing our knowledge of Pliocene paleoclimate. To refine the age and paleoenvironment of the Yorktown Formation, we analyzed the calcareous nannofossil assemblage and compared it with variations in lithology and calculated sea surface...
Reframing fish passage prioritization for human nutrition outcomes
Nicolette Duncan, Ana Horta, John Conallin, Tim Marsden, Abigail J. Lynch, Ivor Stuart
2025, Environmental Management (75) 3401-3417
Water control infrastructure forms barriers that fragment river habitats, reducing aquatic biodiversity and the ecosystem services it provides. Irrigation infrastructure, for example, although implemented to support food production, highlights problematic trade-offs against wild food systems like inland fisheries which are a critical food resource for tens of millions of people,...
Summary of selenium in the lower Gunnison River Basin, Colorado—Information and data gaps
Rachel G. Gidley, Kenneth J. Leib, Cory A. Williams
2025, Circular 1559
The Cretaceous Mancos Shale is a geologic source of selenium in the lower Gunnison River Basin. Natural weathering processes and human activity mobilize selenium from the Mancos Shale and derived materials, and surface water, groundwater, and sediment all affect the transport of selenium from source areas to receiving streams and...
Complex sound scattering layer and water-column dynamics over a mesophotic coral ecosystem: Southwest Puerto Rico, U.S.A.
Olivia M. Cheriton, Curt D. Storlazzi, Clark E. Sherman, Kurt J. Rosenberger, Nikolaos V. Schizas
2025, Coral Reefs (44) 2147-2154
A nearly 5-month record of high-resolution temperature and acoustic backscatter profiles from the upper insular slope off southwest Puerto Rico reveals complex sound scattering layer (SSL) dynamics over a mesophotic coral ecosystem (MCE). The SSLs exhibited both diel and reverse diel vertical migration, thin layer (< 5 m) and multiple layer formations,...
RUSH: Rapid remote sensing Updates of land cover for Storm and Hurricane forecast models
Chak Wa Cheang, Kristin Byrd, Nicholas Enwright, Daniel D. Buscombe, Christopher R. Sherwood, Dean B. Gesch
2025, Remote Sensing (17)
Coastal vegetated ecosystems, including tidal marshes, vegetated dunes, and shrub- and forest-dominated wetlands, can mitigate hurricane impacts such as coastal flooding and erosion by increasing surface roughness and reducing wave energy. Land cover maps can be used as input to improve simulations of surface roughness in advanced hydro-morphological models. Consequently,...
Shear surface undulations modulate clayey gouge strength and contribute to divergent landslide acceleration
William H. Schulz, Gonghui Wang, Yao Jiang, Brian D. Collins, Mark E. Reid, Mason Muir Einbund
2025, Engineering Geology (357)
Landslides display a spectrum of speeds for incompletely known reasons. Sliding occurs along slickensided undulatory shear surfaces within boundary shear gouge. Laboratory tests reveal that gouge shear strength generally decreases with finite cumulative displacement during relatively rapid failure and may...
A comparison of deep-sea coral and sponge species distribution models and the impact of ocean currents in the Southern California Bight
Nissa Kreidler, Andre Buchheister, David D. Huff, Jerome Fiechter, Mary Yoklavich, Mark J. Henderson
2025, Deep Sea Research Part II: Topical Studies in Oceanography (224)
Deep-sea corals and sponges (DSCS) are signature taxa of deep-water habitats, but ecological mechanisms that drive their geographic distributions can be difficult to uncover due to the challenges of surveying deep-water ecosystems and limited oceanographic data. A comparison of species distribution models was made for three DSCS...
Predicting aquatic habitat connectivity across watershed boundaries: Implications for interbasin spread of nonindigenous aquatic species.
Peter J. Pfaff, Alison A. Coulter, Benjamin J. Schall, Tanner Davis, Steven R. Chipps, David P. Coulter
2025, Frontiers in Environmental Science (113)
Understanding habitat connectivity is critical for managing nonindigenous aquatic species (NAS) spread. Dams and watershed boundaries can be impassable to NAS during typical conditions but may become temporarily passable during flooding. The goal of our project was to develop an approach for identifying locations of aquatic connectivity...
Spatiotemporal variability of algal biomass and nitrate in Owasco and Seneca Lakes in the Finger Lakes Region, New York, in 2019
Michael D.W. Stouder, Sabina R. Gifford, Kristina Gutchess, Kaitlyn M. Finkelstein, Brett D. Johnston, Karen M. Beaulieu, Joshua J. Rosen, Megan L. Essig, Guy M. Foster
2025, Scientific Investigations Report 2024-5118
Cyanobacterial harmful algal blooms (CyanoHABs) have become increasingly common, threatening the security of water resources globally. The U.S. Geological Survey conducted high-resolution nearshore mapping surveys using boat-mounted multiparameter sondes and nitrate sensors during the summer and fall of 2019 on Owasco Lake and Seneca Lake, two lakes with documented CyanoHABs...
Urban heterogeneity drives dissolved organic matter sources, transport, and transformation from local to macro scales
Rebecca Hale, Kristina G. Hopkins, Krista A. Capps, John S. Kominoski, Jennifer L. Morse, Allison H. Roy, Shuo Chen, Annika Quick, Andrew Blinn, Liz Ortiz Muñoz, Gwendolynn Folk
2025, Limnology and Oceanography (70) 3109-3125
Urbanization reshapes dissolved organic matter (DOM) sources, transport, and transformations through changes in vegetation, hydrology, and management of waste and water. Yet the impacts of urbanization on DOM are variable within and among cities. Predicting heterogeneous responses to urbanization is challenged by diverse human activities and underlying biophysical variation along...
Extremophile hotspots linked to containerized industrial waste dumping in a deep-sea basin
Johanna Gutleben, Sheila Podell, Kira Mizell, Douglas Sweeney, Carlos Neira, Lisa A. Levin, Paul R. Jensen
2025, PNAS Nexus (4)
Decaying barrels on the seafloor linked to DDT contamination have raised concerns about the public health implications of decades old industrial waste dumped off the coast of Los Angeles. To explore their contents, we collected sediment cores perpendicular to five deep-sea barrels. The concentration of DDT and its breakdown products...
Evaluating mass flow meter measurements from chambers for greenhouse gas emissions from orphan wells and other point sources
Karl Haase, Nicholas J. Gianoutsos
2025, Atmospheric Measurement Techniques (18) 4207-4226
This study evaluates the performance of a rigid gas flux chamber equipped with a mass flow meter (MFM) for measuring gas emissions from leaking orphan wells and similar pressure-driven gas point sources. We conducted a series of laboratory and field experiments to evaluate the sensitivity, stability, and dynamic range of...
Effects of restoration work on Kootenai River Acipenser transmontanus (white sturgeon) critical habitat, Kootenai River, northern Idaho, 2011–22
Megan K. Kenworthy, Taylor J. Dudunake
2025, Scientific Investigations Report 2025-5071
Between 2011 and 2018, the Kootenai River Habitat Restoration Project, led by the Kootenai Tribe of Idaho, implemented restoration treatments to enhance the natural recruitment of the critically endangered Acipenser transmontanus (white sturgeon) and other fish native to the Kootenai River. These restoration treatments in the Straight and Braided Reaches...