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Page 832, results 20776 - 20800

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Not all publications have extents, not all extents are completely accurate
Application of environmental groundwater tracers at the Sulphur Bank Mercury Mine, California, USA
M.A. Engle, F. Goff, D.G. Jewett, G.J. Reller, J.B. Bauman
2008, Hydrogeology Journal (16) 559-573
Boron, chloride, sulfate, ??D, ??18O, and 3H concentrations in surface water and groundwater samples from the Sulphur Bank Mercury Mine (SBMM), California, USA were used to examine geochemical processes and provide constraints on evaporation and groundwater flow. SBMM is an abandoned sulfur and mercury mine with an underlying hydrothermal system,...
Hydroacoustic measures of Mysis relicta abundance and distribution in Lake Ontario
L. G. Rudstam, T. Schaner, G. Gal, B. T. Boscarino, R. O'Gorman, D.M. Warner, O. E. Johannsson, K.L. Bowen
2008, Conference Paper, Aquatic Ecosystem Health and Management
Mysis relicta can be observed on echograms as a sound scattering layer when they migrate into the water column at night to feed on zooplankton. However, quantitative measures of mysid abundance with hydroacoustics requires knowledge of mysid target strength (TS), a method of removing fish echoes and contribution from noise,...
Quantile regression applied to spectral distance decay
D. Rocchini, B.S. Cade
2008, IEEE Geoscience and Remote Sensing Letters (5) 640-643
Remotely sensed imagery has long been recognized as a powerful support for characterizing and estimating biodiversity. Spectral distance among sites has proven to be a powerful approach for detecting species composition variability. Regression analysis of species similarity versus spectral distance allows us to quantitatively estimate the amount of turnover in...
Land cover and forest formation distributions for St. Kitts, Nevis, St. Eustatius, Grenada and Barbados from decision tree classification of cloud-cleared satellite imagery
E.H. Helmer, T.A. Kennaway, D.H. Pedreros, M. L. Clark, H. Marcano-Vega, L.L. Tieszen, T.R. Ruzycki, S.R. Schill, C.M.S. Carrington
2008, Caribbean Journal of Science (44) 175-198
Satellite image-based mapping of tropical forests is vital to conservation planning. Standard methods for automated image classification, however, limit classification detail in complex tropical landscapes. In this study, we test an approach to Landsat image interpretation on four islands of the Lesser Antilles, including Grenada and St. Kitts, Nevis and...
The critical role of volcano monitoring in risk reduction
R.I. Tilling
2008, Advances in Geosciences (14) 3-11
Data from volcano-monitoring studies constitute the only scientifically valid basis for short-term forecasts of a future eruption, or of possible changes during an ongoing eruption. Thus, in any effective hazards-mitigation program, a basic strategy in reducing volcano risk is the initiation or augmentation of volcano monitoring at historically active volcanoes...
Do non-native plant species affect the shape of productivity-diversity relationships?
J.M. Drake, E.E. Cleland, M. C. Horner-Devine, E. Fleishman, C. Bowles, M. D. Smith, K. Carney, S. Emery, J. Gramling, D.B. Vandermast, J.B. Grace
2008, American Midland Naturalist (159) 55-66
The relationship between ecosystem processes and species richness is an active area of research and speculation. Both theoretical and experimental studies have been conducted in numerous ecosystems. One finding of these studies is that the shape of the relationship between productivity and species richness varies considerably among ecosystems and at...
Embryo toxicity of 2,3,7,8-tetrachlorodibenzo-p-dioxin to the wood duck (Aix sponsa)
T.P. Augspurger, D. E. Tillitt, S.J. Bursian, S.D. Fitzgerald, D.E. Hinton, R.T. Di Giulio
2008, Archives of Environmental Contamination and Toxicology (55) 659-669
We examined the sensitivity of the wood duck (Aix sponsa) embryo to 2,3,7,8-tetrachlorodibenzo-p-dioxin (TCDD) by injecting the toxicant into their eggs. Six groups of wood duck eggs (n = 35 to 211 per trial) were injected with 0 to 4600 pg TCDD/g egg between 2003 and 2005. Injections were made...
The effect of terrace geology on ground-water movement and on the interaction of ground water and surface water on a mountainside near Mirror Lake, New Hampshire, USA
T. C. Winter, D.C. Buso, P.C. Shattuck, P. T. Harte, D.A. Vroblesky, D.J. Goode
2008, Hydrological Processes (22) 21-32
The west watershed of Mirror Lake in the White Mountains of New Hampshire contains several terraces that are at different altitudes and have different geologic compositions. The lowest terrace (FSE) has 5 m of sand overlying 9 m of till. The two next successively higher terraces (FS2 and FS1) consist...
Experience preferences as mediators of the wildlife related recreation participation: Place attachment relationship
D.H. Anderson, D.C. Fulton
2008, Human Dimensions of Wildlife (13) 73-88
The human dimensions literature challenges the notion that settings are simply features and attributes that can be manipulated to satisfy public demand; instead, people view specific recreation settings as unique kinds of places. Land managers provide recreation experience opportunities, but most conventional management frameworks do not allow managers to address...
A modeling tool to evaluate regional coral reef responses to changes in climate and ocean chemistry
R. W. Buddemeier, P. L. Jokiel, K.M. Zimmerman, D.R. Lane, J.M. Carey, Geoffrey C. Bohling, J.A. Martinich
2008, Limnology and Oceanography: Methods (6) 395-411
We developed a spreadsheet-based model for the use of managers, conservationists, and biologists for projecting the effects of climate change on coral reefs at local-to-regional scales. The COMBO (Coral Mortality and Bleaching Output) model calculates the impacts to coral reefs from changes in average SST and CO2 concentrations, and from...
Improved tests reveal that the accelarating moment release hypothesis is statistically insignificant
J.L. Hardebeck, K.R. Felzer, A.J. Michael
2008, Journal of Geophysical Research B: Solid Earth (113)
We test the hypothesis that accelerating moment release (AMR) is a precursor to large earthquakes, using data from California, Nevada, and Sumatra. Spurious cases of AMR can arise from data fitting because the time period, area, and sometimes magnitude range analyzed before each main shock are often optimized to produce...
A trade-off between model resolution and variance with selected Rayleigh-wave data
J. Xia, R. D. Miller, Y. Xu
2008, Conference Paper, SEG Technical Program Expanded Abstracts
Inversion of multimode surface-wave data is of increasing interest in the near-surface geophysics community. For a given near-surface geophysical problem, it is essential to understand how well the data, calculated according to a layered-earth model, might match the observed data. A data-resolution matrix is a function of the data kernel...
Land use and the structure of western US stream invertebrate assemblages: Predictive models and ecological traits
D.M. Carlisle, C.P. Hawkins
2008, Journal of the North American Benthological Society (27) 986-999
Inferences drawn from regional bioassessments could be strengthened by integrating data from different monitoring programs. We combined data from the US Geological Survey National Water-Quality Assessment (NAWQA) program and the US Environmental Protection Agency Wadeable Streams Assessment (WSA) to expand the scope of an existing River InVertebrate Prediction and Classification...
Evaluation of MODIS NDVI and NDWI for vegetation drought monitoring using Oklahoma Mesonet soil moisture data
Yingxin Gu, E. Hunt, B. Wardlow, J.B. Basara, Jesslyn F. Brown, J. P. Verdin
2008, Geophysical Research Letters (35) 1-5
The evaluation of the relationship between satellite-derived vegetation indices (normalized difference vegetation index and normalized difference water index) and soil moisture improves our understanding of how these indices respond to soil moisture fluctuations. Soil moisture deficits are ultimately tied to drought stress on plants. The diverse terrain and climate of...
Comparative phylogeography and population genetics within Buteo lineatus reveals evidence of distinct evolutionary lineages
J.M. Hull, Bradley N. Strobel, C. W. Boal, A.C. Hull, Cheryl R. Dykstra, A.M. Irish, A.M. Fish, H. B. Ernest
2008, Molecular Phylogenetics and Evolution (49) 988-996
Traditional subspecies classifications may suggest phylogenetic relationships that are discordant with evolutionary history and mislead evolutionary inference. To more accurately describe evolutionary relationships and inform conservation efforts, we investigated the genetic relationships and demographic histories of Buteo lineatus subspecies in eastern and western North America using 21 nuclear microsatellite loci...
Comparison of the USGS 2001 NLCD to the 2002 USDA Census of Agriculture for the Upper Midwest United States
S.K. Maxwell, E.C. Wood, A. Janus
2008, Agriculture, Ecosystems and Environment (127) 141-145
The U.S. Geological Survey (USGS) 2001 National Land Cover Database (NLCD) was compared to the U.S. Department of Agriculture (USDA) 2002 Census of Agriculture. We compared areal estimates for cropland at the state and county level for 14 States in the Upper Midwest region of the United States. Absolute differences...
Flood trends and river engineering on the Mississippi River system
N. Pinter, A.A. Jemberie, J.W.F. Remo, R.A. Heine, B.S. Ickes
2008, Geophysical Research Letters (35)
Along >4000 km of the Mississippi River system, we document that climate, land-use change, and river engineering have contributed to statistically significant increases in flooding over the past 100-150 years. Trends were tested using a database of >8 million hydrological measurements. A geospatial database of historical engineering construction was used...
Validation of the ASTER instrument level 1A scene geometry
H. H. Kieffer, K. F. Mullins, D. J. MacKinnon
2008, Photogrammetric Engineering and Remote Sensing (74) 289-301
An independent assessment of the Advanced Spaceborne Thermal Emission and Reflection Radiometer (ASTER) instrument geometry was undertaken by the U.S. ASTER Team, to confirm the geometric correction parameters developed and applied to Level 1A (radiometrically and geometrically raw with correction parameters appended) ASTER data. The goal was to evaluate the...
Application of synchrotron methods to assess the uptake of roadway-derived Zn by earthworms in an urban soil
S.M. Lev, E. R. Landa, K. Szlavecz, R. Casey, J. Snodgrass
2008, Mineralogical Magazine (72) 191-195
The impact of human activities on biogeochemical cycles in terrestrial environments is nowhere more apparent than in urban landscapes. Trace metals, collected on roadways and transported by storm water, may contaminate soils and sediments associated with storm water management systems. These systems will accumulate metals and associated sediments may reach...
Mangrove forest distributions and dynamics (1975–2005) of the tsunami-affected region of Asia
S. Giri, Z. Zhu, L.L. Tieszen, A. Singh, S. Gillette, J.A. Kelmelis
2008, Journal of Biogeography (35) 519-528
Aim We aimed to estimate the present extent of tsunami-affected mangrove forests and determine the rates and causes of deforestation from 1975 to 2005.Location Our study region covers the tsunami-affected coastal areas of Indonesia, Malaysia, Thailand, Burma (Myanmar), Bangladesh, India and Sri Lanka in Asia.Methods We interpreted time-series Landsat data...
Predicting recolonization patterns and interactions between potamodromous and anadromous salmonids in response to dam removal in the Elwha River, Washington State, USA
S.J. Brenkman, G.R. Pess, C.E. Torgersen, K.K. Kloehn, J.J. Duda, S.C. Corbett
2008, Northwest Science (82) 91-106
The restoration of salmonids in the Elwha River following dam removal will cause interactions between anadromous and potamodromous forms as recolonization occurs in upstream and downstream directions. Anadromous salmonids are expected to recolonize historic habitats, and rainbow trout (Oncorhynchus mykiss) and bull trout (Salvelinus confluentus) isolated above the dams for...
Influence of dams on river-floodplain dynamics in the Elwha River, Washington
K.K. Kloehn, T.J. Beechie, S.A. Morley, H.J. Coe, J.J. Duda
2008, Northwest Science (82) 224-235
The Elwha dam removal project presents an ideal opportunity to study how historic reduction and subsequent restoration of sediment supply alter river-floodplain dynamics in a large, forested river floodplain. We used remote sensing and onsite data collection to establish a historical record of floodplain dynamics and a baseline of current...
Conservation genetics of Lake Superior brook trout: Issues, questions, and directions
C.C. Wilson, W. Stott, L. Miller, S. D’Amelio, Martin J. Jennings, A.M. Cooper
2008, Conference Paper, North American Journal of Fisheries Management
Parallel efforts by several genetic research groups have tackled common themes relating to management concerns about and recent rehabilitation opportunities for coaster brook trout Salvelinus fontinalis in Lake Superior. The questions that have been addressed include the evolutionary and genetic status of coaster brook trout, the degree of relatedness among...
The release of dissolved actinium to the ocean: A global comparison of different end-members
W. Geibert, M. Charette, G. Kim, W.S. Moore, J. Street, M. Young, A. Paytan
2008, Marine Chemistry (109) 409-420
The measurement of short-lived 223Ra often involves a second measurement for supported activities, which represents 227Ac in the sample. Here we exploit this fact, presenting a set of 284 values on the oceanic distribution of 227Ac, which was collected when analyzing water samples for short-lived radium isotopes by the radium...