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Page 839, results 20951 - 20975

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Publication Extents

Not all publications have extents, not all extents are completely accurate
Interactive visualization to advance earthquake simulation
L.H. Kellogg, G.W. Bawden, T. Bernardin, M. Billen, E. Cowgill, B. Hamann, M. Jadamec, O. Kreylos, O. Staadt, D. Sumner
2008, Pure and Applied Geophysics (165) 621-633
The geological sciences are challenged to manage and interpret increasing volumes of data as observations and simulations increase in size and complexity. For example, simulations of earthquake-related processes typically generate complex, time-varying data sets in two or more dimensions. To facilitate interpretation and analysis of these data sets, evaluate the...
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...
Factors controlling nitrogen release from two forested catchments with contrasting hydrochemical responses
S.F. Christopher, M.J. Mitchell, Michael McHale, E.W. Boyer, Douglas A. Burns, C. Kendall
2008, Hydrological Processes (22) 46-62
Quantifying biogeochemical cycles of nitrogen (N) and the associated fluxes to surface waters remains challenging, given the need to deal with spatial and temporal variability and to characterize complex and heterogeneous landscapes. We focused our study on catchments S14 and S15 located in the Adirondack Mountains...
Integrating remotely sensed land cover observations and a biogeochemical model for estimating forest ecosystem carbon dynamics
J. Liu, S. Liu, Thomas R. Loveland, L.L. Tieszen
2008, Ecological Modelling (219) 361-372
Land cover change is one of the key driving forces for ecosystem carbon (C) dynamics. We present an approach for using sequential remotely sensed land cover observations and a biogeochemical model to estimate contemporary and future ecosystem carbon trends. We applied the General Ensemble Biogeochemical Modelling System (GEMS) for the...
The human footprint in the west: a large-scale analysis of anthropogenic impacts.
M. Leu, S.E. Hanser, S.T. Knick
2008, Ecological Applications (18) 1119-1139
Anthropogenic features such as urbanization, roads, and power lines, are increasing in western United States landscapes in response to rapidly growing human populations. However, their spatial effects have not been evaluated. Our goal was to model the human footprint across the western United States. We first delineated the actual area...
Mechanical and electromagnetic properties of northern Gulf of Mexico sediments with and without THF hydrates
J.Y. Lee, J.C. Santamarina, C. Ruppel
2008, Marine and Petroleum Geology (25) 884-895
Using an oedometer cell instrumented to measure the evolution of electromagnetic properties, small strain stiffness, and temperature, we conducted consolidation tests on sediments recovered during drilling in the northern Gulf of Mexico at the Atwater Valley and Keathley Canyon sites as part of the 2005 Chevron Joint Industry Project on...
Evaluating sampling designs by computer simulation: A case study with the Missouri bladderpod
L.W. Morrison, D. R. Smith, C. Young, D.W. Nichols
2008, Population Ecology (50) 417-425
To effectively manage rare populations, accurate monitoring data are critical. Yet many monitoring programs are initiated without careful consideration of whether chosen sampling designs will provide accurate estimates of population parameters. Obtaining accurate estimates is especially difficult when natural variability is high, or limited budgets determine that only a small...
Observations of the north polar water ice annulus on Mars using THEMIS and TES
Kiri L. Wagstaff, Timothy N. Titus, Anton B. Ivanov, Rebecca Castano, Joshua L. Bandfield
2008, Planetary and Space Science (56) 256-265
The Martian seasonal CO2 ice caps advance and retreat each year. In the spring, as the CO2 cap gradually retreats, it leaves behind an extensive defrosting zone from the solid CO2 cap to the location where all CO2 frost has sublimated. We have been studying this phenomenon in the north...
Soil sail content estimation in the Yellow River delta with satellite hyperspectral data
Yongling Weng, Peng Gong, Zhi-Liang Zhu
2008, Canadian Journal of Remote Sensing (34) 259-270
Soil salinization is one of the most common land degradation processes and is a severe environmental hazard. The primary objective of this study is to investigate the potential of predicting salt content in soils with hyperspectral data acquired with EO-1 Hyperion. Both partial least-squares regression (PLSR) and conventional multiple linear...
Structural equation modeling for observational studies
J.B. Grace
2008, Journal of Wildlife Management (72) 14-22
Structural equation modeling (SEM) represents a framework for developing and evaluating complex hypotheses about systems. This method of data analysis differs from conventional univariate and multivariate approaches familiar to most biologists in several ways. First, SEMs are multiequational and capable of representing a wide array of complex hypotheses about how...
Multiyear riparian evapotranspiration and groundwater use for a semiarid watershed
R.L. Scott, W.L. Cable, T. E. Huxman, P.L. Nagler, M. Hernandez, D.C. Goodrich
2008, Journal of Arid Environments (72) 1232-1246
Riparian evapotranspiration (ET) is a major component of the surface and subsurface water balance for many semiarid watersheds. Measurement or model-based estimates of ET are often made on a local scale, but spatially distributed estimates are needed to determine ET over catchments. In this paper, we document the ET that...
Assigning king eiders to wintering regions in the Bering Sea using stable isotopes of feathers and claws
S. Oppel, A.N. Powell
2008, Marine Ecology Progress Series (373) 149-156
Identification of wintering regions for birds sampled during the breeding season is crucial to understanding how events outside the breeding season may affect populations. We assigned king eiders captured on breeding grounds in northern Alaska to 3 broad geographic wintering regions in the Bering Sea using stable carbon and nitrogen...
A model for radial dike emplacement in composite cones based on observations from Summer Coon volcano, Colorado, USA
Michael P. Poland, W.P. Moats, J.H. Fink
2008, Bulletin of Volcanology (70) 861-875
We mapped the geometry of 13 silicic dikes at Summer Coon, an eroded Oligocene stratovolcano in southern Colorado, to investigate various characteristics of radial dike emplacement in composite volcanoes. Exposed dikes are up to about 7 km in length and have numerous offset segments along their upper peripheries. Surprisingly, most...
Carbon dioxide of Pu`u`O`o volcanic plume at Kilauea retrieved by AVIRIS hyperspectral data
C. Spinetti, V. Carrere, M. Fabrizia Buongiorno, A. J. Sutton, T. Elias
2008, Remote Sensing of Environment (112) 3192-3199
A remote sensing approach permits for the first time the derivation of a map of the carbon dioxide concentration in a volcanic plume. The airborne imaging remote sensing overcomes the typical difficulties associated with the ground measurements and permits rapid and large views of the volcanic processes together with the measurements of volatile components exolving...
Water movement within the unsaturated zone in four agricultural areas of the United States
L.H. Fisher, R. W. Healy
2008, Journal of Environmental Quality (37) 1051-1063
Millions of tons of agricultural fertilizer and pesticides are applied annually in the USA. Due to the potential for these chemicals to migrate to groundwater, a study was conducted in 2004 using field data to calculate water budgets, rates of groundwater recharge and times of water travel through the unsaturated...
Limited change in dune mobility in response to a large decrease in wind power in semi-arid northern China since the 1970s
J.A. Mason, J. B. Swinehart, H. Lu, X. Miao, P. Cha, Y. Zhou
2008, Geomorphology (102) 351-363
The climatic controls on dune mobility, especially the relative importance of wind strength, remain incompletely understood. This is a key research problem in semi-arid northern China, both for interpreting past dune activity as evidence of paleoclimate and for predicting future environmental change. Potential eolian sand transport, which is approximately proportional...
Alien dominance of the parasitoid wasp community along an elevation gradient on Hawai'i Island
R.W. Peck, P.C. Banko, M. Schwarzfeld, M. Euaparadorn, K.W. Brinck
2008, Biological Invasions (10) 1441-1455
Through intentional and accidental introduction, more than 100 species of alien Ichneumonidae and Braconidae (Hymenoptera) have become established in the Hawaiian Islands. The extent to which these parasitoid wasps have penetrated native wet forests was investigated over a 1,765 m elevation gradient on windward Hawai'i Island. For >1 year, malaise...
Identifying habitat sinks: A case study of Cooper's hawks in an urban environment
R.W. Mannan, R.J. Steidl, C. W. Boal
2008, Urban Ecosystems (11) 141-148
We studied a population of Cooper's hawks (Accipiter cooperii) in Tucson, Arizona from 1994 to 2005. High rates of mortality of nestlings from an urban-related disease prompted speculation that the area represented an ecological trap and habitat sink for Cooper's hawks. In this paper, we used estimates of survival and...
A test of the cross-scale resilience model: Functional richness in Mediterranean-climate ecosystems
D.A. Wardwell, Craig R. Allen, G.D. Peterson, A.J. Tyre
2008, Ecological Complexity (5) 165-182
Ecological resilience has been proposed to be generated, in part, in the discontinuous structure of complex systems. Environmental discontinuities are reflected in discontinuous, aggregated animal body mass distributions. Diversity of functional groups within body mass aggregations (scales) and redundancy of functional groups across body mass aggregations (scales) has been proposed...
Are fractal dimensions of the spatial distribution of mineral deposits meaningful?
G. L. Raines
2008, Natural Resources Research (17) 87-97
It has been proposed that the spatial distribution of mineral deposits is bifractal. An implication of this property is that the number of deposits in a permissive area is a function of the shape of the area. This is because the fractal density functions of deposits are dependent on the...
Predictions for an invaded world: A strategy to predict the distribution of native and non-indigenous species at multiple scales
D.A. Reusser, H. Lee II
2008, Conference Paper, ICES Journal of Marine Science
Habitat models can be used to predict the distributions of marine and estuarine non-indigenous species (NIS) over several spatial scales. At an estuary scale, our goal is to predict the estuaries most likely to be invaded, but at a habitat scale, the goal is to predict the specific locations within...
Physical and chemical changes in the foreshore of an estuarine beach: Implications for viability and development of horseshoe crab Limulus polyphemus eggs
N.L. Jackson, D. R. Smith, K.F. Nordstrom
2008, Marine Ecology Progress Series (355) 209-218
Knowledge of conditions that favor development of eggs is important for management of species whose population growth is sensitive to early life history survival. Viability and development of the eggs of horseshoe crabs Limulus polyphemus on a sand and gravel beach were evaluated using data gathered on Delaware Bay, USA,...
Anthropogenic influences on the input and biogeochemical cycling of nutrients and mercury in Great Salt Lake, Utah, USA
D. Naftz, C. Angeroth, T. Kenney, B. Waddell, N. Darnall, S. Silva, C. Perschon, J. Whitehead
2008, Applied Geochemistry (23) 1731-1744
Despite the ecological and economic importance of Great Salt Lake (GSL), little is known about the input and biogeochemical cycling of nutrients and trace elements in the lake. In response to increasing public concern regarding anthropogenic inputs to the GSL ecosystem, the US Geological Survey (USGS) and US Fish and...
Using semi-permeable membrane devices and stable nitrogen isotopes to detect anthropogenic influences on the Truckee River, USA
L. Saito, Michael R. Rosen, S. Chandra, C.H. Fritsen, J.A. Arufe, C. Redd
2008, Environmental Engineering Science (25) 585-600
Stable nitrogen isotopes (??15N) and semipermeable membrane devices (SPMDs) were used together to provide evidence of potential anthropogenic connections to aquatic organisms in the Truckee River, which flows through the Reno/Sparks metropolitan area in Nevada. Crayfish, snail, and periphyton ??15N values, and SPMD toxicity data collected during high and low...
Long-term changes in the phosphorus loading to and trophic state of the Salton Sea, California
Dale M. Robertson, S.G. Schladow, G.C. Holdren
2008, Hydrobiologia (604) 21-36
The Salton Sea (Sea) is a eutrophic to hypereutrophic lake characterized by high nutrient concentrations, low water clarity, and high biological productivity. Based on dissolved phosphorus (P) and nitrogen (N) concentrations and N:P ratios, P is typically the limiting nutrient in the Sea and, therefore, should be the primary nutrient...