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Not all publications have extents, not all extents are completely accurate
The 3D Elevation Program—Supporting New Hampshire’s economy
Dan Walters
2024, Fact Sheet 2024-3056
Introduction The topography of New Hampshire ranges from the Coastal Lowlands to the Eastern New England Upland to the White Mountains region. High-quality statewide elevation data are useful in managing this very diverse landscape. For example, the short coastline, including the Great Bay estuary and the Hampton-Seabrook marshes, is of disproportionately...
Effectiveness of canine-assisted surveillance and human searches for early detection of invasive spotted lanternfly
Angela K. Fuller, Ben C. Augustine, Eric H. Clifton, Ann E. Hajek, Arden Blumenthal, Josh Beese, Aimee Hurt, Carrie J. Brown-Lima
2024, Ecological Applications (15)
Prevention and early detection of invasive species are championed as the most cost-effective and efficient strategies for reducing or preventing negative impacts on ecosystems. Spotted lanternfly (SLF), Lycorma delicatula, is a recently introduced invasive insect whose range in the United States has been expanding rapidly since it was first discovered in...
Nitrogen deposition weakens soil carbon control of nitrogen dynamics across the contiguous United States
Matthew A. Nieland, Piper Lacy, Steven D. Allison, Jennifer M Bhatnagar, Danica A Doroski, Serita D. Frey, Kristen Greaney, Sarah E Hobbie, Kuebbing. Sara E, David Bruce Lewis, Marshall D McDaniel, Steven Perakis, Steve M Raciti, Alanna N Shaw, Christine D Sprunger, Michael S Strickland, Pamela H. Templer, Corrine Vietorisz, Elisabeth Ward, Ashley D Keiser
2024, Global Change Biology (30)
Anthropogenic nitrogen (N) deposition is unequally distributed across space and time, with inputs to terrestrial ecosystems impacted by industry regulations and variations in human activity. Soil carbon (C) content normally controls the fraction of mineralized N that is nitrified (ƒnitrified), affecting N bioavailability for plants and microbes. However, it is...
An intercomparison of DOC estimated from fDOM sensors in wildfire affected streams of the western United States
Garrett Alexander Akie, David W. Clow, Sheila F. Murphy, Gregory D. Clark, Michael Meador, Brian A. Ebel
2024, Hydrological Processes (38)
Wildfires in the western United States (US) have been demonstrated to affect water quality, including dissolved organic carbon (DOC), in streams. Elevated post-wildfire DOC concentration poses a potential risk to drinking water treatment systems. In-stream measurements of fluorescent dissolved organic matter (fDOM), a proxy for DOC, have shown potential to...
Gene flow prevents genetic diversity loss despite small effective population size in fragmented grizzly bear (Ursus arctos) populations
Megan F. Turnock, Justin E. Teisberg, Wayne F. Kasworm, Matthew Richard Falcy, Michael F. Proctor, Lisette P. Waits
2024, Conservation Genetics (26) 279-291
Genetic monitoring is important in small, fragmented populations that rely on gene flow to maintain genetic diversity. The Selkirk, Yaak, and Cabinet grizzly bear (Ursus arctos) populations are among the smallest in North America and are near the southernmost extent of the species’ range. These populations received little to no...
Sensitivity analysis of a dynamic vegetation-sediment transport model using equadratures: Exploring inorganic accretion on a marsh platform
Rachel Allen, Neil K. Ganju, Tarandeep Kalra, Alfredo Aretxabaleta, Jessica R. Lacy
2024, JGR Earth Surface (129)
Salt marsh systems require a net import of inorganic sediment to maintain their structure in response to sea‐level rise. Marshes are affected by physical processes including tides, waves, sediment transport, and the influence of vegetation, and these processes interact in complex ways leading to sediment accretion or erosion. We implement...
Self-guided decision support groundwater modelling with Python
Rui Hugman, Jeremy T. White, Michael N. Fienen, Brioch Hemmings, Katie Markovich
2024, Journal of Open Source Education (7)
The GMDSI tutorial notebooks repository provides learners with a comprehensive set of tutorials for self-guided training on decision-support groundwater modelling using Python-based tools. Although targeted at groundwater modelling, they are based around model-agnostic tools and readily transferable to other environmental modelling workflows. The tutorials are divided into three parts. The...
A comparison of survival and behavior of lake whitefish following transmitter implantation using electro- or chemical immobilization
Lisa K. Izzo, Daniel J. Dembkowski, Thomas R. Binder, Scott P. Hansen, Christopher S. Vandergoot, Daniel A. Isermann
2024, Animal Biotelemetry (12)
Background The number of telemetry studies focused on lake whitefish (Coregonus clupeaformis) in the Laurentian Great Lakes has steadily increased over the last decade, but field tests of immobilization methods used for tag implantation, which have the potential to affect survival and behavior of fish after release, are lacking. We...
Geologic map and structure sections along the southern part of the Bartlett Springs Fault Zone and adjacent areas from Cache Creek to Lake Berryessa, northern Coast Ranges, California
Benjamin L. Melosh, Jackson W. Bodtker, Zenon C. Valin
2024, Scientific Investigations Map 3514
IntroductionLocated in the Coast Ranges of northern California, the Bartlett Springs Fault Zone is the easternmost fault in the San Andreas Fault system in northern California. The fault is a right-lateral, strike-slip structure considered capable of producing an earthquake of moment magnitude 7. The purpose of this mapping is to...
The anatomy of a drought in the upper San Francisco Estuary: Water quality and lower-trophic responses to multi-year droughts
David Bosworth, Samuel M. Bashevkin, Keith Bouma-Gregson, Rosemary Hartman, Elizabeth B. Stumpner
2024, San Francisco Estuary and Watershed Science (22)
Multi-year droughts are important and impactful features of California’s Mediterranean climate and can fundamentally affect the water quality and the ecosystem response of the San Francisco Estuary (Estuary) and the Sacramento-San Joaquin Delta (Delta). This study assesses data collected by long-term monitoring programs over the past 46 years (1975-2021) to...
The emerging invasive species and climate change lexicon
Emily J. Fusco, Bryan G. Falk, Paul J. Heimowitz, Deah Lieurance, Elliott Parsons, Caitlin M. Rottler, Lindsey Thurman, Annette Evans
2024, Trends in Ecology and Evolution (39) 1119-1129
The rapid diversification of terminology associated with invasion ecology is a known barrier to effective communication and management. These challenges are magnified by the addition of terms and concepts related to climate-induced range-shifting taxa and/or changes to impacts. Further, institutional policies and terminologies for invasive species introduce new ambiguities when...
A comparative framework to develop transferable species distribution models for animal telemetry data
Joshua A. Cullen, Camila A. Domit, Margaret Lamont, Christopher D. Marshall, Armando J.B. Santos, Christopher R. Sasso, Mehsin Al Ansi, Kristen Hart, Mariana M.P.B. Fuentes
2024, Ecosphere (15)
Species distribution models (SDMs) have become increasingly popular for making ecological inferences, as well as predictions to inform conservation and management. In predictive modeling, practitioners often use correlative SDMs that only evaluate a single spatial scale and do not account for differences in life stages. These modeling decisions may limit...
Sequoia groves of Yosemite: Visitor use and impacts monitoring
Sheri A. Shiflett, Jeffery S. Jenkins, Rachel F. Mattos, Peter Christian Ibsen, Nicole D. Athearn
2024, Forests (15)
Despite being long-lived and massive, giant sequoias (Sequoiadendron giganteum (Lindl.) J. Bucholz) are susceptible to erosion given their relatively shallow root structure. Human-caused soil compaction and vegetation loss through social trails are primary drivers of erosion in giant sequoia groves, particularly for trees that are near formal trails and access...
New tools for a legacy problem: How isotope tracers inform area of concern actions in the St. Louis River in Lake Superior
Sarah E. Janssen, Joel C. Hoffman, David P. Krabbenhoft
2024, Journal of Great Lakes Research (JGLR) (51)
Numerous mercury (Hg) sources can contribute to biological burdens within the Great Lakes, including atmospheric deposition (e.g., precipitation), non-point source land runoff (e.g., watershed), and legacy contamination. Due to these different environmental entry points, it is often difficult to ascertain if legacy Hg contamination contributes to contemporary fish consumption advisories...
Iodine-129 in the eastern Snake River Plain aquifer at and near the Idaho National Laboratory, Idaho, 2021–22
Kerri C. Treinen, Allison R. Trcka, Nick Krohe, Genene Lehotsky
2024, Scientific Investigations Report 2024-5124
Between the 1950s and 1980s, wastewater generated at the Idaho National Laboratory contained Iodine-129 (129I); this wastewater was discharged directly into the eastern Snake River Plain (ESRP) aquifer through a deep disposal well, unlined infiltration ponds, or leaked from distribution systems below industrial facilities. During 2021–22, the U.S. Geological Survey,...
Ecological trade-offs associated with fuel breaks in the sagebrush ecosystem
Morgan Dake Roche, D. Joanne Saher, Erin K. Buchholtz, Michele R. Crist, Douglas J. Shinneman, Cameron L. Aldridge, Brianne E. Brussee, Peter S. Coates, Cali L. Weise, Julie A. Heinrichs
2024, Fire Ecology (20)
BackgroundUnprecedented wildfire frequency, fueled by invasive annual grasses, threatens sagebrush ecosystems. To suppress wildfire and conserve sagebrush, land management agencies have installed fuel breaks across the sagebrush biome. However, despite the potential reduction in wildfire, fuel breaks may have ecological costs. Determining an acceptable balance between risks and...
Spatial differences in soil nutrients along a hydrographic gradient on floodplains in Dongting Lake
Jiayi Lin, Yuanmi Wu, Dong Peng, Mingzhu Chen, Lingli Peng, Beth Middleton, Ting Lei
2024, Water (16)
The spatial heterogeneity of soil nutrients is crucial for the water bird and whole floodplain wetland ecosystem in large lakes, and it is influenced by the dramatic water level changes and sedimentation progress in West Dongting Lake (WDL). Soil samples were collected at various soil depths along the Yuan River...
SUTRA— A code for simulation of saturated-unsaturated, variable-density groundwater flow with solute or energy transport—Documentation of the version 4.0 enhancements—Freeze-thaw capability, saturation and relative-permeability relations, spatially varying properties, and enhanced budget and velocity outputs
Clifford I. Voss, Alden M. Provost, Jeffrey M. McKenzie, Barret L. Kurylyk
2024, Techniques and Methods 6-A63
Version 4.0 of the Saturated-Unsaturated Transport (SUTRA) software code provides the capability to simulate the freezing and thawing of groundwater during energy transport simulations under saturated and unsaturated conditions. In addition to the types of hydrogeologic processes that SUTRA has been able to simulate in the past, this version can...
Using mercury and lead stable isotopes to assess mercury, lead, and trace metal source contributions to Great Salt Lake, Utah, USA
Samuel Francisco Lopez, Sarah E. Janssen, Michael T. Tate, Diego P. Fernandez, Christopher R. Anderson, Grace Jane Armstrong, Thomas Charng-Shuen Wang, William P. Johnson
2024, Science of the Total Environment (957)
Great Salt Lake is a critical habitat for migratory birds that is threatened by elevated metal concentrations, including mercury (Hg) and lead (Pb), and is subject to severe hydrologic changes, such as declining lake level. When assessing metal profiles recorded in Great Salt Lake sediment, a large data gap exists...
Geophysical characterization of an alkaline‑carbonatite complex using gravity and magnetic methods at Magnet Cove, Arkansas, USA
Chelsea Morgan Amaral, Andrew P. Lamb, Gregory Dumond
2024, Tectonophysics (893)
The Magnet Cove alkaline‑carbonatite complex (MCC), located in the Ouachita Mountains of south-central Arkansas in the United States, hosts an extensive variety of rare rock types and critical mineral resources with physical properties (density and magnetization) that contrast significantly with the sedimentary rocks into which they have intruded. Newly acquired...
Hydrologic and hydraulic analyses of Silver Creek and selected tributaries associated with Scott Air Force Base, Illinois, 2022–24
Charles V. Cigrand, David C. Heimann, Paul H. Rydlund Jr.
2024, Scientific Investigations Report 2024-5117
A hydrologic model of the Silver Creek Basin in southwest Illinois, and a hydraulic model of a selected reach of Silver Creek and local tributaries on and near Scott Air Force Base, Illinois, were developed to assess the effects of temporal land-use development in the Silver Creek Basin, the potential...
The 3D Elevation Program—Supporting the Kansas Economy
Claire DeVaughan
2024, Fact Sheet 2024-3053
Introduction High-resolution elevation data for Kansas inform decision making to improve the State’s economy. Existing elevation data coverage is used to support State water planning initiatives, facilitate infrastructure management, and improve resilience to natural disasters. The expanding availability of current and more accurate elevation data helps better support natural resources conservation,...
Spatial differences in predicted Phalaris arundinacea (reed canarygrass) occurrence in floodplain forest understories
John Delaney, Molly Van Appledorn, Nathan R. De Jager, Kristen L. Bouska, Jason J. Rohweder
2024, Ecosphere (15)
Reed canarygrass (Phalaris arundinacea L.) is one of the most common invaders of floodplains and wetlands in North America. In the Upper Mississippi River floodplain, invasion by reed canarygrass in forest understories can inhibit forest regeneration when gaps form in the overstory. Understanding the distribution of reed canarygrass in forest understories...
Improving time of concentration estimates for small rural watersheds in the Appalachian Plateaus physiographic province, West Virginia
Terence Messinger, Darrin A. Holmes, James D. Scott, Douglas W. Kirk
2024, Scientific Investigations Report 2024-5051
The U.S. Geological Survey (USGS), in cooperation with the West Virginia Department of Transportation, Division of Highways, compared time of concentration (Tc) and related runoff characteristics measured at four field sites in West Virginia to estimates of these values made using accepted methods. These four sites were selected to represent...