Global dynamics of a mutualism–competition model with one resource and multiple consumers
Yuanshi Wang, Hong Wu, Donald L. DeAngelis
2019, Journal of Mathematical Biology (78) 683-710
Recent simulation modeling has shown that species can coevolve toward clusters of coexisting consumers exploiting the same limiting resource or resources, with nearly identical ratios of coefficients related to growth and mortality. This paper provides a mathematical basis for such as situation; a full analysis of the global dynamics of...
Larger body size and earlier run timing increase alewife reproductive success in a whole lake experiment
Allison H. Roy, Meghna N. Marjadi, Adrian Jordaan, Benjamin I. Gahagan, Michael P. Armstrong, Andrew R. Whiteley
2019, Canadian Journal of Fisheries and Aquatic Sciences (76) 1134-1146
Environmental conditions can influence biological characteristics like phenology and body size with important consequences for organismal fitness. Examining these fitness consequences under natural conditions through genetic pedigree reconstruction offers a lens into potential population responses to changing environments. Over three years (2013-2015), we introduced adult alewife (Alosa pseudoharengus), anadromous, iteroparous...
Subsidies from anadromous sea lamprey (Petromyzon marinus) carcasses function as a reciprocal nutrient exchange between marine and freshwaters
Joseph D. Zydlewski
2019, River Research and Applications (34) 824-833
Nutrient and energy flows across ecosystem boundaries subsidize recipient communities and influence bottom‐up processes in food webs. Migratory fish such as anadromous sea lamprey provide a pulse of marine‐derived nutrients and energy to Atlantic coastal streams in spring when organisms would otherwise be subject to limiting...
Amendments fail to hasten biocrust recovery or soil stability at a disturbed dryland sandy site
David G. Chandler, Natalie K. Day, Matthew D. Madsen, Jayne Belnap
2019, Restoration Ecology (27) 289-297
In most drylands, biological soil crusts (biocrusts), an assemblage of lichens, bryophytes, fungi, green algae, and cyanobacteria, are critical to healthy ecosystem function. However, they are extremely sensitive to disturbance and attempts to facilitate their recovery have had variable success. In this study, we applied soil amendments designed to improve...
Understanding how microbiomes influence the systems they inhabit
E.K. Hall, E. S. Bernhardt, R.L. Bier, M.A. Bradford, C.M. Boot, J.B. Cotner, P.A. del Giorgio, S.E. Evans, E.B.; Graham, S.E. Jones, J.T. Lennon, Kenneth J. Locey, D. Nemergut, B. Osborne, J.D. Rocca, J.S. Schimel, Mark Waldrop, M.W. Wallenstein
2019, Nature Microbiology (3) 977-982
Translating the ever-increasing wealth of information on microbiomes (environment, host, or built environment) to advance the understanding of system-level processes is proving to be an exceptional research challenge. One reason for this challenge is that relationships between characteristics of microbiomes and the system-level processes they influence are often evaluated in...
Modeling golden eagle‐vehicle collisions to design mitigation strategies
Eric V. Lonsdorf, Carol A. Sanders-Reed, Clint W. Boal, Taber Allison
2019, Journal of Wildlife Management (82) 1644
The incidental take of golden eagles (Aquila chrysaetos) as a result of wind energy development requires some form of compensatory mitigation. Although several options have been proposed, only one has been formerly accepted and implemented, and the lack of options can limit the permit...
Tools for managing hydrologic alteration on a regional scale II: Setting targets to protect stream health
Raphael D. Mazor, Jason T. May, Ashmita Sengupta, Kenneth S. McCune, Brian P. Bledsoe, Eric D. Stein
2019, Freshwater Biology (63) 786-803
Widespread hydrologic alteration creates a need for tools to assess ecological impacts to streams that can be applied across large geographic scales. A regional framework for biologically based flow management can help catchment managers prioritise streams for protection, evaluate impacts of disturbance or interventions and provide a starting point for...
Accounting for location uncertainty in azimuthaltelemetry data improves ecological inference
Mevin Hooten, Brian D. Gerber, Christopher P. Peck, Mindy B. Rice, Anthony D. Apa, James H. Gammonley, Amy J. Davis
2019, Movement Ecology (6)
BackgroundCharacterizing animal space use is critical for understanding ecological relationships. Animal telemetry technology has revolutionized the fields of ecology and conservation biology by providing high quality spatial data on animal movement. Radio-telemetry with very high frequency (VHF) radio signals continues to be a useful technology because of...
Optimal treatment allocations in space and time for online control of anemerging infectious disease
Eric B. Laber, Nick J. Meyer, Brian J. Reich, Krishna Pacifici, Jaime A. Collazo, John M. Drake
2019, Journal of the Royal Statistical Society. Series C: Applied Statistics (67) 743-789
A key component in controlling the spread of an epidemic is deciding where, when and to whom to apply an intervention. We develop a framework for using data to inform these decisions in realtime. We formalize a treatment allocation strategy as a sequence of functions, one...
Modeling framework to estimate spawning and hatching locations of pelagically-spawned eggs
Holly S. Embke, Patrick Kocovsky, Tatiana Garcia, Christine M. Mayer, Song S. Qian
2019, Canadian Journal of Fisheries and Aquatic Sciences (76) 597-607
Identifying spawning and hatching locations is vital to controlling invasive fish and conserving imperiled fish, which can be difficult for pelagically-spawning species with semi-buoyant eggs. In freshwater systems, this reproductive strategy is common among cyprinid species, such as Chinese carp species currently threatening the Great Lakes. Following the confirmation that...
Diets of endangered silver chub (Macrhybopsis storeriana, Kirtland, 1844) in Lake Erie and implications for recovery
Patrick Kocovsky
2019, Ecology of Freshwater Fish (28) 33-40
Silver chub (Macrhybopsis storeriana, Kirtland, 1844) is a native Cyprinid in Lake Erie, one of the Laurentian Great Lakes of North America. It is listed as endangered by the US state of New York and Canada, which has a recovery plan, and as special concern by the state of Michigan....
Scale dependence of diversity in alpine tundra, Rocky Mountains, USA
George P. Malanson, Daniel B. Fagre, Dale L. Zimmerman
2019, Plant Ecology (219) 999-1008
Drivers of alpine plant community composition have been observed to vary with scale. Diversity of alpine tundra across four regions of the Rocky Mountains and among plots within one region was examined relative to temperature and precipitation variables. For regional scale analyses, averages of three metrics of plot-level...
Post-fire redistribution of soil carbon and nitrogen at a grassland-shrubland ecotone
Guan Wang, Junran Li, Sujith Ravi, David Dukes, Howell B. Gonzales, Joel B. Sankey
2019, Ecosystems (22) 174-188
The rapid conversion of grasslands into shrublands has been observed in many arid and semiarid regions worldwide. Studies have shown that fire can provide certain forms of reversibility for shrub-grass transition due to resource homogenization and shrub mortality, especially in the early stages of shrub encroachment. Field-level post-fire soil resource...
Gas and ash emissions associated with the 2010–present activity of Sinabung Volcano, Indonesia
Sofyan Primulyana, Christoph Kern, Allan Lerner, Ugan Saing, Syegi Kunrat, Hilma Alfianti, Mitha Marlia
2019, Journal of Volcanology and Geothermal Research (382) 184-196
Sinabung Volcano (Sumatra, Indonesia) awoke from over 1200 years of dormancy with multiple phreatic explosions in 2010. After a period of quiescence, Sinabung activity resumed in 2013, producing frequent explosions, lava dome extrusion, and pyroclastic flows from dome collapses, becoming one of the world's most active volcanoes and displacing over...
Joint 3-D tomographic imaging of Vp, Vs and Vp/Vs and hypocenter relocation at Sinabung volcano, Indonesia from November to December 2013
Andri Dian Nugraha, Novianti Indrastuti, Ridwan Kusnandar, Hendra Gunawan, Wendy A. McCausland, Atin Nur Aulia, Ulvienin Harlianti
2019, Journal of Volcanology and Geothermal Research (382) 210-223
We conducted travel time tomography using P- and S-wave arrival times of volcanic-tectonic (VT) events that occurred between November and December 2013 to determine the three-dimensional (3D) seismic velocity structure (Vp, Vs, and Vp/Vs) beneath Sinabung volcano, Indonesia in order to delineate geological subsurface structure and to enhance our understanding...
Exploring the historical earthquakes preceding the giant 1960 Chile earthquake in a time‐dependent seismogenic zone
M. Cisternas, M. Carvajal, Robert L. Wesson, L.L Ely, N Gorigoitia
2019, Bulletin of the Seismological Society of America (107) 2664-2675
New documentary findings and available paleoseismological evidence provide both new insights into the historical seismic sequence that ended with the giant 1960 south-central Chile earthquake and relevant information about the region’s seismogenic zone. According to the few available written records, this region was previously struck by earthquakes of varying size...
MODIS phenology-derived, multi-year distribution of conterminous U.S. crop types
Richard Massey, T.T Sankey, Russ Congalton, Kamini Yadav, Prasad Thenkabail, Mutlu Ozdogan, Sanchez Meador
2019, Remote Sensing of Environment (198) 490-503
Innovative, open, and rapid methods to map crop types over large areas are needed for long-term cropland monitoring. We developed two novel and automated decision tree classification approaches to map crop types across the conterminous United States (U.S.) using MODIS 250 m resolution data:...
Avian predation on juvenile Salmonids: Spatial and temporal analysis based on acoustic and passive integrated transponder tags
Allen F. Evans, Quinn Payton, Aaron Turecek, Bradley D. Cramer, Ken Collis, Daniel D. Roby, Peter J. Loschl, Leah Sullivan, Skalski John, Mark Weiland, Curtis Dotson
2019, Transactions of the American Fisheries Society
We evaluated the impact of predation on juvenile steelhead Oncorhynchus mykiss and yearling and subyearling Chinook Salmon O. tshawytscha by piscivorous waterbirds from 11 different breeding colonies in the Columbia River basin during 2012 and 2014. Fish were tagged with both acoustic tags and PIT tags and were tracked via a network of hydrophone...
Metrics for assessing the quality of groundwater used for public supply, CA, USA: Equivalent-population and area
Kenneth Belitz, Miranda S. Fram, Tyler D. Johnson
2019, Environmental Science & Technology (49) 8830-8838
Data from 11 000 public supply wells in 87 study areas were used to assess the quality of nearly all of the groundwater used for public supply in California. Two metrics were developed for quantifying groundwater quality: area with high concentrations (km2 or proportion) and equivalent-population relying upon groundwater with high...
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...
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...
Improving ecological restoration to curb biotic invasion - A practical guide
Qinfeng Guo, Dale G. Brockway, Diane L. Larson, Deli Wang, Hai Ren
2018, Invasive Plant Science and Management (11) 163-174
Common practices for invasive species control and management include physical, chemical, and biological approaches. The first two approaches have clear limitations and may lead to unintended (negative) consequences, unless carefully planned and implemented. For example, physical removal rarely completely eradicates the targeted invasive species and can cause disturbances that facilitate...
Preliminary assessment of stable nitrogen and oxygen isotopic composition of USGS51 and USGS52 nitrous oxide reference gases and perspectives on calibration needs
Nathaniel E. Ostrom, Hasand Gandhi, Tyler B. Coplen, Sakae Toyoda, J.K. Bohlke, Willi A. Brand, Karen L. Casciotti, Jens Dyckmans, Anette Giesemann, Joachim Mohn, Reinhard Well, Longfei Yu, Naohiro Yoshida
2018, Rapid Communications in Mass Spectrometry (32) 1207-1214
RationaleDespite a long history and growing interest in isotopic analyses of N2O, there is a lack of isotopically characterized N2O isotopic reference materials (standards) to enable normalization and reporting of isotope‐delta values. Here we report the isotopic characterization of two pure N2O gas reference materials, USGS51...
Little islands recording global events: Late Quaternary sea level history and paleozoogeography of Santa Barbara and Anacapa Islands, Channel Islands National Park, California
Daniel R. Muhs, Lindsey T. Groves
2018, Western North American Naturalist (78) 540-589
Marine terraces are common on the Pacific Coast of North America and record interglacial high-sea stands superimposed on either stable or tectonically rising crustal blocks. Despite many years of study of these landforms in southern California, little work on terraces has been conducted on the two smallest of the California...
Extreme‐value geoelectric amplitude and polarization across the northeast United States
Jeffrey J. Love, Greg M. Lucas, Paul A. Bedrosian, Anna Kelbert
2018, Space Weather (17) 379-395
Maps are presented of extreme‐value geoelectric field amplitude and horizontal polarization for the Northeast United States. These maps are derived from geoelectric time series calculated for sites across the Northeast by frequency‐domain multiplication (time‐domain convolution) of 172 magnetotelluric impedance tensors, acquired during a survey, with decades‐long,...