Dietary bioprocessed soybean meal does not affect the growth of exercised juvenile rainbow trout (Oncorhynchus mykiss)
Jill M. Voorhees, Michael Barnes, Steven R. Chipps, Michael Browne
2018, Journal of Animal Research and Nutrition (3) 1-13
Context: This 88-day experiment evaluated the rearing performance of juvenile rainbow trout (Oncorhynchus mykiss) fed one of three isonitrogenous and isocaloric diets and reared at velocities of either 2.3 or 18.7 cm s-1.Objective: Evaluate the effects of diet and exercise during rainbow trout rearing.Design: Fishmeal was the primary protein source...
Correlation of the Eagle Ford Group, Woodbine Group, and equivalent Cenomanian-Turonian Mudstones using regional wireline-log cross sections across the Texas Gulf Coast, U.S.A.
Nicholas J. Gianoutsos, Katherine J. Whidden, Russell F. Dubiel, William A. Rouse
2018, Gulf Coast Association of Geological Societies Transactions (68) 219-228
As part of the U.S. Geological Survey’s 2018 hydrocarbon assessment of the Eagle Ford Group and associated Cenomanian-Turonian strata, a series of regional wireline-log cross sections were constructed to examine geologic characteristics of this stratigraphic interval across the Texas Gulf Coast from Mexico to Louisiana. The cross sections were...
Preface: The wetland book, I: Structure and function, management, and methods
C. Max Finlayson, Mark Everard, Kenneth Irvine, Robert J. McInnes, Beth A. Middleton, Anne A. Van Dam, Nick C. Davidson
2018, Book chapter, The wetland book, I: Structure, function, management, and methods
The Wetland Book is a hard copy and online production that provides an unparalleled collation of information on wetlands. It is global in scope and contains 462 chapters prepared by leading wetland researchers and managers. The wide disciplinary and geographic scope is a unique feature and differentiates The Wetland Book...
Hydraulic fracturing (fracking)
Tanya J. Gallegos
2018, Book chapter, Access Science
No abstract available....
Yellowstone grizzly bear investigations — Annual report of the Interagency Grizzly Bear Study Team 2017
Frank T. van Manen, Mark A. Haroldson, Bryn Karabensh, editor(s)
2018, Report
This Annual Report summarizes results of grizzly bear (Ursus arctos) monitoring and research conducted in the Greater Yellowstone Ecosystem (GYE) by the Interagency Grizzly Bear Study Team (IGBST) during 2017. This report also contains a summary of grizzly bear management actions to address conflict situations. Annual reports of the IGBST...
Quantifying uncertainty and tradeoffs in resilience assessments
Craig R. Allen, Hannah E. Birge, David G. Angeler, Craig Anthony Arnold, Brian C. Chaffin, Daniel A. DeCaro, Ahjond S. Garmestani, Lance Gunderson
2018, Ecology and Society (1)
Several frameworks have been developed to assess the resilience of social-ecological systems, but most require substantial data inputs, time, and technical expertise. Stakeholders and practitioners often lack the resources for such intensive efforts. Furthermore, most end with problem framing and fail to explicitly address trade-offs and uncertainty. To remedy this...
Data quality from a community-based, water-quality monitoring project in the Yukon River basin
Nicole M. Herman-Mercer, Ronald C. Antweiler, Nicole J. Wilson, Edda A. Mutter, Ryan C. Toohey, Paul F. Schuster
2018, Citizen Science: Theory and Practice (3) 1-13
This paper examines the quality of data collected by the Indigenous Observation Network, a community-based water-quality project in the Yukon River Basin of Alaska and Canada. The Indigenous Observation Network relies on community technicians to collect surface-water samples from as many as fifty locations to achieve their goals of monitoring...
The role of driving factors in historical and projected carbon dynamics of upland ecosystems in Alaska
Hélène Genet, Yujie He, Zhou Lyu, A. David McGuire, Qianlai Zhuang, Joy S. Clein, David D'Amore, Alec Bennett, Amy Breen, Frances Biles, Eugénie S. Euskirchen, Kristofer Johnson, Tom Kurkowski, Svetlana Schroder, Neal J. Pastick, T. Scott Rupp, Bruce K. Wylie, Yujin Zhang, Xiaoping Zhou, Zhiliang Zhu
2018, Ecological Applications (28) 5-27
It is important to understand how upland ecosystems of Alaska, which are estimated to occupy 84% of the state (i.e., 1,237,774 km2), are influencing and will influence state‐wide carbon (C) dynamics in the face of ongoing climate change. We coupled fire disturbance and biogeochemical models to assess the relative effects of...
Demography of the Pacific walrus (Odobenus rosmarus divergens) in a changing Arctic
Rebecca L. Taylor, Mark S. Udevitz, Chadwick V. Jay, John J. Citta, Lori T. Quakenbush, Patrick R. Lemons, Jonathan A. Snyder
2018, Marine Mammal Science (34) 54-86
The Pacific walrus (Odobenus rosmarus divergens) is a candidate to be listed as an endangered species under United States law, in part, because of climate change‐related concerns. While the population was known to be declining in the 1980s and 1990s, its recent status has not been determined. We developed Bayesian...
Insights into the emplacement of upper-crustal plutons and their relationship to large silicic calderas, from field relationships, geochronology, and zircon trace element geochemistry in the Stillwater – Clan Alpine caldera complex, western Nevada, USA
Joseph P. Colgan, David A. John, Christopher D. Henry, Kathryn E. Watts
2018, Journal of Volcanology and Geothermal Research (349) 163-176
Geologic mapping, new U-Pb zircon ages, and new and published 40Ar/39Ar sanidine ages document the timing and extent of Oligocene magmatism in the southern Stillwater Range and Clan Alpine Mountains of western Nevada, where Miocene extension has exposed at least six nested silicic calderas and underlying granitic plutons to crustal depths...
Removal of San Clemente Dam did more than restore fish passage
Thomas H. Williams, Amy E. East, Douglas P. Smith, David A. Boughton, Nate Mantua, Lee R. Harrison
2018, The Osprey (89) 1, 4-9
No abstract available....
The electric storm of November 1882
Jeffrey J. Love
2018, Space Weather (16) 37-46
In November 1882, an intense magnetic storm related to a large sunspot group caused widespread interference to telegraph and telephone systems and provided spectacular and unusual auroral displays. The (ring current) storm time disturbance index for this storm reached maximum −Dst ≈ 386 nT, comparable to Halloween storm of 29–31 October 2003, but...
Behavior and reproductive ecology of the Sicklefin Redhorse: An imperiled southern Appalachian Mountain fish
Scott D. Favrot, Thomas J. Kwak
2018, Transactions of the American Fisheries Society (147) 204-222
Many nongame fishes are poorly understood but are essential to maintaining healthy aquatic ecosystems globally. The undescribed Sicklefin Redhorse Moxostoma sp. is a rare, imperiled, nongame fish endemic to two southern Appalachian Mountain river basins. Little is known of its behavior and ecology, but this information is urgently needed for conservation planning....
Rapid colonization of a Hawaiian restoration forest by a diverse avian community
Eben H. Paxton, Stephanie G. Yelenik, Tracy E. Borneman, Eli Rose, Richard J. Camp, Steve J. Kendall
2018, Restoration Ecology (26) 165-173
Deforestation of tropical forests has led to widespread loss and extirpation of forest bird species around the world, including the Hawaiian Islands which have experienced a dramatic loss of forests over the last 200–800 years. Given the important role birds play in forest ecosystem functions via seed dispersal and pollination,...
Lake Sturgeon, Lake Whitefish, and Walleye egg deposition patterns with response to fish spawning substrate restoration in the St. Clair–Detroit River system
Jason L. Fischer, Jeremy J. Pritt, Edward F. Roseman, Carson G. Prichard, Jaquelyn M. Craig, Gregory W. Kennedy, Bruce A. Manny
2018, Transactions of the American Fisheries Society (147) 79-93
Egg deposition and use of restored spawning substrates by lithophilic fishes (e.g., Lake Sturgeon Acipenser fulvescens, Lake Whitefish Coregonus clupeaformis, and Walleye Sander vitreus) were assessed throughout the St. Clair–Detroit River system from 2005 to 2016. Bayesian models were used to quantify egg abundance and presence/absence relative to site-specific variables (e.g., depth, velocity,...
Range position and climate sensitivity: The structure of among-population demographic responses to climatic variation
Staci M. Amburgey, David A. W. Miller, Evan H. Campbell Grant, Tracy A. G. Rittenhouse, Michael F. Benard, Jonathan L. Richardson, Mark C. Urban, Ward Hughson, Adrianne B. Brand, Christopher J. Davis, Carmen R. Hardin, Peter W. C. Paton, Christopher J. Raithel, Rick A. Relyea, A. Floyd Scott, David K. Skelly, Dennis E. Skidds, Charles K. Smith, Earl E. Werner
2018, Global Change Biology (24) 439-454
Species’ distributions will respond to climate change based on the relationship between local demographic processes and climate and how this relationship varies based on range position. A rarely tested demographic prediction is that populations at the extremes of a species’ climate envelope (e.g., populations in areas with the highest mean...
Biogenic coal-to-methane conversion efficiency decreases after repeated organic amendment
Katherine J. Davis, Elliott P. Barnhart, Matthew W. Fields, Robin Gerlach
2018, Energy & Fuels (32) 2916-2925
Addition of organic amendments to coal-containing systems can increase the rate and extent of biogenic methane production for 60–80 days before production slows or stops. Understanding the effect of repeated amendment additions on the rate and extent of enhanced coal-dependent methane production is important if biological coal-to-methane conversion is to...
Variation in angler distribution and catch rates of stocked rainbow trout in a small reservoir
Brian S. Harmon, Dustin R. Martin, Christopher J. Chizinski, Kevin L. Pope
2018, PLoS ONE (13) 1-6
We investigated the spatial and temporal relationship of catch rates and angler party location for two days following a publicly announced put-and-take stocking of rainbow trout (Oncorhynchus mykiss). Catch rates declined with time since stocking and distance from stocking. We hypothesized that opportunity for high catch rates would cause anglers...
Walleye recruitment success is less resilient to warming water temperatures in lakes with abundant largemouth bass populations
Gretchen J. A. Hansen, Stephen R. Midway, Tyler Wagner
2018, Canadian Journal of Fisheries and Aquatic Sciences (75) 106-115
Lakes respond heterogeneously to climate, with implications for fisheries management. We analyzed walleye (Sander vitreus) recruitment to age-0 in 359 lakes in Wisconsin, USA, to (i) quantify the relationship between annual water temperature degree days (DD) and walleye recruitment success and (ii) identify the influence of lake characteristics — area,...
Environmental and ecological conditions at Arctic breeding sites have limited effects on true survival rates of adult shorebirds
Emily L. Weiser, Richard B. Lanctot, Stephen C. Brown, H. River Gates, Rebecca L. Bentzen, Joel Bety, Megan L. Boldenow, Willow B. English, Samantha E. Franks, Laura Koloski, Eunbi Kwon, Jean-François Lamarre, David B. Lank, Joseph R. Liebezeit, Laura McKinnon, Erica Nol, Jennie Rausch, Sarah T. Saalfeld, Nathan R. Senner, David H. Ward, Paul F. Wood, Brett K. Sandercock
2018, The Auk (135) 29-43
Many Arctic shorebird populations are declining, and quantifying adult survival and the effects of anthropogenic factors is a crucial step toward a better understanding of population dynamics. We used a recently developed, spatially explicit Cormack–Jolly–Seber model in a Bayesian framework to obtain broad-scale estimates of true annual survival rates for...
Diel predator activity drives a dynamic landscape of fear
Michel T. Kohl, Daniel R. Stahler, Matthew C. Metz, James D. Forester, Matthew J. Kauffman, Nathan Varley, P.J. White, Douglas W. Smith, Daniel R. MacNulty
2018, Ecological Monographs (88) 638-652
A “landscape of fear” (LOF) is a map that describes continuous spatial variation in an animal's perception of predation risk. The relief on this map reflects, for example, places that an animal avoids to minimize risk. Although the LOF concept is a potentially unifying theme in ecology that is often...
The size, distribution, and mobility of landslides caused by the 2015 Mw7.8 Gorkha earthquake, Nepal
Kevin Roback, Marin K. Clark, A. Joshua West, Dimitrios Zekkos, Li, Sean F. Gallen, Deepak Chamlagain, Jonathan W. Godt
2018, Geomorphology (301) 121-138
Coseismic landslides pose immediate and prolonged hazards to mountainous communities, and provide a rare opportunity to study the effect of large earthquakes on erosion and sediment budgets. By mapping landslides using high-resolution satellite imagery, we find that the 25 April 2015 Mw7.8 Gorkha earthquake and aftershock sequence produced at least...
Patterns and controls of mercury accumulation in sediments from three thermokarst lakes on the Arctic Coastal Plain of Alaska
Samantha M. Burke, Christian E. Zimmerman, Brian A. Branfireun, Joshua C. Koch, Heidi K. Swanson
2018, Aquatic Sciences (80) 1-15
The biogeochemical cycle of mercury will be influenced by climate change, particularly at higher latitudes. Investigations of historical mercury accumulation in lake sediments inform future predictions as to how climate change might affect mercury biogeochemistry; however, in regions with a paucity of data, such as the thermokarst-rich Arctic Coastal Plain...
Purpose, processes, partnerships, and products: four Ps to advance participatory socio-environmental modeling
Steven Gray, Alexey Voinov, Michael Paolisso, Rebecca Jordan, Todd BenDor, Pierre Bommel, Pierre D. Glynn, Beatrice Hedelin, Klaus Hubacek, Josh Introne, Nagesh Kolagani, Bethany Laursen, Christina Prell, Laura Schmitt-Olabisi, Alison Singer, Eleanor J. Sterling, Moira Zellner
2018, Ecological Applications (28) 46-61
Including stakeholders in environmental model building and analysis is an increasingly popular approach to understanding ecological change. This is because stakeholders often hold valuable knowledge about socio-environmental dynamics and collaborative forms of modeling produce important boundary objects used to collectively reason about environmental problems. Although the number of participatory modeling...
Holy flux: Spatial and temporal variation in massive pulses of emerging insect biomass from western U.S. rivers
David Walters, Jeff S. Wesner, Robert E. Zuellig, Dan A. Kowalski, Matt C. Kondratieff
2018, Ecology (99) 238-240
The river stonefly, Pteronarcys californica (aka salmonfly), is an iconic insect in rivers of western North America due to its large size and its support of economically important species like wild trout (Nehring et al. 2011). Their emergence generates a large economic subsidy to local communities, as anglers from around the world travel...