Characterization of water quality and suspended sediment during cold-season flows, warm-season flows, and stormflows in the Fountain and Monument Creek watersheds, Colorado, 2007–2015
Lisa D. Miller, Stogner
2017, Scientific Investigations Report 2017-5084
From 2007 through 2015, the U.S. Geological Survey, in cooperation with Colorado Springs City Engineering, conducted a study in the Fountain and Monument Creek watersheds, Colorado, to characterize surface-water quality and suspended-sediment conditions for three different streamflow regimes with an emphasis on characterizing water quality during storm runoff. Data collected...
Optical and biochemical properties of a southwest Florida whiting event
Jacqueline Long, Chaunmin Hu, Lisa L. Robbins, Robert H. Byrne, John H. Paul, Jennifer L. Wolny
2017, Estuarine, Coastal and Shelf Science (196) 258-268
“Whiting” in oceanography is a term used to describe a sharply defined patch of water that contains high levels of suspended, fine-grained calcium carbonate (CaCO3). Whitings have been reported in many oceanic and lake environments, and recently have been reported in southwest Florida coastal waters. Here, field and laboratory measurements were used to study...
Novel observations of larval fire survival, feeding behavior, and host plant use in the regal fritillary, Speyeria idalia (Drury) (Nymphalidae)
Kelsey McCullough, Gene Albanese, David A. Haukos
2017, Journal of the Lepidopterists' Society (71) 146-152
Speyeria idalia is a prairie specialist that has experienced dramatic population declines throughout its range. Speyeria idalia is nearly extirpated from the eastern portion of its former range; however, populations within Kansas are relatively stable. We made several previously undescribed field observations of late-instar larvae and post-diapause female S. idalia in northeastern Kansas during 2014–2016. We...
A suite of standard post-tagging evaluation metrics can help assess tag retention for field-based fish telemetry research
Kayla M. Gerber, Martha E. Mather, Joseph M. Smith
2017, Reviews in Fish Biology and Fisheries (27) 651-664
Telemetry can inform many scientific and research questions if a context exists for integrating individual studies into the larger body of literature. Creating cumulative distributions of post-tagging evaluation metrics would allow individual researchers to relate their telemetry data to other studies. Widespread reporting of standard metrics is a precursor to...
Comparing automated classification and digitization approaches to detect change in eelgrass bed extent during restoration of a large river delta
Anna Elizabeth Davenport, Jerry D. Davis, Isa Woo, Eric E. Grossman, Jesse B. Barham, Christopher S. Ellings, John Y. Takekawa
2017, Northwest Science (91) 272-282
Native eelgrass (Zostera marina) is an important contributor to ecosystem services that supplies cover for juvenile fish, supports a variety of invertebrate prey resources for fish and waterbirds, provides substrate for herring roe consumed by numerous fish and birds, helps stabilize sediment, and sequesters organic carbon. Seagrasses are in decline...
Luminescence dating of paleolake deltas and glacial deposits in Garwood Valley, Antarctica: Implications for climate, Ross ice sheet dynamics, and paleolake duration
Joseph S. Levy, Tammy M. Rittenour, Andrew G. Fountain, Jim E. O'Connor
2017, GSA Bulletin (129) 1071-1084
The formation of perched deltas and other lacustrine deposits in the McMurdo Dry Valleys of Antarctica is widely considered to be evidence of valley-filling lakes dammed by the grounded Ross Sea ice sheet during the local Last Glacial Maximum, with lake drainage interpreted as a record...
The fascinating and complex dynamics of geyser eruptions
Shaul Hurwitz, Michael Manga
2017, Annual Review of Earth and Planetary Sciences (45) 31-59
Geysers episodically erupt liquid and vapor. Despite two centuries of scientific study, basic questions persist—why do geysers exist? What determines eruption intervals, durations, and heights? What initiates eruptions? Through monitoring eruption intervals, analyzing geophysical data, taking measurements within geyser conduits, performing numerical simulations, and constructing laboratory models, some of these...
Hawai`i forest bird monitoring database: Database dictionary
Richard J. Camp, Ayesha Genz
2017, Technical Report HCSU-039
Between 1976 and 1981, the U.S. Fish and Wildlife Service (now U.S. Geological Survey – Pacific Island Ecosystems Research Center [USGS-PIERC]) conducted systematic surveys of forest birds and plant communities on all the main Hawaiian Islands, except O‘ahu, as part of the Hawai‘i Forest Bird Surveys (HFBS). Results of this...
Coastal eolian sand-ramp development related to paleo-sea-level changes during the Latest Pleistocene and Holocene (21–0 ka) in San Miguel Island, California, U.S.A.
Curt D. Peterson, Jon M. Erlandson, Errol Stock, Steven W. Hostetler, David M. Price
2017, Journal of Coastal Research (33) 1022-1037
Coastal eolian sand ramps (5–130 m elevation) on the northern slope (windward) side of the small San Miguel Island (13 km in W-E length) range in age from late Pleistocene to modern time, though a major hiatus in sand-ramp growth occurred during the early Holocene marine transgression (16–9 ka). The...
Play-fairway analysis for geothermal resources and exploration risk in the Modoc Plateau region
Drew Siler, Yingqi Zhang, Nicolas F. Spycher, Patrick Dobson, James S. McClain, Erika Gasperikova, Robert A. Zierenberg, Peter Schiffman, Colin Ferguson, Andrew Fowler, Carolyn Cantwell
2017, Geothermics (69) 15-33
The region surrounding the Modoc Plateau, encompassing parts of northeastern California, southern Oregon, and northwestern Nevada, lies at an intersection between two tectonic provinces; the Basin and Range province and the Cascade volcanic arc. Both of these provinces have substantial geothermal resource base and resource potential. Geothermal systems with evidence...
Mathematical models for plant-herbivore interactions
Zhilan Feng, Donald L. DeAngelis
2017, Book
Mathematical Models of Plant-Herbivore Interactions addresses mathematical models in the study of practical questions in ecology, particularly factors that affect herbivory, including plant defense, herbivore natural enemies, and adaptive herbivory, as well as the effects of these on plant community dynamics. The result of extensive research on the use of mathematical modeling...
Size selection from fishways and potential evolutionary responses in a threatened Atlantic salmon population
George A. Maynard, M.T. Kinnison, Joseph D. Zydlewski
2017, River Research and Applications (33) 1004-1015
The evolutionary effects of harvest on wild fish populations have been documented around the world; however, sublethal selective pressures can also cause evolutionary changes in phenotypes. For migratory fishes, passage facilities may represent instances of nonlethal selective pressure. Our analysis of 6 years of passage data suggests that certain fish passage...
Comparing efficiency of American Fisheries Society standard snorkeling techniques to environmental DNA sampling techniques
Roy M. Ulibarri, Scott A. Bonar, Christopher B. Rees, Jon J. Amberg, Bridget Ladell, Craig Jackson
2017, North American Journal of Fisheries Management (37) 644-651
Analysis of environmental DNA (eDNA) is an emerging technique used to detect aquatic species through water sampling and the extraction of biological material for amplification. Our study compared the efficacy of eDNA methodology to American Fisheries Society (AFS) standard snorkeling surveys with regard to detecting the presence of rare fish...
Fraction of young water as an indicator of aquifer vulnerability along two regional flow paths in the Mississippi embayment aquifer system, southeastern USA
James A. Kingsbury, Jeannie R. B. Barlow, Bryant C. Jurgens, Peter B. McMahon, John K. Carmichael
2017, Hydrogeology Journal (25) 1661-1678
Wells along two regional flow paths were sampled to characterize changes in water quality and the vulnerability to contamination of the Memphis aquifer across a range of hydrologic and land-use conditions in the southeastern United States. The flow paths begin in the aquifer outcrop area and end at public supply...
Forestry best management practices relationships with aquatic and riparian fauna: A review
Brooke M. Warrington, W. Michael Aust, Scott M. Barrett, W. Mark Ford, C. Andrew Dolloff, Erik B. Schilling, T. Bently Wigley, M. Chad Bolding
2017, Forests (8) 1-16
Forestry best management practices (BMPs) were developed to minimize water pollution from forestry operations by primarily addressing sediment and sediment transport, which is the leading source of pollution from silviculture. Implementation of water quality BMPs may also benefit riparian and aquatic wildlife, although wildlife benefits were not driving forces for...
A new parameterization for integrated population models to document amphibian reintroductions
Adam Duarte, Christopher Pearl, M. J. Adams, James T. Peterson
2017, Ecological Applications (27) 1761-1775
Managers are increasingly implementing reintroduction programs as part of a global effort to alleviate amphibian declines. Given uncertainty in factors affecting populations and a need to make recurring decisions to achieve objectives, adaptive management is a useful component of these efforts. A major impediment to the estimation of demographic rates...
Imputation approaches for animal movement modeling
Henry Scharf, Mevin Hooten, Devin S. Johnson
2017, Journal of Agricultural, Biological, and Environmental Statistics (22) 335-352
The analysis of telemetry data is common in animal ecological studies. While the collection of telemetry data for individual animals has improved dramatically, the methods to properly account for inherent uncertainties (e.g., measurement error, dependence, barriers to movement) have lagged behind. Still, many new statistical approaches have been developed to...
Modifications to EPA Method 3060A to Improve Extraction of Cr(VI) from Chromium Ore Processing Residue-Contaminated Soils
Christopher T. Mills, Carleton R. Bern, Ruth E. Wolf, Andrea L. Foster, Jean M. Morrison, William Benzel
2017, Environmental Science & Technology (51) 11235-11243
It has been shown that EPA Method 3060A does not adequately extract Cr(VI) from chromium ore processing residue (COPR). We modified various parameters of EPA 3060A toward understanding the transformation of COPR minerals in the alkaline extraction and improving extraction of Cr(VI) from NIST SRM 2701, a standard COPR-contaminated soil....
Evolution of strain localization in variable-width three-dimensional unsaturated laboratory-scale cut slopes
Michael S. Morse, Ning Lu, Alexandra Wayllace, Jonathan W. Godt
2017, Journal of Engineering Mechanics (143)
To experimentally validate a recently developed theory for predicting the stability of cut slopes under unsaturated conditions, the authors measured increasing strain localization in unsaturated slope cuts prior to abrupt failure. Cut slope width and moisture content were controlled and varied in a laboratory, and a sliding door that extended...
Optimization of human, animal, and environmental health by using the One Health approach
Jonathan M. Sleeman, Thomas J. DeLiberto, Natalie T. Nguyen
2017, Journal of Veterinary Science (18) 263-268
Emerging diseases are increasing burdens on public health, negatively affecting the world economy, causing extinction of species, and disrupting ecological integrity. One Health recognizes that human, domestic animal, and wildlife health are interconnected within ecosystem health and provides a framework for the development of multidisciplinary solutions to global health challenges....
Application and evaluation of a rapid response earthquake-triggered landslide model to the 25 April 2015 Mw 7.8 Gorkha earthquake, Nepal
Sean F. Gallen, Marin K. Clark, Jonathan W. Godt, Kevin Roback, Nathan A Niemi
2017, Tectonophysics (714-715) 173-187
The 25 April 2015 Mw 7.8 Gorkha earthquake produced strong ground motions across an approximately 250 km by 100 km swath in central Nepal. To assist disaster response activities, we modified an existing earthquake-triggered landslide model based on a Newmark sliding block analysis to estimate the extent and intensity of landsliding and landslide...
Using remote sensing to characterize and compare evapotranspiration from different irrigation regimes in the Smith River Watershed of central Montana
Roy Sando, Rodney R. Caldwell, Kyle W. Blasch
2017, Irrigation & Drainage Systems Engineering (6) 1-10
According to the 2005 U.S. Geological Survey national water use compilation, irrigation is the second largest use of fresh water in the United States, accounting for 37%, or 484.48 million cubic meters per day, of total freshwater withdrawal. Accurately estimating the amount of water withdrawals and actual consumptive water use...
Estimating age at a specified length from the von Bertalanffy growth function
Derek H. Ogle, Daniel A. Isermann
2017, North American Journal of Fisheries Management (37) 1176-1180
Estimating the time required (i.e., age) for fish in a population to reach a specific length (e.g., legal harvest length) is useful for understanding population dynamics and simulating the potential effects of length-based harvest regulations. The age at which a population reaches a specific mean length is typically estimated by...
Estimating total maximum daily loads with the Stochastic Empirical Loading and Dilution Model
Gregory E. Granato, Susan Cheung Jones
2017, Transportation Research Record (2638) 104-112
The Massachusetts Department of Transportation (DOT) and the Rhode Island DOT are assessing and addressing roadway contributions to total maximum daily loads (TMDLs). Example analyses for total nitrogen, total phosphorus, suspended sediment, and total zinc in highway runoff were done by the U.S. Geological Survey in cooperation with FHWA to...
Crossing boundaries in a collaborative modeling workspace
Jeffrey T. Morisette, Amanda E. Cravens, Brian W. Miller, Marian Talbert, Colin Talbert, Catherine S. Jarnevich, Michelle Fink, Karin Decker, Eric Odell
2017, Society and Natural Resources (30) 1158-1167
There is substantial literature on the importance of bridging across disciplinary and science–management boundaries. One of the ways commonly suggested to cross boundaries is for participants from both sides of the boundary to jointly produce information (i.e., knowledge co-production). But simply providing tools or bringing people together in the same...